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Unit 5 Resources SUGGESTED PACING CHART Unit U - chart 5 head (1 blue day) Chapter 23 (6 days) Chapter 24 (6 days) Chapter 25 (6 days) Chapter 26 (6 days) Unit 5 (1 day) Day U - chart 1 head red Introduction w/ p4 U - chart text U - chart head red U - chart text Day 1 Chapter 23 Intro, Section 1 Day 2 Section 2 Day 3 Section 3 Day 4 Section 4 Day 5 Chapter 23 Review Day 6 Chapter 23 Assessment Day 1 Chapter 24 Intro, Section 1 Day 2 Section 2 Day 3 Section 3 Day 4 Section 4 Day 5 Chapter 24 Review Day 6 Chapter 24 Assessment Day 1 Chapter 25 Intro, Section 1 Day 2 Section 2 Day 3 Section 3 Day 4 Section 4 Day 5 Chapter 25 Review Day 6 Chapter 25 Assessment Day 1 Chapter 26 Intro, Section 1 Day 2 Section 2 Day 3 Section 3 Day 4 Section 4 Day 5 Chapter 26 Review Day 6 Chapter 26 Assessment Day 1 Wrap-Up/Projects/ Unit 5 Assessment Use the following tools to easily assess student learning in a variety of ways: • Performance Assessment Activities and Rubrics • Chapter Tests • Section Quizzes • Standardized Test Practice Workbook • SAT I/II Test Practice • www.wh.glencoe.com • Interactive Tutor Self-Assessment CD-ROM • MindJogger Videoquiz • ExamView® Pro Testmaker CD-ROM TEACHING TRANSPARENCIES Unit Time Line Transparency 5 L2 Cause-and-Effect Transparency 5 L2 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. UNIT TIME LINE TRANSPARENCY 5 CAUSE-AND-EFFECT TRANSPARENCY 5 Global Chronology, 1914–1945 Politics World Wars: Causes and Effects • Timed Readings Plus in Social Studies help students increase their reading rate and fluency while maintaining comprehension. The 400-word passages are similar to those found on state and national assessments. 1917 1914 World War I begins 1915 The Russian Revolution occurs; Russian women win the right to vote 1921 Science and Culture 1933 1945 Adolf Hitler comes to power in Germany 1927 1939 World War II begins 1933 1939 1925 1926 1928 1935 Diego Rivera works on famous murals in Mexico City Robert Goddard launches the first liquid propellant rocket Alexander Fleming discovers penicillin Jews lose rights of citizenship in Germany 1922 James Joyce publishes Ulysses; T. S. Eliot publishes The Wasteland The United States drops an atomic bomb on Hiroshima End of old order Economic competition Political instability Nationalism Militarism Disillusionment Alliances Resentment 1945 Enrico Fermi produces the first controlled nuclear chain reaction 1940 Charlie Chaplin makes the movie The Great Dictator World War II Economic suffering 1942 Social chaos Nationalism World War I Rise of dictatorships Aggressive expansion Shift in balance of power Emergence of superpowers Creation of new nations • Reading in the Content Area: Social Studies concentrates on six essential reading skills that help students better comprehend what they read. The book includes 75 high-interest nonfiction passages written at increasing levels of difficulty. Founding of United Nations • Reading Fluency helps students read smoothly, and accurately. KEY TO ABILITY LEVELS Teaching strategies have been coded. L1 BASIC activities for all students L2 AVERAGE activities for average to above-average students L3 CHALLENGING activities for above-average students ELL ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNER activities 710A • Jamestown’s Reading Improvement, by renowned reading expert Edward Fry, focuses on helping build your students’ comprehension, vocabulary, and skimming and scanning skills. • Critical Reading Series provides high-interest books, each written at three reading levels. For more information, see the Jamestown Education materials in the front of this book. To order these products, call Glencoe at 1-800-334-7344. Unit 5 Resources ASSESSMENT Unit 5 Tests Forms A and B L2 INTERDISCIPLINARY ACTIVITIES ExamView® Pro Testmaker CD-ROM World Literature Reading 5 L2 Name B. genocide 2. declared that Germany and Austria were responsible for starting World War I C. New Economic Policy 3. political philosophy that emphasizes the need for a strong central government led by a dictatorial ruler D. “Mukden incident” 4. the modified version of the old capitalist system that Lenin used to avoid complete economic disaster E. planned economies 7. a small country dependent on large, wealthy nations 8. policy of maintaining peace and stability by satisfying the reasonable demands of dissatisfied powers About the Author Rabindranath Tagore (1861–1941) is one of India’s most famous writers, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1913. Born into a wealthy and famous family, Tagore was educated in England and returned to India to manage his father’s estate. He was a pacifist and deeply moved by the plight of the poor, themes that run through his stories. Tagore also wrote poems, plays, and essays. In addition, he was a skilled musician, painter, and actor. A. appeasement F. GUIDED READING As you read “The Kabuliwallah,” think about the messages about having compassion the story conveys. banana republic B G. War Guilt Clause H. Vichy France I. Chiang Kai-shek J. fascism “The Kabuliwallah” Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. DIRECTIONS: Multiple Choice Choose the item that best completes each sentence or answers each question. Write the letter of the item in the blank to the left of the sentence. (4 points each) 11. The Western Front was characterized by A. the slow but steady advance of the German army. B. trench warfare that kept both sides in virtually the same positions for four years. C. decisive victories by the French army, quickly driving back the German forces. D. innovative strategy and tactics that fully utilized the new technologies available to both armies. 12. World War I was a , meaning that it involved a complete mobilization of resources and people. A. modern conflict C. total war B. trench war D. mobile conflict My five-year-old daughter Mini cannot live without chattering. I really believe that in all her life she has not wasted a minute in silence. Her mother is often vexed at this, and would stop her prattle, but I would not. To see Mini quiet is unnatural, and I cannot bear it long. And so my own talk with her is always lively. One morning, for instance, when I was in the midst of the seventeenth chapter of my new novel, my little Mini stole into the room, and putting her hand into mine, said: “Father! Ramdayal the door-keeper calls a crow a crew! He doesn’t know anything, does he?” Before I could explain to her the differences of language in this world, she was embarked on the full tide of another subject. “What do you think, Father? Bhola says there is an elephant in the clouds, blowing water out of his trunk, and that is why it rains!” And then, darting off anew, while I sat still making ready some reply to this last saying, “Father! what relation is Mother to you?” “My dear little sister in the law!” I murmured involuntarily to myself, but with a grave face contrived to answer: “Go and play with Bhola, Mini! I am busy!” The window of my room overlooks the road. The child had seated herself at my feet near my table, and was playing softly, drumming on her knees. I was hard at work on my seventeenth chapter, where Pratap Singh, the hero, had just caught Kanchanlata, the heroine, in his arms, and was about to escape with her by the third story window of the castle, when all of a ( APPLICATION AND ENRICHMENT Charting and Graphing Activity 5 L2 Name Date i Socialism and the Three Questions of Economics Socialism emerged in the early 1800s as a response to the economic and social injustices that resulted, in large part, from the Industrial Revolution. Early socialists—most of whom were French and English—hated the vast extremes of wealth and power that seemed to come about as a result of capitalism and the free market economy. In its broadest sense, socialism refers to an economic and political system in which capital is managed for the benefit of the larger society rather than for individuals. How to institute such a system has led to endless debate and many historical experiments, all of which have colored the meaning of socialism in one way or another. For instance, socialism can be applied to certain practices or institutions of the Scandinavian nations, of Britain, Canada, and the United States, yet is also identified with murderous totalitarian regimes, such as Stalin’s Russia, Hitler’s Germany, or Mao’s China. Many economists view economic theory as a continuum. This continuum starts at one end with a theoretically pure market economy, in which no governmental control is brought to bear on the three questions of economics. No such theoretically pure market economy exists, however, because all governments act to restrain activities considered harmful—for example, the manufacture and sale of addictive drugs. On the other end of the continuum is theoretically pure socialism, in which there is no private property, all wealth is distributed equally, there are no disparities in rank or power, and government becomes unnecessary because everyone will be equally rich and good. This form of socialism is sometimes labeled communism because the early Bolsheviks in Russia, and later Communists in China, claimed that theoretical extreme as their goal. Neither the Russians nor the Chinese ever realized their vision of a socialist society—or even came close to it. Russian revolutionaries did seize control of factories and industries, and under Stalin the Soviet Union abolished private property and guaranteed all its citizens food, shelter, education, and medical care. Nevertheless, Soviet politicians proved unable to manage the Soviet economy in a way that facilitated its growth and prosperity. Ultimately the Soviet economy collapsed. Socialism can be further examined in terms of the three questions of economics. Question 1: What goods will be produced? To determine the types of goods to produce, some socialists wanted a pure command economy. This means that the government “commands” businesses as to what they should produce. The former Soviet Union had a pure command economy. One example of this was Stalin’s collectivization of farms in which the government took over private farms and land. Other socialists wanted market, or liberal socialism. This is a mixed economy, in which certain industries or resources considered vital to the nation are owned by the government in order to benefit and protect the population as a whole. The definition of vital, however, has differed from country to country. In the past, countries such as Great Britain have owned their coal, steel, railroad, and health industries and managed them — not for profit but for the good of the nation and its citizens. Today, nations as different as Norway, Mexico, and Saudi Arabia own their oil industries. Many people, regardless of the form of socialism to which they subscribe, believe that certain industries, transportation for example, Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 9. authoritarian regime under German control that was set up to govern occupied France 10. used as an excuse for Japanese seizure of Manchuria Economic Theory As a Continuum unrestricted market economy market economy with some government control socialism communism d) GEOGRAPHIC LITERACY NGS Focus on Geography Literacy Building Geography Skills for Life Class Graphing Activity Charting and 5 The Struggle for National Identity Directions: Complete the chart below by filling in the missing information about the countries, the forces struggling for control in the country, and where known, the names of important leaders. For the various forces struggling for control, select from the following list. Nationalistic groups Police/military forces Individual dictator Foreign countries/businesses Struggle for National Identity Date Country Forces Struggling for Control Names 1919 1921 1921 1922 1928 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Economics and History Activity 5 Economic Theory at Work Column B 1. systems directed by government agencies in order to mobilize resources for the war effort 6. leader of the Chinese Nationalist Party after Sun Yat-sen Name ____________________________________ Date ________________ Class __________ “The Kabuliwallah” takes place in India around 1890. The family in the story is Hindu, and the members belong to the Brahman caste. The Indian castes did not socialize or intermarry, but the caste system would not have applied to a Kabuliwallah, a Muslim from Kabul, Afghanistan. DIRECTIONS: Matching Match each item in Column A with the items in Column B. Write the correct letters in the blanks. (4 points each) 5. the deliberate mass murder of a particular racial, political, or cultural group Class Score Unit 5 Test, Form A Column A Date World Literature Reading 5 Name 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 Date 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 Class 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 ✔ Economics and History Activity 5 L2 1930 1930 1930 1934 1936 1937 Reading List Generator CD-ROM The Glencoe BookLink CD-ROM is a database that allows you to search more than 15,000 titles to create a customized reading list for your students. ■ Reading lists can be organized by students’ reading level, author, genre, theme, or area of interest. ■ The database provides Degrees of Reading Power™ (DRP) and Lexile™ readability scores for all selections. ■ A brief summary of each selection is included. Extending the Content Leveled reading suggestions for this unit: For students at a Grade 8 reading level: ■ An Album of World War II Homefronts, by Don Lawson Readings for the Teacher ■ A History in Fragments: Europe in the Twentieth Century, by Richard Vinen. Da Capo Press, 2001. For students at a Grade 9 reading level: Gandhi’s Truth on the Origins of Militant Nonviolence, by Erik Erikson ■ ■ For students at a Grade 10 reading level: ■ The Generation of 1914, by Robert Wohl Multimedia Resources American Civil Liberties: A History. (57 minutes) Films for the Humanities & Sciences. P. O. Box 2053, Princeton, NJ 08543, 1–800–257–5126. VHS. ■ After the Cloud Lifted: Hiroshima’s Stories of Recovery. (35 minutes) RMS Communications, 1996. VHS. 710B Introducing UNIT 5 TwentiethCentury Crisis The Out of Time? If time does not permit teaching each chapter in this unit, you may use the Reading Essentials and Study Guide summaries. 1914–1945 Unit Objectives After studying this unit, students should be able to: 1. describe the causes and impact of World War I; 2. trace the growth of Fascist and Communist dictatorships in Italy, Germany, and the Soviet Union; 3. explain the upsurge of nationalism in Asia, Africa, and Latin America; 4. trace the events that led to World War II; 5. describe major events and turning points of World War II; 6. describe events that took place during the Holocaust; 7. describe the impact of World War II on civilian populations. The eriod in Perspective The period between 1914 and 1945 was one of the most destructive in the history of humankind. As many as 60 million people died as a result of World Wars I and II, the global conflicts that began and ended this era. As World War I was followed by revolutions, the Great Depression, totalitarian regimes, and the horrors of World War II, it appeared to many that European civilization had become a nightmare. By 1945, the era of European domination over world affairs had been severely shaken. With the decline of Western power, a new era of world history was about to begin. Primary Sources Library The Period in Perspective To build student interest in this unit prior to assigning the first reading, discuss the general causes of war, particularly more recent wars like the Vietnam War, the Persian Gulf War, and the war on terrorism. Use these materials to enrich student understanding of World War I and World War II. NGS PICTURE SHOW™ CD-ROMs World War I Era World War II Era NGS PICTURE PACK TRANSPARENCY SETS World War I Era World War II Era 710 See pages 998–999 for primary source readings to accompany Unit 5. 䊱 Gate, Dachau Memorial 䊳 Former Russian prisoners of war honor the American troops who freed them. Use The World History Primary Source Document Library CD-ROM to find additional primary sources about The Twentieth-Century Crisis. 710 TEAM TEACHING ACTIVITY Art With the art teacher, coordinate a study of the major modern art movements of the 1920s and 1930s. Students should examine the philosophy and works of the Dada movement, surrealism, cubism, and the functionalist movement of the Bauhaus school. After students are familiar with each of these movements and its philosophy, discuss the possible influence that World War I had on the art of this period. You may want to have students write reports analyzing an artist’s work and the historical influences on that artist, or you may want students, with the help of the art teacher, to create their own artistic creations that reflect the philosophies of one of the movements. L2 Introducing UNIT 5 “Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few.” CD-ROM —Winston Churchill World History Primary Source Document Library CD-ROM Use the World History Primary Source Document Library CD-ROM to access primary source documents related to the twentieth-century crisis. More About the Photo The inscription above the gate at Dachau reads “Arbeit Macht Frei” (“Work will make you free.”) Dachau was Germany’s first concentration camp, opened in 1933. Almost 30,000 prisoners were living there upon liberation in 1945. In 1965 the camp was made into a memorial. History and the Humanities • • • • • • • • World Art and Architecture Transparencies 45 I Want You for the U.S. Army 46 Three Musicians 48 Empire State Building 49 Zapatistas 50 The Persistence of Memory 51 Migrant Mother 52 Bird in Space 53 The Red Stairway SERVICE-LEARNING PROJECT Some of the best primary sources for information about World War II live in our own communities. Have students work in pairs to interview a World War II survivor. Students may choose to contact the local Veterans Affairs office or local senior centers to identify a veteran. Have students interview the person and write a report about that person’s experiences. Also have students reflect on how learning about the war from someone directly involved in it has expanded their understanding of the war. L2 Refer to Building Bridges: Connecting Classroom and Community through Service in Social Studies from the National Council for the Social Studies for information about service-learning. 711 TEACH Introduction This feature focuses on efforts by the international community to achieve collective security, first through the League of Nations, established after World War I, and later through the United Nations, set up in the aftermath of World War II. International Peacekeeping ➊ ➋ ➌ Background Notes Linking Past and Present United Nations As students will read in this unit, American president Woodrow Wilson strongly supported the concept of collective security and was one of the strongest proponents of the League of Nations; the failure of the United States Senate to approve American participation was a blow to Wilson and to the League. In contrast, today, the United States is a leading member of the United Nations. Even with the strong leadership role of the United States in the United Nations, however, there is often heated debate in Congress about American participation in UN peacekeeping missions. The United Nations has been far more than an agent for collective security. Remind students that the UN, in addition to the Security Council has an Economic and Social Council and an International Court of Justice. Until the 1900s, with the exception of the Seven Years’ War, never in history had there been a conflict that literally spanned the globe. The twentieth century witnessed two world wars and numerous regional conflicts. As the scope of war grew, so did international commitment to collective security, where a group of nations join together to promote peace and protect human life. 1914–1918 World War I is fought 1919 League of Nations created to prevent wars 1939–1945 World War II is fought ➊ Europe The League of Nations At the end of World War I, the victorious nations set up a “general association of nations” called the League of Nations, which would settle international disputes and avoid war. By 1920, 42 nations had sent delegates to the League’s headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, and they were eventually joined by another 21. The United States never joined. Opponents in the U.S. Senate argued that membership in the League went against George Washington’s advice to avoid “entangling alliances.” When the League failed to halt warlike acts in the 1930s, the same opponents pointed to the failure of collective security. The League of Nations was seen as a peacekeeper without a sword—it possessed neither a standing army nor members willing to stop nations that used war as diplomacy. The League of Nations and Uncle Sam 712 COOPERATIVE LEARNING ACTIVITY STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 Model United Nations Have students compile a list of international conflicts that are currently raging around the world. Then organize students into small groups. Assign each group a conflict from the list. Have them role-play an attempt by the United Nations to resolve the situation. In each group, have some students represent the two parties in the conflict and others represent UN mediators. Have students discuss the sources of the conflict and then negotiate a peace treaty. Each group can describe its dilemma to the class, and explain why they could or could not resolve the conflict. L2 SS.A.3.4.10 For grading this activity, refer to the Performance Assessment Activities booklet. 712 Geography ➋ The United States The United Nations After World War II, the United States hosted a meeting to create a new peacekeeping organization. Delegates from 50 nations hammered out the Charter of the United Nations. To eliminate the root causes of war, the UN created agencies that promoted global education and the well-being of children. In 1948, United States delegate Eleanor Roosevelt convinced the UN to adopt the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which committed the UN to eliminate oppression. The headquarters for the UN are located in New York City. UN membership flags Movement Since 1989, troops from around the world have participated in UN observer and peacekeeping missions in Latin America, Africa, and Europe. Among the most important have been the observer groups sent to monitor elections in Nicaragua, Haiti, and South Africa and the peacekeeping missions in Bosnia, the Republic of Georgia, and Somalia. Ask students what problems the growing numbers of UN missions in recent years may have created. (The UN has been burdened with ballooning costs and funding shortages.) SS.A.3.4.10 1945 United Nations is founded 1948 UN adopts the Universal Declaration of Human Rights 1988 Nobel Peace Prize awarded to UN peacekeeping forces 1950–1953 UN troops participate in the Korean War CULTURAL DIFFUSION International Cooperation and Popular Music Since the ➌ South Africa 1970s the spirit of international cooperation has influenced the world of rock music. In the early 1970s, a number of rock musicians, including George Harrison and Bob Dylan, held a concert to raise money for famine victims in the newly created nation of Bangladesh (formerly part of Pakistan). In the 1980s, Bob Geldof of the Boomtown Rats organized Band Aid, featuring many recording artists such as Sting and Phil Collins, to raise money for famine relief in Ethiopia. The Power of World Opinion By 1995, the UN had taken part in 35 peacekeeping missions—some successful, some not. It also had provided protection for over 30 million refugees. The UN used world opinion to promote justice. In 1977, it urged nations to enforce economic sanctions and an arms embargo against South Africa until apartheid was lifted. In 1994, South Africa held its first all-race elections. Many believed this was a major triumph for collective international action. Casting a vote in South Africa Why It Matters The UN hopes to use collective international actions to promote peace around the world. Often this involves preventing injustice and improving living conditions. What are some recent UN actions that support these principles? UNIT 5 The Twentieth-Century Crisis 713 Why It Matters Student answers will vary depending on current events. Students may identify the efforts in Somalia, Sudan, and Sarajevo to provide food and supplies; the campaign to create international policy for the elimination of land mines; food drops into Afghanistan during the war on terrorism; relief to refugees and victims of civil and tribal warfare in Rwanda and other African nations. STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 713 Chapter 23 Resources Timesaving Tools Use Glencoe’s Presentation Plus! multimedia teacher tool to easily present dynamic lessons that visually excite your students. Using Microsoft PowerPoint® you can customize the presentations to create your own personalized lessons. ™ Teacher Edition Access your Teacher Wraparound Edition and • Interactive your classroom resources with a few easy clicks. Lesson Planner Planning has never been easier! Organize your • Interactive week, month, semester, or year with all the lesson helps you need to make teaching creative, timely, and relevant. TEACHING TRANSPARENCIES Graphic Organizer Student Activity 23 Transparency L2 Graphic Organizer 8: Table: Pyramid Chapter Transparency 23 L2 Map Overlay Transparency 23 L2 CHAPTER TRANSPARENCY 23 War and Revolution (1914–1919) World War I Map Overlay Transparency 23 15°W 0° 15°E 30°E 45°E 55°N North Sea GREAT BRITAIN ATLANTIC OCEAN RUSSIA GERMANY BELGIUM 45°N AUSTRIA-HUNGARY FRANCE Black Sea SERBIA BULGARIA ITALY OTTOMAN EMPIRE N W M edite GREECE E S rranean Sea 200 0 35°N 0 200 400 mi. 400 km APPLICATION AND ENRICHMENT Class ★ Name Date PRIMARY SOURCE R Governments often use methods of propaganda or persuasion to get their citizens to side with the government’s policies at a given time, especially during times of war. Governments use the media as an easy way to distribute their message. Today these methods include television ads, print ads, Class ★ EADING 23 L enin became a revolutionary after his brother was executed for plotting to kill the czar. As a student, Lenin had read Karl Marx and developed a strong belief in revolutionary socialism. This meant abolishing private property and establishing a classless society to be set up after a revolution. Lenin fled to Geneva to escape czarist secret service. From Geneva he wrote letters to accomplices advising them on how to organize the workers and get them to join the Russian Social Democratic Labor party. The Bolsheviks were the majority group within the party and advocated revolutionary actions. Their publication was Vpered, which means “forward.” The Mensheviks were the minority group and were less radical than the Bolsheviks. Lenin returned to Russia in 1917. After the revolution in that year, the Bolsheviks were in power, and the Russian Social Democratic Labor party had become the Communist Party. n American wartime poster from 1917 shows a smiling, gray-haired woman standing in front of an American flag. Her arms are open and her hands are outstretched. She is depicted as a homey and maternal woman, almost grandmotherly in appearance. In the background, the artist has depicted various battle scenes in miniature. The poster reads, “Women! Help America’s Sons Win the War. Buy U.S. Government Bonds.” A I M U L AT I O N CTIVITY To S. I. Gusev in Petersburg, member of the Bureau of Bolshevik Committees [Geneva, the beginning of March, 1905] Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 6. Why do you think the artist has drawn the battle scenes in the background rather than the foreground? _________________________________________________________________ 7. Design your own wartime poster. Pick a clearly stated goal, such as asking volunteers to join the army or suggesting that people not waste food during the wartime shortages. Find other examples of posters in library reference books to help you. In drawing the poster, be sure that it will grab people’s attention and convey your message clearly and persuasively. What is the content of your message? What persuasive techniques do you want to use? To which emotions do you wish to appeal? My dear Friend, Very many thanks for your letters. You are simply saving us from foreign impressions. Do continue this. For God’s sake, get hold of letters from the workers themselves. Why do they not write?? It is a positive disgrace! Your detailed account of the agitation in the Committee at the election to the Shidlovsky Commission [a commission to try to solve workers’ problems] was magnificent. We shall print it. Another question: have you accepted the six selected workers for the Committee? Answer without fail. We strongly advise you to accept workers on to the Committee, at any rate half. Without this you will not strengthen yourselves against the Mensheviks, who will send strong reinforcements from here. No one writes from the Bureau about the Congress. This makes us anxious, for the Nymph’s [a nickname of one of Gusev’s colleagues] optimism (and partly your own), that the Central Committee consent to the Congress is a plus, inspires us with gigantic fears. It is as clear as daylight to us that the Central Committee wanted to fool you. You must be a Among the global catastrophes that threatened peace during the 1990s was the flow of refugees from areas of conflict toward safety. This type of problem is not new. In 1945 millions of German Holocaust survivors were displaced after the collapse of Hitler’s Third Reich. In 1979 hundreds of thousands of Vietnamese fled their war-torn YOU ARE THERE: YOU ARE THERE: YOU ARE THERE: You’ve got so many lice, your clothes are crawling with them. But killing them gives you something to do while being shelled. • Lose 10,000 troops. Poison gas your side has launched blows back over your own troops. Two friends didn’t get their masks on in time. • Lose 20,000 troops. Rats eat last night’s rations you were saving. Go hungry. • Lose 10,000 troops. ✃ YOU ARE THERE: YOU ARE THERE: Nights are cold and wet. Two of your toes get frostbitten. Go to the hospital. • Lose 10,000 troops. Supplies didn’t make it through the lines. You are being shelled but must wait for more ammo and go hungry until supplies arrive. • Lose 30,000 troops. YOU ARE THERE: YOU ARE THERE: Barbed wire cuts your hand. It’s so infected you can’t operate a gun. Go to the hospital until you’re recalled to duty. • Lose 10,000 troops. Dug in, you sit under heavy fire. The roar of impact has made your ears bleed. In a rare lull, you and a comrade take advantage of the quiet and share whispered memories of home. THE BIG PICTURE: THE BIG PICTURE: THE BIG PICTURE: Tannenberg Allied cost: 30,000 dead/92,000 prisoners; Central cost: 13,000 dead. • You have no gun to fight with. Pick one up from your comrades who fell before you. Ypres Allied cost: 60,000 dead; Central cost: 130,000 dead. • Poison gas is introduced here. Everyone panics trying to escape. You see thousands die, gasping for air. Verdun Allied cost: 375,000 dead; Central cost: 375,000 dead. • For nearly two years both sides make countless attacks and retreats. The front moves fewer than 10 miles. THE BIG PICTURE: THE BIG PICTURE: At Sea Allied cost: 50,000 dead; Central cost: 20,000 dead. • Blockades by both sides make supplies at the front and at home scarce. Your rations are cut in half. THE BIG PICTURE: THE BIG PICTURE: The Marne Allied cost: 110,000 dead; Central cost: 140,000 dead. • This is the war’s first Allied victory. But all that really means is that you won’t be home by Christmas after all. THE BIG PICTURE: • Lose 10,000 troops. ✃ ✃ Belgian Campaign Allied cost: 100,000 dead; Central cost: 50,000 dead. • You see men from your own unit beating civilians and looting. One of them is shot by a sniper. ✃ THE BIG PICTURE: Outside Paris Allied cost: 70,000 dead; Central cost: 120,000 dead. • To protect Paris, taxicabs are requisitioned to transport troops into position. Escaping Parisians clog the roads. ✃ Class ! Passchendaele Allied cost: 210,000 dead; Central cost: 270,000 dead. • Neither side understands why the enemy (a valiant but inferior fighting force) hasn’t crumbled. s many as 2 million Bosnians lost their homes in the civil war there and are now scattered and adrift across Europe. Many in that refugee diaspora [dispersion] will soon attempt to put down new roots in their old land. The international powers, which have invested so much in fostering military and political stability in the former Yugoslavia, owe it to the Bosnians and to the cause of peace to help in the resettlement. For if the refugee effort fails on a broad scale or is mired in widespread turmoil, all of the international community’s other efforts will be hardpressed to succeed. . . . But the number of returnees to date pales beside the 830,000 more dislocated persons UNHCR [United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees] anticipates will try to resettle in Bosnia by year-end, beginning in the spring. The first step in staving off a potential fiasco is filling the $353 million Balkan funding request the UNHCR issued to donor nations earlier this month. Washington legislators must not allow campaign politicking to prevent the United States from contributing its share. The second step is encouraging other inter-national development agencies to follow the lead of the World Bank, which last week announced a $450 million loan package for Bosnian redevelopment. Especially important to the reconstruction agenda will be support for de-mining. About 3 million land mines have been sown in Bosnia, many in residential areas, and the painstaking, unglamorous job of removal will in many cases determine the success of the resettlement efforts. DIRECTIONS: Complete the activities described below. Write your editorial on a separate sheet of paper. 1. Discuss the passage with a small group of classmates. What is the writer’s point of view? Do you agree or disagree? 2. Working individually, write an editorial supporting or rebutting the argument made in the passage. 3. Meet again with your group to share and discuss completed editorials. R R The following videotape programs are available from Glencoe as supplements to Chapter 23: • Woodrow Wilson: Reluctant Warrior (ISBN 0–7670–0101–X) • Nicholas and Alexandra (ISBN 1–56501–514–2) • Rasputin: The Mad Monk (ISBN 0–7670–0189–3) 714A Name ★ Date Cooperative Learning Activity Class 23 ★ World War I Political Cartoons country in makeshift boats, hoping to find a haven in foreign lands. More recently, wars in Afghanistan and the Balkans have created enormous refugee populations. Read the following passage from a March 1996 newspaper editorial about refugees from the Bosnian civil war. BACKGROUND The onset of World War I was marked by intense nationalism and military rivalry among the nations of Europe. During that era, and in other times of great political upheaval, political cartoons published in newspapers and magazines have managed to convey important and complex ideas and opinions, and they did so in ways that speeches, writings, and other forms of communication could not. Political cartoons remain a unique and sophisticated form of art and political rhetoric even today. By creating political cartoons, you will better understand how they work and why they can be so effective. You will also use political (or editorial) cartooning to examine causes of World War I. A YOU ARE THERE: You’re lying facedown in mud trying to get back to your trench. Bullets whiz over your head. You notice a shell crater and roll in. • Lose a turn. YOU ARE THERE: ✃ The Somme Allied cost: 200,000 dead; Central cost: 175,000 dead. • Tanks are introduced here, but they cannot cross the trenches. You see one hit directly. Everyone inside is burned. Cooperative Learning Activity 23 L1/ELL The Plight of Refugees HANDOUT MATERIAL Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 5. To what emotions do you think the artist is trying to appeal? _________________________ Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 2. What is the persuasive point of the poster? _________________________________________ pessimist so far as the Central Committee is concerned. For God’s sake do not trust it! Take advantage of the moment to force Menshevik Committees and especially weak Committees to appear. It is extremely important to exert pressure on Kiev, Rostov, and Kharkov. We know that in these three centers there are “Vpered” supporters, both among the workers and the intelligentsia. Whatever happens, they must send delegates to the Congress with a consultative vote. Write to the Nymph and the Demon [another member of the Bureau] about all this. The same applies to the Moscow printers. It is a great pity that the Bureau did not publish our decision to invite Workers’ Organisations to the Congress: that was a terrible mistake. Put it right at once and without fail. I would strongly advise an agitation among the three hundred organised [Bolshevik] workers in St. Petersburg that they should send at their own expense one or two delegates to the Congress with a consultative vote. That will probably flatter the workers and they will take up the matter enthusiastically. Do not forget that the Mensheviks will do their utmost to discredit the Congress to the workers by saying that there were no workers. This must be taken into account and we must not fail to pay serious attention to the workers being represented. The St. Petersburg workers will surely be able to col- Date Historical Significance Activity 23 23 In the Trenches—Game Cards Guided Reading In this selection, read to learn what problems Lenin faced in organizing workers and persuading them to attend the meeting of the Third Communist Party Congress as delegates. DIRECTIONS: Answer the questions below in the space provided. 1. To whom do you think this poster is addressed? ____________________________________ 4. Why do you think the woman’s hands are outstretched? _____________________________ Name Class ISTORY The Letters of Lenin or radio spots. In the era before television was invented, governments used posters to carry their propagandistic messages. During World War I, governments from both the Allies and the Central Powers used illustrated posters to rally their citizens behind their war cause. 3. Why do you think the artist drew the woman as a smiling, gray-haired, grandmotherly type? __________________________________________________________________________ Date HS A Historical Significance Activity 23 L2 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Enrichment Activity 23 Getting the Message Across ✃ Date Name ★ History Simulation Activity 23 L1 ✃ Name Primary Source Reading 23 L2 To order, call Glencoe at 1–800–334–7344. To find classroom resources to accompany many of these videos, check the following home pages: A&E Television: www.aande.com The History Channel: www.historychannel.com GROUP DIRECTIONS 1. Use Chapter 23 and library or Internet resources to research the causes of World War I with your group. 2. Collect examples of historical political and editorial cartoons as well as current examples from recent daily newspapers and magazines. You might also research some symbols of World War I that were used in cartoons and posters such as the German helmet, Lady Liberty, the British lion, the Russian bear, and so on. 3. Decide on a country and create a World War I political cartoon, with or without a caption, that might have appeared on the editorial page of a newspaper or in a magazine of the day, and that expresses one country’s rationale for entering the war. Pick from one of the following countries: Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Enrichment Activity 23 L3 Great Britain Germany Austria-Hungary Italy Russia United States of America France Canada 4. Your group’s cartoon should be placed on poster board and shared with the class. Try not to explain the cartoon. Let it stand on its own merits without explanation until the viewing audience members have had a chance to “get” it. ORGANIZING THE GROUP 1. Decision Making Decide on a country and assign group members to different tasks such as research, design, and drawing the cartoon. Assign the elements to individual group members according to their talents and interests. ★ Chapter 23 Resources REVIEW AND REINFORCEMENT Linking Past and Present Activity 23 L2 Time Line Activity 23 L2 Name Name ____________________________________ Date ________________ Class __________ Date Reteaching Activity 23 L1 Name Class ‘ Time Line Activity 23 Date Critical Thinking Skills Activity 23 L2 Vocabulary Activity 23 L1 Class Name f Reteaching Activity 23 Date Name Class Date Class Critical Thinking Skills Activity 23 Vocabulary Activity 23 Determining Cause and Effect Linking Past and Present Activity 23 War and Revolution War and Revolution next to the theme it represents, caused, or resulted from. In the right-hand column, explain how each event is related to the theme. Try to place events in more than one category. Examples have been started for you. definitions. Across 1. agreement to end fighting 5. ideology based on Marx and Lenin 6. a set of final conditions that must be met 10. series of defense agreements made between nations (two words) 11. councils composed of representatives from the workers and soldiers 13. complete mobilization of resources and people (two words) 15. government that is only temporary 16. territory administered by another country 17. situation where each side tries to wear down the other by constant attacks (three words) DIRECTIONS: Use the chart below to review the causes, progress, and outcomes of World War I. Complete each item by filling in the blank spaces in the columns. 1882 Italy joins Germany and Austria-Hungary in Triple Alliance. 1904 Entente Cordiale between France and Great Britain 1894 France and Russia sign military alliance. 1912–1913 Balkan Wars World War I: Causes, Progress, and Events Date Causes 1850 1900 1950 July 28, 1914 Austria-Hungary declares war on Serbia. 1918 Civil war in Russia; Wilson presents Fourteen Points January 1916 Allied defeat at Gallipoli June 28, 1919 Signing of Treaty of Versailles April 2, 1917 President Wilson asks Congress to declare war to help Allies. Cooperation Event Explanation Italy joins Germany and Austria-Hungary in Triple Alliance. Alliance brings countries together to support one another against aggressors. Progress on Eastern Front Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. response. the library or on the Internet to learn more about the history of air warfare. Choose one person or event that you think is significant to air warfare. Write a brief explanation of why that person or event should be included in a new video about air warfare. 1921 Russia’s White armies admit defeat. Events Relating to Themes Theme Triple Alliance August– September 1914 September 6-10, 1914 November 11, 1917 Germans sign armistice. September 5, 1914 France and Germany fight the Battle of the Marne. 3. Synthesizing information: Do research in Progress on Western Front November 1917 Coup d´état topples provisional government in Russia. August 3, 1914 Germans invade Belgium. 1882 Event Description Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy agree to mutual protection. 1907 June 1914 June 28, 1914 Assassination of Archduke Francis Ferdinand Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Critical Thinking Directions: Answer the following questions on a separate sheet of paper. 1. Making comparisons: Contrast the importance of combat aircraft today with its importance in World War I. 2. Drawing conclusions: Reflect on the statement “The country that controls the air will always win the war.” Do you agree or disagree with this statement? Explain your War and Revolution: 1914–1919 DIRECTIONS: On the puzzle, fill in the terms across and down that match the numbered The Great War caused human suffering and loss of life on a scale that had never before been experienced. When the war ended, the peace settlement included the payment of heavy reparations. This caused resentment and anger that eventually led to further conflict among European neighbors. DIRECTIONS: Look at the events listed on the time line. Write each event in the chart below Now Today, some wars are fought almost entirely from the air. In 1999 NATO forces used bombers rather than ground troops to end the Serbian effort of genocide against ethnic Albanians. When the United States and its allies pursued Osama bin Laden in 2001, air strikes destroyed the Taliban air force before commandos had even set foot on Afghanistan soil. Today, military aircraft are capable of intercepting and destroying enemy missiles, aircraft, and ships. Some of these aircraft carry enormous “smart bombs” which can be laserguided to hit a specific target. Military cargo planes are strong enough to carry heavy equipment such as tanks or artillery deep into a battle zone. Armored helicopters are capable of tracking enemy movements and engaging in air-to-ground attacks. They also evacuate wounded personnel, conduct search-and-rescue missions, and move troops in or out of battle areas. The first victory attributed mainly to air power was the United States defeat of Iraq in the 1991 Gulf War. Stealth F-117A fighters and B-2 bombers used their virtual invisibility to radar to strike deep into enemy territory, taking out communications centers, air defenses, and chemical warfare factories without being fired upon by Iraqi forces. Today, because planes have become so complex and expensive, and because skilled pilots cannot easily be trained, military planners are experimenting with unmanned aircraft or drones for combat purposes. For example, the X-plane Pegasus, an unmanned plane capable of identifying and destroying enemy targets, fires a Pain Cannon that is capable of disabling an enemy without causing lasting harm. Conflict Revolution later in 1916 April 1917 March– September 1918 November 11, 1918 end of August 1914 Allied forces in retreat Down 2. glorification of war 3. government agency directs efforts to mobilize nation for war (two words) 4. friendly understanding between two nations, but not a full-fledged alliance 7. payments for damages 8. calling-up of citizens for compulsory military service 9. ditch 12. rumors 14. preparing military troops and equipment for war 1 March 1918 and-effect relationships between the events described. earing an attack by Germany, which had signed an alliance with AustriaHungary, France sought its own security arrangement with Russia. This agreement required the parties to support each other against German or Austro-Hungarian aggression. Counting on French support, Russia mobilized against Germany and Austria-Hungary in defense of the Slavs in Serbia. Germany then gave France an ultimatum to remain neutral, but when its conditions were not met, it declared war on France. F Event 1 2 Event 6 3 5 6 8 7 Allied offensives 9 Therefore Therefore 11 10 Event 2 Germany decisively defeats Russian army. 12 14 13 15 Outcome DIRECTIONS: Read the following passage. Then fill in the diagram to illustrate the cause- 4 stalemate Verdun Somme Allied attempt to open a Balkan front fails mid-1915 events that are related by cause and effect: One event causes the next, which causes the next, and so on. This kind of series is called a chain of events. Russian casualties at 2.5 million Russia gives up eastern Poland, Ukraine, Finland, and the Baltic provinces 16 January 1919 June 28, 1919 17 Event 5 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Then “Aviation is good sport,” proclaimed French General Foch in 1914, “but for warfare it is useless!” One reason for the general’s opinion was that early aircraft carried no weapons. However, less than one year later, the French had figured out how to fire a machine gun without damaging the plane’s propeller. On April 1, 1915, Lieutenant Roland Garros shot down a German plane using such a device. Within a few weeks, Germans learned the secret of his weapon when Garros was forced to make an emergency landing behind enemy lines. The German Anthony Fokker improved French technology, timing bullets to fire between the blades of a turning propeller. In August 1915, the Germans began shooting back. The resulting air war became a battle of aces, with skilled pilots shooting down enemy planes in dogfights. Because planes were flimsy, casualties were high. A pilot’s average life expectancy after arriving at the front was three to six weeks. When World War I began in 1914, the United States didn’t even have an air force. Volunteer American pilots flew with France’s Lafayette Escadrille. During the battles of St. Mihiel and Mense-Argonne, General Billy Mitchell organized hundreds of aircraft to support advancing allied troops. After the war ended General Mitchell began advocating for an independent U.S. Air Force. Mitchell was one of the few military personnel who realized that planes could support ground attacks and even sink ships. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Air Warfare When historians attempt to record and make sense of the events of a particular era, they look at causes and results of those events. Often they discover a series of Therefore Therefore Event 3 Event 4 Therefore Internationalism ASSESSMENT AND EVALUATION Chapter 23 Test Form A L2 Chapter 23 Test Form B L2 ExamView® Pro Testmaker CD-ROM Performance Assessment Activity 23 L1/ELL Standardized Test Practice Workbook Activity 23 L2 Name 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 Date 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 Class 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 Name 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 Date 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 Class 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 ✔ ★ Performance Assessment Activity 23 Name 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 Date 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 Class 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 ✔ Score Chapter 23 Test, Form A Name __________________________________ Date ____________________ Class ____________ Standardized Test Practice Score Chapter 23 Test, Form B Use with Chapter 23. A CTIVITY 23 Making Decisions War and Revolution DIRECTIONS: Matching Match each item in Column A with the items in Column B. Write the correct letters in the blanks. (4 points each) DIRECTIONS: Matching Match each item in Column A with the items in Column B. Write the correct letters in the blanks. (4 points each) Column A Column A ★ BACKGROUND 1. a military draft A. propaganda 1. his assassination started World War I A. war of attrition 2. assassinated Archduke Francis Ferdinand and his wife Sophia B. mandate C. conscription 2. the process of assembling troops and supplies and making them ready for war C. Central Powers 3. the spread of ideas to influence public opinion for or against a cause D. Erich von Ludendorff 3. kept the Western Front in virtually the same positions for four years D. David Lloyd George 4. Great Britain, France, Italy, and Russia E. planned economies 4. wearing the other side down with constant attacks and heavy losses E. trench warfare “I am young, I am twenty years old; yet I know nothing of life but despair, death, fear, and fatuous superficiality cast over an abyss of sorrow. I see how peoples are set against one another, and in silence, unknowingly, foolishly, obediently, innocently slay one another. I see that the keenest brains in the world invent weapons and words to make it yet more refined and enduring. And all men of my age, here and over there, throughout the whole world see these things; all my generation is experiencing these things with me.” This quote is from Erich Maria Remarque’s All Quiet on the Western Front, written in 1928. It is an account written by a German soldier of what it was like to survive in the trenches of World War I. 5. Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, Germany, and the Ottoman Empire F. F. ★ TASK Column B 6. urged princes in the Middle East to revolt against their Ottoman overlords Communists Archduke Francis Ferdinand H. self-determination You will present a journal account of an episode from World War I, written in the first person. You will focus on the thoughts and feelings of your narrator, but you should also provide some factual details to give your account a realistic context. I. Allied Powers 7. head of the Petrograd soviet and, later, commissar of war I. League of Nations ★ AUDIENCE J. Lawrence of Arabia 8. world organization created at the Paris Peace Conference to prevent future wars J. Leon Trotsky G. Gavrilo Princip G. Grigori Rasputin 6. uneducated Siberian peasant who claimed to be a holy man to influence Alexandra H. War Guilt Clause 7. new name for the Bolsheviks after they seized power 8. general who guided German military operations 9. declared that Germany and Austria were responsible for starting World War I B. mobilization 10. a nation officially governed by another nation on behalf of the League of Nations Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 13. The Western Front was characterized by A. the slow but steady advance of the German army. B. trench warfare that kept both sides in virtually the same positions for four years. C. decisive victories by the French army, quickly driving back the German forces. D. innovative strategy and tactics that fully utilized the new technologies available to both armies. DIRECTIONS: Multiple Choice Choose the item that best completes each sentence or answers each question. Write the letter of the item in the blank to the left of the sentence. (4 points each) 11. •Find out what issue requires a decision. •List the alternative decisions available to you. •Identify the positive and negative consequences of each choice. • Evaluate each choice and its consequences in light of your goals and values. • Make a decision and put it into effect. ★ Practicing the Skill —the aggressive preparation for war—was growing along with nations’ armies. A. Conscription C. Warmongering B. Militarism D. Mobilization 12. The Schlieffen Plan was A. Austria-Hungary’s attempt to negotiate a peaceful settlement with Serbia. B. Germany’s proposal for dividing up Serbia between Russia and Austria-Hungary. C. the Black Hand’s plan to assassinate the heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne. D. Germany’s plan for a two-front war with Russia and France, who had formed a military alliance. Your purpose is to explore the emotional and philosophical impact of a World War I event. After winning independence from Great Britain, the United States officially declared its desire to avoid any permanent “entangling” alliances with European nations. In the early part of the twentieth century, as the United States became a key player on the global stage, the rush of the world’s nations toward war challenged this policy. Study the following statements of American foreign policy, including the excerpt from Wilson’s Appeal for Neutrality. Then complete the activity that follows. ★ PROCEDURES 1. Select an event from World War I that you would like to explore. It can be a battle, victory, defeat, or any other occurrence related to the war. Statements of American Foreign Policy 2. Identify the narrator of your journal account. It can be a soldier, a military or political leader, a nurse or doctor, a civilian in one of the warring countries, or anyone else who would have been affected by war. Washington’s Farewell Address, September 17, 1796 “Why, by interweaving our destiny with that of any part of Europe, entangle our peace and prosperity in the toils of European ambition, rivalship, interest, humor, or caprice? It is our true policy to steer clear of permanent alliances with any portion of the foreign world…” 3. Read excerpts from All Quiet on the Western Front and other World War I narratives to get ideas for your journal account. Pay particular attention to passages in which characters describe their thoughts and feelings. The Monroe Doctrine, 1823 “Our policy in regard to Europe, which was adopted at an early age of the wars which so long agitated the globe, nevertheless remains the same, which is, not to interfere in internal affairs of any of its powers…” 4. Conduct research on the event you have chosen to write about. Take notes on details that you can use to add realism to your account. 5. Keeping in mind the event and narrator you have chosen and what you have learned from your research, decide on the specific experiences you will describe. Also decide on the time frame for your journal. It may be a day, several days, or longer. Wilson’s Appeal for Neutrality, August 19, 1914 “The effect of the war upon the United States will depend upon what American citizens say and do. Every man who really loves America will act and speak in the true spirit of neutrality, which is the spirit of impartiality and fairness and friendliness to all concerned…. The people of the United States are drawn from many nations, and chiefly from the nations now at war…. Some will wish one nation, others another, to succeed in the momentous struggle…. Such divisions amongst us would be fatal to our peace of mind and might seriously stand in the way of the proper performance of our duty as the one great nation at peace, the one people holding itself ready to play a part of impartial mediation and speak the counsels of peace and accommodation, not as a partisan, but as a friend. 6. Write your journal. Be sure to include sensory details to bring forth the experience. Make it as real as possible, so that others can feel what you have felt while writing about the event 13. The German advance toward Paris was halted at A. the Battle of Tannenburg. C. the Battle of Marne. B. the French-Belgian border. D. the German-Belgian border. INTERDISCIPLINARY ACTIVITIES Mapping History Activity 23 L2 Date World Art and Music Activity 23 L2 History and Geography Activity 23 L2 Class Name Mapping History Activity 23 World Art and Date Name Class Music Activi ty 23 ★ World War I in the Balkans When fighting broke out in Europe in 1914, the Allies and the Central Powers fought for control of the Balkan Peninsula and the Ottoman Empire. Songwriter, actor, producer, and playwright, George M. Cohan had a long and successful theatrical career, beginning as a child in his parents’ vaudeville act and continuing for 60 years. Many of his songs are still instantly recognizable. Balkan Peninsula and Surrounding Regions, 1914 ROMANIA Bucharest IAT IC Prizven A ALBANIA Tirana Constanz BLACK SEA BULGARIA Sofia Skopje Constantinople Salonika Gallipoli ITALY The Central Powers led an OTTOMAN offensive against Serbia in Valona AEGEAN GREECE EMPIRE 1915. Attacks were launched SEA IONIAN from Austria-Hungary just N SEA north of Belgrade and from Athens Sofia. The armies came W E together west of Skopje near S 0 100 200 miles the Albanian border. Another MEDITERRANEAN SEA 0 150 300 kilometers attack came from Sarajevo and pushed south into Albania. In 1916 the German forces that had succeeded in moving the Eastern Front into Russia turned south to conquer Romania. Falkenhayn led an offensive from several points in southeastern AustriaHungary toward the capital city of Bucharest and the Black Sea port of Constanz. Mackensen led forces from northeastern Bulgaria to these same cities. All of the territory north of the line running from Valona to Salonika fell into Central Powers’ hands. The Allies finally were able to counterattack. In 1918 they moved in from Greek territory. The French and British troops arrived at the port of Salonika. From there, they drove north through Serbia to Belgrade and from there to Budapest. The Central Powers were unable to halt the advances of the Allied troops. Other regiments battled on to Sofia and to Constantinople in order to end the Central Powers’ dominance over the peninsula. a. Using red markers, draw arrows to show the movements of the Central Powers’ troops. b. Shade in the territory conquered by the Central Powers. c. Using blue markers, draw in the counteroffensive staged by the Allies in Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. A DR SE eorge Michael Cohan was born on July 3, 1878, but always celebrated his birthday on July 4, Independence Day. Cohan was the child of two successful vaudeville performers and both he and his sister joined the act, which became known as The Four Cohans. Vaudeville was the most popular form of entertainment in the United States during the late 1800s. Vaudeville took the form of a variety show and often included between 8 and 20 short performances, or acts, in an evening. Most of these were comedy sketches or musical numbers. Child performers like the younger Cohans were common in vaudeville— they were great audience favorites. Trained animal acts or circus performers might also be on the bill. For example, W. C. Fields appeared as a juggler on the vaudeville stage before he became George M. Cohan, 1878–1942 famous for his comedy films. Judy Garland, Jack Benny, George Burns and Gracie Allen, Buster Keaton, and Charlie Chaplin are among the many performers who, like Cohan, began their careers in vaudeville and went on to great success in Hollywood. G Belgrade SERBIA MONTE- Nish NEGRO Cohan began writing material for The Four Cohans when he was 11. He wrote his first song at 13. In 1904 he entered a partnership with Sam H. Harris to produce and manage Broadway shows. Many of the plays they produced were Cohan’s own work, including Broadway Jones, Forty-five Minutes from Broadway, and Little Johnny Jones. At the turn of the century, most musicals appearing on Broadway were European operettas featuring princesses and noblemen in mythical Balkan countries. The plots were romantic and the music consisted of lush waltzes and love duets, with the orchestrations relying heavily on violins and woodwinds. Cohan’s musicals, by contrast, featured brisk, brassy marching rhythms and American subjects and characters. Some of his best-loved tunes, including “Give My Regards to Broadway” and “Yankee Doodle Dandy,” were written for these shows. Their popularity paved the way for many future American playwrights, composers, and lyricists to write what became known as “Broadway musicals”: Showboat, Oklahoma!, Carousel, and West Side Story, for example. (continued) Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. DIRECTIONS: Read the passage below about this American popular songwriter. Then answer the questions in the space provided. Budapest AUSTRIA- HUNGARY Allies Central Powers Sarajevo Date Class Where there had once been green forests and groves, there was now only the occasional leafless, branchless tree. Autumn had come to the Somme valley of France in 1916. But it was an artificial autumn, brought on by bombs, bullets, and hand grenades. How did advances in military technology change the nature of warfare with the outbreak of World War I? Before World War I, vacationing Parisians used to flock north to the Somme River. The waterway flowed lazily through a gentle countryside dotted with rich farms, quaint villages, and thickly wooded hills. Happy to escape the stresses of city life, the Parisians swam in the Somme, strolled through the woods, and nibbled on bread and cheese from the local bakeries and farms. The tourists barely dented the local food supply. For hundreds of years, the rolling plains around the Somme had been one of France’s leading agricultural regions. Wheat, barley, oats, sugar beets, and all manner of fruits and vegetables grew in the area’s fertile Date Class ld History: Activity People in Wor 23 P r o f i le 1 Archduke Francis Ferdinand (1863–1914) soil. Farmers raised cattle by the thousands and produced cheese and butter by the ton. When the opposing armies arrived at the Somme in 1916, they dug trenches A Desolate Landscape I reached a [crossroads] where four lanes broadened into a confused patch of destruction. Fallen trees, shell holes, a hurriedly dug trench beginning and ending in an uncertain manner, abandoned rifles, broken branches with their sagging leaves, an unopened box of ammunition, sandbags half-filled with bombs, a derelict machine-gun propping up the head of an immobile figure in uniform, with a belt of ammunition drooping from the breech into a pile of red-stained earth—this is the livery of War. Shells were falling, over and short, near and wide, to show that somewhere over the hill a gunner was playing the part of blind fate for all who walked past this well-marked spot. Here, in the struggle between bursting iron and growing timber, iron had triumphed. . . . —From Up To Mametz, by L. W. Griffith (1923) “Over the top!” resounded along Allied lines as soldiers poured from their trenches into No Man’s Land. The scarred remains of a forest show the devastating effects of trench warfare on the countryside near the Somme River. MULTIMEDIA Vocabulary PuzzleMaker CD-ROM Interactive Tutor Self-Assessment CD-ROM ExamView® Pro Testmaker CD-ROM Audio Program World History Primary Source Document Library CD-ROM Name HISTORY AND GEOGRAPHY ACTIVITY 23 The Battle of the Somme George M. Cohan DIRECTIONS: The map below shows these areas. Use the map to complete the activities that follow. Write your answers on a separate sheet of paper. 1. Which countries in the Balkan Peninsula sided with the Allies? 2. Why was it important for the Allies to attempt the Gallipoli invasion? 3. Why did it make sense for both AustriaHungary and Bulgaria to attempt an attack on Romania? 4. Read the following passage, then follow the instructions below. People in World History Activity 23 L2 MindJogger Videoquiz Presentation Plus! CD-ROM TeacherWorks CD-ROM Interactive Student Edition CD-ROM The World History Video Program Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Name Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 12. In 1914 was considered an act of war. A. assassination of a member of royalty C. mobilization of a nation’s army B. ending diplomatic relations D. breaking a military alliance Use the following guidelines to help you make a decision. Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 11. What was the name of the group that conspired to assassinate Archduke Francis Ferdinand? A. the Serbian People’s Front C. the Bosnian Militia B. the Red Band D. the Black Hand In problem solving, a choice made among two or more alternative courses of action is known as a decision. Your final decision should not conflict with your goals or values, so you must weigh each choice carefully. ★ Learning to Make a Decision Your audience includes the teacher and other students. 10. the right of each people to have its own nation DIRECTIONS: Multiple Choice Choose the item that best completes each sentence or answers each question. Write the letter of the item in the blank to the left of the sentence. (4 points each) Reading Objective 4: The student will perceive relationships and recognize outcomes in a variety of written texts. Writing Objective 1: The student will respond appropriately in a written composition to the purpose/audience specified in a given topic. ★ PURPOSE 9. prime minister of Great Britain, who wanted to make the Germans pay for the war Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 5. systems directed by government agencies in order to mobilize resources for the war effort Column B Describing the death of a soldier in Shakespeare’s Macbeth, the king’s son says, “Nothing in his life became him like the leaving it.” Archduke Francis Ferdinand, too, is remembered for the way he died, for his death was the spark that ignited World War I. Francis Ferdinand was born in Graz, Austria, the eldest son of Archduke Charles Louis and the nephew of Emperor Francis Joseph. When he was 12 years old, Francis Ferdinand inherited the title archduke of Austria-Este. He became heir to the AustroHungarian Empire in 1899, after the deaths of his father and his cousin, Crown Prince Rudolph. However, since Francis Ferdinand’s health was poor, most people assumed that the throne would go to his younger brother Otto. This made Francis Ferdinand very bitter. There were other conflicts as well. Francis Ferdinand was deeply in love with Countess Sophie Chotek, duchess of Hohenberg. The countess was of a much lower social rank than Francis Ferdinand. As the heir apparent to the AustroHungarian Empire, he was expected to marry someone of equal rank, such as the queen or princess of a great empire. After much strife, Francis Ferdinand was allowed to marry Sophie —but only after he relinquished all claim to the throne for his children. The morganatic marriage disallowing Sophie and their children any of the rights guaranteed by Francis Ferdinand’s status took place in 1900. Francis Ferdinand tried to influence foreign affairs, but he had little success because of limitations placed on his power by Francis Joseph, who remained emperor. From 1906 on, however, he did exert greater influence on military issues. In 1913 he became the inspector general of the army, but his time in this office was tragically cut short. In June 1914, he and his wife were assassinated at Sarajevo by the Serb nationalist Gavrilo Princip. World War I began a month later, when Austria declared war against Serbia. REVIEWING THE PROFILE Directions: Answer the following questions on a separate sheet of paper. 1. Why is Archduke Francis Ferdinand significant in history? 2. What made Archduke Francis Ferdinand bitter? 3. What were the expectations about the kind of person the Archduke would marry? 4. Critical Thinking Determining Cause and Effect. What were the consequences of Archduke Francis Ferdinand’s marriage? 5. Critical Thinking Predicting Consequences. What influence do you think Archduke Francis Ferdinand might have had on history had he lived? Explain your answer. SPANISH RESOURCES The following Spanish language materials are available: • Spanish Guided Reading Activities • Spanish Reteaching Activities • Spanish Quizzes and Tests • Spanish Vocabulary Activities • Spanish Summaries • Spanish Reading Essentials and Study Guide 714B Chapter 23 Resources SECTION RESOU RCES Daily Objectives SECTION 1 The Road to World War I 1. Discuss how militarism, nationalism, and a crisis in the Balkans led to World War I. 2. Explain why Serbia’s determination to become a large, independent state angered Austria-Hungary and initiated hostilities. SECTION 2 The War 1. Report how the stalemate at the Western Front led to new alliances, a widening of the war, and new weapons. 2. Summarize how governments expanded their powers, increased opportunities for women, and made use of propaganda. SECTION 3 The Russian Revolution 1. Explain how poor leadership led to the fall of the czarist regime in Russia. 2. Relate how the Bolsheviks came to power under Lenin. 3. Describe how Communist forces triumphed over anti-Communist forces. SECTION 4 End of the War 1. Report how combined Allied forces stopped the German offensive. 2. Explain how peace settlements brought political and territorial changes to Europe and created bitterness and resentment in several nations. Reproducible Resources Multimedia Resources Reproducible Lesson Plan 23–1 Daily Lecture and Discussion Notes 23–1 Guided Reading Activity 23–1* Section Quiz 23–1* Reading Essentials and Study Guide 23–1* Daily Focus Skills Transparency 23–1 Interactive Tutor Self-Assessment CD-ROM ExamView® Pro Testmaker CD-ROM* Presentation Plus! CD-ROM Reproducible Lesson Plan 23–2 Daily Lecture and Discussion Notes 23–2 Guided Reading Activity 23–2* Section Quiz 23–2* Reading Essentials and Study Guide 23–2* Daily Focus Skills Transparency 23–2 Interactive Tutor Self-Assessment CD-ROM ExamView® Pro Testmaker CD-ROM* Presentation Plus! CD-ROM Reproducible Lesson Plan 23–3 Daily Lecture and Discussion Notes 23–3 Guided Reading Activity 23–3* Section Quiz 23–3* Reading Essentials and Study Guide 23–3* Daily Focus Skills Transparency 23–3 Interactive Tutor Self-Assessment CD-ROM ExamView® Pro Testmaker CD-ROM* Presentation Plus! CD-ROM Reproducible Lesson Plan 23–4 Daily Lecture and Discussion Notes 23–4 Guided Reading Activity 23–4* Section Quiz 23–4* Reteaching Activity 23* Reading Essentials and Study Guide 23–4* Daily Focus Skills Transparency 23–4 Interactive Tutor Self-Assessment CD-ROM ExamView® Pro Testmaker CD-ROM* Presentation Plus! CD-ROM Assign the Chapter 23 Reading Essentials and Study Guide. *Also Available in Spanish 714C Blackline Master Transparency CD-ROM DVD Poster Music Program Audio Program Videocassette Chapter 23 Resources Teacher’s Corner INDEX TO NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MAGAZINE The following articles relate to this chapter: • “Riddle of the Lusitania,” by Robert D. Ballard, April 1994. • “The Bolshevik Revolution: Experiment That Failed,” by Dusko Doder, October 1992. NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SOCIETY PRODUCTS To order the following, call National Geographic at 1-800-368-2728: • 1914–1918: World War I (Video) • 1917: Revolution in Russia (Video) • The Rise and Fall of the Soviet Union (Video) Access National Geographic’s new dynamic MapMachine Web site and other geography resources at: www.nationalgeographic.com www.nationalgeographic.com/maps MEETING SPECIAL NEEDS In addition to the Differentiated Instruction strategies found in each section, the following resources are also suitable for your special needs students: • • • • ExamView® Pro Testmaker CD-ROM allows teachers to tailor tests by reducing answer choices. The Audio Program includes the entire narrative of the student edition so that less-proficient readers can listen to the words as they read them. The Reading Essentials and Study Guide provides the same content as the student edition but is written two grade levels below the textbook. Guided Reading Activities give less-proficient readers point-by-point instructions to increase comprehension as they read each textbook section. KEY TO ABILITY LEVELS WORLD HISTORY Use our Web site for additional resources. All essential content is covered in the Student Edition. You and your students can visit www.wh.glencoe.com , the Web site companion to Glencoe World History. This innovative integration of electronic and print media offers your students a wealth of opportunities. The student text directs students to the Web site for the following options: • Chapter Overviews • Self-Check Quizzes • Student Web Activities • Textbook Updates Answers to the Student Web Activities are provided for you in the Web Activity Lesson Plans. Additional Web resources and Interactive Tutor Puzzles are also available. From the Classroom of… Daniel W. Blackmon Coral Gables Senior High School Miami, Florida Terrorism Then and Now Direct students to the “World War I Primary Document Archive” site maintained by Brigham Young University Library: www.lib.byu.edu/~rdh/wwi/. Have them do a word search for the Serbian nationalist society, Narodna Odbrana. It was within this society that another secret band was formed called The Black Hand, whose members were responsible for the assassination of Archduke Francis Ferdinand, an act that ultimately resulted in the start of World War I. Of the 30 or so documents found, ask students to read “World War I, the Narodna Odbrana,” “The Black Hand,” “World War I, the Assassination of Archduke Ferdinand” plus three documents of their choosing. At a later date, when the students have completed the assigned reading, lead a class discussion comparing and contrasting the Narodna Odbrana with known terrorist groups of today. Teaching strategies have been coded. L1 L2 L3 ELL BASIC activities for all students AVERAGE activities for average to above-average students CHALLENGING activities for above-average students ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNER activities Activities that are suited to use within the block scheduling framework are identified by: 714D Introducing CHAPTER 23 War and Revolution Performance Assessment Refer to Activity 23 in the Performance Assessment Activities and Rubrics booklet. 1914–1919 Key Events As you read this chapter, look for the key events of World War I, the Russian Revolution, and the Paris Peace Conference. • Archduke Francis Ferdinand was assassinated by a Serbian nationalist. • Militarism, nationalism, and alliances drew nations into war. • The United States’s entry into the war helped the Allies. • The impact of the war at home led to an increase in the federal government’s powers and changed the status of women. • The Russian Revolution ended with the Communists in power. • Peace settlements caused lingering resentment. • The League of Nations was formed. The Impact Today Explain to students that World War I was larger in scope and scale than any prior war and that it left lasting resentments, some of which still exist today. Ask students to find evidence of World War I’s repercussions in current world events or in their own family history. SS.A.3.4.9 The Impact Today The events that occurred during this period still impact our lives today. • World War I led to the disintegration of empires and the creation of new states. • Communism became a factor in global conflict as other nations turned to its ideology. • The Balkans continue to be an area of political unrest. The World History Video Program World History Video The Chapter 23 video, “Modern Warfare,” chronicles innovations in warfare during the twentieth century. To learn more about World War I, students can view the Chapter 23 video, “Modern Warfare,” from The World History Video Program. 1914 Assassination of Archduke Ferdinand sparks World War I MindJogger Videoquiz Use the MindJogger Videoquiz to preview Chapter 23 content. 1914 Available in VHS. 1915 1916 1915 German submarine sinks the Lusitania German U-boat 714 STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 714 PURPOSE FOR READING Capsule Vocabulary This strategy helps students use vocabulary they encounter in their reading and deepens their understanding of complex words and ideas. Write the words trench warfare, poison gas, tank, machine guns, rockets, submarine, and Red Baron on the board or overhead. Have students pair up and start a conversation using as many of these words as possible. Then ask them to write down some of their exchanges. They can track the words as they read the chapter, correcting and expanding on their usage. L1 Refer to Inclusion for the High School Social Studies Classroom Strategies and Activities in the TCR. Introducing CHAPTER 23 Chapter Objectives After studying this chapter, students should be able to: 1. define the Triple Alliance and the Triple Entente; 2. summarize the causes of World War I; 3. describe the stalemate on the Western Front and events on the Eastern Front; 4. explain innovations in warfare; 5. explain what is meant by “total war” and its effects; 6. trace the fall of czarist Russia and the rise of the Communists; 7. explain the Allies’ victory; 8. list the major provisions of the Treaty of Versailles. HISTORY Battle of the Somme by Richard Woodville The Battle of the Somme was one of the bloodiest battles of World War I. Chapter Overview Introduce students to chapter content and key terms by having them access Chapter Overview 23 at wh.glencoe.com . Bolsheviks in Russia 1917 Russian Revolution begins 1917 1917 United States enters the war HISTORY 1919 Allies sign Treaty of Versailles 1918 1918 Germany agrees to truce Chapter Overview Visit the Glencoe World History Web site at wh.glencoe.com wh.glencoe.com click andand click on Chapter 23–Chapter 5–Chapter Overview to preview chapter information. information. 1919 People celebrating the end of the war Time Line Activity Have students explain the significance of the dates 1914 through 1918. How many years after the start of World War I did the United States become involved in the war? (3 years) How long after the United States’s involvement did Germany agree to a truce? (1 year) L1 FCAT MA.A.3.4.3 715 MORE ABOUT THE ART Battle of the Somme The Battle of the Somme began on July 1, 1916, along a 25-mile (40.2 km) front near the Somme River in France. It was a devastating campaign for both Allied and German forces. As students will read in A Story That Matters on the next page, on the first day of fighting the British lost about 21,000 men. Four months later, the Allied forces had advanced just five miles (8 km). Allied and German casualties totaled approximately one million. The battle was one of the costliest in history. In Britain, the enormous costs of this battle contributed to the first signs of war weariness. An interesting exercise for students would be to compare the depiction of the battle on this page with firsthand accounts. Dinah Zike’s Foldables are threedimensional, interactive graphic organizers that help students practice basic writing skills, review key vocabulary terms, and identify main ideas. Have students complete the foldable activity in the Dinah Zike’s Reading and Study Skills Foldables booklet. 715 Introducing A Story That Matters Depending upon the ability levels of your students, select from the following questions to reinforce the reading of A Story That Matters. 1. When and where did this battle begin? (July 1, 1916) Who were the opposing forces? (British and French against the Germans) 2. What was “No-Man’s-Land”? (unoccupied area between opposing armies) 3. What details in the story suggest that this was, in fact, a Great War? (the great number of lives lost, the large amount of equipment, the violence and destruction described) L1 L2 Advancing troops in the Battle of the Somme British artillery firing on the Germans at the Battle of the Somme The Battle of the Somme O n July 1, 1916, British and French infantry forces attacked German defensive lines along a front about 25 miles (40 km) long near the Somme River in France. Each soldier carried almost 70 (32 kg) pounds of equipment, including a rifle, ammunition, grenades, a shovel, a mess kit, and a full water bottle. This burden made it “impossible to move much quicker than a slow walk.” German machine guns soon opened fire. “We were able to see our comrades move forward in an attempt to cross No-Man’s-Land, only to be mown down like meadow grass,” recalled one British soldier. Another wrote later, “I felt sick at the sight of this carnage and remember weeping.” Philip Gibbs, an English journalist with the troops, reported on what he found in the German trenches that the British forces overran: “Victory! . . . Groups of dead lay in ditches which had once been trenches, flung into chaos by that bombardment I had seen. . . . Some of the German dead were young boys, too young to be killed for old men’s crimes, and others might have been old or young. One could not tell because they had no faces, and were just masses of raw flesh in rags of uniforms. Legs and arms lay separate without any bodies thereabouts.” In the first day of the Battle of the Somme, about 21,000 British soldiers died. After four months of fighting, the British had advanced five miles (eight km). About one million Allied and German soldiers lay dead or wounded. About the Art At the Battle of the Somme, the British introduced a new weapon—an armored vehicle called the tank. However, it made little difference to the outcome of the struggle. Tanks were still too clumsy, too slow, and too prone to mechanical failure to be an effective weapon. The generals on both sides did not yet understand how best to use them. The following literature from the Glencoe Literature Library may enrich the teaching of this chapter: All Quiet on the Western Front by E. M. Remarque STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 716 Why It Matters World War I (1914–1918) devastated the economic, social, and political order of Europe. People at the time, overwhelmed by the size of the war’s battles and the number of casualties, simply called it the Great War. The war was all the more disturbing to Europeans because it came after a period that many believed to have been an age of progress. World War I and the revolutions it spawned can properly be seen as the first stage in the crisis of the twentieth century. History and You Look online or in the library for a speech delivered by Woodrow Wilson or another leader, explaining the reasons for entering the war. Analyze the arguments. How might someone opposed to the war counter those arguments? 716 HISTORY AND YOU After reading the story, ask students to imagine that they are a soldier on the Western Front fighting for either side. Have them write a letter to their country’s leader about life at war. How would they feel about life on the Western Front? How would they characterize their purpose for being there? How would they feel about the enemy? What requests would they make of their leader? What would their hopes be for the future? Encourage students to be creative in their approach and writing style and to share their letters with the class. L1 CHAPTER 23 The Road to World War I Section 1, 717–720 1 FOCUS Guide to Reading Section Overview Main Ideas People to Identify Reading Strategy • Militarism, nationalism, and a crisis in the Balkans led to World War I. • Serbia’s determination to become a large, independent state angered Austria-Hungary and initiated hostilities. Archduke Francis Ferdinand, Gavrilo Princip, Emperor William II, Czar Nicholas II, General Alfred von Schlieffen Cause and Effect Use a diagram like the one below to identify the factors that led to World War I. BELLRINGER Places to Locate Serbia, Bosnia Key Terms Skillbuilder Activity Preview Questions conscription, mobilization Preview of Events ✦1860 ✦1870 This section discusses the causes of World War I. ✦1880 ✦1890 ✦1900 Project transparency and have students answer questions. World War I 1. How did the assassination of Archduke Francis Ferdinand lead to World War I? 2. How did the system of alliances help cause the war? ✦1910 Daily Focus Skills Transparency 23–1 ✦1920 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. UNIT 1882 Triple Alliance forms 1907 Triple Entente forms 5 1914 World War I begins ANSWERS 1. the Archduke Francis Ferdinand and his wife 2. in Sarajevo 3. to avenge the seizure of Bosnia by Austria DAILY FOCUS SKILLS Chapter 23 TRANSPARENCY 23-1 The Road to World War I 1 Who was killed in the assassination? 2 Where did the murders take 3 Why did the murders take place? place? HEIR TO AUSTRIA’S THRONE IS SLAIN WITH HIS WIFE BY A BOSNIAN YOUTH TO AVENGE SEIZURE OF HIS COUNTRY Voices from the Past Francis Ferdinand Shot During State Visit to Sarajevo On June 28, 1914, the heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne, Archduke Francis Ferdinand, was assassinated in the Bosnian city of Sarajevo. One of the conspirators described the scene: SLAIN IN SECOND ATTEMPT Answers to Graphic: World War I: system of alliances, growth of nationalism, internal dissent, militarism duke, the Archduchess Sophia, in the abdomen. She was an expectant mother. She died instantly. The second bullet struck the Archduke close to the heart. He uttered only one word: ‘Sophia’—a call to his stricken wife. Then his head fell back and he collapsed. He died almost instantly. ” —Eyewitness to History, John Carey, ed., 1987 This event was the immediate cause of World War I, but underlying forces had been moving Europeans toward war for some time. Nationalism and the System of Alliances In the first half of the nineteenth century, liberals believed that if European states were organized along national lines, these states would work together and create a peaceful Europe. They were wrong. The system of nation-states that emerged in Europe in the last half of the nineteenth century led not to cooperation but to competition. Rivalries over colonies War and Revolution Archduke Saves His Life First Time by Knocking Aside a Bomb Hurled at Auto. Guide to Reading “As the car came abreast, [the assassin] stepped forward from the curb, drew his automatic pistol from his coat and fired two shots. The first struck the wife of the Arch- CHAPTER 23 TWO ATTACKS IN A DAY Preteaching Vocabulary Discuss the meaning of conscription and mobilization with the students. Ask them to consider why both of these actions might be seen as a threat to opposing nations. (expands the size of the army; prepares the army to go to war) 717 SECTION RESOURCES Reproducible Masters • Reproducible Lesson Plan 23–1 • Daily Lecture and Discussion Notes 23–1 • Guided Reading Activity 23–1 • Section Quiz 23–1 • Reading Essentials and Study Guide 23–1 Transparencies • Daily Focus Skills Transparency 23–1 Multimedia Interactive Tutor Self-Assessment CD-ROM ExamView® Pro Testmaker CD-ROM Presentation Plus! CD-ROM STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 2 717 CHAPTER 23 Section 1, 717–720 Alliances in Europe, 1914 NORWAY 10°W E SPAIN 40°N Corsica E S Mediterra ne Rome an Sea R RUSSIA R . Budapest AUSTRIAHUNGARY BOSNIA Sarajevo Sardinia AFRICA 400 kilometers 0 Lambert Azimuthal Equal-Area projection Vienna ITALY W Daily Lecture and Discussion Notes 23–1 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Daily Lecture and Discussion Notes Chapter 23, Section 1 ? In 1919, the German government was allowed to submit a counter proposal to the Treaty of Versailles. In it the Germans agreed to many of the terms including reparations, territorial adjustments, and reduction of military. However, the counter proposal said that for Germany to sign the treaty as it stood, the country would be signing its own death warrant. It asked that a neutral inquiry into the question of responsibility for the war be held, one that would inspect the archives of all the nations that had fought. The counter proposal was rejected almost entirely. MONTENEGRO ALBANIA B. Two main alliances divided Europe: The Triple Alliance (1882) was made up of Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy; and the Triple Entente (1907) was made up of France, Great Britain, and Russia. 718 CHAPTER 23 r epe . Black Sea Constantinople OM AN E MP IR E Sicily 10°E 20°E nationalism in the first half of the nineteenth century lead to increased competition or increased cooperation among European nations? A. Liberals during the first half of the 1800s hoped that the formation of European nation-states would lead to peace. However, the imperialist states that emerged during the second half of the 1800s became highly competitive over trade and colonies. OT T GREECE Reading Check Identifying Did the growth of Nationalism and the System of Alliances (pages 717–718) D ni ROMANIA SERBIA BULGARIA and trade grew during an age of frenzied nationalism and imperialist expansion. At the same time, Europe’s great powers had been divided into two loose alliances. Germany, AustriaHungary, and Italy formed the Triple Alliance in 1882. France, Great Britain, and Russia created the Triple Entente in 1907. In the early years of the twentieth century, a series of crises tested these alliances. Especially troublesome were the crises in the Balkans between 1908 and 1913. These events left European states angry at each other and eager for revenge. Each state was guided by its own self-interest and success. They were willing to use war as a way to preserve the power of their national states. The growth of nationalism in the nineteenth century had yet another serious result. Not all ethnic groups had become nations. Slavic minorities in the Balkans and the Hapsburg Empire, for example, still dreamed of creating their own national states. The Irish in the British Empire and the Poles in the Russian Empire had similar dreams. Answer: Conservative leaders feared that their countries were on the verge of revolution; the desire to suppress internal disorder may have encouraged them to plunge into war. 400 miles 0 R. SWITZ. N Madrid lt e ALSACE & LORRAINE D anube n FRANCE Ba Berlin GERMANY e R. ei Triple Alliance Triple Entente Balkans LUX. R. me e R. Atlantic Ocean Answer: increased competition D. European ethnic groups, such as Slavs in the Balkans and the Irish in the British Empire, dreamed of creating their own national states, which also increased tensions in Europe. BELG. m o ParisS 0° C. During the early 1900s, several crises erupted, particularly in the Balkans, which created a great deal of anger and tension between the nations of the two alliances. Each nation was willing to go to war to preserve its power. Rhin Loire R . 2. Triple Alliance: Austria-Hungary, Germany, Italy; Triple Entente: Britain, France, Russia; Other: Portugal, Spain, Switzerland, Belgium, Netherlands, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Romania, Serbia, Bulgaria, Greece, Albania I. lb NETH. nel E n g li s h C h a n S Answers: 1. Britain was separated from the rest of Europe by water, making it harder to invade. Did You Know DENMARK London 50° N Moscow SWEDEN North Sea UNITED KINGDOM Se a TEACH ic 2 St. Petersburg Crete 30°E Cyprus The alliance system was one of the major causes of World War I. 1. Interpreting Maps What geographic factor made it unlikely that World War I battles would be fought in Great Britain? 2. Applying Geography Skills Create a threecolumn chart with the headings Triple Entente, Triple Alliance, and Other. Place all the countries labeled on the map in the proper column. Internal Dissent National desires were not the only source of internal strife at the beginning of the twentieth century. Socialist labor movements also had grown more powerful. The Socialists were increasingly inclined to use strikes, even violent ones, to achieve their goals. Some conservative leaders, alarmed at the increase in labor strife and class division, feared that European nations were on the verge of revolution. In the view of some historians, the desire to suppress internal disorder may have encouraged various leaders to take the plunge into war in 1914. Reading Check Explaining According to some historians, how might internal disorder have been one of the causes of World War I? Militarism The growth of mass armies after 1900 heightened the existing tensions in Europe. The large size of these armies also made it obvious that if war did come, it would be highly destructive. Conscription, a military draft, had been established as a regular practice in most Western countries before 1914. (The United States and Britain were War and Revolution READING THE TEXT STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 718 2 Synthesizing Have students do additional research on the origins of World War I and then conduct a class debate on this topic. Have students assume the roles of the leaders of AustriaHungary, Germany, Serbia, Russia, France, and Britain. Debate which country was most responsible for starting World War I and which country bore little or no responsibility for starting the war. Or, have students use a map of 1914 Europe to explain the role geography played in the development of the Schlieffen plan. Ask students how geography affected the war plans of the other World War I participants. L2 FCAT LA.A.2.4.8 exceptions.) European armies doubled in size between 1890 and 1914. With its 1.3 million men, the Russian army had grown to be the largest. The French and German armies were not far behind, with 900,000 each. The British, Italian, and Austro-Hungarian armies numbered between 250,000 and 500,000 soldiers each. Militarism—aggressive preparation for war— was growing. As armies grew, so too did the influence of military leaders. They drew up vast and complex plans for quickly mobilizing millions of men and enormous quantities of supplies in the event of war. Military leaders feared that any changes in these plans would cause chaos in the armed forces. Thus, they insisted that their plans could not be altered. In the 1914 crises, this left European political leaders with little leeway. They were forced to make decisions for military instead of political reasons. Reading Check Examining What was the effect of conscription on events leading up to World War I? CHAPTER 23 It was against this backdrop of mutual distrust and hatred that the events of the summer of 1914 were played out. Section 1, 717–720 Assassination in Sarajevo On June 28, 1914, Archduke Francis Ferdinand, the heir to the throne of Austria-Hungary, and his wife Sophia, visited the Bosnian city of Sarajevo (SAR•uh•YAY•VOH). A group of conspirators waited there in the streets. The conspirators were members of the Black Hand, a Serbian terrorist organization that wanted Bosnia to be free of Austria-Hungary and to become part of a large Serbian kingdom. The conspirators planned to kill the archduke, along with his wife. That morning, one of the conspirators threw a bomb at the archduke’s car, but it glanced off and exploded against the car behind him. Later in the day, however, Gavrilo Princip, a 19-yearold Bosnian Serb, succeeded in shooting both the archduke and his wife. Answer: European armies doubled in size between 1890 and 1914. L1/ELL Guided Reading Activity 23–1 Name DIRECTIONS: Answer the following questions as you read Section 1. 1. What did liberals believe about European states in early nineteenth century? 2. Name the two loose alliances of Europe's great powers. 3. How did Socialist labor movements affect strife at the start of the twentieth century? 4. What did the large size of European armies make obvious? 5. What three things may have played a role in starting World War I? 6. What assassination instigated war between Serbia and Austria-Hungary? The Serbian Problem As we have seen, states in southeastern Europe had struggled for many years to free themselves of Ottoman rule. Furthermore, the rivalry between Austria-Hungary and Russia for domination of these new states created serious tensions in the region. By 1914, Serbia, supported by Russia, was determined to create a large, independent Slavic state in the Balkans. Austria-Hungary, which had its own Slavic minorities to contend with, was equally determined to prevent that from happening. Many Europeans saw the potential danger in this explosive situation. The British ambassador to Vienna anticipated war in 1913: Serbia will some day set Europe by the ears, and “ bring about a universal war on the Continent. . . . I cannot tell you how exasperated people are getting here at the continual worry which that little country causes to Austria under encouragement from Russia. . . . It will be lucky if Europe succeeds in avoiding war as a result of the present crisis. The Austro-Hungarian government did not know whether or not the Serbian government had been directly involved in the archduke’s assassination, but it did not care. It saw an opportunity to “render Serbia innocuous [harmless] once and for all by a display of force,” as the Austrian foreign minister put it. Austrian leaders wanted to attack Serbia but feared Russian intervention on Serbia’s behalf, so they sought the backing of their German allies. Emperor William II of Germany and his chancellor responded with a “blank check,” saying that Austria- 7. What action of Russia prompted Germany to declare war? 8. What was Germany's Schlieffen Plan? 9. By what route did Germany invade France? 10. For what official reason did Great Britain declare war on Germany? ht © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Militarism, nationalism, and the desire to stifle internal dissent may all have played a role in the starting of World War I. However, it was the decisions made by European leaders in response to another crisis in the Balkans in the summer of 1914 that led directly to the conflict. Class The Road to World War I Austria-Hungary Responds The Outbreak of War: Summer 1914 Date Guided Reading Activity 23-1 Government Ask students to research the concept of neutrality as defined by international law and practiced in the twentieth century. Suggest they consider the U.S. Neutrality Acts of 1935, 1936, and 1937. L2 “Till the world comes to an end the ultimate decision will rest with the sword.” 3 Assign Section 1 Assessment as homework or as an in-class activity. —Emperor William II of Germany ” CHAPTER 23 War and Revolution ASSESS 719 Have students use Interactive Tutor Self-Assessment CD-ROM. COOPERATIVE LEARNING ACTIVITY EXTENDING THE CONTENT Preparing a News Report Organize students into small groups and have them stage a series of radio or television newscasts devoted to the outbreak of World War I. Each group should select a crucial date from June 28 to August 4, 1914. Students should incorporate researched information with the text material and design visual aids, such as maps and charts, when appropriate. Groups should assign members tasks, such as researching and compiling information, writing, designing, visual aids, and performing. Have groups include participants’ comments and citizens’ responses. L2 SS.A.3.4.9 STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 For grading this activity, refer to the Performance Assessment Activities booklet. 719 CHAPTER 23 Hungary could rely on Germany’s “full support,” even if “matters went to the length of a war between Austria-Hungary and Russia.” Strengthened by German support, Austrian leaders sent an ultimatum to Serbia on July 23. In it, they made such extreme demands that Serbia had little choice but to reject some of them in order to preserve its sovereignty. On July 28, Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia. Section 1, 717–720 Answer: It called for a two-front war with France and Russia. By declaring war on France, Germany brought Great Britain into the war. Russia Mobilizes Russia was determined to support Serbia’s cause. On July 28, Czar Nicholas II ordered partial mobilization of the Russian army against Austria-Hungary. Mobilization is the process of assembling troops and supplies and making them ready for war. In 1914, mobilization was considered an act of war. Leaders of the Russian army informed the czar that they could not partially mobilize. Their mobilization plans were based on a war against both Germany and Austria-Hungary. Mobilizing against only Austria-Hungary, they claimed, would create chaos in the army. Based on this claim, the czar ordered full mobilization of the Russian army on July 29, knowing that Germany would consider this order an act of war. L2 Section Quiz 23–1 Name 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 Date 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 Class 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 ✔ Score Chapter 23 Section Quiz 23-1 DIRECTIONS: Matching Match each item in Column A with the items in Column B. Write the correct letters in the blanks. (10 points each) Column A Column B 1. military draft A. mobilization 2. aggressive preparation for war B. militarism 3. readying troops and supplies for war C. Germany 4. ally of Austria-Hungry D. Russia 5. protector of Serbia E. conscription DIRECTIONS: Multiple Choice In the blank, write the letter of the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. (10 points each) 6. The Triple Alliance was a loose agreement of cooperation among A. Serbia, Germany, Britain. C. Germany, Italy, Russia. L1/ELL Reading Essentials and Study Guide 23–1 Name Date Class The Conflict Broadens Indeed, Germany reacted quickly. The German government warned Russia that it must halt its mobilization within 12 hours. When Russia ignored this warning, Germany declared war on Russia on August 1. Reading Essentials and Study Guide Chapter 23, Section 1 For use with textbook pages 717–720 THE ROAD TO WORLD WAR I KEY TERMS conscription a military draft (page 718) mobilization the process of assembling troops and supplies and making them ready for war (page 720) Like the Russians, the Germans had a military plan. It had been drawn up under the guidance of General Alfred von Schlieffen (SHLEE•fuhn), so was known as the Schlieffen Plan. The plan called for a two-front war with France and Russia, who had formed a military alliance in 1894. According to the Schlieffen Plan, Germany would conduct a small holding action against Russia while most of the German army would carry out a rapid invasion of France. This meant invading France by moving quickly along the level coastal area through Belgium. After France was defeated, the German invaders would move to the east against Russia. Under the Schlieffen Plan, Germany could not mobilize its troops solely against Russia. Therefore, it declared war on France on August 3. About the same time, it issued an ultimatum to Belgium demanding the right of German troops to pass through Belgian territory. Belgium, however, was a neutral nation. On August 4, Great Britain declared war on Germany, officially for violating Belgian neutrality. In fact, Britain, which was allied with the countries of France and Russia, was concerned about maintaining its own world power. As one British diplomat put it, if Germany and Austria-Hungary won the war, “what would be the position of a friendless England?” By August 4, all the great powers of Europe were at war. Reading Check Evaluating What was the Schlieffen Plan and how did it complicate the events leading to World War I? DRAWING FROM EXPERIENCEII Have you ever been given an ultimatum? How did you react to the ultimatum? In this section, you will learn about the events that led to the start of World War I. Ultimatums played an important role in starting World War I. ORGANIZING YOUR THOUGHTSII Use the time line below to help you take notes. Identify seven key events during the summer of 1914 that led to World War I. 1. 2. June 28 3. July 23 July 28 Reteaching Activity Ask students to identify the specific events that led to World War I. L1 SS.A.3.4.9 4 CLOSE Ask students to give examples that explain the following sentence: “It was against this backdrop of mutual distrust and hatred that the events of the summer of 1914 were played out.” L1 SS.A.3.4.9 STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 2 720 Checking for Understanding 1. Define conscription, mobilization. 2. Identify Triple Alliance, Triple Entente, Archduke Francis Ferdinand, Gavrilo Princip, Emperor William II, Czar Nicholas II, General Alfred von Schlieffen. 3. Locate Serbia, Bosnia. 4. Explain why Great Britain became involved in the war. 5. List the ethnic groups that were left without nations after the nationalist movements of the nineteenth century. 720 CHAPTER 23 Critical Thinking 6. Analyze How did the creation of military plans help draw the nations of Europe into World War I? In your opinion, what should today’s national and military leaders have learned from the military plans that helped initiate World War I? Explain your answer. Analyzing Visuals 8. Examine the painting of Emperor William II of Germany shown on page 719 of your text. How does this portrait of the emperor reflect the nature of leadership before World War I? 7. Sequencing Information Using a diagram like the one below, identify the series of decisions made by European leaders in 1914 that led directly to the outbreak of war. 9. Expository Writing Some historians believe that the desire to suppress internal disorder may have encouraged leaders to take the plunge into war. As an adviser, write a memo to your country’s leader explaining how a war might be advantageous for domestic policy. War and Revolution 1. Key terms are in blue. 2. Triple Alliance (p. 718), Triple Entente (p. 718), Archduke Francis Ferdinand (p. 719), Gavrilo Princip (p. 719), Emperor William II (p. 719), Czar Nicholas II (p. 720), General Alfred von Schlieffen (p. 720) 3. See chapter maps. 4. official cause: Germany violated Belgian neutrality; actual cause: Britain concerned about own power 5. Slavic minorities in Balkans and Hapsburg Empire; Irish in British Empire; Poles in Russian Empire 6. Countries could not partially mobilize or limit war fronts. 7. Austria-Hungary punish Serbia → Germany helps Austria-Hungary → Russia against Austria-Hungary, Germany → German war against Russia and France → Britain declares war on Germany 8. rise of militarism 9. Answers should be consistent with material presented in this section. CHAPTER 23 The War Section 2, 721–727 Guide to Reading Main Ideas People to Identify Reading Strategy • The stalemate at the Western Front led to new alliances, a widening of the war, and new weapons. • Governments expanded their powers, increased opportunities for women, and made use of propaganda. Lawrence of Arabia, Admiral Holtzendorff, Woodrow Wilson Organizing Information Identify which countries belonged to the Allies and the Central Powers. What country changed allegiance? What country withdrew from the war? Key Terms Preview Questions Places to Locate Marne, Tannenberg, Masurian Lakes, Verdun, Gallipoli 1. How did trench warfare lead to a stalemate? 2. Why did the United States enter the war? propaganda, trench warfare, war of attrition, total war, planned economies Preview of Events ✦1914 Allies ✦1915 ✦1916 1915 Lusitania sunk by German forces ✦1917 1916 Battle of Verdun 1 FOCUS Section Overview This section discusses the widening of World War I and the expansion of government powers to accommodate the war. Central Powers Allies BELLRINGER Split Off ✦1918 Skillbuilder Activity ✦1919 Project transparency and have students answer questions. 1917 United States enters the war Daily Focus Skills Transparency 23–2 Voices from the Past Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. ANSWERS 1. Russia 2. Germany 3. Germany had the largest number of soldiers and great wealth and so was likely to be a strong opponent in a war. UNIT 5 Chapter 23 DAILY FOCUS SKILLS TRANSPARENCY 23-2 The War 1 Stefan Zweig, an Austrian writer, described the excitement Austrians felt going to war in 1914: Which country had the greatest population in 1914? 2 Which country had the largest numbers of available soldiers? (in millions) 1,200 150 spective of their school readers and of paintings in museums; brilliant cavalry attacks in glittering uniforms, the fatal shot always straight through the heart, the entire campaign a resounding march of victory—‘We’ll be home at Christmas,’ the recruits shouted laughingly to their mothers in August of 1914. . . . The young people were honestly afraid that they might miss this most wonderful and exciting experience of their lives; . . . that is why they shouted and sang in the trains that carried them to the slaughter. 0 8 1,030 6 46 3.5 3 424 50 40 300 21 190 2 199 .75 67 0 .33 0 Great Britain France Russia Germany Austria-Hungary Turkey Guide to Reading Europeans went to war in 1914 with remarkable enthusiasm. 1914 to 1915: Illusions and Stalemate Before 1914, many political leaders had thought that war involved so many political and economic risks that it would not be worth fighting. Others had believed that diplomats could easily control any situation and prevent war. At the beginning of August 1914, both ideas were shattered. However, the new illusions that replaced them soon proved to be equally foolish. Government propaganda—ideas spread to influence public opinion for or against a cause—had worked in stirring up national hatreds before the war. Now, in August 1914, the urgent pleas of European governments for defense against War and Revolution 4.5 4 600 65 ” —The World of Yesterday, Helmut Ripperger and B. W. Buebsch, trans., 1943 CHAPTER 23 (in millions) 8.5 1,223 900 50 Soldiers Available on Mobilization 10 1,500 (in millions) 167 100 From the information in the three graphs, what conclusion can you draw about Germany’s power? Explain. Annual Value of Foreign Trade in British Pounds Population 200 “What did the people know of war in 1914, after nearly half a century of peace? They did not know war; they had hardly given it a thought. They still saw it in the per- 3 Answers to Graphic: Allies: Great Britain, France, United States, Italy, Russia; Central Powers: Germany, AustriaHungary, Bulgaria, Ottoman Empire; Italy changed from Central Powers to Allies; Russia withdrew from the war Preteaching Vocabulary Have students define war of attrition, propaganda, and total war, and discuss why a war of attrition might require more propaganda and lead to a total war. L2 721 SECTION RESOURCES Reproducible Masters • Reproducible Lesson Plan 23–2 • Daily Lecture and Discussion Notes 23–2 • Guided Reading Activity 23–2 • Section Quiz 23–2 • Reading Essentials and Study Guide 23–2 Transparencies • Daily Focus Skills Transparency 23–2 Multimedia Interactive Tutor Self-Assessment CD-ROM ExamView® Pro Testmaker CD-ROM Presentation Plus! CD-ROM 721 CHAPTER 23 Section 2, 721–727 2 TEACH Daily Lecture Daily Lecture and and Discussion Notes 23–2 Discussion Notes 1–1 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. aggressors fell on receptive ears in every nation at war. Most people seemed genuinely convinced that their nation’s cause was just. A new set of illusions also fed the enthusiasm for war. In August 1914, almost everyone believed that the war would be over in a few weeks. People were reminded that almost all European wars since 1815 had, in fact, ended in a matter of weeks. Both the soldiers who boarded the trains for the war front in August 1914, and the jubilant citizens who showered them with flowers as they left, believed that the warriors would be home by Christmas. 6–10). To stop the Germans, French military leaders loaded two thousand Parisian taxicabs with fresh troops and sent them to the front line. The war quickly turned into a stalemate, as neither the Germans nor the French could dislodge each other from the trenches they had dug for shelter. These trenches were ditches protected by barbed wire. Two lines of trenches soon reached from the English Channel to the frontiers of Switzerland. The Western Front had become bogged down in trench warfare that kept both sides in virtually the same positions for four years. The Western Front The Eastern Front In contrast to the Western Front, the war on the Eastern Front was marked by mobility. The cost in lives, however, was equally enormous. At the beginning of the war, the Russian army moved into eastern Germany but was decisively defeated at the Battle of Tannenberg on August 30 and the Battle of Masurian Lakes on September 15. As a result of these defeats, the Russians were no longer a threat to German territory. Daily Lecture and Discussion Notes Chapter 23, Section 2 Did You Know German hopes for a quick end to the war rested on a military gamble. The Schlieffen Plan had called for the German army to make a vast encircling movement through Belgium into northern France. According to the plan, the German forces would sweep around Paris. This would enable them to surround most of the French army. The German advance was halted a short distance from Paris at the First Battle of the Marne (September ? When President Woodrow Wilson declared war in 1917, he called it the “war to end all wars” and said that the United States would fight to “make the world safe for democracy.” The government asked for volunteers, saying it needed a million men. However, public support was not as strong as the government would have liked. In the first six weeks after war was declared, about 70,000 men volunteered, which led Congress to start the draft. I. 1914 to 1915: Illusions and Stalemate (pages 721–723) A. The events of August 1914 shattered two previously held ideas: that war was not worth fighting and that diplomats could prevent war. B. Government propaganda—ideas spread to influence public opinion—had stirred up national hatreds before the war. When the war began, propaganda was used to urge people to defend their own country. The majority of people thought their country’s cause was just. C. All European wars since 1815 had only lasted a few weeks. In August, 1914, most people thought the war would be over by Christmas. D. In the Western Front, Germany swept through Belgium into northern France and was stopped a short distance from Paris at the First Battle of the Marne. The Western Front turned into a stalemate, with neither side able to push the other out of the system of trenches they had built. The trenches stretched from the English Channel nearly to the Swiss border. For four years both sides remained in almost the same positions. E. In the Eastern Front, the war was far more mobile. The Russian army moved into eastern Germany but was defeated in two battles, making them no longer a threat to invade Germany. The Russians defeated Austria-Hungary and dislodged them from Serbia. The Italians, who had been allied with Germany and Austria-Hungary, broke their alliance in 1915 and attacked Austria-Hungary. The Germans came to the aid of the Austrians and together they defeated the Russians in several battles and drove them back. 2.5 million Russians had been killed, captured, or wounded. The Russians were almost out of the war. After defeating Serbia, Germany turned its attention back to the Western Front. turn 327 Trench Warfare W arfare in the trenches of the Western Front produced unimaginable horrors. Battlefields were hellish landscapes of barbed wire, shell holes, mud, and injured and dying men. The introduction of poison gas in 1915 produced new forms of injuries. One British writer described them: I wish those people who write so glibly about this being a holy war could see a case of mustard gas . . . could see the poor things burnt and blistered all over with great mustard-coloured suppurating [pus-forming] blisters with blind eyes all sticky . . . and stuck together, and always fighting for breath, with voices a mere whisper, Art Ask interested students to bring in copies of visual arts used as propaganda before and during World War I, including posters, cartoons, or paintings. Who were the artists? How effective was their work? L2 “ Critical Thinking Have students explain the significance of the First Battle of the Marne. (It ended the Schlieffen Plan, began trench warfare, and showed that the war would last a long time.) 722 saying that their throats are closing and they know they will choke. Soldiers in the trenches also lived with the persistent presence of death. Because combat went on for months, soldiers had to carry on in the midst of countless bodies of dead men or the remains of men blown apart by artillery barrages. Many soldiers remembered the stench of decomposing bodies and the swarms of rats that grew fat in the trenches. Daily life in the trenches was predictable. Thirty minutes before sunrise, troops had to “stand to,” or be combat-ready to repel any attack. If no attack came that day, ” British gas mask and pack READING THE TEXT STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 722 Making Inferences After World War I, many Europeans feared going to war again. European leaders also followed policies to keep the peace. The Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928, which renounced war as an instrument of national policy, is an outstanding example of the interwar mood. Have students write a paragraph explaining how trench warfare and the course of World War I influenced this mood. L1 Refer to Inclusion for the High School Social Studies Classroom Strategies and Activities in the TCR. Austria-Hungary, Germany’s ally, fared less well at first. The Austrians had been defeated by the Russians in Galicia and thrown out of Serbia as well. To make matters worse, the Italians betrayed their German and Austrian allies in the Triple Alliance by attacking Austria in May 1915. Italy thus joined France, Great Britain, and Russia, who had formed the Triple Entente, but now were called the Allied Powers, or Allies. By this time, the Germans had come to the aid of the Austrians. A German-Austrian army defeated the Russian army in Galicia and pushed the Russians far back into their own territory. Russian casualties stood at 2.5 million killed, captured, or wounded. The Russians had almost been knocked out of the war. Buoyed by their success, Germany and AustriaHungary, joined by Bulgaria in September 1915, attacked and eliminated Serbia from the war. Their successes in the east would enable the Germans to move back to the offensive in the west. Reading Check Contrasting How did the war on the Eastern Front differ from the war on the Western Front? the day’s routine consisted of breakfast followed by inspection, sentry duty, work on the trenches, care of personal items, and attempts to pass the time. Soldiers often recalled the boredom of life in the dreary, lice-ridden, and muddy or dusty trenches. At many places along the opposing lines of trenches, a “live and let live” system evolved. It was based on the realization that neither side was going to drive out the other. The “live and let live” system resulted in such arrangements as not shelling the latrines and not attacking during breakfast. On both sides, troops produced their own humor magazines to help pass the time and fulfill the need to laugh in the midst of their daily madness. The British trench magazine, the B. E. F. Times, devoted one of its issues to defining military terms, including “DUDS—These are of two kinds. A shell on impact failing to explode is called a dud. They are unhappily not as plentiful as the other kind, which often draws a big salary and explodes for no reason.” CHAPTER 23 1916 to 1917: The Great Slaughter Section 2, 721–727 On the Western Front, the trenches dug in 1914 had by 1916 become elaborate systems of defense. The lines of trenches for both sides were protected by barbed wire entanglements up to 5 feet (about 1.5 m) high and 30 yards (about 27 m) wide, concrete machine-gun nests, and other gun batteries, supported further back by heavy artillery. Troops lived in holes in the ground, separated from each other by a strip of territory known as no-man’s-land. Answer: The Western Front reached a stalemate due to trench warfare; the Eastern Front was a more typical war of movement and maneuver. Tactics of Trench Warfare The unexpected development of trench warfare baffled military leaders. They had been trained to fight wars of movement and maneuver. The only plan generals could devise was to attempt a breakthrough by throwing masses of men against enemy lines that had first been battered by artillery. Once the decisive breakthrough had been achieved, they thought, they could return to the war of movement that they knew best. At times, the high command on either side would order an offensive that would begin with an artillery Answers: 1. Each side realized that it was not going to drive out the other, so they could refrain from shelling latrines or attacking during breakfast. 2. Answers should be consistent with material presented in this section. L1/ELL Guided Reading Activity 23–2 Name Date Class Guided Reading Activity 23-2 The War DIRECTIONS: Fill in the blanks below as you read Section 2. Before 1914, many political leaders thought war in Europe could be (1) . Government (2) had worked in stir- ring up national hatreds before the war. In August, 1914, most people seemed genuinely convinced that their nation's cause was (3) . The German Schlieffen Plan called for the German army to sweep around (4) and surround most of the French army. The German advance was halted at (5) (6) . The war quickly turned into a . The unexpected development of (7) on the Western Front baffled military leaders. In 10 months at (8) , France, in 1916, seven hundred thousand men lost their lives over a few miles of land. By the end of 1915 (9) British soldiers in the trenches CONNECTING TO THE PAST 1. Explain What was the rationale behind the “live and let live” system? 2. Writing about History Write several journal entries as if you were a soldier in the trenches. 723 began to Literature Have students read all or parts of All Quiet on the Western Front and then write a letter in which they try to explain to their friends and family back home exactly what they are experiencing in the trenches on the Western Front. What difficulties do they face in trying to describe what they are experiencing? L2 DIFFERENTIATED INSTRUCTION At-Risk Students Have students identify the Triple Alliance and Triple Entente countries on the map on page 718, and ask them to list each country in its correct category. Then have students find photographs depicting scenes from each of the countries in the early 1900s. Have the students share their lists and pictures with the class. To aid in memorization and learning, pass out 35 cards upon which students list all countries in the Triple Alliance and Triple Entente. Ask students to sort the cards into these two categories. L1 Refer to Inclusion for the High School Studies Classroom Strategies and Activities in the TCR. STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 723 CHAPTER 23 barrage to flatten the enemy’s barbed wire and leave the enemy in a state of shock. After “softening up” the enemy in this fashion, a mass of soldiers would climb out of their trenches with fixed bayonets and hope to work their way toward the enemy trenches. The attacks rarely worked because men advancing unprotected across open fields could be fired at by the enemy’s machine guns. In 1916 and 1917, millions of young men died in the search for the elusive breakthrough. In 10 months at Verdun, France, in 1916, seven hundred thousand men lost their lives over a few miles of land. World War I had turned into a war of attrition, a war based on wearing the other side down by constant attacks and heavy losses. ; (See page 998 to read an excerpt from Arthur Guy Empey’s Over the Top in the Primary Sources Library.) Section 2, 721–727 Answer: Traditional military methods did not work in trenches. Answer: Both sides had to search for new allies who might provide a winning advantage, bringing more countries into the war. War in the Air By the end of 1915, airplanes had appeared on the battlefront for the first time in history. At first, planes were used to spot the enemy’s position. However, planes soon began to attack ground targets, especially enemy communications. Fights for control of the air occurred and increased over time. At first, pilots fired at each other with handheld pistols. Later, machine guns were mounted on the noses of planes, which made the skies considerably more dangerous. The Germans also used their giant airships—the zeppelins—to bomb London and eastern England. This caused little damage but frightened many people. Germany’s enemies, however, soon found that zeppelins, which were filled with hydrogen gas, quickly became raging infernos when hit by antiaircraft guns. Then and Now Answer: In addition to airplanes, they used zeppelins. Science and Technology Ask students to prepare a display showing the development of aviation during World War I. L2 Reading Check Explaining Why were military leaders baffled by trench warfare? Critical Thinking Ask students to identify the important American figures arguing for and against U. S. neutrality. Ask students to speculate on the outcome of the war had the United States chosen to remain neutral. L3 Widening of the War Because of the stalemate on the Western Front, both sides sought to gain new allies who might provide a winning advantage. The Ottoman Empire had already come into the war on Germany’s side in August 1914. Russia, Great Britain, and France—the Allies—declared war on the Ottoman Empire in November. The Allies tried to open a Balkan front by landing forces at Gallipoli (guh•LIH•puh•lee), southwest of Constantinople, in April 1915. However, Bulgaria entered the war on the side of the Central Powers, as Germany, Austria-Hungary, and the Ottoman Empire were called. A disastrous campaign at Gallipoli forced the Allies to withdraw. In return for Italy entering the war on the Allied side, France and Great Britain promised to let Italy have some Austrian territory. Italy on the side of the Allies opened up a front against Austria-Hungary. By 1917, the war that had started in Europe had truly become a world conflict. In the Middle East, a British officer known as Lawrence of Arabia, in 1917, urged Arab princes to revolt against their Ottoman overlords. In 1918, British forces from Egypt destroyed the Ottoman Empire in the Middle East. For their Middle East campaigns, the British mobilized forces from India, Australia, and New Zealand. The Allies also took advantage of Germany’s preoccupations in Europe and lack of naval strength to seize German colonies in the rest of the world. Japan, a British ally beginning in 1902, seized a number of German-held islands in the Pacific. Australia seized German New Guinea. Reading Check Describing What caused the widening of the war? Then and Now The introduction of airplanes greatly changed the nature of warfare during the twentieth century. What kind of aircraft did the Germans use during World War I? British fighter plane, c. 1917 䊳 U.S. jet fighter, 2001 䊲 Critical Thinking When students finish reading this section, have them explain why World War I is considered a major era in world history. Have students describe the defining characteristics of this era. L1 724 SS.A.3.4.9 CRITICAL THINKING ACTIVITY STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 724 Decision Making New machines and devices were first used on a large scale during World War I. These included submarines, airplanes, tanks, motor trucks, machine guns, rapid-fire artillery, barbed wire, and poison gas. Break students into groups and ask them to complete a project (visual display, oral report, multimedia presentation) that answers the following question: What mistake did military leaders continue to make even though new technology was available? Remind students to define tasks thoroughly and to assign roles and responsibilities. After the project is complete, the group should evaluate everyone’s contribution, highlighting aspects of the work that went well and suggesting ways the team might have functioned better. L2 L3 CHAPTER 23 World War I in Europe, 1914–1918 60 °N 20°W 10°W 0° 10°E 20°E 30°E Section 2, 721–727 40°E Allies Central Powers Neutral nations NORWAY Line of trench warfare, 1915–1917 Farthest advance of Allies with date W SWEDEN Masurian Lakes Sept. 1914 No v 1915 ber em 9 14 Baltic Sea .1 ug Berlin BELGIUM GERMANY SWITZ. PO RT UG A L FRANCE Verdun Feb.–Dec. 1916 SPAIN Corsica AUSTRIA-HUNGARY Budapest Sarajevo O ALBANIA . 1915 ec D Sardinia GREECE SPANISH MOROCCO MOROCCO Fr. 5 916 t. 1 Indecisive ROMANIA SERBIA Ja n. 1917 BULGARIA MONTENEGRO ITALY 40° N Central Powers victory Jan . 19 15 LUXEMBOURG Schlieffen Plan 1917 n. Ja Marne N o v. 191 4 Sept. 1914, July–Aug. 1918 Tannenberg, Aug. 1914 Sep Paris . 19 1 ATLaNTIC OCEaN Somme July 1916 A NETH. ct London March 1918 Fr. TUNISIA Mediterranean Sea Fr. Caspian Sea Cartography Have students draw their own thematic maps to show the widening of the war into the Balkans, the Middle East, Africa, and Asia. Students should include an appropriate legend for their maps. Discuss reasons why military leaders sought to expand the conflict into these areas. (Because of the stalemate in the west, both sides sought to gain strength in new allies.) Black Sea N o v . 1917 OTTOMAN EMPIRE 8 ber 191 Octo Sicily ALGERIA Answer: 1. Students will create a graph based on the map. Farthest advance of Central Powers with date British naval blockade Allied mine barrier German submarine war zone Sinking of the Lusitania, May 7, 1915 Armistice line, Nov. 11, 1918 Treaty line of Brest-Litovsk Allied victory RUSSIAN EMPIRE 18 h 19 UNITED KINGDOM 50 °N rc Ma North Sea DENMARK 0 Crete Cyprus Oct . 19 18 191 8 E ar. S M N 500 miles 500 kilometers 0 Lambert Azimuthal Equal-Area projection Entry of the United States At first, the United States tried to remain neutral. As World War I dragged on, however, it became more difficult to do so. The immediate cause of United States involvement grew out of the naval war between Germany and Great Britain. Britain had used its superior naval power to set up a naval blockade of Germany. The blockade kept war materials and other goods from reaching Germany by sea. Germany had retaliated by setting up its own blockade of Britain. Germany enforced its blockade with the use of unrestricted submarine warfare, which included the sinking of passenger liners. On May 7, 1915, the British ship Lusitania was sunk by German forces. There were about 1,100 civilian casualties, including over 100 Americans. After strong United States protests, the German government suspended unrestricted submarine warfare in September 1915 to avoid antagonizing the United States further. Only once did the German and British naval forces actually engage in direct battle—at the Battle of Jutland on May 31, 1916, when neither side won a conclusive victory. Trench warfare produced a stalemate on the Western Front. 1. Applying Geography Skills Create a line graph with dates as one axis and miles as the other. Starting from Berlin, plot the Central Powers advances for the dates shown on the map. Critical Thinking Ask students to discuss the following sentence: “The immediate cause of U.S. involvement grew out of the naval war between Germany and Great Britain.” SS.A.3.4.9 By January 1917, however, the Germans were eager to break the deadlock in the war. German naval officers convinced Emperor William II that resuming the use of unrestricted submarine warfare could starve the British into submission within six months. When the emperor expressed concern about the United States, he was told not to worry. The British would starve before the Americans could act. Even if the Americans did intervene, Admiral Holtzendorff assured the emperor, “I give your Majesty my word as an officer that not one American will land on the continent.” The German naval officers were quite wrong. The British were not forced to surrender, and the return to unrestricted submarine warfare brought the United States into the war in April 1917. United States troops CHAPTER 23 War and Revolution Critical Thinking 725 Ask students why the psychological impact of the United States’s entry into World War I might have been greater than the actual military impact. (The entry would have given a desperately needed morale boost to the Allies and discouraged Germany and Austria-Hungary. The opposition would have been more willing to seek a settlement.) L2 DIFFERENTIATED INSTRUCTION Reading Support Encourage students needing extra reinforcement to summarize the material under each subhead in this section in a manner of their own choosing. Some students may elect to prepare oral summaries. Visual learners might draw a series of cartoons depicting such subjects as the battle, the weapons used, or trench warfare. Gifted students may use outside resources to enhance their summaries. You may wish to have students work in small groups to complete this activity. L1 ELL FCAT LA.A.1.4.2 STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 2 725 CHAPTER 23 Section 2, 721–727 Answer: The Germans wanted to starve Britain into submission. They believed they could accomplish that before the United States would enter the war. 3 ASSESS Assign Section 2 Assessment as homework or as an in-class activity. American troops leave for war. did not arrive in large numbers in Europe until 1918. However, the entry of the United States into the war not only gave the Allied Powers a psychological boost, but also brought them a major new source of money and war goods. Have students use Interactive Tutor Self-Assessment CD-ROM. L2 Reading Check Evaluating Why did the Germans resort to unrestricted submarine use? Section Quiz 23–2 Name 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 Date 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 Class 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 ✔ Chapter 23 Score The Home Front: The Impact of Total War Section Quiz 23-2 DIRECTIONS: Matching Match each item in Column A with the items in Column B. Write the correct letters in the blanks. (10 points each) Column A Column B 1. ideas spread to influence public opinion A. trench warfare 2. warfare based on wearing down opponents B. propaganda 3. huge German airship C. zeppelin 4. system of competing “dug in” defenses D. total war 5. complete mobilization of resources and people E. war of attrition As World War I dragged on, it became a total war, involving a complete mobilization of resources and people. It affected the lives of all citizens in the warring countries, however remote they might be from the battlefields. Masses of men had to be organized and supplies had to be manufactured and purchased for years of combat. (Germany alone had 5.5 million men in uniform in 1916.) This led to an increase in government powers and the manipulation of public opinion to keep the war effort going. The home front was rapidly becoming a cause for as much effort as the war front. DIRECTIONS: Multiple Choice In the blank, write the letter of the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. (10 points each) 6. During the war, new roles in the workforce were created for women because A. they were experienced workers. B. so many men entered the military effort. C. women needed something to do. D. women demanded equality. 8. Air warfare in World War I involved all of the following EXCEPT A. the first long-range missiles. C. attacking ground targets. B. spotting enemy positions. D. shooting down enemy aircraft. 9. Across Europe, wartime governments A. maintained free-market conditions. B. set up planned economies. C. reduced their powers. D. re-regulated prices, wages, rent. 10. The United States entered the war largely over the issue of A. Serbian independence. C. German use of zeppelins. B. trench warfare. D. unrestricted submarine warfare. 2 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 7. To maintain high morale and maintain support for the war among their citizens A. only the authoritarian regimes used propaganda. B. only the authoritarian powers allowed peace rallies. C. the democratic states used propaganda. D. the democratic states never resorted to exaggeration. Increased Government Powers Most people had expected the war to be short, so little thought had been given to long-term wartime needs. Governments had to respond quickly, however, when the war machines failed to achieve their goals. Many more men and supplies were needed to continue the war. To meet these needs, governments expanded their powers. Countries drafted tens of millions of young men for that elusive breakthrough to victory. Glencoe World History Who?What?Where?When? African American Soldiers More than 350,000 African Americans served in segregated units in World War I. Several units saw action alongside French soldiers fighting against the Germans. The French Legion of Honor was awarded to 171 African Americans. 726 CHAPTER 23 Throughout Europe, wartime governments also expanded their power over their economies. Freemarket capitalistic systems were temporarily put aside. Governments set up price, wage, and rent controls; rationed food supplies and materials; regulated imports and exports; and took over transportation systems and industries. In effect, in order to mobilize all the resources of their nations for the war effort, European nations set up planned economies— systems directed by government agencies. Under conditions of total war mobilization, the differences between soldiers at war and civilians at home were narrowed. In the view of political leaders, all citizens were part of a national army dedicated to victory. As United States president Woodrow Wilson said, the men and women “who remain to till the soil and man the factories are no less a part of the army than the men beneath the battle flags.” Manipulation of Public Opinion As the war continued and casualties grew worse, the patriotic enthusiasm that had marked the early stages of World War I waned. By 1916, there were signs that civilian morale was beginning to crack under the pressure of total war. War governments, however, fought back against the growing opposition to the war. Authoritarian regimes, such as those of Germany, Russia, and Austria-Hungary, relied on force to subdue their populations. Under the pressures of the war, however, even democratic states expanded their police powers to stop internal dissent. The British Parliament, for example, passed the Defence of the Realm Act (DORA). It allowed the government to arrest protestors as traitors. Newspapers were censored, and sometimes their publication was even suspended. Wartime governments made active use of propaganda to arouse enthusiasm for the war. At the beginning, public officials needed to do little to achieve this goal. The British and French, for example, exaggerated German atrocities in Belgium and found that their citizens were only too willing to believe these accounts. As the war progressed and morale sagged, governments were forced to devise new techniques for motivating the people. In one British recruiting poster, for example, a small daughter asked her father, “Daddy, what did YOU do in the Great War?” while her younger brother played with toy soldiers. Total War and Women World War I created new roles for women. Because so many men left to fight at the front, women were asked to take over jobs that had not been available to them before. Women were employed in jobs that had once been considered War and Revolution INTERDISCIPLINARY CONNECTIONS ACTIVITY STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 726 Sociology and Economics Have students research and report on the effects of the war on civilians. Among the subjects students might investigate are rationing, restrictions on transportation, popular entertainment, and the changing role of women. Ask students to describe the specific roles of women, children, and families during this time. Ask students to examine the economic and cultural influence of women during the time, as well. Finally, ask students to research and report on how the war was financed, with special attention to the sale of war bonds. L2 SS.A.3.4.9 CHAPTER 23 beyond their capacity. These included such occupations as chimney sweeps, truck drivers, farm laborers, and factory workers in heavy industry. For example, 38 percent of the workers in the Krupp Armaments works in Germany in 1918 were women. The place of women in the workforce was far from secure, however. Both men and women seemed to expect that many of the new jobs for women were only temporary. This was evident in the British poem “War Girls,” written in 1916: 1865–1915—British nurse E dith Cavell was born in Norfolk, England. She trained as a nurse and moved to Brussels in 1907 to head the Berkendael Medical Institute. After the outbreak of war, the institute became a Red Cross hospital. Cavell worked to shelter French and British soldiers and help them reach safety in the Netherlands. Outraged, German military authorities in Brussels put her on trial for aiding the enemy and ordered her to be shot. Before her execution, Cavell said, “I am glad to die for my country.” To arouse anti-German sentiment, both the French and British used her as an example of German barbarism. The Germans insisted they had the right to execute a traitor—whether man or woman. “ There’s the girl who clips your ticket for the train, And the girl who speeds the lift [elevator] from floor to floor, There’s the girl who does a milk-round [milk delivery] in the rain, And the girl who calls for orders at your door. Strong, sensible, and fit, They’re out to show their grit, And tackle jobs with energy and knack. No longer caged and penned up, They’re going to keep their end up Till the khaki soldier boys come marching back. ” At the end of the war, governments would quickly remove women from the jobs they had encouraged them to take earlier. The work benefits for women from World War I were short-lived as men returned to the job market. By 1919, there would be 650,000 unemployed women in Great Britain. Wages for the women who were still employed would be lowered. Nevertheless, in some countries the role played by women in wartime economies had a positive impact Section 2, 721–727 Edith Cavell Answer: Citizens were subject to rationing, propaganda, the draft, and loss of free speech. Women took jobs formerly considered beyond their capacity. Enrich Have students discuss the impact of World War I on the status of women. How did their acceptance, even if temporary, into occupations previously considered beyond their ability empower women to demand equal rights with men? L2 on the women’s movement for social and political emancipation. The most obvious gain was the right to vote, which was given to women in Germany, Austria, and the United States immediately after the war. Most British women gained the vote in 1918. Many upper- and middle-class women had also gained new freedoms. In ever-larger numbers, young women from these groups took jobs; had their own apartments; and showed their new independence. SS.A.3.4.9 L1/ELL Reading Essentials and Study Guide 23–2 Name Date Class Reading Essentials and Study Guide Reading Check Summarizing What was the effect of Chapter 23, Section 2 total war on ordinary citizens? For use with textbook pages 721–727 THE WAR KEY TERMS propaganda ideas spread to influence public opinion for or against a cause (page 721) trench warfare warfare fought in trenches (ditches protected by barbed war) (page 722) war of attrition a war based on wearing the other side down by constant attacks and heavy losses (page 724) total war a war involving a complete mobilization of resources and people in the warring countries (page 726) planned economies Checking for Understanding 1. Define propaganda, trench warfare, war of attrition, total war, planned economies. 2. Identify Lawrence of Arabia, Admiral Holtzendorff, Woodrow Wilson. 3. Locate Marne, Tannenberg, Masurian Lakes, Verdun, Gallipoli. Critical Thinking 6. Identify What methods did governments use to counter the loss of enthusiasm and opposition to the war at home? 7. Organizing Information Use a diagram like the one below to identify ways in which government powers increased during the war. 4. Explain why World War I required total warfare. 5. List some of the occupations opened to women by the war. Analyzing Visuals 8. Examine the photograph of British soldiers shown on page 723. How does this photograph illustrate the type of warfare that emerged during World War I? What aspects of trench warfare are not shown in the photo? 9. Expository Writing What lasting results occurred in women’s rights due to World War I? What were the temporary results? Write an essay discussing the effect of the war on women’s rights. Government Powers CHAPTER 23 1. Key terms are in blue. 2. Lawrence of Arabia (p. 724); Admiral Holtzendorff (p. 725); Woodrow Wilson (p. 726) 3. See chapter maps. 4. Masses of men had to be organized and supplies had to be manufactured and purchased for years of combat, which led to measures that affected the lives of all citizens in the warring countries. 5. chimney sweeps, truck drivers, farm laborers, factory workers in heavy industry 6. propaganda, expanded police powers, protesters arrested, censorship 7. draft; rationing; price, wage, and War and Revolution DRAWING FROM EXPERIENCEII Have you ever read the book All Quiet on the Western Front? How does the book describe the fighting on the Western Front during World War I? In the last section you learned about the events that led to the start of World War I Reteaching Activity Discuss the war’s major events on both fronts and at sea; the effects of technological advances; the entrance of the United States into the war. L1 SS.A.3.4.9 4 727 rent controls; takeover of transportation; import and export regulation; 8. trench warfare, waiting for next assault; the disease, death, uncomfortable conditions 9. Essays should reflect students’ grasp of material. economic systems directed by government agencies (page 726) CLOSE Have students summarize the situations of the Allies and the Central Powers in the spring of 1917. (The prospect of victory was slim for both sides at this point.) STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 2 727 SPECIAL REPORT SPECIAL REPORT SUMMARY the In 1915, a German submarine sank the British luxury liner Lusitania, killing more than 1,000 people and helping draw the United States into World War I. Lusitania ■ To clear up questions about the sinking, scientists used a robot vehicle to examine the wreck on the ocean floor. 1 P Passengers boarding the British liner R.M.S. Lusitania in New York on May 1, 1915, for the voyage to Liver- ■ pool, England, knew of Germany’s threat to sink ships Although the ship was carrying arms, the team found that the weapons had not exploded when a torpedo struck the Lusitania. This disproved a oncepopular theory of why the ship sank so fast. bound for the British Isles. Britain and Germany had been fighting for nine months. Still, few passengers imagined that a civilized nation would attack an unarmed passenger steamer without warning. ■ The team hypothesized that the powerful secondary explosion that caused the ship to sink in only 18 minutes was probably caused by the ignition of coal dust in a storage compartment. Built eight years earlier, the Lusitania was described as a “floating palace.” German authorities, however, saw her as a threat. They accused the British government of using the Lusitania to carry ammunition and other war supplies across the Atlantic. With her four towering funnels, the liner looked invincible as she left New York on her last voyage. Six days later, at 2:10 P.M. on May 7, 1915, Walther Schwieger, the 30-year-old commander of the German submarine U 20, fired a single torpedo at the Lusitania from a range of about 750 yards (686 m). Captain William Turner of the Lusitania saw the torpedo’s wake from the navigation bridge just before impact. It sounded like a “million-ton hammer hitting a steam boiler a hundred feet high,” one passenger said. A second, more powerful explosion followed, sending a geyser of water, coal, and debris high above the deck. TEACH Points to Discuss After students have read the feature, ask the following: Why did the Germans see the Lusitania as a threat? (They believed the ship was carrying ammunition and other war materials to England.) Why did so many people lose their lives when the Lusitania sank? (The boat sank quickly, and the lifeboats were almost impossible to reach and board.) Why did the sinking of the Lusitania anger many Americans? (because sinking the unarmed passenger vessel 728 CHAPTER 23 Teacher’s Notes 728 Listing to starboard, the liner began to sink rapidly at the bow, sending passengers tumbling down her slanted decks. Lifeboats on the port side were hanging too far inboard to be readily launched, those on the starboard side too far out to be easily boarded. Several overfilled lifeboats spilled occupants into the War and Revolution 2 2 sea. The great liner disappeared under the waves in only 18 minutes, leaving behind a jumble of swimmers, corpses, deck chairs, and wreckage. Looking back upon the scene from his submarine, even the German commander Schwieger was shocked. He later called it the most horrible sight he had ever seen. SPECIAL REPORT SPECIAL REPORT 0 mi 0 km killed more than 1,000 civilians, including 128 Americans) What questions were raised about the sinking? (Was the ship warned about German submarines? Why did one torpedo sink it so fast? Was it armed, as Germany claimed? What caused a second explosion?) How do British and German accounts of responsibility for the sinking of the ship differ? (A British judge claimed Germany was completely responsible. The German government claimed that the British had purposely made the ship a target.) 30 30 Enrich Ask students to evaluate the political choices and decisions made by Britain, Germany, and the United States in regard to the Lusitania. Be sure students take into account the historical context. Then ask students to apply this knowledge to the analysis of choices and decisions faced by societies today. Students should use current news media for the second part of this activity. L3 3 News of the disaster raced across the Atlantic. Of 1,959 people aboard, only 764 were saved. The dead included 94 children and infants. Questions were immediately raised. Did the British Admiralty give the Lusitania adequate warning? How could one torpedo have sunk her? Why did she go down so fast? Was there any truth to the German claim that the Lusitania had been armed? From the moment the Lusitania sank, she was surrounded by controversy. Americans were outraged by the attack, which claimed the lives of 123 U.S. citizens. Newspapers called the attack “deliberate murder” and a “foul deed,” and former President Theodore Roosevelt demanded revenge against Germany. The attack on the Lusitania is often credited with drawing the United States into World War I. However, President Woodrow Wilson—though he had vowed to hold Germany responsible for its submarine attacks—knew that the American people were not ready to go to war. It was almost two years before the United States joined the conflict in Europe. A British judge laid full blame on the German submarine commander, while the German government claimed that the British had deliberately made her a military target. Tragically, inquiries following the sinking of the Lusitania revealed that Captain Turner had received warnings by wireless from the British Admiralty, 1 The Lusitania arrives in New York on her maiden voyage in 1907 (opposite page). 2 Captain William Turner of the Lusitania, (opposite page, center); Walther Schwieger, commander of the German submarine U 20 (opposite page, right). SS.A.1.4.4 3 Headlines in Boston and New York (above) report the terrible news of the sinking of the Lusitania on May 7, 1915. In the two days prior to the attack on the Lusitania, the German submarine U 20 had sunk three ships off Ireland’s southern coast. Yet the captain of the Lusitania, who had received warnings by wireless from the British Admiralty, took only limited precautions as he approached the area. CHAPTER 23 War and Revolution 729 FUN FACTS ■ ■ Woodrow Wilson’s secretary of state, William Jennings Bryan, resigned rather than sign a strongly worded protest Wilson sent to Germany after the Lusitania’s sinking. The name of the ship came from the ancient Roman province of Lusitania, which made up the region that is now Portugal and western Spain. ■ The cargo of arms and ammunition that the Lusitania was carrying weighed about 173 tons. ■ The British admiralty had recommended that the Lusitania follow a zigzag course, changing direction every few minutes, to avoid torpedo attacks. 729 SPECIAL REPORT but took only limited precautions as he approached the area where the U 20 was waiting. Rumors of diamonds, gold, and valuables locked away in Lusitania’s safes have prompted salvage attempts over the years. To date, no treasure has ever been reported. Perhaps the biggest puzzle has been the hardest to solve: Why did the liner sink so fast? Newspapers speculated that the torpedo had struck munitions in a cargo hold, causing the strong secondary explosion. Divers later reported a huge hole in the port side of the bow, opposite where munitions would have been stored. Science and Technology The first submarine to be used in combat was built by an American, David Bushnell, in 1776 and was used during the Revolutionary War. It was made of wood and moved by means of a hand-turned propeller. (The craft was used in an unsuccessful attempt to blow up a British warship in New York harbor.) By the late 1800s, an American engineer named Simon Lake had made considerable advances in submarine technology, including the use of horizontal rudders for diving and water ballast for submergence. The U.S. Navy was slow to see the merits of Lake’s work. In the early 1900s, however, Lake was hired by the United States. Hoping to settle the issue, a team from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, sponsored by the National Geographic Society, sent their robot vehicle Jason down to photograph the damage. Fitted with cameras and powerful lights, the robot sent video images of the wreck by fiber-optic cable to a control room on the surface ship, Northern Horizon. A pilot maneuvered Jason with a joystick, while an engineer relayed instructions to the robot’s computers. Other team members watched for recognizable objects on the monitors. In addition to using Jason to make a visual survey of the Lusitania, the team of researchers and scientists also used sonar to create a computerized, threedimensional diagram of how the wreck looks today. From this data, it was discovered that the Lusitania’s hull had been flattened—in part by the force of gravity—to half its original width. But when Jason’s cameras swept across the hold, looking for the hole reported by divers shortly after the sinking, there was none to be found. Indeed, no evidence was found that would indicate that the torpedo had detonated an explosion in a cargo hold, undermining one theory of why the liner sank. Questions about her cargo have haunted the Lusitania since the day she went down. Was she carrying illegal munitions as the Germans have always claimed? In fact, she was. The manifest for her last voyage included wartime essentials such as motorcycle parts, metals, cotton goods, and food, as well as 4,200 cases of rifle ammunition, 1,250 cases of shrapnel (not explosive), and 18 boxes of percussion fuses. However, the investigation conducted by the Woods Hole team and Jason suggested that these munitions did not cause the secondary blast that sent the Lusitania to the bottom. So what did? One likely possibility was a coaldust explosion. The German torpedo struck the liner’s starboard side about 10 feet (3 m) below the waterline, rupturing one of the long coal 4 Connecting to the Past In recent years a number of wrecked ships have been raised from the ocean bottom by scientists and entrepreneurs. The salvage operations have generated controversy about the ownership of the materials recovered, which can be worth millions of dollars. Among the better-known cases are the Padre Island wrecks in Texas and the case of Nuestra Señora de la Atocha in Florida. 730 CHAPTER 23 War and Revolution CRITICAL THINKING ACTIVITY Ask students to review the maps in this feature and throughout this chapter. Then have students create a thematic database from the information contained on the maps. Students should interpret the database by posing and answering questions about geographic distributions and patterns in world history as revealed by information contained in the database. Make sure that students use appropriate mathematical skills to interpret the information on the maps. L2 SS.B.1.4.1 730 SPECIAL REPORT SPECIAL REPORT 5 6 4 Homer, a small robot, (opposite page) explores a hole in the stern of the Lusitania that was cut by a salvage crew to recover silverware and other items. 5 A provocative poster (left) depicted drowning innocents and urged Americans to enlist in the armed forces. 6 Alice Drury (above left) was a young nanny for an American couple on the Lusitania. She and another nanny were caring for the couple’s children: Audrey (above right), Stuart, Amy, and Susan. Alice was about to give Audrey a bottle when the torpedo hit. Alice wrapped Audrey in a shawl, grabbed Stuart, and headed for the lifeboats. A crewman loaded Stuart, but when Alice tried to board, the sailor told her it was full. Without a life jacket and with Audrey around her neck, Alice jumped into the water. A woman in the lifeboat grabbed her hair and pulled her aboard. Audrey’s parents were rescued too, but Amy, Susan, and the other nanny were lost. Alice and Audrey Lawson Johnston have remained close ever since. her superstructure is ghostly wreckage. Yet the horror and fascination surrounding the sinking of the great liner live on. With today’s high-technology tools, researchers and scientists at Woods Hole and the National Geographic Society have provided another look—and some new answers—to explain the chain of events that ended with the Lusitania at the bottom of the sea. FCAT MA.B.1.4.3 Who?What?Where?When? INTERPRETING THE PAST bunkers [storage bins] that stretched along both sides. If that bunker, mostly empty by the end of the voyage, contained explosive coal dust, the torpedo might have ignited it. Such an occurrence would explain all the coal that was found scattered on the seafloor near the wreck. The Lusitania’s giant funnels have long since turned to rust, an eerie marine growth covers her hull, and Geography Have students study the map on page 729. How far was the Lusitania from the Irish coast when it was sunk? (about 10 miles [16 km]) How far apart were the two ships sunk by the U 20 on May 6, 1915? (about 10 miles [16 km]) What was the approximate distance between Ireland and Wales? (about 50 miles [81 km]) German U-Boat Attacks After the sinking of the Lusitania, German submarines continued to torpedo merchant vessels without warning. In March 1916, fearing the United States would enter the war, Germany stopped the attacks. With the war stalemated, however, Germany resumed unrestricted submarine attacks in February 1917, sinking four American ships in just two months. Wilson cited German violations of “freedom of the seas” as a reason for entering the war in April 1917. SS.A.3.4.9 1. How did the Lusitania contribute to drawing the United States into World War I? 2. Describe the Lusitania’s route. Where was it when it sank? 3. What mysteries were researchers able to solve by using underwater robot technology? CHAPTER 23 War and Revolution 731 INTERPRETING THE PAST Answers: 1. Americans were outraged by this action by the Germans against a civilian target. 2. The Lusitania was traveling from New York City, across the Atlantic Ocean, and then along the southern coast of Ireland en route to Liverpool (on the western coast), England. The Lusitania was sunk off the southern coast of Ireland. 3. Researchers were able to determine that weapons carried by the Lusitania had not exploded, and they hypothesized that the second explosion was caused by the ignition of coal dust. 731 CHAPTER 23 The Russian Revolution Section 3, 732–737 1 FOCUS Guide to Reading Section Overview This section discusses the fall of Czar Nicholas II in Russia and the ensuing Russian Revolution, which put the communists in power. BELLRINGER Main Ideas People to Identify Reading Strategy • The czarist regime in Russia fell as a result of poor leadership. • The Bolsheviks under Lenin came to power. • Communist forces triumphed over anti-Communist forces. Alexandra, Grigori Rasputin, Alexander Kerensky, Bolsheviks, V. I. Lenin, Leon Trotsky Categorizing Information Using a chart like the one below, identify the factors and events that led to Lenin coming to power in 1917. Key Terms Preview Questions Places to Locate Petrograd, Ukraine, Siberia, Urals Skillbuilder Activity Project transparency and have students answer questions. Preview of Events ✦1916 ✦1917 1916 Rasputin assassinated Daily Focus Skills Transparency 23–3 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. UNIT 5 Lenin in Power (1917) 1. What promises did the Bolsheviks make to the Russian people? 2. Why did civil war break out in Russia after the Russian Revolution? soviets, war communism ✦1918 1917 Czar Nicholas II steps down ✦1919 ✦1920 1918 Lenin signs Treaty of Brest-Litovsk ✦1921 1921 Communists control Russia ANSWERS 1. the Czar 2. the peasants 3. the Czar, the officials, the nobles, and the middle classes DAILY FOCUS SKILLS Chapter 23 TRANSPARENCY 23-3 The Russian Revolution 1 Who was in charge of Russian society in the nineteenth century? 2 What part of society had the greatest number of people? 3 Voices from the Past What parts of society would probably be overthrown in a revolution? THE CZAR — a complete autocrat; his will was law THE OFFICIALS — carried out czar’s commands; included army, navy, secret service, and bureaucracy THE NOBLES — served czar but had power over peasants THE PEASANTS — majority of Russian people; very poor with few rights THE MIDDLE CLASSES — included merchants and craftsmen John Reed, an American journalist, described an important event that took place in St. Petersburg, Russia, on the night of November 6, 1917: THE INDUSTRIAL WORKERS — becoming more numerous but poor and underpaid “ After a few minutes huddling there, some hundreds of men began again to flow forward. By this time, in the light that streamed out of the Winter Palace windows, I could see that the first two or three hundred men were Red Guards [revolutionaries], with only a few scattered soldiers. Over the barricade of firewood we clambered, and leaping down inside gave a triumphant shout as we stumbled on a heap of rifles thrown down by the guards who had stood there. On both sides of the main gateway the doors stood wide open, and from the huge pile came not the slightest sound. Guide to Reading Answers to Graphic: strikes by working class women, workers, and soldiers → provisional government established → czarist regime falls Germans ship Lenin back to Russia → Bolsheviks use soviets to overthrow Provisional Government ” —Eyewitness to History, John Carey, ed., 1987 Reed was describing the Bolshevik seizure of the Winter Palace, seat of the Russian Government, by Bolshevik revolutionaries. This act led to a successful revolution in Russia. Background to Revolution Preteaching Vocabulary Ask students to define soviet and discuss it with the class. L2 As you will learn, out of Russia’s collapse in 1917 came the Russian Revolution. Its impact would be felt all over the world. Russia was unprepared both militarily and technologically for the total war of World War I. Russia had no competent military leaders. Even worse, Czar 732 CHAPTER 23 War and Revolution SECTION RESOURCES Reproducible Masters • Reproducible Lesson Plan 23–3 • Daily Lecture and Discussion Notes 23–3 • Guided Reading Activity 23–3 • Section Quiz 23–3 • Reading Essentials and Study Guide 23–3 732 Transparencies • Daily Focus Skills Transparency 23–3 Multimedia Interactive Tutor Self-Assessment CD-ROM ExamView® Pro Testmaker CD-ROM Presentation Plus! CD-ROM CHAPTER 23 Section 3, 732–737 History 2 Rasputin (shown upper right corner) had great influence over Czar Nicholas II and his family, shown here in a 1913 photograph. Why was Rasputin able to influence Russian political TEACH History Nicholas II insisted on taking personal charge of the armed forces despite his obvious lack of ability and training. In addition, Russian industry was unable to produce the weapons needed for the army. Many soldiers trained using broomsticks. Others were sent to the front without rifles and told to pick one up from a dead comrade. Given these conditions, it is not surprising that the Russian army suffered incredible losses. Between 1914 and 1916, two million soldiers were killed, and another four to six million wounded or captured. By 1917, the Russian will to fight had vanished. Daily DailyLecture Lectureand and Discussion DiscussionNotes Notes23–3 1–1 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Daily Lecture and Discussion Notes Chapter 23, Section 3 Did You Know ? Vladimir Ulianov Lenin was born in 1870 to a middle class family. He was educated and became a lawyer. In 1887, his older brother was executed by the czarist police for planning to assassinate the czar. This event turned Lenin into a revolutionary, and he dedicated his life to overthrowing the czar. then tied him up and threw him into the Neva River. He drowned, but not before he had managed to untie the knots underwater. The killing of Rasputin occurred too late, however, to save the monarchy. I. Background to Revolution (pages 732–734) A. Due to a lack of experienced military leaders and technology, Russia was unprepared for World War I. The Russian army was poorly trained and equipped and suffered terrible losses. B. By 1917, the Russian will to continue fighting in the war had disappeared. C. Czar Nicholas II relied on his army and government to keep him in power. His wife Alexandra cut him off from events. She was strongly influenced by Grigori Rasputin, who claimed to be a holy man. Though he had no military experience, Czar Nicholas II insisted on commanding the army in the field and was away from the capital. In his absence, Alexandra made important decisions with the help of Rasputin. The March Revolution At the beginning of March 1917, a series of strikes led by working-class women broke out in the capital city of Petrograd (formerly St. Petersburg). A few weeks FINLAND RUSSIA earlier, the government had started Petrograd (St. Petersburg) bread rationing in Petrograd after the price of bread had skyrocketed. Many of the women who stood in the lines waiting for bread were also factory workers who worked 12-hour days. A police report warned the government: D. The Russian people became increasingly upset with the Czar and his wife due to military and economic disasters. Conservatives wanted to save the deteriorating situation and assassinated Rasputin late in 1916. However, this did not save the monarchy. E. In March, 1917 working-class women led a series of strikes in the capital city of Petrograd. They were upset about bread shortages and rationing. They called a general strike that shut down all the factories. F. Alexandra reported the situation to Nicholas, describing the demonstrators as hooligans. Nicholas responded by ordering troops to break up the crowds with force. However, many soldiers refused to shoot and joined the demonstrators. On March 12, the Duma, or legislature, met and established a provisional government. The government then urged the Czar to step down, which he did. G. The provisional government was headed by Alexander Kerensky and decided to continue fighting the war. This was a grave mistake, as it upset workers and peasants who wanted to end the years of fighting. H. The government was also challenged by the soviets—councils representing workers and soldiers—who came to play an important role in Russian politics. Soviets sprang up around the country, and were mostly made up of socialists. Baltic Sea Beginnings of Upheaval Czar Nicholas II was an autocratic ruler who relied on the army and bureaucracy to hold up his regime. Furthermore, he was increasingly cut off from events by his German-born wife, Alexandra. She was a willful and stubborn woman who had fallen under the influence of Grigori Rasputin (ra•SPYOO•tuhn), an uneducated Siberian peasant who claimed to be a holy man. Alexandra believed that Rasputin was holy, for he alone seemed able to stop the bleeding of her son Alexis. Alexis, the heir to the throne, had hemophilia (a deficiency in the ability of the blood to clot). With the czar at the battlefront, Alexandra made all of the important decisions. She insisted on first consulting Rasputin, the man she called “her beloved, never-to-be-forgotten teacher, savior, and mentor.” Rasputin’s influence made him an important power behind the throne. He did not hesitate to interfere in government affairs. As the leadership at the top stumbled its way through a series of military and economic disasters, the Russian people grew more and more upset with the czarist regime. Even conservative aristocrats who supported the monarchy felt the need to do something to save the situation. For a start, they assassinated Rasputin in December 1916. It was not easy to kill this man of incredible physical strength. They shot him three times and Answer: Alexandra believed that Rasputin was a holy man who could stop her son’s bleeding, and this belief gave Rasputin influence at court. turn 331 Critical Thinking Ask students to research and analyze further how Rasputin’s interference in Russia’s political affairs contributed to the undermining of the czarist government. L2 Mothers of families, exhausted by endless stand“ ing in line at stores, distraught over their half-starving and sick children, are today perhaps closer to revolution than [the liberal opposition leaders] and of course they are a great deal more dangerous because they are the combustible material for which only a single spark is needed to burst into flame. ” CHAPTER 23 War and Revolution 733 COOPERATIVE LEARNING ACTIVITY EXTENDING THE CONTENT Creating a Presentation Divide students into four groups and assign each group a major figure in the Russian Revolution: Czar Nicholas II, Rasputin, Lenin, and Trotsky. Have each group research its assigned individual. Students should include his background, education, beliefs, and role in the revolution. Students should divide up the research appropriately and combine their findings to prepare a written or oral report to present to the class. If possible, the report should be accompanied by illustrations. Following the presentations, students should analyze the influence of each of these individuals on political events of the twentieth century. L2 STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 733 CHAPTER 23 On March 8, about 10,000 women marched HISTORY through the city of Petrograd demanding “Peace Web Activity Visit and Bread” and “Down the Glencoe World History Web site at with Autocracy.” Soon the wh.glencoe.com and women were joined by click on Chapter 23– other workers. Together Student Web Activity they called for a general to learn more about the strike. The strike shut Russian royal family. down all the factories in the city on March 10. Alexandra wrote her husband Nicholas II at the battlefront, “This is a hooligan movement. If the weather were very cold they would all probably stay at home.” Nicholas ordered troops to break up the crowds by shooting them if necessary. Soon, however, large numbers of the soldiers joined the demonstrators and refused to fire on the crowds. The Duma, or legislative body, which the czar had tried to dissolve, met anyway. On March 12, it established the provisional government, which mainly consisted of middle-class Duma representatives. This Section 3, 732–737 Answer: The Russian army suffered incredible losses in the war. Nicholas II’s wife made decisions under the influence of Rasputin; then came a series of military and economic disasters. At the beginning of March 1917, strikes led by workingclass women broke out in Petrograd, which developed into a general strike. Large numbers of the soldiers joined the demonstrators. The Duma met and established a provisional government. Nicholas II stepped down on March 15. government urged the czar to step down. Because he no longer had the support of the army or even the aristocrats, Nicholas II did step down, on March 15, ending the 300-year-old Romanov dynasty. The provisional government, headed by Alexander Kerensky (keh•REHN•skee), now decided to carry on the war to preserve Russia’s honor. This decision to remain in World War I was a major blunder. It satisfied neither the workers nor the peasants, who, tired and angry from years of suffering, wanted above all an end to the war. The government was also faced with a challenge to its authority—the soviets. The soviets were councils composed of representatives from the workers and soldiers. The soviet of Petrograd had been formed in March 1917. At the same time, soviets sprang up in army units, factory towns, and rural areas. The soviets, largely made up of socialists, represented the more radical interests of the lower classes. One group—the Bolsheviks—came to play a crucial role. Reading Check Identifying Develop a sequence of events leading to the March Revolution. Answer: One reason may have been to obtain the Romanov wealth. The Mystery of Anastasia L1/ELL Guided Reading Activity 23–3 Name Date Class Guided Reading Activity 23-3 The Russian Revolution DIRECTIONS: Fill in the blanks below as you read Section 3. I. Russia was A. for the total war of World War I. was increasingly cut off from events by his wife. B. In March 1917, a series of strikes led by , started in Petrograd. C. Nicholas ordered troops to break up crowds by D. A socialist group, the if necessary. , represented the radical interests of lower classes. II. The Bolsheviks were a party called the Russian Social Democrats. A. The Bolsheviks came under the leadership of V.I. 1. They became a party dedicated to 2 “P B . revolution. d” d th B l h ik Czar Nicholas II, his wife Alexandra, and their five children were murdered on the night of July 16, 1918. Soon after, rumors began to circulate that some members of the family had survived. In 1921, a young woman in Dalldorf, Germany, claimed to be the Grand Duchess Anastasia, youngest daughter of Nicholas II. Some surviving members of the Romanov family became convinced that she was Anastasia. Grand Duke Andrew, Nicholas II’s first cousin, said after meeting with her, “For me there is definitely no doubt; it is Anastasia.” 䊱 Literature Have students research and report on one of the following: Maksim Gorky, a champion of the revolutionary movement in Russia; Alexander Blok, who wrote “The Twelve,” a poem about the revolution; or Vladimir Mayakovski, a poet who popularized the revolution. L3 STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 734 Grand Duchess Anastasia Later, the woman claiming to be Anastasia came to the United States. While in New York, she registered at a Long Island hotel as Anna Anderson and soon became known by that name. In 1932, she returned to Germany. During the next 30 years, she pursued a claim in German courts for part of the estate left to Empress Alexandra’s German relatives. In the 1960s in the United States, she became even better known as a result of a popular play and film, Anastasia. In 1968, Anna Anderson returned to the United States, where she died in 1984. In 1994, DNA testing of tissues from Anna Anderson revealed that she was not the Grand Duchess Anastasia. In all probability, Anna Anderson was Franziska Schanzkowska, a Polish farmer’s daughter who had always dreamed of being an actress. 䊴 Anna Anderson The woman claiming to be Anastasia convinced many people of the authenticity of her claim. What do you think might have motivated her to act out the part of Anastasia for so many years? 734 EXTENDING THE CONTENT Health As if the world war, revolution, and civil war were not devastating enough to the Russian people, an even greater danger appeared in the form of lice. Lice carry Rickettsia bacteria, which causes typhus. During the war years, between 1914 and 1916, the typhus outbreak on the Eastern Front was serious (there were no similar outbreaks on the Western Front due to the use of fumigants). After the revolution of 1917, Russia experienced the worst typhus epidemic in history. Between 1917 and 1921, over 25 million Russians came down with typhus and more than 2.5 million died. Ask students to compare this typhus epidemic with the fourteenth-century plague and identify any contemporary situations that parallel these historical situations. FCAT LA.A.2.2.7, SC.F.1.4.7 CHAPTER 23 Russian Revolution and Civil War, 1917–1922 Section 3, 732–737 Western boundary of Russia, 1914 Russia, 1922 °E 20 60 Land lost by Russia (Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, 1918) Center of revolutionary (Bolshevik) activity, 1917–1918 °E Murmansk White Russian (anti-Bolshevik) or Allied attack, 1918–1920 Area under Bolshevik control, October 1919 80°E Helsinki TA AN IA UN S W M IN S RO Archangel Petrograd Riga (St. Petersburg) Minsk Novgorod Moscow Vladimir WESTERN Kiev Kazan SIBERIA UK Smolensk RA Perm INE O Odessa Orel M Tobolsk AL Samara U R Yekatarinburg Black Rostov Tsaritsyn Sea (Volgograd) N FINLAND °E IA N TO A ES VI NIA T A LA HU T LI GERMANY PO LA N Warsaw D BrestLitovsk 40 AY NORW N E D E SW E North Sea 50 °N 0° Arctic OCEaN Answers: 1. area not under Bolshevik control is larger, but area under Bolshevik control contained main cities 2. Questions and answers will vary. BU R U S S I A LG AR IA RK US AS EY CA U C TU °N 40 Caspian Sea Vladivostok Aral Sea IRAN MONGOLIA CHINA JAPAN 1,000 miles 0 1,000 kilometers 0 Two-Point Equidistant projection The Rise of Lenin The Bolsheviks began as a small faction of a Marxist party called the Russian Social Democrats. The Bolsheviks came under the leadership of Vladimir Ilyich Ulianov (ool•YAH•nuhf), known to the world as V. I. Lenin. Under Lenin’s direction, the Bolsheviks became a party dedicated to violent revolution. Lenin believed that only violent revolution could destroy the capitalist system. A “vanguard” (forefront) of activists, he said, must form a small party of well-disciplined professional revolutionaries to accomplish the task. Between 1900 and 1917, Lenin spent most of his time abroad. When the provisional government was formed in March 1917, he saw an opportunity for the Bolsheviks to seize power. In April 1917, German military leaders, hoping to create disorder in Russia, shipped Lenin to Russia. Lenin and his associates were in a sealed train to prevent their ideas from infecting Germany. Lenin’s arrival in Russia opened a new stage of the Russian Revolution. Lenin maintained that the soviets of soldiers, workers, and peasants were readymade instruments of power. He believed that the Bolsheviks should work toward gaining control of N 30° PaCIFIC OCEaN Critical Thinking Have students research and analyze the three Bolshevik slogans: “Peace, Land, Bread,” “Worker Control of Production,” and “All Power to the Soviets.” Which did Lenin attempt to address? Which were strictly propaganda? What is the appeal of these slogans? L2 The Russian Revolution and civil war resulted in significant changes to Russia’s boundaries. 1. Interpreting Maps Compare the area of Russia under Bolshevik control in 1919 with the area not under Bolshevik control. Which is larger? Which contained Russia’s main cities? 2. Applying Geography Skills Pose two questions for your classmates to determine whether or not they can describe the changes in Russia’s boundaries resulting from the Russian Revolution and World War I. these groups and then use them to overthrow the provisional government. At the same time, the Bolsheviks reflected the discontent of the people. They promised an end to the war, the redistribution of all land to the peasants, the transfer of factories and industries from capitalists to committees of workers, and the transfer of government power from the provisional government to the soviets. Three simple slogans summed up the Bolshevik program: “Peace, Land, Bread,” “Worker Control of Production,” and “All Power to the Soviets.” Turning Points in World History The ABC News videotape includes a segment on the Russian Revolution. Writing Activity Reading Check Examining What was Lenin’s plan when he arrived in Russia? CHAPTER 23 War and Revolution Answer: to gain control of the soviets of soldiers, workers, and peasants and use them to overthrow the provisional government 735 Have students write an essay in which they identify and explain the causes and effects of the rise of communism on the Soviet Union. L3 SS.A.3.4.9 INTERDISCIPLINARY CONNECTIONS ACTIVITY Art Have students use the Internet or library to research Communist propaganda posters from this period. Ask them to write a brief report analyzing at least one of the posters. Students should consider the following questions: What can be learned by examining the poster? What message is the poster trying to convey? Does the poster elicit an emotional response? How do the images in the poster portray Communist ideology and values? Students’ reports should include a copy of the poster, and reports can be presented orally to the class. L2 STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 735 CHAPTER 23 The Bolsheviks Seize Power Section 3, 732–737 Answer: Russia gained peace but lost eastern Poland, Ukraine, Finland, and the Baltic provinces. Answer: groups loyal to the czar, liberals, anti-Leninist socialists, Communist White Russians, Allied forces, and Ukrainians 3 ASSESS Assign Section 3 Assessment as homework or as an in-class activity. Have students use Interactive Tutor Self-Assessment CD-ROM. Reading Check Describing What was the impact of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk on Russia? Civil War in Russia L2 Many people were opposed to the new Bolshevik, or Communist, regime. These people included not only groups loyal to the czar but also liberals and anti-Leninist socialists. These groups were joined by the Allies, who were extremely concerned about the Communist takeover. The Allies sent thousands of troops to various parts of Russia in the hope of Section Quiz 23–3 Name 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 Date 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 Class 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 ✔ Score Chapter 23 Section Quiz 23-3 DIRECTIONS: Matching Match each item in Column A with the items in Column B. Write the correct letters in the blanks. (10 points each) Column A Column B 1. Russian legislative body in 1917 A. Trotsky 2. representative councils of workers and soldiers B. duma 3. small faction of the Russian Social Democrat party C. soviets 4. red army’s commissar D. war communism 5. temporary suspension of communist practices E. bolsheviks 736 CHAPTER 23 Se a SS.A.3.4.9 an Ask students to write an essay in which they identify the historic origins of the economic systems of capitalism and socialism. Then have students identify the historical origins of the economic and political system of communism. Finally, ask students to state the reasons for the Communist victory in the Russian civil war. L3 sp i Writing Activity Ca By the end of October, Bolsheviks made up a slight majority in the Petrograd and Moscow soviets. The number of party members had grown from 50,000 to 240,000. With Leon Trotsky, a dedicated revolutionary, as head of the Petrograd soviet, the Bolsheviks were in a position to claim power in the name of the soviets. During the night of November 6, Bolshevik forces seized the Winter Palace, the seat of the provisional government. The government quickly collapsed with little bloodshed. This overthrow of the provisional government coincided with a meeting in Petrograd of the all-Russian Congress of Soviets, which represented local soviets from all over the country. Outwardly, Lenin turned over the power of the provisional government to the Congress of Soviets. The real power, however, passed to a Council of People’s Commissars, headed V. I. Lenin by Lenin. The Bolsheviks, who soon renamed themselves the Communists, still had a long way to go. Lenin had promised peace, and that, he realized, would not be an easy task. It would mean the humiliating loss of much Russian territory. There was no real choice, however. On March 3, 1918, Lenin signed the Treaty of BrestLitovsk with Germany and gave up eastern Poland, Ukraine, Finland, and the Baltic provinces. To his critics, Lenin argued that it made no difference. The spread of the socialist revolution throughout Europe would make the treaty largely irrelevant. In any case, he had promised peace to the Russian people. Real peace did not come, however, because the country soon sank into civil war. bringing Russia back into the war. The Allied forces rarely fought on Russian soil, but they did give material aid to anti-Communist forces. Between 1918 and 1921, the Communist (Red) Army was forced to fight on many fronts against these opponents. The first serious threat to the Communists came from Siberia. Here an anti-Communist (White) force attacked westward and advanced almost to the Volga River before being stopped. Attacks also came from the Ukrainians in the southwest and from the Baltic regions. In mid-1919, White forces swept through Ukraine and advanced almost to Moscow before being pushed back. By 1920, however, the major White forces had been defeated and Ukraine retaken. The next year, the Communist regime RUSSIA regained control over the independent Black Sea GEORGIA nationalist governments in Georgia, ARMENIA Russian Armenia, and Azerbaijan ( A • AZERBAIJAN zuhr•BY•JAHN). The royal family was another victim of the civil war. After the czar abdicated, he, his wife, and their five children had been taken into captivity. In April 1918, they were moved to Ekaterinburg, a mining town in the Urals. On the night of July 16, members of the local soviet murdered the czar and his family and burned their bodies in a nearby mine shaft. Reading Check Identifying Who opposed the new Bolshevik regime? Triumph of the Communists How had Lenin and the Communists triumphed in the civil war over what seemed to be overwhelming forces? One reason was that the Red Army was a well-disciplined fighting force. This was largely due to the organizational genius of Leon Trotsky. As commissar of war, Trotsky reinstated the draft and insisted on rigid discipline. Soldiers who deserted or refused to obey orders were executed on the spot. Furthermore, the disunity of the anti-Communist forces weakened their efforts. Political differences created distrust among the Whites and prevented them from cooperating effectively with one another. Some Whites insisted on restoring the czarist regime. Others believed that only a more liberal and democratic program had any chance of success. War and Revolution DIRECTIONS: Multiple Choice In the blank, write the letter of the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. (10 points each) 6. Russia was unprepared for war in all of the following ways EXCEPT one. Which one? READING THE TEXT STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 736 Reading Maps, Graphs, and Charts Organize the class into three groups. Have one group create a chart identifying the causes and evaluating the effects of the English, American, French, and Russian Revolutions. The second group will create a chart summarizing the ideas from the same revolutions concerning separation of powers, liberty, equality, democracy, popular sovereignty, human rights, constitutionalism, nationalism, capitalism, socialism, and communism. The third group will identify and explain the causes and effects of World War I. Have groups share their information, and have all students write a summary of this information. L2 FCAT LA.A.2.4.8, LA.E.2.2.1 CHAPTER 23 History Section 3, 732–737 The Red Army is shown here marching through Moscow. Between 1918 and 1921, the Communist (Red) Army faced resistance from both the Allies and the anti-Communist (White) forces. Who was the Communist commissar of war during this period? The Whites, then, had no common goal. The Communists, in contrast, had a singleminded sense of purpose. Inspired by their vision of a new socialist order, the Communists had the determination that comes from revolutionary zeal and convictions. The Communists were also able to translate their revolutionary faith into practical instruments of power. A policy of war communism, for example, was used to ensure regular supplies for the Red Army. War communism meant government control of banks and most industries, the seizing of grain from peasants, and the centralization of state administration under Communist control. Another Communist instrument was revolutionary terror. A new Red secret police—known as the Cheka—began a Red Terror aimed at the destruction of all those who opposed the new regime (much like the Reign of Terror in the French Revolution). The Red Terror added an element of fear to the Communist regime. Finally, the presence of foreign armies on Russian soil enabled the Communists to appeal to the powerful force of Russian patriotism. At one point, over a History Answer: Leon Trotsky Answer: The Red Army had the organizational genius of Leon Trotsky and a common goal; there were conflicting goals among the antiCommunist White forces. hundred thousand foreign troops—mostly Japanese, British, American, and French—were stationed in Russia in support of anti-Communist forces. Their presence made it easy for the Communist government to call on patriotic Russians to fight foreign attempts to control the country. By 1921, the Communists were in total command of Russia. In the course of the civil war, the Communist regime had transformed Russia into a centralized state dominated by a single party. The state was also largely hostile to the Allied powers, because the Allies had tried to help the Communists’ enemies in the civil war. Enrich Have students write a brief essay explaining why the police believed that Russian women were “a great deal more dangerous” than political leaders, as stated in the report on page 733. L2 L1/ELL Reading Essentials and Study Guide 23–3 Reading Check Contrasting Why did the Red Army prevail over the White Army? Name Date Class Reading Essentials and Study Guide Chapter 23, Section 3 For use with textbook pages 732–737 THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION KEY TERMS Checking for Understanding 1. Define soviets, war communism. 2. Identify Alexandra, Grigori Rasputin, Alexander Kerensky, Bolsheviks, V.I. Lenin, Leon Trotsky. 3. Locate Petrograd, Ukraine, Siberia, Urals. 4. Explain why Lenin accepted the loss of so much Russian territory in the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk. 5. List some of the different opinions that split the White forces. Critical Thinking 6. Explain How did the presence of Allied troops in Russia ultimately help the Communists? 7. Organizing Information Using a chart like the one below, sequence the steps the Communists took to turn Russia into a centralized state dominated by a single party. Analyzing Visuals 8. Examine the photograph of Czar Nicholas II and his family shown on page 733 of your text. Is this photograph an idealized view of royalty? Do you think the people of Russia would have agreed with this view of the royal family as portrayed in this photograph, especially during World War I? Steps to Communist control 1. 9. Expository Writing Write an essay comparing the economic, political, and social causes of the American, French, and Russian Revolutions. 2. CHAPTER 23 1. Key terms are in blue. 2. Alexandra (p. 733); Grigori Rasputin (p. 733); Alexander Kerensky (p. 734); Bolsheviks (p. 735); V. I. Lenin (p. 735); Leon Trotsky (p. 736) 3. See chapter maps. 4. Lenin promised the people peace, thinking the socialist revolution would make the treaty irrelevant. 5. a restoration of the czarist regime, a liberal democracy 6. The presence of foreign forces stirred Russian patriotism, to which the Communists appealed. 7. well-disciplined, zealous Red Army; political differences among antiCommunists; war communism; Cheka War and Revolution soviets councils in Russia composed of representatives from the workers and soldiers (page 734) war communism a Communist policy that was used to ensure regular supplies for the Red Army through government control of banks and industries, the seizing of grain from peasants, and the centralization of state administration under Communist control (page 737) DRAWING FROM EXPERIENCEII What is communism? Have you ever thought what it would be like to live in a Communist country? How would your life be different? Reteaching Activity Have students construct a chart using dates from 1916 to 1922 along the side and these headings at the top: Government Leader(s); Political/Social Events. Have students fill in their charts. L1 737 8. appear prosperous, country was poor 9. Essays should be supported from material in the text. 4 CLOSE Have students summarize the effects of World War I on the Russian Revolution. SS.A.3.4.9 STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 2 737 TEACH Ten Days That Shook the World Analyzing Primary Sources This selection captures the fervor and excitement of the early days of communism. What aspects of the Communist program would have seemed most attractive to people exhausted by war? What would have been the fascination for people like John Reed, who had become disenchanted with capitalism and angry about continuing social inequalities? Why did the Bolsheviks have such revolutionary fervor? How do Lenin’s use of language and his mannerisms affect the crowd? Compare Reed’s enthusiasm and the Bolsheviks’ fervor to the new revolutionary fervor that overthrew communism in the revolutions of 1989. L3 FCAT LA.A.2.4.7 Lenin speaks to the troops in Moscow. JOHN REED WAS AN AMERICAN JOURNALIST sympathetic to socialism. In Ten Days That Shook the World, he left an eyewitness account of the Russian Revolution. Inspired by the Bolsheviks, he helped found the American Communist Labor Party in Chicago. Accused of treason, he returned to the Soviet Union, dying there in 1920. It was just 8:40 when a thundering wave of “ cheers announced the entrance of the presidium [executive committee], with Lenin—great Lenin— among them. A short, stocky figure, with a big head set down in his shoulders, bald and bulging. Little eyes, a snubbish nose, wide, generous mouth, and heavy chin. Dressed in shabby clothes, his trousers much too long for him. Unimpressive, to be the idol of a mob, loved and revered as perhaps few leaders in history have been. . . . Now Lenin, gripping the edge of the reading stand, letting his little winking eyes travel over the crowd as he stood there waiting, apparently oblivious to the long-rolling ovation, which lasted several minutes. When it finished, he said simply, ‘We shall The following literature from the Glencoe Literature Library may enrich the teaching of this chapter: Animal Farm by G. Orwell now proceed to construct the socialist order!’ Again that overwhelming human roar. ‘The first thing is the adoption of practical measures to realize peace. . . . We shall offer peace to the peoples of all the warring countries upon the basis of the Soviet terms—no annexations, no indemnities, and the right of self-determination of peoples. . . . This proposal of peace will meet with resistance on the part of the imperialist governments—we don’t fool ourselves on that score. But we hope that revolution will soon break out in all the warring countries; that is why we address ourselves especially to the workers of France, England and Germany. . . .’ ‘The revolution of November 6th and 7th,’ he ended, ‘has opened the era of the Social Revolution. . . . The labour movement, in the name of peace and socialism, shall win, and fulfill its destiny. . . .’ There was something quiet and powerful in all this, which stirred the souls of men. It was understandable why people believed when Lenin spoke. —John Reed, Ten Days That Shook the World ” Analyzing Primary Sources 1. Did John Reed agree or disagree with Lenin? 2. How do you know that Reed’s account of Lenin is biased? 738 ANSWERS TO ANALYZING PRIMARY SOURCES 1. John Reed agreed with Lenin and considered Lenin a hero. STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 738 2. Answers will vary, but students should support their answers with examples from the excerpt. Students should know that phrases such as “great Lenin” and “the idol of the mob, loved and revered as perhaps few leaders in history have been” show bias. CHAPTER 23 End of the War Section 4, 739–744 Guide to Reading Main Ideas People to Identify Reading Strategy • Combined Allied forces stopped the German offensive. • Peace settlements brought political and territorial changes to Europe and created bitterness and resentment in several nations. Erich von Ludendorff, Friedrich Ebert, David Lloyd George, Georges Clemenceau Key Terms 1. What were the key events in bringing about an end to the war? 2. What was the intended purpose of the League of Nations? Organizing Information At the Paris Peace Conference, the leaders of France, Britain, and the United States were motivated by different concerns. Using a chart, identify the national interests of each country as it approached the peace deliberations. Places to Locate Kiel, Alsace, Lorraine, Poland Preview Questions armistice, reparation, mandate Preview of Events ✦1917 ✦1918 France Britain Section Overview This section discusses the end of the Great War and the peace settlements that followed. BELLRINGER Skillbuilder Activity ✦1919 1918 Germany agrees to an armistice United States 1 FOCUS Project transparency and have students answer questions. ✦1920 1919 Treaty of Versailles signed at the Paris Peace Conference Daily Focus Skills Transparency 23–4 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. UNIT 5 Voices from the Past ANSWERS 1. in Paris, on November 11, at 5 A.M. Paris time 11:00 A.M. Paris time 3. They rejoiced. 2. at DAILY FOCUS SKILLS Chapter 23 TRANSPARENCY 23-4 End of the War 1 On what day, at what time, and where was the armistice signed? 2 At what time did the war actually stop? 3 How do you think the Allied countries reacted to the news? On September 15, 1916, on the Western Front, a new weapon appeared: “ We heard strange throbbing noises, and lumbering slowly towards us came three huge mechanical monsters such as we had never seen before. My first impression was that they looked ready to topple on their noses, but their tails and the two little wheels at the back held them down and kept them level. . . . Instead of going on to the German lines the three tanks assigned to us straddled our front line, stopped and then opened up a murderous machine-gun fire. . . . They finally realized they were on the wrong trench and moved on, frightening the Germans out of their wits and making them scuttle like frightened rabbits. W ashington, November 11.—The armistice was signed at 5 a.m. today, Paris time, and hostilities will cease at 11 a.m., Paris time. Guide to Reading ” —Eyewitness to History, John Carey, ed., 1987 The tank played a role in bringing an end to World War I and foreshadowed a new kind of warfare. The Last Year of the War The year 1917 had not been a good one for the Allies. Allied offensives on the Western Front had been badly defeated. The Russian Revolution, which began in November 1917, led to Russia’s withdrawal from the War a few months later. The cause of the Central Powers looked favorable, although war weariness was beginning to take its toll. On the positive side, the entry of the United States into the war in 1917 gave the Allies a much-needed psychological boost, along with fresh men and material. In 1918, American troops would prove crucial. CHAPTER 23 War and Revolution Answers to Graphic: France: strip Germany of weapons; reparations; separate Rhineland; Britain: make Germany pay for war United States: reduce armaments; ensure self-determination; League of Nations Preteaching Vocabulary Ask students to define armistice, reparation, and mandate and use each word in sentences of their own. L1 739 SECTION RESOURCES Reproducible Masters • Reproducible Lesson Plan 23–4 • Daily Lecture and Discussion Notes 23–4 • Guided Reading Activity 23–4 • Section Quiz 23–4 • Reading Essentials and Study Guide 23–4 Transparencies • Daily Focus Skills Transparency 23–4 Multimedia Interactive Tutor Self-Assessment CD-ROM ExamView® Pro Testmaker CD-ROM Presentation Plus! CD-ROM 739 CHAPTER 23 A New German Offensive For Germany, the withdrawal of the Russians offered new hope for a successful end to the war. Germany was now free to concentrate entirely on the Western Front. Erich von Ludendorff, who guided German military operations, decided to make one final military gamble—a grand offensive in the west to break the military stalemate. The German attack was launched in March 1918. By April, German troops were within about 50 miles (80 km) of Paris. However, the German advance was stopped at the Second Battle of the Marne on July 18. French, Moroccan, and American troops (140,000 fresh American troops had just arrived), supported by hundreds of tanks, threw the Germans back over the Marne. Ludendorff’s gamble had failed. With more than a million American troops pouring into France, Allied forces began a steady advance toward Germany. On September 29, 1918, General Ludendorff informed German leaders that the war was lost. He demanded that the government ask for peace at once. Section 4, 739–744 2 TEACH Daily Lecture Daily Lecture and and Discussion Notes 23–4 Discussion Notes 1–1 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Daily Lecture and Discussion Notes Chapter 23, Section 4 Did You Know ? The 1919 Treaty of Versailles demanded that Germany pay $5 billion in reparations for damages caused by the war. In 1921, Germany had paid nearly half the amount. However, the reparations committee met and decided that Germany should pay a total of $32.5 billion by 1963, an amount that many experts agreed could cause the German people to starve. I. The Last Year of the War (pages 739–741) A. During 1917, the Allies had been defeated in their offensives on the Western Front, and the Russians had withdrawn from the war. The Central Powers appeared to have the advantage. B. In March 1918, the Germans launched a large offensive on the Western Front and came to within 50 miles of Paris. The Germans were stopped at the Second Battle of the Marne by French, Moroccan, and American troops and hundreds of tanks. C. In 1918, the addition of more than 2 million American troops helped the Allies begin to advance toward Germany. By the end of September, the German military commander General Erich von Ludendorff told German leaders that the war was lost. D. The Allies were not willing to negotiate with the German government under Emperor William II. The German people were angry and exhausted by the war. In spite of attempted government reforms, German workers and soldiers revolted and set up their own councils. On November 9, William II left the country. Collapse and Armistice German officials soon discovered that the Allies were unwilling to make peace with the autocratic imperial government of Germany. Reforms were begun to create a liberal government, but these efforts came too late for the exhausted and angry German people. On November 3, Baltic Sea sailors in the town North Sea of Kiel, in northern Kiel Germany, mutinied. GERMANY Within days, councils of workers and solMunich diers were forming throughout northern Germany and taking over civilian and military offices. William II gave in to public pressure and left the country on November 9. After William II’s departure, the Social Democrats under Friedrich Ebert announced the creation of a democratic republic. Two days later, on November 11, 1918, the new German government signed an armistice (a truce, an agreement to end the fighting). E. The German Social Democratic party, led by Friedrich Ebert, declared that Germany would become a democratic republic. On November 11, the new German government signed an armistice with the Allies that ended the war. F. In December, 1918, a group of radical socialists formed the German Communist Party and then tried to seize power. They were defeated by the new government, which was backed by the army. The revolutionary leaders were killed. G. The attempt by the Communists to take over the government left many middle-class Germans deeply afraid of communism. H. At the end of the war, ethnic groups in Austria-Hungary sought independence. The Austro-Hungarian Empire disintegrated into the independent republics of Austria, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia and the monarchial state of Yugoslavia. National rivalries in the region would weaken eastern Europe for years to come. turn 335 “ Enrich Ask students to define an idealist. (One guided by ideals—lofty, high principles—rather than by practical considerations.) Have them discuss the ways in which Woodrow Wilson was an idealist. Since ideals are usually considered positive and admirable, why didn’t European leaders embrace Wilson’s proposals? L2 Who Caused World War I? Immediately after World War I, historians began to assess which nation was most responsible for beginning the war. As these four selections show, opinions have varied considerably. SS.A.1.4.1 Writing Activity The Allied and Associated Governments affirm and Germany accepts the responsibility of Germany and her allies for causing all the loss and damage to which the Allied and Associated Governments have been subjected as a consequence of the war imposed upon them by the aggression of Germany and her allies. ” Treaty of Versailles, Article 231, 1919 “ None of the powers wanted a European War. . . . But the verdict of the Versailles Treaty that Germany and her allies were responsible for the War, in view of the evidence now available, is historically unsound. It should therefore be revised. ” —Sidney Bradshaw Fay Origins of the World War, 1930 Have students write an essay analyzing the influence of Woodrow Wilson on political events of the twentieth century. L3 740 CHAPTER 23 War and Revolution COOPERATIVE LEARNING ACTIVITY EXTENDING THE CONTENT STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 740 Preparing a Presentation Organize the class into four groups to research and report on World War I in the Middle East. One group should research the life of T.E. Lawrence. The second group should research Britain’s role in the Middle Eastern front, including its broken promise of Arab independence. The third group should research the goals and participation of the Arab people involved. The fourth group should research the immediate results and long-term effects that the peace agreement has had on the people living in the Middle East. All four groups should then meet to share their data in presentations to the rest of the class. L3 SS.A.3.4.9 Revolutionary Forces The war was over, but the revolutionary forces it had set in motion in Germany were not yet exhausted. A group of radical socialists, unhappy with the moderate policies of the Social Democrats, formed the German Communist Party in December 1918. A month later, the Communists tried to seize power in Berlin. The new Social Democratic government, backed by regular army troops, crushed the rebels and murdered Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht (LEEP• KNEHKT), leaders of the German Communists. A similar attempt at Communist revolution in the city of Munich, in southern Germany, was also crushed. The new German republic had been saved from radical revolution. The attempt at revolution, however, left the German middle class with a deep fear of communism. Austria-Hungary, too, experienced disintegration and revolution. As war weariness took hold of the empire, ethnic groups increasingly sought to achieve their independence. By the time the war ended, the Austro-Hungarian Empire was no more. “ In estimating the order of guilt of the various countries we may safely say that the only direct and immediate responsibility for the World War falls upon Serbia, France and Russia, with the guilt about equally divided. ” —Harry Elmer Barnes The Genesis of the World War, 1927 ” —Fritz Fischer, Germany’s Aims in the First World War, 1961 1. Write a quote of your own that reflects your views on which nation caused World War I. Support your quote with passages from the text. Section 4, 739–744 Answer: William II left country; Social Democrats formed republic; Communists tried to seize power, leaving German middle class with deep fear of communism Reading Check Describing What happened within Germany after the armistice? The Peace Settlements In January 1919, representatives of 27 victorious Allied nations met in Paris to make a final settlement of the Great War. Over a period of years, the reasons for fighting World War I had changed dramatically. When European nations had gone to war in 1914 they sought territorial gains. By the beginning of 1918, more idealistic reasons were also being expressed. Answer: Have students share their quotes with the class. Wilson’s Proposals No one expressed these idealistic reasons better than the U.S. president, Woodrow Wilson. Even before the end of the war, Wilson outlined “Fourteen Points” to the United States Congress—his basis for a peace settlement that he believed justified the enormous military struggle being waged. Wilson’s proposals for a truly just and lasting peace included reaching the peace agreements openly rather than through secret diplomacy; reducing armaments (military forces or weapons) to a “point consistent with domestic safety”; and ensuring self-determination (the right of each people to have its own nation). Wilson portrayed World War I as a people’s war against “absolutism and militarism.” These two enemies of liberty, he argued, could be eliminated only by creating democratic governments and a “general association of nations.” This association would guarantee “political independence and territorial integrity to great and small states alike.” Wilson became the spokesperson for a new world order based on democracy and international cooperation. When he arrived in Europe for the peace conference, he was enthusiastically cheered by many Europeans. Wilson soon found, however, that more practical motives guided other states. L1/ELL Guided Reading Activity 23–4 Name DIRECTIONS: Fill in the blanks below as you read Section 4. 1. Allied on the Western Front had been badly defeated. 2. The entry of the United States into the war in 1917 gave the Allies a much-needed boost. 3. The withdrawal of the Russians allowed Germany to concentrate on the . 4. After William II's departure, the in Germany under Friedrich Ebert announced the creation of a republic. 5. An attempt at revolution left the German middle class with a deep fear of . 6. among the nations that succeeded Austria-Hungary would weaken eastern Europe for the next 80 years. 7. In January 1919, representatives of 27 victorious Allied nations met in to make a final settlement of the Great War. 8. U.S. President Woodrow Wilson portrayed World War I as a people's war against “ and .” 9. David Lloyd George, prime minister of , had a simple platform at the Peace Conference: make the Germans 10. In the for this dreadful war. , Germany was ordered to pay reparations for all the dam- age to which the Allied nations had been subjected. 11. Both the German and Russian empires lost considerable Austro-Hungarian Empire and the altogether. 120 World War I and the Russian Revolution were important turning points in world history. Ask students to identify changes that resulted from these two events. L2 SS.A.3.4.9 Delegates met in Paris in early 1919 to determine the peace settlement. At the Paris Peace Conference, complications became obvious. For one thing, secret treaties and agreements that had been made before the war had raised War and Revolution Class End of the War The Paris Peace Conference CHAPTER 23 Date Guided Reading Activity 23-4 741 EXTENDING THE CONTENT Treaty of Versailles The mishandling of the peace accords of World War I directly led to World War II and the eventual dominant role of the United States in the world. Ask students to identify the two key nations that were not at the Paris Peace Conference. (Germany and Russia) Guide students in a discussion concerning how national interests, desire for revenge, and hopes for territorial gains figured in the peace talks. Have students list as many ways as they can in which the Paris Peace Conference and the Treaty of Versailles led to future problems. How did the absence of Germany and Russia impact future prospects for peace? Then have students debate the relative importance and possible results of each item on the list. L2 SS.A.3.4.9 STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 741 Copyright © by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. “ As Germany willed and coveted the AustroSerbian war and, in her confidence in her military superiority, deliberately faced the risk of a conflict with Russia and France, her leaders must bear a substantial share of the historical responsibility for the outbreak of general war in 1914. CHAPTER 23 The empire had been replaced by the independent republics of Austria, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia, along with the large monarchical state called Yugoslavia. Rivalries among the nations that succeeded Austria-Hungary would weaken eastern Europe for the next 80 years. CHAPTER 23 the hopes of European nations for territorial gains. These hopes could not be totally ignored, even if they did conflict with the principle of self-determination put forth by Wilson. National interests also complicated the deliberations of the Paris Peace Conference. David Lloyd George, prime minister of Great Britain, had won a decisive victory in elections in December of 1918. His platform was simple: make the Germans pay for this dreadful war. France’s approach to peace was chiefly guided by its desire for national security. To Georges Clemenceau (KLEH•muhn•SOH), the premier of France, the French people had suffered the most from German aggression. The French desired revenge and security against future German aggression. Clemenceau wanted Germany stripped of all weapons, vast German payments—reparations—to cover the costs of the war, and a separate Rhineland as a buffer state between France and Germany. The most important decisions at the Paris Peace Conference were made by Wilson, Clemenceau, and Lloyd George. Italy, as one of the Allies, was considered one of the so-called Big Four powers. However, it played a smaller role than the other key powers— the United States, France, and Great Britain, called the Big Three. Germany was not invited to attend, and Russia could not be present because of its civil war. Section 4, 739–744 Critical Thinking Many different political systems are represented by the nations mentioned in this chapter. Ask students to define and give examples of different political systems of the past and present. L2 Political Science Ask students to research and compare the League of Nations and the United Nations. Or, students may choose to research the Treaty of Versailles to discover what, specifically, were its provisions. L2 SS.A.3.4.9 Who?What?Where?When? The Windsor family Anti-German feeling reached near-hysteria in many of the Allied countries during World War I. In the United States, Germanlanguage instruction was dropped from schools. In Britain, King George V changed his family name from the German Saxe-Coburg-Gotha to the English name Windsor. Government Ask students to discuss the failure of Wilson’s approach to the peace. Since the United States entered the war so late and since no battles were fought on United States soil, was it fair for Wilson to expect the European nations to share his views? L2 Georges Clemenceau 1841–1929—French statesman Georges Clemenceau was one of France’s wartime leaders. He had a long political career before serving as French premier (prime minister) from 1906 to 1909 and from 1917 to 1920. When Clemenceau became premier in 1917, he suspended basic civil liberties for the rest of the war. He had the editor of an antiwar newspaper executed on a charge of helping the enemy. Clemenceau also punished journalists who wrote negative war reports by having them drafted. Clemenceau strongly disliked and distrusted the Germans and blamed them for World War I. “For the catastrophe of 1914 the Germans are responsible,” he said. “Only a professional liar would deny this.” 742 CHAPTER 23 In view of the many conflicting demands at the peace conference, it was no surprise that the Big Three quarreled. Wilson wanted to create a world organization, the League of Nations, to prevent future wars. Clemenceau and Lloyd George wanted to punish Germany. In the end, only compromise made it possible to achieve a peace settlement. Wilson’s wish that the creation of an international peacekeeping organization be the first order of business was granted. On January 25, 1919, the conference accepted the idea of a League of Nations. In return, Wilson agreed to make compromises on territorial arrangements. He did so because he believed that the League could later fix any unfair settlements. Clemenceau also compromised to obtain some guarantees for French security. He gave up France’s wish for a separate Rhineland and instead accepted a defensive alliance with Great Britain and the United States. The U.S. Senate refused to ratify this agreement, which weakened the Versailles peace settlement. The Treaty of Versailles The final peace settlement of Paris consisted of five separate treaties with the defeated nations—Germany, Austria, Hungary, Bulgaria, and Turkey. The Treaty of Versailles with Germany, signed at Versailles near Paris, on June 28, 1919, was by far the most important. The Germans considered it a harsh peace. They were especially unhappy with Article 231, the socalled War Guilt Clause, which declared that Germany (and Austria) were responsible for starting the war. The treaty ordered Germany to pay reparations for all the damage to which the Allied governments and their people had been subjected as a result of the war “imposed upon them by the aggression of Germany and her allies.” The military and territorial provisions of the Treaty of Versailles also angered the Germans. Germany had to reduce its army to a hundred thousand men, cut back its navy, and eliminate its air force. Alsace and Lorraine, taken by the Germans from France in 1871, were now returned. Sections of eastern Germany were awarded to a new Polish state. German land along both sides of the Rhine was made a demilitarized zone and stripped of all weapons and fortifications. This, it was hoped, would serve as a barrier to any future German military moves westward against France. Outraged by the “dictated peace,” the new German government complained but, unwilling to risk a renewal of the war, they accepted the treaty. War and Revolution DIFFERENTIATED INSTRUCTION STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 742 Reading Support Have the class read carefully pages 739 to 744. Assist the students with the reading or have them read it aloud. Divide the class into three groups representing France, Britain, and the United States. Have each group prepare their country’s opinions about how to deal with Germany and make a final settlement of World War I. Once each group is ready, they may come together and discuss their respective concerns in a role-playing activity where each student plays the role of a delegate. Some of the expected responses should be: 1) from the United States: reduction of military forces and weapons; self-determination of people (liberty); 2) Britain: revenge; 3) France: national security, strip Germany of all weapons, make Germany pay reparations. L2 SS.A.3.4.9 CHAPTER 23 Europe and the Middle East after World War I Section 4, 739–744 FINLAND 60° N NORWAY N W Atlantic Ocean BELGIUM Versailles LUX. Se c B EAST PRUSSIA C ZE SOVIET UNION Ger. Aral Sea POLAND CHO n a Se ALBANIA GREECE ia 40°N Black Sea Connecting Across Time TURKEY SYRIA in e M R. LUX. ALSACE & LORRAINE Ask students to look at a contemporary map of Europe and the Middle East and compare it with the map on page 743. Have students list the ways in which Europe and the Middle East have changed since the end of World War I. What do these changes suggest about the effectiveness of the peace treaties to satisfy the nations in Europe? L2 PERSIA Rh IU LG BE MOROCCO 2. Many students might have predicted that Germany would lose the most territory, but answers will vary. SLOV A KIA Y SWITZ. AUSTRIA AR G HUN YU ROMANIA GO SL AV IA BULGARIA ITALY 0° SPANISH GERMANY MOROCCO Answers: 1. Russia, Austria-Hungary, Ottoman Empire, Germany sp 100 mi. 0 100 km Lambert Azimuthal Equal-Area projection 500 kilometers 0 Lambert Azimuthal Equal-Area projection Territory lost by: Austria-Hungary Bulgaria Germany Ottoman Empire Russia Ca SPAIN 0 LATVIA t i LITHUANIA l a GERMANY FRANCE 10°W a North Sea UNITED DENMARK IRELAND Independent from 1922 KINGDOM NETHERLANDS 50° N NETH. ESTONIA E S 500 miles 0 SWEDEN TUNISIA N W E S Me d iterr anean ALGERIA IRAQ LEBANON Se a PALESTINE JORDAN FRANCE LIBYA ARABIA EGYPT Re SWITZ. Pe G ursia n lf d 10°E 20°E A New Map of Europe As a result of the war, the Treaty of Versailles, and the separate peace treaties made with the other Central Powers—Austria, Hungary, Bulgaria, and Turkey—the map of Eastern Europe was largely redrawn. Both the German and Russian empires lost much territory in eastern Europe. The Austro-Hungarian Empire disappeared. New nation-states emerged from the lands of these three empires: Finland, Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Austria, and Hungary. New territorial arrangements were also made in the Balkans. Romania acquired additional lands from Russia, Hungary, and Bulgaria. Serbia formed the nucleus of a new state, called Yugoslavia, which combined Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes. The Paris Peace Conference was supposedly guided by the principle of self-determination. However, the mixtures of peoples in eastern Europe made it impossible to draw boundaries along neat ethnic lines. Compromises had to be made, sometimes to satisfy the national interests of the victors. France, for 30°E a Se Rhineland 40°E World War I dramatically changed political boundaries. 1. Interpreting Maps Rank the countries and empires listed in the map legend according to the amount of lost territory, from largest loss to smallest loss. 2. Applying Geography Skills Look back at the map on page 718, then examine the map above. Now, knowing the outcome of the war, predict which countries would lose the most territory. Why does the actual loss of territory, as shown above, differ from (or match) your predictions? 3 ASSESS Assign Section 4 Assessment as homework or as an in-class activity. Have students use Interactive Tutor Self-Assessment CD-ROM. example, had lost Russia as its major ally on Germany’s eastern border. Thus, France wanted to strengthen and expand Poland, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, and Romania as much as possible. Those states could then serve as barriers against Germany and Communist Russia. As a result of compromises, almost every eastern European state was left with ethnic minorities: Germans in Poland; Hungarians, Poles, and Germans in Czechoslovakia; Hungarians in Romania, and the L2 Section Quiz 23–4 Name 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 Date 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 Class 㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭㛭 ✔ Chapter 23 Score Section Quiz 23-4 DIRECTIONS: Matching Match each item in Column A with the items in Column B. Write the correct letters in the blanks. (10 points each) Column A Column B 1. truce agreement A. mandate system 2. payments to cover war costs B. Lloyd George 3. governing without owning the territory C. armistice 4. British prime minister in 1919 D. Georges Clemenceau 5. French premier in 1919 E. reparations CHAPTER 23 War and Revolution 743 DIRECTIONS: Multiple Choice In the blank, write the letter of the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. (10 points each) 6. American President Wilson argued at the Paris Peace conference most t l f READING THE TEXT Reading Primary and Secondary Sources For writers who were involved in the military during World War I, the war was an especially unforgettable experience. Have students research and write brief biographies of authors who created fiction or memoirs about their experiences. Possible subjects include Robert Graves, Siegfried Sassoon, e.e. cummings, John Dos Passos, and Ernest Hemingway. Encourage students to read a work by one of these writers and discuss with the class how the literary work reflects the writer’s experience in the war. L1 FCAT LA.A.2.4.2 Refer to Inclusion for the High School Social Studies Classroom Strategies and Activities in the TCR. STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 743 CHAPTER 23 History through Art Section 4, 739–744 Signing of the Treaty of Versailles by John Christen Johansen, 1919 A peace settlement with Germany was signed at Versailles on June 28, 1919. What were the names of the representatives of the Big Three powers at the Paris Peace Conference? History through Art Answer: Woodrow Wilson (United States), David Lloyd George (Great Britain), Georges Clemenceau (France) combination of Serbs, Croats, Slovenes, Macedonians, and Albanians in Yugoslavia. The problem of ethnic minorities within nations would lead to later conflicts. Yet another centuries-old empire—the Ottoman Empire—was broken up by the peace settlement. To gain Arab support against the Ottoman Turks during the war, the Western Allies had promised to recognize the independence of Arab states in the Ottoman Empire. Once the war was over, however, the Western nations changed their minds. France took control of Lebanon and Syria, and Britain received Iraq and Palestine. These acquisitions were officially called mandates. Woodrow Wilson had opposed the outright annexation of colonial territories by the Allies. As a result, the peace settlement created the mandate system. According to this system, a nation officially governed another nation as a mandate on behalf of the League of Nations but did not own the territory. Answer: Article 231, the War Guilt Clause, which declared that Germany (and Austria) were responsible for starting the war L1/ELL Reading Essentials and Study Guide 23–4 Name Date Class Reading Essentials and Study Guide Chapter 23, Section 4 For use with textbook pages 739–744 END OF THE WAR KEY TERMS armistice a truce or an agreement to end the fighting in a war (page 740) reparation a payment by a nation defeated in a war to other nations to cover the costs of the war (page 742) mandate a commission from the League of Nations to a nation that allowed it to officially govern another nation or region without actually owning the territory (page 744) DRAWING FROM EXPERIENCEII The War’s Legacy World War I shattered the liberal, rational society that had existed in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Europe. The death of almost 10 million people, as well as the incredible destruction caused by the war, undermined the whole idea of progress. Entire populations had participated in a devastating slaughter. World War I was a total war—one that involved a complete mobilization of resources and people. As a result, the power of governments over the lives of their citizens increased. Freedom of the press and speech were limited in the name of national security. World War I made the practice of strong central authority a way of life. The turmoil created by the war also seemed to open the door to even greater insecurity. Revolutions broke up old empires and created new states, which led to new problems. The hope that Europe and the rest of the world would return to normalcy was, however, soon dashed. Reading Check Identifying What clause in the Treaty of Versailles particularly angered the Germans? Have you ever heard the slogans, “the war to end all wars” and “to make the world safe for democracy”? Did you know that these slogans were used in reference to World War I? In the last section, you read about the events that led to the Russian Revolution. In this section, you will read about the end of World War I and the efforts to restore peace after the war. ORGANIZING YOUR THOUGHTSII ompanies, Inc. Use the chart below to help you take notes. In January 1919, representatives of the victorious nations met in Paris to make a final settlement of World War I. The peace settlement with Germany was called the Treaty of Versailles. List the major provisions of the treaty as they relate to the four areas in this chart. Major Provisions of the Treaty of Versailles Responsibility/costs of the war 1. Reteaching Activity Have students list the major participants at the Paris Peace Conference and summarize the aims of each. L1 SS.A.3.4.9 4 CLOSE Review with students the major consequences of World War I on European society. In what sense did the conflict undermine “the whole idea of progress”? Checking for Understanding 1. Define armistice, reparation, mandate. 2. Identify Erich von Ludendorff, Friedrich Ebert, David Lloyd George, Georges Clemenceau. 3. Locate Kiel, Alsace, Lorraine, Poland. 4. Explain why the mandate system was created. Which countries became mandates? Who governed them? Critical Thinking 6. Making Generalizations Although Woodrow Wilson came to the Paris Peace Conference with high ideals, the other leaders had more practical concerns. Why do you think that was so? 7. Compare and Contrast Using a Venn diagram like the one below, compare and contrast Wilson’s Fourteen Points to the Treaty of Versailles. 5. List some of President Wilson’s proposals for creating a truly just and lasting peace. Why did he feel the need to develop these proposals? 744 CHAPTER 23 Fourteen Points Treaty of Versailles Analyzing Visuals 8. Compare the photograph of troops going to war on page 721 with the painting on page 715. How do you think the soldiers’ expectations compared to their actual experiences? 9. Informative Writing You are a reporter for a large newspaper, sent to the Paris Peace Conference to interview one of the leaders of the Big Three. Prepare a written set of questions you would like to ask the leader you have selected. War and Revolution SS.A.3.4.9 STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 744 2 1. Key terms are in blue. 2. Erich von Ludendorff (p. 740); Friedrich Ebert (p. 740); David Lloyd George (p. 742); Georges Clemenceau (p. 742) 3. See chapter maps. 4. as an alternative to territorial annexation; France oversaw Lebanon, Syria; Britain oversaw Iraq, Palestine 5. open peace agreements reducing armaments; self-determination; creating a “general association of nations” 6. national interests 7. Fourteen Points: open diplomacy; self-determination of people; Treaty of Versailles: assignment of war guilt; reparations; demilitarized zone in Germany; map of Europe redrawn: Fourteen Points and Treaty of Versailles: reduction of arms; establishment of League of Nations 8. long war, not short adventure 9. Questions will vary. TEACH Interpreting Military Interpreting Military Movements on Maps Movements on Maps Ask students to make their own military maps of an engagement in an imaginary war. They should use two different colors to represent the opposing sides. Have students use different symbols or colors for the victories of each side and arrows to show the direction of troop movements. The students should label land and water areas and a few important towns or cities. The map should also include a legend explaining what the various colors and symbols represent. L1 Why Learn This Skill? Although wars begin over many different issues, they end as fights to control territory. Because wars are basically fought over land, maps are particularly useful tools for seeing the “big picture” of a war. • Identify all symbols. These may include symbols for battle sites, victories, and types of military units and equipment. Once you have studied the key and the map, follow the progress of the campaign that is shown. Notice where each side began, in which direction it moved, where the two sides fought, and which side claimed victory. Practicing the Skill The map on this page shows the Middle East front during World War I. Study the map and then answer the following questions. 1 On which side did Arabia and Egypt fight? 2 Who won the battle at the Dardanelles? 3 Describe the movement of the Central Powers offensives. 4 When did the Allies win the most battles in the Middle East? Dardanelles 1915 OTTOMAN EMPIRE RUSSIA 40°E I ARM E N A Tabriz 1914–1915 Tikrit Aleppo 1917 Crete Cyprus 1918 Baghdad U.K. Damascus 1917 PERSIA Mediterranean Sea Beirut 1918 Ramadi 1918 1917 Basra Gaza Suez Canal Kut-el-Amara 1914 1917 1915 1916 EGYPT U.K. KUWAIT Aqaba 1917 ARABIA Persian Gulf N Allies Central Powers Neutral nations Allied victory Central Powers victory Allied offensive Central Powers offensive E W Sea Red • Study the arrows, which show the direction of military movements. Because these movements occur over time, some maps give dates showing when and where troops advanced and retreated. E Black Sea Gallipoli 1915 Additional Practice S 500 miles 0 0 L1 500 kilometers Lambert Azimuthal Equal-Area projection Skills Reinforcement Activity 23 Name Applying the Skill ✎ Date Class Skills Reinforcement Activity 23 Interpreting Military Movements on Maps Choose a military map from this text or select one from another source. Study the map selection carefully. Write a paragraph about the war or conflict as it is depicted in the map. You should respond to issues such as where most of the fighting occurred; the year in which the most significant advance was made, and by whom; and whether or not there was a decisive victory by either side. Attach a copy of the map to your report. important to read the map key. The key tells you what various colors and symbols on the map represent. When looking at a map that explains military information such as battles, troop movements, and conquered territory, it is DIRECTIONS: Study the key to the map below, then use the map to answer the questions in the space provided. 1. a. Before the war began, to what country did Warsaw belong? Western Russia at the time of Bolshevik control Entente Fleet NORWAY b. Was Finland part of Russia after World War I? c. Judging from the map, which was bigger the Russian Empire Murmansk British French Canadians Italians Serbs SWEDEN Baltic Se • Determine the meanings of the colors on the map. Usually, colors represent different sides in the conflict. GREE C The map key is essential in interpreting military maps. The key explains what the map’s colors and symbols represent. Use the following steps to study the key: 30°E BULGARIA ian sp a Ca Se Learning the Skill Middle East in World War I, 1914–1918 a FINLAND Finns Archangel sh Briti ch Fren dians na ns Boundary of Russian Empire, 1914 Eastern Front, Mar. 1917 Towns under Bolshevik control Nov–Dec. 1917 Towns not under Bolshevik control Russian territory occupied by Central Powers 1918 Area controlled by Bolsheviks, Oct. 1919 Glencoe’s Skillbuilder Interactive Workbook, Level 2, provides instruction and practice in key social studies skills. CD-ROM 745 ANSWERS TO PRACTICING THE SKILL 1. Arabia and Egypt fought with the Allied forces. 2. The Central Powers won the battle at the Dardanelles. 3. The Central Powers moved north from the Ottoman Empire across the Black Sea into Russia. 4. The Allies won the most battles in the Middle East in 1917 and 1918. Glencoe Skillbuilder Interactive Workbook CD-ROM, Level 2 This interactive CD-ROM reinforces student mastery of essential social studies skills. Applying the Skill: Essays should be supported by information on maps that students will attach. Students should use social studies terminology correctly. They should also use standard grammar, spelling, sentence structure, and punctuation in their essays. 745 CHAPTER 23 Assessment and Activities MJ Using Key Terms MindJogger Videoquiz Use the MindJogger Videoquiz to review Chapter 23 content. Available in VHS. Using Key Terms 1. conscription 2. mobilization 3. trench warfare 4. war of attrition 5. total war 6. planned economies 7. soviets 8. War communism 9. reparations Reviewing Key Facts 10. by passing the Defence of the Realm Act, which allowed the government to arrest protesters as traitors and to censor or shut down newspapers 11. They promised an end to the war, redistribution of land to peasants, transfer of factories and industries from capitalists to committees of workers, and transfer of government power to soviets. 12. 1914: start of World War I; 1917: beginning of the Russian Revolution, and U.S. enters the war; 1918: end of World War I 13. During the war, women assumed many of the jobs men had vacated. After the war, women were encouraged to relinquish those jobs. They retained some social freedom and in some countries received the right to vote. 14. Czar Nicholas II was away leading the Russian army, leaving Alexandra to make decisions; she had come under Rasputin’s influence. Reviewing Key Facts 1. The practice of requiring young people to join the military, which was followed by many nations before World War I, was called . 2. Before World War I, many European nations completed the of their military by assembling troops and supplies for war. 3. The development of baffled military leaders who had been trained to fight wars of movement. 4. World War I became a , or war based on wearing the other side down by constant attacks and heavy losses. 5. World War I involved a complete mobilization of resources and people that affected the lives of all citizens in the warring countries—a situation called . 6. European nations set up , or systems directed by government agencies to mobilize the entire resources of their nations. 7. Councils of workers and soldiers called challenged the provisional government established after Nicholas II stepped down. 8. is the term used to describe the Communists’ centralization of control over its economy. 9. Germany was required by the Treaty of Versailles to make payments called to the nations that won the war. 10. Government How did the British government try to eliminate opposition from the people who were opposed to World War I? 11. Culture Explain the social changes promised by the Bolshevik slogans. 12. History State the significance of the following dates: 1914, 1917, and 1918. 13. Culture Describe the role and contribution of women during World War I. What was their status after the war? 14. History Why were Alexandra and Rasputin able to control the czar’s government during much of World War I? 15. Government How did international alliances help to draw nations into World War I? 16. History Why was a “breakthrough” such an important military goal during the war? 17. Government What did the creation of a League of Nations have to do with Woodrow Wilson’s willingness to sign the Treaty of Versailles? 18. History Why did Russia withdraw from the war? How did that affect Germany? 19. Science and Technology What innovations in military warfare occurred during World War I? The outline below shows four themes of the chapter. Cooperation: Alliance System • Two loose alliances form in Europe: the Triple Alliance (Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy) and the Triple Entente (France, Great Britain, and Russia). • Alliances draw France and Great Britain into a conflict in which they have no direct interest. Conflict: World War I • Combat takes the forms of trench warfare on the Western Front, a war of movement on the Eastern Front, and German submarine warfare in the waters surrounding Great Britain. • For the first time in history, airplanes are used for reconnaissance, combat, and bombing. Revolution: Russian Revolution Internationalism: Peace of Paris • Military and economic crises lead to a spontaneous revolution that ends the reign of the czars. • The peace is a compromise between international and national interests. • The Bolsheviks overthrow the provisional government and establish a Communist regime. • Germany’s reparation payments, military reductions, and territorial losses create a lasting bitterness that helps spark World War II. 746 15. Because nations were allies, they were bound to respond. 16. Trench warfare caused a stalemate; a “breakthrough” would allow a return to the war of movement that the generals knew best. 17. He agreed to make compromises on territorial arrangements in the Treaty of Versailles, believing that the League of Nations could later fix any unfair settlements. 18. Russia withdrew due to the Russian Revolution—the Bolsheviks had promised peace in return for the support of the people. It meant that Germany only had to 746 fight a war on the Western Front, giving them hope of winning. 19. fighter planes, tanks, submarines, bioweapons Critical Thinking Answers 20. Lenin stressed revolution and dictatorial government. Wilson affirmed democratic values, self-determination, and free institutions. Answers to final part of question will vary but should be supported by logical arguments. CHAPTER 23 Assessment and Activities Paris Peace Conference: The Big Three HISTORY Self-Check Quiz Visit the Glencoe World History Web site at wh.glencoe.com and click on Chapter 23–Self-Check Quiz to prepare for the Chapter Test. Critical Thinking 20. Decision Making Compare Lenin’s beliefs and goals with those of Woodrow Wilson. Which leader has had the greater impact on world history? Why? 21. Analyzing Why do some people feel that it is unlikely that a lasting peace could have been created at the end of World War I? Writing about History 22. Persuasive Writing Both Britain and the United States passed laws during the war to silence opposition and censor the press. Are democratic ideals consistent with such laws? Provide arguments for and against. Analyzing Sources Reread the quote below, which appears on page 719, then answer the questions below. “I cannot tell you how exasperated people are getting here at the continual worry which that little country Country Leader Goal United States Wilson Lasting peace Great Britain Lloyd George Germany pays France Clemenceau French security Treaty of Versailles International • League of Nations is formed. Relations Responsibility • Germany accepts responsibility for starting the war and agrees to make reparations to the Allies. Territory • New nations are formed. • Germany returns Alsace and Lorraine to France. • France and Great Britain acquire mandates in the Middle East. Military • Germany will reduce its army and navy and Strength eliminate its air force. • German land along the Rhine River is demilitarized. Analyzing Maps and Charts Using the chart above, answer the following questions: 27. Which of the Big Three nations at the Treaty of Versailles wanted to punish Germany for World War I? 28. What was the effect of the Treaty of Versailles on Germany’s military? 29. What territory did France regain after the war? 25. Interpreting the Past Use the Internet to research the total costs of World War I. Determine how many people, both military and civilian, were killed or wounded on both sides. Also find the monetary costs of the war for both sides. Create a table that clearly shows your findings. Making Decisions 26. Some historians argue that the heavy psychological and economic penalties placed on Germany by the Treaty of Versailles created the conditions for World War II. How might the treaty have been written to alleviate worldwide concern over German militarism without exacting such a heavy toll? Standardized Test Practice Directions: Choose the best answer to the following statement. The role Russia played in World War I can best be described as A a strong supporter of Germany and Austria. B a strong supporter of France and Great Britain. C a weak role due to the Russian Revolution. D militarily strong because of its vast army. Writing about History War and Revolution Analyzing Maps and Charts 27. Britain 29. Alsace and Lorraine Standardized Test Practice 747 24. A Serbian nationalist shot the heir to the Austrian throne; Russia backed Serbia when Austria-Hungary declared war, while Germany backed Austria and declared war on France. 22. Answers should be supported by logical arguments. Applying Technology Skills Analyzing Sources 25. Answers will vary depending on sources. Only cost estimates are available because many were unaccounted for. 23. Vienna is in Austria; answers will vary. 26. Answers will vary. Test-Taking Tip: An important word in this question is best. Although it is true that Russia entered on the side of France and Great Britain, it could never provide strong support due to internal weaknesses. CHAPTER 23 21. too many compromises; many unresolved issues; resentments among nations; no agreement satisfactory to all Making Decisions Answer: C Answer Explanation: Students should remember the domestic history in Russia during World War I, especially that of the Russian Revolution in 1917. Once Lenin established a Bolshevik government, he immediately pulled Russia out of the war. ” Applying Technology Skills Have students visit the Web site at wh.glencoe.com to review Chapter 23 and take the Self-Check Quiz. 28. reduce Germany’s army and navy, eliminate its air force; German land along the Rhine River demilitarized [Serbia] causes to Austria under encouragement from Russia. . . . It will be lucky if Europe succeeds in avoiding war as a result of the present crisis. 23. Where is Vienna located? Is the ambassador neutral in his comments or does he favor one country over another? 24. Compare the ways in which the actual events that started World War I mirror this ambassador’s concerns. HISTORY STUDENT EDITION SUNSHINE STATE STANDARDS 1 3 2 747