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Transcript
THE GREAT WAR
1914-1918
“The War
to End all
Wars”
The Road to War – Underlying Causes of WWI
Industrialization
Militarism
M.A.I.N.
Nationalism
Alliances
Imperialism
Unification of New Nations – Germany & Italy
Europe 1900
Europe 1914
Underlying Causes of World War I
Militarism




Most European countries began drafts.
Germany began building a navy to rival Britain.
Britain increased its navy to stay ahead.
Other nations joined in the arms race to keep up
and to showcase their military advances.
Industrialization encouraged mass production of
new weapons and war technologies.
Underlying Causes of World War I
Alliances
Dual Alliance (1879) – Secret defensive alliance between Germany
and Austria-Hungary which guaranteed mutual support if either
was attacked by Russia.
Triple Alliance (1882) - Italy joined the secret Dual Alliance because
of anger toward France.
Franco-Russian Alliance (1894) - Russia and Germany break
relations. France joined Russia in a secret alliance.
Triple Entente (1907) - Britain joined France and Russia in an
alliance to counter the Triple Alliance .
European Alliances Prior to WWI
European Alliances in WW I
Underlying Causes of World War I
Imperialism



European countries fought over territory in
Africa and Asia
Germany entered the race for empire after its
unification, particularly in Africa.
The Congress of Berlin (1878) preserved an
uneasy peace between European imperialist
powers because of Bismarck’s diplomacy.
Underlying Causes of World War I
Nationalism





Unification of Germany and Italy caused a shift
in the balance of power
National rivalries led to policies of expansion.
Intense patriotism fanned the flames for war.
Balkan States wanted independence from
Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman Empires.
Russia and Austria sought stronger influence in
the Balkans.
Underlying Causes of World War I
International Anarchy



Newspapers caused resentment and encouraged
violent acts of protest
No strong international organizations existed to
settle disputes
Political Assassinations destroyed stability
1881 - Alexander II of Russia killed by bomb
1898 - Empress Elizabeth of stabbed to death
1901 - US President William McKinley
assassinated by anarchist
Immediate Cause of World War I
Assassination of Austrian Archduke
Francis Ferdinand and his wife
• On June 28, 1914, the heir to the Austrian
throne Francis Ferdinand and his wife were
assassinated by a young Serbian nationalist
in Sarajevo.
• The assassination sparked a chain reaction
which would plunge Europe and other
nations into the world’s first global war.
Assassination of Archduke Francis Ferdinand
Sarajevo
The Road to War
July 26, 1914 - Austria gets a guarantee of support
from Germany and issues an ultimatum to Serbia.
Its demands that Serbia:
• Stop all anti-Austrian propaganda
• Dismiss all anti-Austrian government officials
• Allow Austria into Serbia to investigate the
assassination
July 27, 1914 - Serbia receives a promise of
support from Russia and rejects the ultimatum
July 28, 1914 - Austria declares war on Serbia
The Road to War
July 28 - Austria
Declares War on
Serbia
The Road to War
August 1, 1914 - Russia begins to mobilize along
German border. Germany declares war on Russia
August 3, 1914 - Germany declares war on France.
They begin marching through neutral Belgium
toward France. France declares war on Germany.
August 4, 1914 - Great Britain, which had pledged
to protect Belgium’s neutrality, declares war on
Germany.
Aug 4 - Great
Britain declares
war on Germany
The Road to War
Aug 1 -Germany
Declares War on
Russia
Aug 3
France
declares
war on
Germany
Aug 3 - Germany declares
War on France and
marches through neutral
Belgium toward France
Aug 1 - Russia Mobilizes
Along German Border
The Road to War
August 14, 1914 - China declares war on Germany
August 24, 1914 - Japan declares war on Germany
November 1, 1914 - Russia declares war on the
Ottoman Empire. The Ottomans join Germany and
Austria. Bulgaria later joins. They become known
as the Central Powers.
April 26, 1915 - Italy joins Great Britain, France,
Russia, Belgium, and over 30 other countries. They
become known as the Allied Powers.
Central Powers
• Germany
• Austria-Hungary
• Bulgaria
• Turkey (Ottoman Empire)
Allied Powers
•Great Britain
•France
•Italy
•Russia
•Japan
•United States (1917) & over 30 other countries
Europe Prepares for War
Europe Prepares for War
Europe Prepares for War
Europe Prepares for War
Europe Prepares for War
Europe Prepares for War
Europe Prepares for War
THE GREAT WAR
Early German Strategy
The Schlieffen Plan
 Lure France into attacking Alsace
and Lorraine on the French/German
border with minimal German troops
defending.
 Send overwhelming force through
Belgium and capture Paris
 Sweep back to the east entrapping
French forces in a vice between two
German armies
 Defeat France then move troops to
the Eastern Front to fight Russia.
The Schlieffen Plan
Germany’s Plan for a Two Front War
Paris
The Schlieffen Plan
Germany’s Plan for a Two Front War
Paris
The Schlieffen Plan
Germany’s Plan for a Two Front War
Paris
The Schlieffen Plan
Germany’s Plan for a Two Front War
Paris
The Schlieffen Plan
Germany’s Plan for a Two Front War
Paris
Why the Schlieffen Plan Failed
Paris
Why the Schlieffen Plan Failed
Paris
Why the Schlieffen Plan Failed
Battle of the
Marne
Paris
The war becomes stalemated after the Battle of the Marne and
both sides begin to dig in. Trenches stretched for 300 miles
from Switzerland to the English Channel. Trench warfare
results because of technological advances in weapons.
Trenches
TECHNOLOGY & WAR
 Technology turned WWI into an Industrial War. Military tactics
were unable to stay up with the changes in technology.
Communications, transportation, munitions …
 New weapons changed the tactics of warfare and led to a
stalemated “war of attrition”
TECHNOLOGY & WAR
Machine guns - led to trench warfare and a
stalemated war.
TECHNOLOGY & WAR
Poison Gas - First used by Germany in 1915
despite treaties outlawing it. Suffocated
and blinded victims.
TECHNOLOGY & WAR
Tanks - Developed by British in 1916.
Eventually helped break the stalemate.
TECHNOLOGY & WAR
Airplanes - First used for reconnaissance
and later for primitive bombing.
TECHNOLOGY & WAR
Submarines (U-Boats) - Unrestricted Submarine
Warfare led to American entry in 1917.
Total War
 World War I was the first “total war” in which all of the
resources of a nation were put into the war effort.
 Many citizens were targeted or became victims of the
war effort
 Women – were forced to work in munitions plants
and factories and to tend to agricultural duties
 Governments began rationing of food and other
supplies to provided enough for the men on the front
 Governments began censoring and controlling news
accounts to build support for the war on the home
front.
Trench Warfare in WWI
Trench Warfare in WWI
Trench Warfare in WWI
Trench Rats
Many men killed in the
trenches were buried almost
where they fell. If a trench
subsided, or new trenches or
dugouts were needed, large
numbers of decomposing
bodies would be found just
below the surface. These
corpses, as well as the food
scraps that littered the trenches,
attracted rats. One pair of rats
can produce 880 offspring in a
year and so the trenches were
soon swarming with them.
"Rats came up from the canal, fed
on the plentiful corpses, and
multiplied exceedingly. While I
stayed here with the Welch. a new
officer joined the company and, in
token of welcome, was given a
dug-out containing a spring-bed.
When he turned in that night he
heard a scuffling, shone his torch
on the bed, and found two rats on
his blanket tussling for the
possession of a severed hand."
Trench Warfare in WWI
Trench Rats
…there were rats as big as cats". ....They were so big they would
eat a wounded man if he couldn't defend himself." These rats
became very bold and would attempt to take food from the
pockets of sleeping men. Two or three rats would always be found
on a dead body. They usually went for the eyes first and then they
burrowed their way right into the corpse.
One soldier described finding a group of dead bodies while on
patrol: "I saw some rats running from under the dead men's
greatcoats, enormous rats, fat with human flesh. My heart
pounded as we edged towards one of the bodies. His helmet had
rolled off. The man displayed a grimacing face, stripped of flesh;
the skull bare, the eyes devoured and from the yawning mouth
leapt a rat."
Trench Warfare in WWI
Trench Foot and Amputations
Trench Warfare in WWI
Children on the Front
Officer (to a boy of 13 who has given his age as 16):
"Do you know where boys go who tell lies?"
Applicant: "To the Front, Sir."
George Maher,
who was only 13
at the time,
claims that
Lewis was too
short to see over
the edge of the
trench. "The
youngest was 12
years old. A little
nuggety bloke he
was, too. We
joked that the
other soldiers
would have had
to have lifted
him up to see
over the
trenches.
the Top
No Over
Man’s
Land
Trench Warfare in WWI
Trench Warfare in WWI
Poison Gas
Poison Gas Deaths: 1914-1918
Country
NonFatal
Deaths
Total
British
Empire
180,597
8,109
188,706
France
182,000
8,000
190,000
United
States
71,345
1,462
72,807
Italy
55,373
4,627
60,000
Russia
419,340
56,000
475,340
Germany
191,000
9,000
200,000
AustriaHungary
97,000
3,000
100,000
Others
9,000
1,000
10.000
Total
1,205,65
5
91,198
1,296,85
3
An estimated
91,198 soldiers
died as a result
of poison gas
attacks and
another 1.2
million were
hospitalized.
The Russian
Army , with
56,000 deaths,
suffered more
than any other
armed force.
Death in the Trenches
German Notice Placed in American
Newspapers in April 1915
IMPERIAL GERMAN EMBASSY,
Washington, D.C. 22nd April 1915
NOTICE!
TRAVELLERS intending to embark on the Atlantic voyage
are reminded that a state of war exists between Germany
and her allies and Great Britain and her allies; that the
zone of war includes the waters adjacent to the British Isles;
that, in accordance with formal notice given by the Imperial
German Government, vessels flying the flag of Great
Britain, or any of her allies, are liable to destruction in
those waters and that travelers sailing in the war zone on
the ships of Great Britain or her allies do so at their own
risk.
Sinking of the Lusitania
May 7, 1915
Sinking of the Lusitania
May 7, 1915
• 1959 People on Board.
• Sank 8 Miles of the Irish Coast.
• 1198 Men, Women, and Children died
including over 120 Americans.
• Turned Public Opinion against
Germany.
• Instrumental in bringing America into
the war in 1917.
Sinking of the Lusitania
May 7, 1915
American Entry Into the War
Major Battles of World War I
Battle of Jutland May 1916
Battle of the
Somme
July 1916
Battle of Tannenberg
August 1914
Galipoli Campaign
February 1915
Battle of Verdun
February 1916
American Entry Into the War
The Zimmerman Telegram
American Entry Into the War
American Entry Into the War
American Entry Into the War
The United States Declares War
against Germany on April 1, 1917
President Woodrow Wilson asks Congress for a Declaration of War
April 1, 1917
American Counter Offensive August - November 1918
Battle of San Mihiel/Argonne Forest
Paris
American Counter Offensive August - November 1918
Battle of San Mihiel/Argonne Forest
Paris
American Counter Offensive August - November 1918
Battle of San Mihiel/Argonne Forest
Paris
American Counter Offensive August - November 1918
Battle of San Mihiel/Argonne Forest
Paris
American Counter Offensive August - November 1918
Battle of San Mihiel/Argonne Forest
Paris
Armistice
Paris
November 11, 1918
Armistice!
November 11,
1918 - 11:00 AM
“The Eleventh Hour
of the Eleventh Day
of the Eleventh
Month”
Woodrow Wilson’s
Fourteen Points
Major Points
Right to self-rule
 Right to free trade
 Free Access to the seas by all
nations
 An international peace keeping
body “League of Nations”

The Treaty of Versailles
The Hall of Mirrors in the Palace of Versailles
The Treaty of Versailles
The Big Four
George Clemenceau – France
David Lloyd George – Great Britain
Vittorio Emanule Orlando – Italy
Woodrow Wilson – United States
The Treaty of Versailles
What Resulted?
• Wilson wanted all countries to share equally in peace
“Peace without Victory”
• The other countries wanted revenge on Germany
•
•
•
•
Germany was required to accept all blame for the war.
Required to pay $33 Billion in reparations to the Allies.
Germany was forced to disarm its military.
A demilitarized zone (the Rhineland) set up between
Germany and France.
• Redrew the map of Europe from land of Central Powers.
• The seeds of future war were sewn with the harsh
terms of the treaty and the humiliation of Germany.