Trench Warfare The ugly side of WWI.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Trench Warfare.
Advertisements

The battlefields of WWI
World War I: The Western Front and Trench Warfare.
Grade 10 History TRENCH WARFARE. The Canadian government wanted to encourage men to enlist for war. They said the war would be safe, hardly any fighting,
World War I Trench Warfare & Weapons "The Great War was without precedent... never had so many nations taken up arms at a single time. Never had the battlefield.
 M ilitarism- policy of building up a strong military to prepare for war.  A lliances- agreements (friendships) between nations to provide aid and protect.
Bellringer Download today’s notes: WWI Warfare Notes Turn in any makeup or late work. Open yesterday’s notes (WWI Causes) and prepare to go over review.
 As WWI began, Germany invaded Belgium on their way to France  In Belgium the Allies stopped them  Germans couldn’t continue, but Allies couldn’t push.
27.2 Notes. I. The Belligerents A. Central Powers- Germany, Austria- Hungary, Bulgaria, Ottoman Empire B. Allied Powers- GB, France, Russia.
All Quiet on the Western Front By Erich Maria Remarque.
Trench WarfareTrench Warfare – type of fighting during World War I in which both sides dug trenches protected by mines and barbed wire Trench Warfare.
Europe at War.
Trench warfare and deadly weapons
CHC2D. BACKGROUND TO TRENCH WARFARE Trench warfare is a form of war in which both opposing armies have static lines of defense. Trench warfare arose when.
Trench Warfare in WWI Trench Definition: A ditch.
A German and British soldier during the Christmas truce in 1914.
Fighting the War: BBC Resources WW!. Fighting the War  World War 1 represents a transitional time in warfare.  Previously wars were fought with single.
Unit 7 – Imperialism through World War I Lesson # 3 – Causes of World War I.
Bellringer Download today’s notes: WWI Warfare Notes
“All Quiet on the Western Front” The German army moved into France and for a while it looked like they would capture Paris. The German army quickly developed.
WWI and the Christmas Truce. A few facts WWI started in 1914 and ended in It was called the Great War and it was one of the biggest tragedies of.
Section 2 A New Kind of War Understand why a stalemate developed on the Western Front. Describe how technology made World War I different from earlier.
The War.
Objective: To examine the horrors of trench warfare.
Trench Warfare in Europe
THE FIRST WORLD WAR, War broke out in Europe in August 1914.
The Schlieffen plan and the realities of Trench Warfare.
Life in the Trenches.
World War I Fighting The War.
THE GREAT WAR What & When: WW I Central Powers: Germany,
BELLWORK: March 27th Describe the causes/effects of Ferdinand’s assassination. How do you think the Industrial Revolution affected how WWI was fought?
World War I: 12.2 Part 1 Stalemate.
All Quiet on the Western Front
A NEW KIND OF WAR.
WW What do you know about WW1?.
Trenches and Technology
Tactics & Battles During World War I
The Great War Begins US History II.
Dysentery was especially bad at the start of the war
Trench Warefare.
BELLWORK: Block 2 How was trench warfare used in WWI? Why did this tactic lead to a stalemate? What weapons were created to fight WWI? How was aircraft.
Horrors on the Western Front
What countries make up the Allied forces?
World War I: A New Kind of War
minds on – what do you see?
Lesson 2: The Reality of War
A picture of soldiers going
Trench Warfare Poison Gas
Tactics & Battles During World War I
Tactics & Battles During World War I
Tactics & Battles During World War I
Japan, Belgium, Serbia, Greece, Montenegro, Czechoslovak legions
Homework Read Total War and underline 3 main ideas.
WHAT’S UP HUN? WHAT UP TOMMY?.
Era of the Great War Life in the trenches.
Aim: Summarize Military Events on the Western Front
Turn in your Schlieffen Plan worksheet and grab today’s Agenda (8:6).
Tactics & Battles During World War I
29.2-Europe in War Student Objectives
Tactics & Battles During World War I
Tactics & Battles During World War I
Tactics & Battles During World War I
Trench Warfare Standard
Lesson 2: The Reality of War
Life in the Trenches.
“The War To End All Wars”
“The War To End All Wars”
Trench Warfare WORLD WAR I
Life on the Western Front - Trench Warfare
Tactics & Battles During World War I
Presentation transcript:

Trench Warfare The ugly side of WWI

Sandwich Cookie Effect Europe is split into two regions: Western Front: France and Germany Eastern Front: Russia and Germany How can Germany fight a two sided war with two different enemies?

Scheifflen Plan First Germany will go and fight France Then after the quick defeat of France, Germany will move in and defeat Russia Sounds easy hey? But what problems occur? Why is this not a solid plan for war?

Trench Warfare What kind of tactic is this? Is it effective? How was such a strategy created? What is meant by Over the Top? What is No Man’s Land? What is a stalemate? How did one Christmas Day in 1915 lead to a temporary truce?

What were the trenches? The trench system was created along the Western Front and ran for approximately 475 miles, in an "S" shape across Europe, from the North Sea to Switzerland.

Trench Facts Each battalion had its own supply of rum that it distributed to its soldiers. Each division of 20,000 men received 300 gallons.  - Every soldier carried iron rations -- emergency food that consisted of a can of bully bee, biscuits and a tin of tea and sugar.  - A single pair of rats could produced up to 880 offspring in a year.  - A total of 3,894 men in the British Army were convicted of self-inflicted wounds. A firing-squad offense -- none were executed, but all served prison terms.  - The British Army treated 20,000 soldiers for trench foot during the winter of 1914-15.  - One-third of all casualties on the Western Front may have been killed or wounded in a trench.  - A lit candle was fairly effective in removing lice, but the skill of burning the lice without setting yourself on fire was difficult to learn.   -Soldiers in the trenches often depended on impure water collected from shell-holes or other cavities, causing dysentery.   Source: Spartacus Educational

                                                                        

Next Slide What do you think the picture represents or depicts?

Problems in the Trenches UNSANITARY RATS Bordem Trench FOOT ALWAYS WET and MUDDY Dystentary LICE Night Patrol

Trench Foot                                                                             

Isaac Rosenberg, The Immortals (1918) POEM FROM THE TRENCHES: Isaac Rosenberg, The Immortals (1918) I killed them, but they would not die. Yea! all the day and all the night For them I could not rest or sleep, Nor guard from them nor hide in flight. Then in my agony I turned And made my hands red in their gore. In vain - for faster than I slew They rose more cruel than before. I killed and killed with slaughter mad; I killed till all my strength was gone. And still they rose to torture me, For Devils only die in fun. I used to think the Devil hid In women’s smiles and wine’s carouse. I called him Satan, Balzebub. But now I call him, dirty louse.  

Video Clip: All Quiet on the Western Front http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QEaHnD0DIgc

What were the effects of gas?

Go to….. http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/FWWgas.htm

http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/worldwars/wwone/launch_ani_wwone_movies.shtml

Christmas Truce 1914 Between British and German Troops Dec. 24th, 1914 All firing had ceased and troops moved into No Man’s Land Gifts were exchanged and both side took opportunities to bury their dead Generals got a hold of the news and stated for this never to happen again

Work Cited www.firstworldwar.com www.awm.gov www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk www.eyewitnesstohistory.com www.worldwarone.com http://www.greatwar.co.uk/westfront/ypsalient/secondypres/prelude/images/gasjustwf-1.gif