The Great War Chronology of Events Leading to and During World War I.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter Thirteen The Great War
Advertisements

Icebreaker Take out signed syllabus and pass to the front
Rise of Nationalism I. NATIONALISM A. deep devotion to ones country
CH 23: War and Revolution Our Lady of Lourdes Social Studies Department I.
Ch.12 The World War I Era Overview - Timeline Warm -up Name one country east of Germany. West of Germany. Name one country in the Allied Powers.
Causes of World War I The “isms”.
World War I Outbreak of War in Europe Causes of WWI Key Terms M M ilitarism A A lliances I I mperialism N N ationalism The policy of building up military.
World War I Notes.
Section 1 World War I. Section 1 World War I Preview Starting Points Map: European Alliances and Military Forces Main Idea / Reading Focus Europe on the.
America and WWI Part A. 1.When did World War One begin? August When did an armistice end the major fighting of WWI? November 11, What.
Militarism Alliances Imperialism Nationalism Glorification of the military Leads to increased suspicions between countries & made war more likely Readiness.
WW I and the Russian Revolution CH 27 section 1 Setting the stage for War.
WORLD WAR I World War I, Great War, War to End All Wars, War to make the world safe for democracy.
Causes.
The Great War
World War I Prelude to a War.
Events Leading to WWI (1902—1914) Start with paragraph 7, “For many years the most powerful” Prepare a ten statement outline on the events leading up to.
Chapter 13 Section 1 Marching Toward War
World War I and the Russian Revolution
Unification of Germany 1870: Prussia defeats France at the Battle of Sedan 1871: Otto von Bismarck unites Prussia and the German states 1.
World War 1  3 Continents  31 Countries  65 Million Soldiers  37 Million Casualties  91,198 Deaths by Gas  6,395 Allied and Neutral Ships lost 
Warm-up: Alliances Identify the 2 major alliances (including names of countries) in Europe before the outbreak of WWI. Look in Ch Notes, Part 4.
“The war to end all wars”
The Road to War. Nationalism and the System of Alliances Liberals during the first half of the 1800’s hoped the formation of European nation-states would.
World War I Notes Tuesday, January 20, Causes of WWI – MANIA! M ilitarism - policy of building up a strong military to prepare for war A lliances.
Ch. 23.    9 million casualties  Millions are homeless and hungry  Civil War in Russia World War I.
Europe 1914 The First World War: Why? Long term – 1. The European experience 2. Alliance system 3. Imperialist Competition 4. Stockpiling of Weapons.
Tuesday, February 19th We start World War I!!!! 3 more weeks until Spring Break Next week AIMS testing (Monday/Tuesday 10:30 dismissal) Collect warm ups!
Chapter 15 Section 1 World War I. Nationalism The love for one’s country.
World War I. Causes of the Great War At the beginning of the 20 th century the most powerful nations of Europe were Great Britain, Germany, France, Austria-Hungary,
-” War to end all wars”-”Make the world safe for democracy” -Fought on 3 continents-6 continents involved in the fighting Causes of World War I.
World War I. GENERAL INFORMATION ABOUT WWI Started on July 28, 1914 Ended November 11, 1918 Almost 8 million died because of the war –Russia having the.
Causes of World War I.
World War I.
Causes of World War I. Entangling Alliances An alliance is an agreement made between two or more countries to give each other help if it is needed When.
“War to End All Wars” SETTING THE STAGE Many Western European countries had become constitutional monarchies by the late 1800’s. Constitutional.
Conventional View 1. Nationalism – Devotion to one’s nation  Created a competition among the great powers (Germany, Austria-Hungary, Great.
SSWH16 The student will demonstrate an understanding of long-term causes of World War I and its global impact.
World War I War to end all wars 1914 – World War I Began on July 28, 1914 Ended on November 11, 1918 United States joined in April 1917.
Setting the Stage for World War I. Bell Ringer What unites people? What unites people? What divides people? What divides people? What causes alliances.
WWI “THE GREAT WAR”. M.A.I.N. Causes of WWI Militarism As this occurs, rivals feel threatened and build up their military strength too. Nations increase.
Marching Toward War Chapter 13 Section 1.  WWI - Roots of War.asx WWI - Roots of War.asx.
Section 1 World War I Click the icon to play Listen to History audio. Click the icon below to connect to the Interactive Maps.
The Start of World War I Opener: Opener: top left side of notebook – Write down everything that you think you know about World War I (who, where, when,
World War I and the Great Russian Revolution Chapter 11.
World War I, The Great War Causes of the War  Nationalism- pride in and loyalty to one’s ethnic group  Imperialism- race for colonies around.
Warm up War, what is good about the idea? Write all that you know about World War I.
The Great War – WWI Ch. 29, Sec. 1 Advanced World History Adkins.
World War 1: Overview First total war in history (soldiers & civilians) In August 1914 it involved only 7 European countries but by November 1918 there.
World War I The War to End All Wars.
The Great War Begins Main Idea Reading Focus
WWI Notes.
World War I.
Causes of World War I = “M.A.N.I.A.”
Alliances Triple Alliance Triple Entente.
World War 1: Overview First total war in history (soldiers & civilians) In August 1914 it involved only 7 European countries but by November 1918 there.
World War I.
The Great War Begins Main Idea
The Great War.
World War 1: Overview First total war in history (soldiers & civilians) In August 1914 it involved only 7 European countries but by November 1918 there.
World War I Warm-Up: Please answer the following question- Why is World War I known as the “Great War”? John Nash, Over the Top, oil on canvas Source:
Background of World War I
Marching Toward War Chapter 13 Section 1.
World War I.
World War 1: Overview First total war in history (soldiers & civilians) In August 1914 it involved only 7 European countries but by November 1918 there.
The Road to World War I.
War Breaks Out in Europe World War I
Militarism Alliances Imperialism Nationalism Significant individuals
World War I.
Presentation transcript:

The Great War Chronology of Events Leading to and During World War I

Overview Historical Background: 19th Century Europe The Outbreak of War The Course of the War Versailles and Peace

The Great War US war fatalities in Iraq ( present ): 4,713 US war fatalities in Vietnam ( ): 58,209 US war fatalities in WWI ( ): 116,516

WW1 Fatalities ( ) CountryMilitaryCivilianTotal Belgium42,98762,000104,987 United Kingdom 885,138109,000994,138 Italy651,010589,0001,240,000 France1,397,800300,0001,697,800 Russia1,811,0001,500,0003,311,000

WW1 Fatalities ( ) CountryMilitaryCivilianTotal Austria- Hungary 1,100,000467,0001,567,000 Germany2,036,897426,0002,463,897 Bulgaria87,500100,000187,500 Ottoman Empire 800,0004,200,0005,000,000 Total:4,024,3975,193,0009,217,397

WW1 Casualties ( ) Total Casaulties (Killed and Wounded), all sides: –Military Deaths: 9,720,453 –Civilian Deaths: 8,871,248 Total Death: 18,591,701 –Military Wounded: 21,288,813

WW 1 Casualties 1918 global flu pandemic 1/4th of US population afflicted, 1/5th of global population Estimated death from pandemic: 21,500,000

Overview World War I innovations: –first use of machine gun –first use of chemical weapons –first use of tanks –first use of aerial bombardment of civilian populations –first genocide (Armenians by Turks)

Chronology: Deep Roots Picking up our political narrative from 1830 and the abortive revolutions and restorations around Europe Keep in mind the two interrelated ideas of nationalism and class coming to the fore in 19th century thought Rising bourgeoisie across much of Europe, but especially in France, puts pressure on aristocracy for greater role in government

Chronology: Deep Roots Only option is some form of democracy, which, of course, means reaching out to working class to some extent In removing the aristocracy and landed gentry as the center of political power, nationalism assumes a central role in helping to organize and unite a disparate population (it cuts across class lines)

Chronology: Deep Roots By a nation we mean a people who share: –common language (or dialects of common language) –common customs and traditions –common interests –common identity (a “sense” of themselves as a unified whole)

Chronology: Deep Roots Note that this defintion does not include a specifically political component; that is, no mention is made of a government A state would be an –association of persons –living in a determinate part of the world –legally organized for their own government

Chronology: Deep Roots In other words, it would be possible to have –a single nation in a single state (e.g, Japan) – nations without a state (e.g., the Kurds today) – states with multiple nations (e.g., the UK today) Mid 19th century Europe had a quite a few states composed of multiple nations

Chronology: Deep Roots An abortive string of democratic and socialist revolutions spread across Europe again in 1848 (starting in Sicily, they spread to all major European powers with the exception of Russia, England, Poland, the Netherlands, and the Ottoman Empire [Turkey])

Chronology: Deep Roots In France, the Second Republic begins with the successful February revolution, but by 1851 Louis Bonaparte gains power and rules as Napoleon III.

Germany as we know it today did not exist as a sovereign unified state until the end of the 19th century It took 3, relatively quick wars to accomplish that 19th Century Background

By the end of the Napoleonic era, “Germany” was a loose confederation comprising at least: 4 kingdoms 6 grand duchies 5 duchies 7 principalities 19th Century Background

Wars of German Unification ‣ 1864 Danish- Prussian War ‣ 1866 Austro- Prussian War ‣ Franco-Prussian War th Century Background Otto von Bismarck

The longest of these wars (Franco-Prussian) lasted 6 months Casualties were relatively minor and all three advanced important political objectives for the victor (Prussia) German unification culminated with Kaiser Wilhelm I crowned as the leader of the state In France, end of Napoleon III (2nd French Empire) and creation of the Third French Republic 19th Century Background

Austria-Hungary was in some sense the mirror image of “Germany” in that it comprised multiple nations within a single state, including: ethnic Germans, Hungarians, Serbs, Croats, Czechs, Romanians, Slavs Franz-Joseph became Emperor of Austria/King of Hungary in 1848 and would rule until his death in 1916 Habsburg line ends with his death 19th Century Background

Despite its longevity, Franz Joseph’s rule was difficult, presiding over significant loss of empire prior to WWI: -lost 2 major wars (France, 1848; Prussia 1866) -lost most of its Italian possessions (e.g., Lombardy and Venetia) following Italian unification -lost alliance with Russia as a result of not supporting Russia in Crimea War 19th Century Background

–His brother, Maximilian, was installed as emperor of Mexico by Napoleon III at the request of some Mexican monarchists –He was executed during a Mexican Revolution (1867) 19th Century Background

His wife, Elizabeth of Bavaria, was assassinated on 10 September th Century Background Empress Elizabeth Assassin Luigi Lucheni

19th Century Background His nephew and heir, Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated on 14 June 1914 by Serbian nationalists opposed to Austrian-Hungarian rule in Sarajevo (the capital of Bosnia-Herzegovenia, a province within the empire Archduke Assassin Gavrilo Princip

19th Century Background Russia -Under rule of the Romanov family line -Probably the least developed economically of the “great” European powers -Volatile combination of autocratic rule at top, fairly well organized and well led radical political movements at bottom, and welter of ethnic and protonationalist forces

19th Century Background Following loss in Crimean War, Tsar Alexander II embarked on some liberalization Serfs were freed in 1861, essentially ending the last feudal regime in Europe Despite the reforms (or perhaps because of them), numerous assassination attempts on Alexander II

19th Century Background On March 13, 1881 Alexander was assassinated (bomb explosions) by revolutionaries on return from watching a military parade

Alexander III assumed throne after the assassination, and ushered in a new era of autocratic rule. Dies of kidney failure a few years later (1894) His son Tsar Nicholas II ascended to throne and rules until th Century Background Coronation of Tsar Nicholas II, 1896

19th Century Background During Nicholas reign, Russia suffers defeat in Russo-Japanese war ( ), the first time a modern European power loses to an Asian power The loss helps spark an unsuccessful revolution in 1905 led by mutinous soldiers and radical anti- tsarist groups

19th Century Backgroud Nicholas attempts to stay ahead of political unrest with combination of crackdowns on radicals and liberal reforms, neither of which were successful in the long run For example, introduced a legislature (the “Duma”) with universal male suffrage (25 years and older) but had 4 electoral colleges and a weighted voting system (aristocratic votes counted more than peasant or worker voters)

19th Century Background Ottoman Empire (Turkey) One of the oldest ongoing political units in Europe, lasting from 1299 to 1923 In 19th Century, Ottoman Empire was much like Austrian-Hungarian empire in that contained a huge variety of ethnic groups organized under single sovereign, with semi- autonomous regions

19th Century Background A revolt in 1908 (led by the “Young Turks”) brought about some liberal reforms (including instituting a parliament), but also stoked nationalist sentiments among other ethnic groups within the Empire Sultan Abdul Hamid II, the Ottoman ruler attempted to stage a counter revolution and abandon the reforms. Instead he was deposed and exiled Sultan Abdul Hamid II

19th Century Background Ismaiel Enver (Enver Pasha) emerges as new ruler and seeks to navigate a course that protects Ottoman rule from further European encroachments, particularly Russia As a result, he concludes a secret treaty with Germany in 1914 Enver Pasha

Prelude to War So, by the turn of the century, we have a series of essentially monarchical regimes clinging to power with... Burgeoning nationalist movements, and... Fairly severe economic and social stresses brought on by capitalist expansion

Prelude to War To help placate working class at home, by late 19th century the European powers were engaged in a scramble to claim other lands in Asia and Africa

Prelude to War As part of the legacy of the 19th century conflicts, political leaders across Europe had important and significant underlying resentments towards each other -e.g., France vs. Germany, Russia vs. Austria- Hungary, Russia vs Turkey, Britain vs. Germany, etc.

Prelude to War In the interests of promoting security, the leaders of the major European powers enter into series of (often secret) defensive pacts that call for signatory states to come to the defense of other states: Austria-Hungary and Germany ( ) A-H/Germany/Italy ( ) A-H/Germany/Romania ( ) France/Russia ( ) Bulgaria/Russia ( ) France/UK ( ) UK/Russia ( ) UK/Russia/France ( ) Turkey/Germany ( )

Prelude to War Lessons from 19th Century War -War can advance political objectives -War can be quick and relatively low cost -Key to success is rapid military mobilization -Military doctrine for Germany in particular calls for rapid strike west to knock out France, then go east against Russia

Outbreak of War On 28 June 1914 Archduke Franz Ferdinand is travelling in Bosnia (celebrating his 14th wedding anniversary) and is assassinated by Serbian nationalist 28 June was also St.Vitus Day, a holiday memorializing a Serbian defeat by Turkish forces in 1389

Outbreak of War Serbia leadership disavows any involvement in the assassination and sends condolences to Vienna Kaiser Wilhelm II in Germany urges caution for Austria Austria nonetheless begins mobilization and issues ultimatum to Serbia on 22 July 1914 demanding a response in 48 hours22 July 1914

Outbreak of War Serbia leadership rejects ultimatum with 5 minutes to spare, and begins mobilization to prepare for Austrian-Hungarian attack On 26 July, Russia, an ally of Serbia, begins pre-mobilization to dissuade Austria from attacking Serbia 28 July (one month after the assassination) Austria-Hungary declares war on Serbia

Outbreak of War On 31 July, Russia starts full mobilization Germany, getting reports of Russian mobilization, begins to mobilize to protect Austria Germany threatens Russia with war unless it halts mobilization, Russia refuses to halt 1 August, Germany declares war on Russia 3 August, Germany declares war on France

Outbreak of War Germany asks neutral Belgium for “right of access,” Belgium refuses and Germany invades Belgium en route to France 4 August Britain demands Germany leave Belgium under threat of war Germany refuses and Britain declares war on Germany

Outbreak of War Main forces arrayed against each other: Triple Alliance: Austria-Hungary, Germany, Ottoman Empire Triple Entente: UK, France, Russia But both groups tried to bring allies on board and war quickly spread beyond Europe, including the Middle East, North Africa, South Africa, and India

The War Rather than the quick strikes that characterized 19th century conflict, this war quickly settled into a defensive struggle Both sides dug trench lines, and the latest military technology -- machine guns -- favored defensive positions

The War War drags on for 4 years with little progress on any fronts for either side, but

The War Internal revolutions in Russia (Bolshevik topple the tsar in 1917 and Russia concludes peace treaty with Germany

The War And the UK, with the Irish Easter Rising of 1916 Irish nationalist forces seize government buildings in Dublin and declare independence for Ireland

The War US enters war in 1917 on side of UK and France and the infusion of new troops breaks the deadlock on the Western Front German troops begin to pull back in fall of 1918

Peace On 29 September, Bulgaria became the first of the central powers to sign an armistice On 30 September, the Ottoman Empire surrendered On 9 November, an internal revolution in Germany deposes Kaiser Wilhelm and a republic is declared On 11 November, general armistice is signed ending the fighting

Peace Formal peace negotiations commence on 18 January at Versailles and after six months of negotiating, the Treaty of Versailles is signed, formally ending the war between Germany and the rest of Europe

Peace Treaty includes provisions in which Germany acknowledges that it bears sole responsiblity for the war Germany agrees to pay retributions for the costs of the war Germany agrees to arms limitations regarding the size of its military Germany cedes all its colonial territories and significant territory (e.g., East Prussia, Alsace-Lorraine) to other European powers (e.g, France and Poland)

Peace Also created a series of nation-states in what was left of the Austrian-Hungarian and Ottoman empires Created League of Nations