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Published byNathaniel Matthews Modified over 9 years ago
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World War I
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Failure of the Schlieffen Plan Failure of French to advance on left flank Belgian resistance Russian advances on the Eastern front British support for French
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The Western Front German advance stopped at the Marne Trench warfare Stalemate War of attrition
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The Western Front (cont.) Examples: –Battle of Verdun –Battle of the Somme Millions dead, with little territorial gain
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The Eastern Front Russia made initial gains Germans countered at Tannenberg & Masurian Lakes Russians pushed back; but Germans main focus was in the West
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Alliances The Central Powers –Austria-Hungary –Germany –Turkey –Bulgaria The Allies –Serbia –Russia –France –Britain –Japan –Italy
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The Middle East The Allies tried to take control of the Dardanelles & Bosporus The British failed to capture Gallipoli
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The Role of Technology Advanced weapons greatly increased casualties & horrors of war Strategies often did not account for new technologies –Machine Guns –Artillery –Poison gas –U-boats –Airplanes –Barbed wire –Tanks
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Appeals to Nationalism Both sides tried to incite nationalist uprisings within territories of their enemies –E.g. Irish, Flemings, Poles, Czechs, Ukrainians Most successful in inciting Arabs against the Turks
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The War at Sea British imposed a blockade and seized neutral ships Germans countered with unrestricted submarine warfare May 1915, Lusitania sunk; Germany stopped unrestricted sub warfare due to US objections April 1916- Battle of Jutland; only naval battle of the war; Germans failed to break the blockade
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Russia’s Exit Russia was losing 1917 Russian Revolution 1918 Treaty of Brest- Litovsk; Russia out of the war
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US Entry British blockade caused hardship for Germany Resumption of unrestricted submarine warfare The Zimmerman Telegram April 1917 US declares war
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The Home Front “Total War” Extensive use of propaganda Governments took greater control of economies – rationing –Cooperation with private sector and with labor unions Lower classes benefited Women’s roles changed
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The End of the War March 1918- Germany launched the “Spring Offensive” but was unsuccessful US troops had begun arriving By Sept.1918, Gen. Ludendorff realized that defeat was inevitable; gave power to the Reichstag led by the Social Democrats Oct. 1918- Rebellions in Austria-Hungary Oct-Nov. 1918- desertions & mutinies in German military; “Workers & Soldiers Councils” take over many local governments Nov. 9, 1918- Kaiser William II abdicated Nov. 11, 1918- Armistice signed
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