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The Great War 1914-1918

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1914-1918. The Great War. Europe 1914. Long-Term Causes. Nationalism Strong in Balkan Peninsula Many smaller nations gaining independence from Ottoman Empire (Serbia, Bosnia, Bulgaria, Romania) A-H threatening to annex them - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Great War

The Great War1914-1918

Page 2: The Great War

Europe 1914

Page 3: The Great War

Long-Term Causes Nationalism

Strong in Balkan Peninsula▪ Many smaller nations gaining

independence from Ottoman Empire (Serbia, Bosnia, Bulgaria, Romania)

▪ A-H threatening to annex them

▪ Russia happy to support Slavic nationalism (only to take them over later)

Economic Competition▪ GB and Germany relations

become tense due to economic rivalry

▪ Rivalries encourage strong sense of pride

BALKAN PENINSULA

Page 4: The Great War

Imperialism

Leads to economic and egotistical competition

International economy and no ability to Police it

Rivalries develop b/w Great Powers over land and wealth

Tension over territories in Africa

Page 5: The Great War

Militarism

Glorification of armed strength War seen as solution to international

problems No major wars within 30 years +▪ military leaders restless and eager to prove

superiority with new weapons▪ “boys and their toys”

Germany building massive, modern army▪ Anti-war Social Dems vs. German Imperial

Gov’t(needed to prove their power)▪ Creates anxiety in other Great Powers

Page 6: The Great War

Alliances

Page 7: The Great War

AlliancesYear? Name the

Treaty/AllianceCountries?

Page 8: The Great War

Alliances

1879- Dual Alliance: Germany and A-H 1882-Triple Alliance: Germany, A-H , Italy 1887- Reinsurance Treaty: Germany &

Russia Lapses due to new Kaiser

1894-France and Russia become allies 1904-France and GB become allies 1907-Triple Entente: France, Russia & GB

1907: Triple Alliance vs. Triple Entente

Page 9: The Great War

Alliances

Page 10: The Great War

Immediate Cause 1908: Austria annexes

Bosnia Large Slavic population Outraged Slavic leaders

looking to self-rule; talk of war

June, 1914: Nationalism peaks in the Balkans Serbs gaining

confidence and looking to challenge Austrian presence in region

Page 11: The Great War

Immediate Cause

June 28, 1914 Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand

visiting Sarajevo, Bosnia Serbs use this opportunity to challenge

Austrians Archduke and wife shot at point-blank

range▪ Killer- Gavrilo Princip of the “Black Hand”

Murder causes A-H to go after Serbia with complete support from Germany▪ “blank check” support

Page 12: The Great War

Timeline of Immediate Cause June 28-assassination of Archduke July 5-Germany issues “blank check” July 23- July 25-Serbia responds to ultimatum

How? July 28- August 1- August 3- August 4-

Page 13: The Great War

Bravo, Belgium!

Page 14: The Great War

Crime of the Ages…”Who Did It?”

Page 15: The Great War

Crime of the Ages…Who Did it?

Page 16: The Great War

Schlieffen Plan (1906) the plan was to win the

two-front war by first quickly beating France before Russia would be able to mobilize against Germany

depended on Germany's ability to invade France before France could fully mobilize its troops to defend itself, and then to turn on Russia, seen as the slowest of the three to mobilize, before the Russians were ready

Page 17: The Great War

The Powers that be…

•Central Powers

• Germany, Austria –Hungary, Ottomans

Triple Allianc

e•Allied Powers

• Russia, France, Great Britain

Triple Entent

e What happened to Italy?

Page 18: The Great War

The Battle of the Marne-Sept. 1914 Located just east of Paris

along the Marne River

GOAL: Allies to push the Germans back from Paris

Allied forces are successful

Schlieffen Plan ruined Slow moving battle Both sides “dig in”

Why?

Page 19: The Great War

Battle of the Marne 1914

Page 20: The Great War

New Tools of War

Machine Gun Maxim Gun 600 rounds per

minute Most devastating

effect on how the war was fought

Forced men into trenches

Page 21: The Great War

New Tools of War Poison Gas Heavier than air; good

to use against trench warfare Tear Gas: eye irritant Mustard Gas: skin

irritant Chlorine: eyes, nose,

lung irritant that could cause asphyxiation

Used to force troops to break ranks

Only 4% related-deaths

Page 22: The Great War

Poison Gas

Page 23: The Great War

New Tools of War

Submarine (U-boats) Only used by

Germans US and GB had

technology but chose not to use it; “ungentlemanly”

Very effective in sinking GB and US ships

Very influential in bringing US into the war

Page 24: The Great War

New Tools of War Tanks

Used to move through “no man’s land” in trench warfare

Improvement of armored trucks that got stuck in the mud

1916: Developed into “tanks”

Late 1917: more effective tanks finally developed

1916

1918

Page 25: The Great War

New Tools of War

Airplanes Made out of

canvas and wood Flew up to 100

mph Early use for

reconnaissance Dog-fights began

after mounting machine guns

Page 26: The Great War

Trench Warfare

After the Battle of the Marne (1914) it was evident soldiers were not equipped to protect themselves from rapid gunfire…so the dug in…

Trench warfare begins

Page 27: The Great War

Trenches

Elaborate system of trenches zigzagged along the Western Front (France)

Used by both Allies and Germans

Only front line soldiers fought in trenches 4 days on, 4 days

off depending on conditions

Page 28: The Great War

Trench System

Page 29: The Great War

Trenches

Page 30: The Great War

Trenches

It was said you could smell the trenches way before you could see

them.

Page 31: The Great War

Trenches

Trenches were used on the Western Front only

Not new to war use not commonly used in European wars

Created stalemate on the Western Front…dragging war on for years

Page 32: The Great War

Wet Trenches

Very wet and poor sanitary conditions in trenches

Many soldiers came down with trench foot and other diseases

More men died from disease than from combat

Page 33: The Great War

Trench FootMild Case of Trench

Foot

Severe Case of Trench Foot

Page 34: The Great War

Battle of the Somme-July 1916 GOAL: Allies to push Germans

lines further back from Paris and Verdun Fought near Verdun, in Somme River

Valley in France One of the bloodiest battles of the war 1.5 millions lives lost British gained little more that 5 miles at

the deepst point of penetration of German lines

Realization that this was a “war of attrition”

Page 35: The Great War

Battle of the Somme

Page 36: The Great War

Total War

All countries resources go to the war effort▪ Civilians: men drafted to fight; women take

on male-roles back home▪ Government: control of the economy

increases▪ Rationing items: limiting its use by civilians▪ Controlling industrial production to increase war

materials▪ Propaganda: one-sided promotional

information▪ Government controls the news—national security▪ Promotes all positive information to keep up morale

& support

Page 37: The Great War

Eastern Front

Russia vs. Austria-Hungary, Germany, Ottomans, Bulgaria

Trench warfare not used…Russia lacked technology ; best weapon…MEN!

Problem for Allies: Russia cut off from Allied support Many failed efforts to help send relief to

Russia Italy finally joins Allies 1915

Page 38: The Great War

Battle of Tannenberg-August 1914

August, 1914 Russians easily

defeated by Germans

Russians lost many supplies and land

Allies feared that Russia may not hold their own

Page 39: The Great War

Gallipoli Campaign - 1915 GOAL: Allies use

new member –Italy– to gain supply access to Russia Use Italy as stepping

stone into Ottoman territory

Campaign a failure Russia remains

isolated

Page 40: The Great War

Gallipoli Campaign

Page 41: The Great War

Lawrence of Arabia Major contribution was

convincing Arab leaders to co-ordinate their revolt to aid British interests against the Ottomans, a Central Power; successful

He sought to convince his superiors in the British Gov’t that Arab independence was in their interests

Page 42: The Great War

Unrestricted Submarine Warfare Germans used this

strategy of torpedoing ships without warning

Effective in sinking many British naval and cargo ships

GOAL: weaken GB and cut-off their supply lines

Page 43: The Great War

Sinking of the Lusitania –May 7, 1915

Largest, fastest ocean liner torpedoed and sunk in 18 minutes off the coast of Ireland.

killing 1,198 of the 1,959 people aboard 138 Americans

Generated much hatred towards Germans

Theory: GB left it as a sitting duck hoping to have US loss of life and bring US into the war against Germany

US does not declare war but give stern warning to Germans

forcing Germans to end UNRESTRICTED Submarine

warfare

Page 44: The Great War

RMS Lusitania

Page 45: The Great War

Lusitania

Page 46: The Great War

Russia Out of the War

1917: Russia fighting on Eastern Front for 3 years on the DEFENSIVE 2 million dead; 6

million deserters People wanted

peace; Czar Nicholas II refuses to pull out of war

Page 47: The Great War

Russia Out of the War- Nov 1917 Germans secretly help

set up Communist Revolution in Russia as a diversion Sent in Russian exile

Vladimir Lenin Forces Czar Nicholas II to

abdicate Once in Communists in

place; Russia surrenders to Germany- ends war in East▪ Treaty of Brest-Litovsk-

Russia surrenders land to Germany & Germans leave Russia alone

Page 48: The Great War

Zimmerman Telegram

January, 1917 Germans begin unrestricted sub warfare

again; needed weaken GB; knew it might bring in US

Precaution: Instigate a war with Mexico against the US to prevent US involvement in WWI

German Foreign Secretary, Zimmerman, sends telegram to Ambassador in Mexico pledging support for a war against US Intercepted and US declares war on April

2, 1917

Page 49: The Great War

Zimmerman Telegram

Page 50: The Great War

Some Promise! April 1917

Page 51: The Great War

US Enters the War

April 2, 1917- US declares war on Germany

Allies have advantage US have fresh troops arriving to Western

Front 250,000/month by late spring

Germany left with young, weak army; young boys very scared and inexperienced

Page 52: The Great War

Battle of the Marne-Fall 1918 Allies Goal: push Germans out of

France completely Allies much stronger Germany refuses to surrender but

can’t hold their own; largest artillery barrage of entire war…but not enough

Bulgarians, Turks sue for peace A-H has its own revolution…pulls out of war Germany left alone to fight Allies

Page 53: The Great War

End of War to End All Wars Germany Navy mutinies; Germany very

close to revolution November 9, 1918- Kaiser Wilhelm II

abdicates the throne November 11, 1918- Germany signs an

armistice with Allies Armistice: agreement to stop fighting Signed on a RR car outside of Paris Known as Armistice Day but currently know

as…?

Page 54: The Great War

November 11, 1918- Armistice Day

Paris, Nov 11, 1918

Page 55: The Great War

Treaty of Versailles- 1919 January 1918- President Woodrow Wilson

drew up his FOURTEEN POINTS to global peace: End to secret treaties Freedom of the seas Reduction of armaments Redrawing European boundaries with

respect to ethnicities #14: International Political Organization

to prevent war (League of Nations)

Page 56: The Great War

Treaty of Versailles

Big Three (four) US, GB, France

(Italy) Met with 70

delegates from 27 countries

Met at Versailles in Hall of Mirrors

Signed June 28, 1919 Exactly 5 years

after assassination of Archduke

Page 57: The Great War

Treaty of Versailles Germany gets

slammed Lost all colonies Rhineland occupied by

French for 15 years Austria remain

independent Sudetenland to

Czechoslovakia No navy No artillery, subs, planes Standing army of

100,000

Page 58: The Great War

Treaty of Versailles

THE GUILT CLAUSE: Germany forced to take full blame Must pay reparations of $31 billion over

33 years

This was most devastating for German people…taking full blame for the actions of their “war monger” Kaiser

Lesson from Congress of Vienna???

Page 59: The Great War

League of Nations

Goal: to prevent global war and promote peace and diplomacy

Permanent members: France, GB Italy 42 other allied nations members

US never joins; Wilson’s idea, Congress wants to remain isolated and in control

Weak…why?

Page 60: The Great War

New Nations Created West Ottoman Empire becomes Turkey

rest becomes Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, Transjordan Austria Hungary Poland Czechoslovakia Yugoslavia (Serbs, Croats, Slovenes) Estonia Latvia Lithuania Finland

Page 61: The Great War

New Nations Created

Page 62: The Great War

Central Powers Military Deaths Germany-

2,050,897 A-H-1,100,000 Bulgaria-87,500 Ottomans-771,844

Total- 4,010,241

Page 63: The Great War

Allied Powers Military Deaths British Empire-

1,114,914 France- 1,397,800 Russia- 1,811,000 Italy- 651,000 Serbia- 275,000 Romania- 250,00 United States-

116,708 Others-99,000

Total: 5,711,696