Causes of the Great War - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 11
About This Presentation
Title:

Causes of the Great War

Description:

... Russia and given a strong warning to Germany that Britain would take ... Or Lord Grey could have warned France and Russia that Britain would remain neutral. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:40
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 12
Provided by: duff3
Category:
Tags: causes | great | war | warned

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Causes of the Great War


1
Causes of the Great War
Who is to Blame?
2
  • Source A
  • On 6 July, Bethmann, the German Foreign
    Minister, told the Austrians, "Austria must judge
    what is to be done with Serbia. But whatever
    Austria's decision, you can count upon it that
    Germany will stand by you as an ally." He added,
    "If war must break out, better now than in one or
    two years' time when .the Triple Entente will be
    stronger."
  • Kaiser Wilhelm and Bethmann did more than give
    Austria-Hungary a free hand. They encouraged the
    Austrians to start a war and to risk the
    consequences. If it came to world war, they were
    confident of winning now but less confident of
    winning later. If they had wanted a peaceful
    solution, they would have approached the British
    at once. Instead, they did nothing, hoping to
    keep Britain neutral in a continental war.
  • From A. J. P. Taylor, 'The Struggle for Mastery
    in Europe', 1954.

3
Source B A British postcard from 1914 showing
Kaiser Wilhelm.




4
  • Source C
  • A German cigarette card from about 1900, with a
    quotation from a famous German General, Moltke,
    who said, 'War is an element in God's natural
    order of things.'

5
Source D A cartoon drawn during the
Moroccan crisis of 1911. The French and Spanish
children playing round the pond turn to Uncle
John Bull (Britain), who looks sternly on at the
German boy who is interrupting their game.
Britain's strong stand in support of France over
Morocco forced Germany to withdraw its demands.
Look carefully at the boats floating in the pond.
6
  • Source E
  • A German cartoon from about 1910. Germany is
    shown peacefully watering his garden. An
    uncivilized bully, his Russian neighbour,
    threatens him from over the fence.

7
  • Source F
  • A cartoon dated about 1900. It shows Germany
    breast-feeding the Prussian army and kicking away
    the thinker. The cartoonist believed that Germany
    gave too much influence to generals and that this
    made it a warlike state.

8
Source I A British propaganda Poster from
World War I. Try to pay particular attention
to the small text in this poster.
9
  • Source G
  • The Kaiser's aims were largely defensive. He
    had to prop up his ally, Austria. The longer
    Austria's decline went on, the weaker the Triple
    Alliance became. He needed to break free of the
    encircling powers of the Triple Entente he
    needed to fend off Russia, the military revenge
    by France and trading domination by Britain. He
    dreaded war on two fronts. He felt that war was
    bound to happen so he had to decide the timing.
    He had to create a mighty army and navy and give
    power to their leaders.
  • From Ed Rayner and Ron Stapley, 'GCSE World
    History', 1988.

10
  • Source H
  • Lord Grey could have prevented war. Early in the
    crisis he could have responded to France and
    Russia and given a strong warning to Germany that
    Britain would take the side of the Franco-Russian
    Alliance. This would have led Germany to try to
    hold back the Austrians. It might have prevented
    the declaration of war on Serbia. Or Lord Grey
    could have warned France and Russia that Britain
    would remain neutral. Russia would then have
    hesitated with its mobilization against Austria
    and Germany.
  • From Sidney Bradshaw Fay, 'Origins of the World
    War', 1930.

11
  • Source J
  • In Germany, fear of growing isolation dominated.
    Austria-Hungary was Germany's last ally and thus
    seemed to deserve support at all cost. The
    German government, in particular, felt under
    increasing pressure from the generals and from
    right-wing opinion to wage war at the next
    feasible opportunity. Diplomatic means to
    counteract the encirclement of the country had
    proven counterproductive and seemed exhausted.
    Russia, moreover, was industrializing rapidly,
    its population grew at a pace that alarmed
    Germans, and their concern heightened when
    Russia, with French money, began to build
    railways to the German border and alongside it.
    Germans now feared that they could be crushed
    within a few weeks if France and Russia decided
    to wage a two-front war against Germany.
  • Raffael Scheck, Associate Professor and Chair
    History Department, Colby College, USA
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com