Title: The Great War
1The Great War
- By Heather Henderson and Shelly Smith
2The Road to World War I
3Conscription
- The significances of conscriptions was to
increase the size of the army. - Between 1890 and 1914 the European armies doubled
in size. - The Russian armies had grown to be the largest
with 1.3 million men. - The French and German armies had approximately
900,000. - The British, Italian, and Austro-Hungarian armies
were between 250,000 and 500,000.
Doughboys First by Frank Schoonover 1
4Mobilization
- The process of assembling troops and supplies and
making them ready for war. - 1914 ?considered an act of war.
WWI mobilization 2 ?
German soldiers celebrating start of war
1
5Archduke Francis Ferdinand
- June 28, 1914 ?Heir to the throne.
- Conspirators plan to kill Ferdinand, along with
his wife Sophia. They began throwing bombs at his
car, but it bounced off and exploded into another
car. Gavrilo Princip succeeded in shooting both
Ferdinand and his wife. - Austria declared war on Serbia, because of his
death.
Archduke Francis Ferdinand 1
Archduke Francis Ferdinand 2
6Emperor William II
- Emperor of Germany
- Gave the blank check saying that
Austria-Hungary had Germanys full support even
if matters went to the length of war between
Austria-Hungary and Russia - Till the world comes to an end the ultimate
decision will rest with the sword. - -Emperor William II
William II 1
William II with his first wife Augusta Viktoria
2
? William II 3
7Czars Nicholas II
- July 28 He order partial mobilization of the
Russian army against Austria-Hungary - July 29 He ordered full mobilization of the
Russian army, knowing that they considered this
an act of war.
Czars Nicholas II 1
A portrait of Nicholas II,Painted by V.A. Serov,
1900. 2
8Triple Entente Triple Alliance
Blue Triple Entente Red Triple Alliance
Yellow Neutral Countries 1
9Triple Alliance
- Created in 1882
- Formed by Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy
- Crises tested these alliances which left
European states angry at each other and eager for
revenge.
1
10Triple Entente
- Created in 1907
- Formed by France, Great Britain, and Russia
- Crises tested these alliances which left
European states angry at each other and eager for
revenge.
1
11Militarism
- Aggressive preparation for war
- Armies grew along with the influence of military
leaders - Leaders had plans for quickly mobilizing millions
of men and enormous amount of supplies in the
event of war. (conscription)
12What ethnic groups were left without nations in
Europe before 1914?
- Slavic minorities in the Balkans and the Hapsburg
Empire dreamed of creating their own national
states - The Irish in the British Empire wanted to create
their own national states - The poles in the Russian Empire also had dreams
of creating their own national states.
13How did the creation of military plans help draw
the nations of Europe into World War I?
- The Germans had a military plan the Schlieffen
plan - Called a two front war with France and Russia
- The plan was that Germany would conduct a small
holding action against Russian while most of the
German army would carry out a rapid invasion of
France. After the defeat of France, they would
move east against Russia - Under the Schlieffen plan, Germany declared war
on France on August 3 - On August 4, Great Britain declared war on Germany
14Which decisions made by European leaders in 1914
lead directly to the outbreak of war?
- June 28, 1914- Archduke Francis Ferdinand was
assassinated in Sarajevo. The Austrian-Hungarian
government didnt know if the Serbian government
was involved with his assassination, but the
Austrian foreign minister saw it as an
opportunity to render Serbian innocuous once and
for all by a display of force. On July 28,
Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia. - Austrian leaders sought backup from Germany were
Emperor William II gave Austria-Hungary, Germanys
full support. - On July 28, Czar Nicholas II ordered partial
mobilization of the Russian army. Then on July
29, Czars ordered full mobilization of the
Russian army, which was considered an act of war. - The Schlieffen plan was put into play on August
3, when Germany declared war on France.
15What were the chief domestic problems confronting
European nations before 1914?
- Rivalries of colonies and trade grew during an
age of frenzied nationalism and imperialist
expansion. - Growth of nationalism
- Not all ethnic groups became nations
- Socialist were increasingly inclined to use
strikes to achieve their goals. - There were labor strife and class divisions.
- Resulted in the encouragement of war in 1914.
16The War
17Propaganda
- Ideas spread to influence public opinion for or
against a cause. - Government propaganda started national hatred
before the war.
18Trench Warfare
- Fighting from ditches protected by barbed wire
- The Germans and the French could not dislodge
each other from the trenches, which made them
stay in the same position for 4 years.
French soldiers building a trench
1
19War of Attrition
- A war based on wearing the other side down by
contrast attacks and heavy losses. - Ex. One side would order commands starting with
artillery, to shock the enemy. Then, they would
come out of their trenches with bayonets - The attacks rarely hurt because as they came out
of the trench, they had a chance of being fired
at by enemy machine guns.
20Total War
- A war that involves the complete mobilization of
resources and people, affecting the lives of all
citizens in the warring countries, even those
remote from the battlefields. - Men had to be organized and supplies had to be
manufactured and purchased for years of combat
increase of government powers? manipulated public
opinion to keep war effort going. -
1
21Planned Economies
- System directed by government agencies
- Governments set up
- Price, wage, and rent controls
- Rationed food supplies and materials
- Regulated imports and exports
- Took over transportation systems
22Lawrence of Arabia
- British officer
- Real name T. E. Lawrence
- 1917- urged Arab princes to revolt against their
Ottoman over lords. - The British under minded Ottoman rule in the
Arabian peninsula Lawrence of Arabia aided the
Arabian nationalists.
Lawrence of Arabia 1
23Admiral Holtzendorff
- A German admiral for the submarines
- Real name Henning Von Holtzendorff
- Assured the emperor, I give your majesty my word
as an officer that not one American will land on
the continent. - He decided that the Germans should return to
unrestricted submarine warfare which brought the
US into war in April 1917.
1
24Battle of the Marne
- September 6-10
- To stop the Germans, French military leaders
loaded two thousand Parisian taxicabs with fresh
troops and sent them to the front line.
Battle of the Marne begins 1
25Battle of Tannenberg Battle of Masurian Lakes
- August 30 September 15
- Battle of Tannenberg led by Erich Ludendorff and
Paul von Hindenburg - Russian army moved into eastern Germany but was
decisively defeated - The Russians were no longer a threat to German
territory
Generals Ludendorff and von Hindenburg with
Kaiser Wilhelm II
1
26Battle of Verdun
- 1916 in France
- German General Erich von Falkenhayn developed a
plan to attack Verdun considered by many
military historians as the greatest and most
demanding battle in history. - Men would hide in trenches and when they came out
they attacked the enemy with bayonets. - Seven hundred men lost their lives over a few
miles of land - war of attrition
Underground entrance
1
Overview of battle
2
Dead French soldiers in trench
3
27Battle of Gallipoli
- April 1915
- The Allies tried to open a Balkan front by
landing troops in Gallipoli - They entered the side of the Central Powers
(Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Ottoman) and were
forced to withdraw.
Turkish soldiers defending Gallipoli
2
Gallipoli Front
1
ANZAC troops attack enemy positions at Gallipoli
3
28Lusitania
- British ship
- Departed from Britain on May 1, 1915 and six days
later ( May 7, 1915 _at_ 210 p.m.) was sunk by
Walther Schwieger, a German commander who fired a
torpedo 750 yards away. - May 7, 1915 Sunk by German forces
- 1,100 civilian casualties (over 100 Americans)
- floating palace
- Britain set up a blockade of Germany Germany set
up a blockade of Britain - German authorities saw Lusitania as a threat
- Germany accused the British as using Lusitania to
carry ammunition and other war supplies across
the Atlantic
Newspaper ad run by German Embassy before
Lusitania sailed
1
Lusitania 2
29Zimmerman Telegram
- Written by German foreign secretary Arthur
Zimmerman - It was a coded message sent to Mexico, proposing
a military alliance against the U.S. - Threats contained in the telegram helped convince
Congress to declare war against Germany in 1917.
Detail of the Zimmermann Telegram
1
30Battle at the Somme
- British and French armies joined at the Somme
River - British attacked the German defensive line on
July 1, 1916 - First day of the battle 21,000 British soldiers
were killed - Was the single worst day in death and casualties
in British military history - 20,000 out of 100,000 troops were killed and over
40,000 were wounded.
Overview of Battle 2
Explosions near the Somme 1
31Battle at Ypres
- First Battle 1914
- Second Battle 1915
- Third Battle 1917
- June 7, 1917 Set off bombs on German lines that
were dug in mines over the past eighteen months. - General Douglas Haigs plan failed because when
the bombs fired the land was turned into
Quicksand and all men, animals and equipment
sank into the ground.
Overview of Battle 2
Post-war Ypres 1
32Why did WWI require total warfare?
- So the government could have control over the
people and resources - Also so that the people could not go against the
government - Before total warfare, there was the trench
warfare were they
33What methods did governments use to create
enthusiasm for war, and counter opposition to the
war at home?
- Made active use of Propaganda
- Newspapers were censored and sometimes their
publications were suspended - The French exaggerated German atrocities in
Belgium and found that their citizens were only
too willing to believe these accounts.
34Which government powers increased during the war?
- Drafted tens of millions of young men
- PLANNED ECONIMIES Set up price, wage, and rent
controls rationed food supplies and materials
regulated imports and exports took over
transportation.
35How did war affect womens rights, and the role
of women in society?
- Women were asked to take over jobs that had not
been available to them before. - Chimney sweeps
- Truck drivers
- Farm labors
- Factory workers in heavy industry
- At the end of the war government quickly removed
women from the jobs. - 1919 350,00 unemployed women
- Gained the right to vote in Germany, Austria, and
the United States
Woman in gas mask factory 1
36Which events brought the US into the war?
- The naval war between Germany and Great Britain.
- The U.S. protested the use of unrestricted
submarine warfare. - Germany brought back the use of unrestricted
submarine warfare which brought the U.S. into
war. (April 1914)
U.S. enters WWI 1
37How did soldiers try to make life in the trenches
bearable?
- Produced humor magazines to help pass the time.
38Russian Revolution
39Soviets
- Councils composed of representatives from the
workers and soldiers - Soviets of Petrograd had been formed in March
1917. - Soviet sprang up in army units, factory towns,
and rural areas - Were largely made up of socialist who represented
the more radical interest of the lower classes.
An assembly of the Petrograd Soviet, 1917 1
40War Communism
- Was used to insure regular supplies for the Red
Army - Meant government control of banks and most
industries, the seizing of grain from most
peasants, and the centralization of state
administration under communist control.
41Grigori Rasputin
- An uneducated Serbian peasant who claimed to be a
holy man - Alexandra believed that Rasputin was holy because
he alone was able to stop her son Alexis from
bleeding - Was first consulted by Alexandra when making the
most important decision. She called him, he
beloved, never-to-be-forgotten teacher, savior,
and mentor. - Rasputin was made an important power behind the
throne - Didnt hesitate to interfere with government
affairs - Was assassinated in December 1916
- It wasnt easy to kill a man with such incredible
strength They shot him three times and then tied
him up and threw him into the Neva River. He
drowned by then untied the knots underwater
before he died.
Grigori Rasputin 1
42Alexander Kerensky
- Headed the provisional government
- Decided to carry on the war to preserve Russias
honor
1
43Czar Nicholas II
- Relied on the Army and bureaucracy to hold up his
regime. - Lost support of the Army and stepped down from
the battlefield on March 15, 1917 ending the
300-year-old Romanov dynasty.
44Bolsheviks
- Began as a small fraction of a Marxist party
called the Russian Social Democrats - Came under the leadership of V. I. Lenin
- Under Lenins directions, the Bolsheviks became a
party dedicated to violent revolution. Reflected
the discontent of people and promised an end to
the war, the redistribution, of all land to the
peasants, the transfer of factories and
industries from capitalist to committees of
workers, and the transfer of the government power
from the provisional government to the soviets - Three simple slogans that summed up the Bolshevik
program - Land, Peace, and Bread
- Workers control of government
- All power to the soviets
- At the end of October, they made up a slight
majority in the Petrograd and Moscow soviets the
number of party members had grown from 50,000 to
240,000 - November 6, Bolsheviks forces seized the Winter
Palace - Renamed themselves the communists
- Many people opposed the new Bolshevik and were
concerned about the communist takeover - Between 1918 and 1921, were forced to fight on
many fronts against opponents, the anti-communist
forces. - 1921, communist regain control over the
independent nationalist governments in Georgia,
Russian Armenian, and Azerbaijan - Were inspired by their vision of a new socialist
order and determination that comes from
revolutionary zeal and convictions. - Were able to translate their revolutionary faith
into practical instruments of power - War communism
- Revolutionary terror
- Appealed to the powerful force of Russian
patriotism\ - In 1992, were in total command of Russia
Study 1
under arms 2
Work 3
45Lenin
- Vladimir Ilyich Ulianov, known to the world as V.
I. Lenin - Lead the Bolsheviks
- Believed that only violent revolution could
destroy the capitalist system. - Spent most of his time abroad between 1900 and
1917 - 1917 Saw an opportunity for the Bolsheviks to
seize power - In April 1917, he was shipped to Russia by the
German military leaders, hoping to create
disorder in Russia His arrival opened a new
stage of Russian revolution - Lenin maintained that the Soviets of soldiers,
workers, and peasants were ready made instruments
of power - He believed that the Bolsheviks should work
towards gaining control of these groups and then
used them to overthrow the provisional government - Turned over the power of the provisional
government to the Congress of Soviets The real
power was passed to a Council of People's
Commissars, headed by Lenin - Lenin promised peace which meant that a
humiliating loss of much Russian territory - On March 3, 1918 Lenin signed the Treaty of Brest
Litovsk with Germany and gave up eastern Poland,
Ukraine, Finland, and the Baltic Provinces
Vladimir Ilyich
1
Lenin speaks 2
46Trotsky
- A Commissar of war
- Reinstated the draft and insisted on rigid
discipline - Executed soldiers on the spot who deserted or
refused to obey orders
Trotsky 1
47Petrograd
- Formerly St. Petersburg
- Had started bread rationing in Petrograd after
the price of bread went up - Many strikes lead by the working class women were
held in the capital of Petrograd - On March 8, about 10,000 women marched through
the city demanding Peace and bread and down
with autocracy
The Eastern Front 1
48Ukraine
- Was given up by Lenin when he signed the Treaty
of Brest Litovsk with Germany
49Siberia
- Gave the first serious threats to the communists
an anti-communist force attacked westward and
advance almost to the Volga River
Siberia 1
50Brest Litovsk
- The Treaty of Brest Litovsk
- Signed by Lenin with Germany and gave up eastern
Poland, Ukraine, Finland, and the Baltic province - The spread of socialist revolution throughout
Europe made the Treaty largely irrelevant
1
2
51What were the main causes of the Russian
Revolution?
- Rasputins assassination
- Czars Nicholas steps down
- Lenin rises
- Lenin signs the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
- The communist control Russia
- The March Revolution
- The Bolsheviks seize power
- Civil War in Russia
52How did World War I contribute to the Revolution?
- The Russian government was dissatisfied with the
conduct of the war. - The Russians were being peacefully reformed until
the stress of WWI cause the revolution.
53How did the presence of the allied troops in
Russia ultimately help the communist?
- The presence made it easy for the communist
government to call on patriotic Russians to fight
foreign attempts to control the country
54What steps did the communist take to turn Russia
into a centralized state dominated by a single
party?
- November 6 Bolshevik forces seized the Winter
Palace- provisional government - Meeting in the Petrograd of the all-Russian
Congress of Soviets - Bolsheviks renamed themselves the Communists
- 1921 the communists were in total control of
Russia - In the course of the civil war, the Communist
regime had transformed Russia into a centralized
stated dominated by a single party.
55The End of the War
56Armistice
- A truce, an end agreement to the end fighting
- On November 1, 1918, the new German government
signed an armistice
57Reparation
- Payment that made the victors by the vanquished
to cover the cost of a war - Clemenceau wanted Germany stripped of all
reparation to cover the cost of war
58Mandate
- A nation governed by another nation on behalf of
the League of Nations but not own the territory - France took control of Lebanon and Syria
- Britain received Iraq and Palestine
59Erich Von Ludendorff
- Guided German military operations
- Decided to make a grand offensive in the west to
break the military stalemate but he failed - On September 29, 1918, informed German leaders
that the war was lost and demanded that the
government ask for peace at once
60Friedrich Ebert
- Was over the Social Democrats after the departure
of William II - Announced the creation of a democratic republic
61David Lloyd George
- Prime minister of Great Britain
- Won a decisive victory in the elections in
December of 1918 - His platform was to make the Germans pay for his
dreadful war - Lloyd along with Clemenceau wanted to punish
Germany - One of the men to make the important decisions at
the Paris Peace Conference
62Georges Clemenceau
- The Premier of France
- Believed that the French people had suffered the
most from German aggression - Wanted Germany stripped of all weapons, vast
German payments to cover the cost of war, and a
separate Rhineland as a buffer state between
France and Germany - One of the men to make the important decisions at
the Paris Peace Conference - Clemenceau along with Lloyd, wanted to punish
Germany - He compromised to obtain some guarantees for
French security and accepted a defend alliance
with Great Britain and the US.
63Woodrow Wilsons Fourteen points
- US president, Woodrow explained the ideas of the
fourteen points - Basis for a peace settlement that Woodrow
believed justified the enormous military struggle
being waged - Woodrow outlined the fourteen points to the US
even before the end of the war - Was a puzzle for a truly just and lasting peace
which included reaching the peace reaching the
peace agreements rather than through secret
diplomacy reduced military forces and weapons to
a point consistent with domestic safety and
ensuring self-determination
64Second Battle of the Marne
- Occurred on July 18
- Stopped the German advance
- French, Moroccan, and American troops supported
by hundreds of tanks, threw the Germans back
over the Marne
65What were the most important provisions to the
Treaty of Versailles?
- The Treaty of Versailles with Germany, on June
28, signed at Versailles near Paris was the most
important, by far - Military and territorial provisions angered the
Germans
66Why was the Mandate System created?Which
countries became mandated?Who governed them?
- The mandate system was created as a result of the
peace settlement - Lebanon and Syria were mandated France governed
them - Iraq and Palestine were mandated Britain
governed them
67Compare and contrast Woodrow Wilsons Fourteen
points to the Treaty of Versailles.
- The Treaty of Versailles and Woodrows fourteen
points both wanted to have peace - The Treaty of Versailles wanted to blame Germany
for the war and changed the way Germany works - Woodrow Wilsons fourteen points were about the
ways of achieving the peace agreement and how to
get fourteen points of getting there.
68The Impact of the Great War
69How many people, both military and civilian, were
killed or wounded on both sides?
- Killed 37,466,904
- Wounded 21,189,1545
70What was the monetary cost of the war for both
sides?
- 1913 The cost was 82,400,000,000
- Inflation 95
- Today The cost would be 8,239,999,905
71What innovations in military warfare occurred
during World War I?
Aircraft
- Central Powers
- Rumpler
- Albatross D
- Zeppelin L-44
- Allied Powers
- SE-5
- Neuport 28
- SPAD XIII
- SPAD VII
- Handley-Page bomber
- Sopwith Pup
- BE-2C Reconnaissance bomber
72How did the slaughter of World War I affect
British, French, and German painters?
- Painters began illustrating death in their
pictures.
73How did the slaughter of World War I affect
British, French, and German poets and writers?
- Writers and poets begin to write about death and
suffering.
74What was the impact of the war on the French
environment?
- Desired revenge and security against future
German aggression. - Lost Russia as its major ally on Germanys
eastern border.
75How did the Great War contribute to the rise of
an international movement of pacifism?
- Pacifism the belief that disputes between
nations should and can be settled peacefully - After the war the peace movement reappeared
- The League of nations and the United nations.