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The Treaty of Versailles and Its Consequences

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THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES AND ITS CONSEQUENCES Unit 8 Day 2 The Course of the War World War I lasts for 5 years, 1914-1919 During the War all nations mobilize for ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Treaty of Versailles and Its Consequences


1
The Treaty of Versailles and Its Consequences
  • Unit 8 Day 2

2
The Course of the War
  • World War I lasts for 5 years, 1914-1919
  • During the War all nations mobilize for Total War
  • All aspects of life subsumed by war effort
  • During the course of the war Russia undergoes the
    socialist, Bolshevik Revolution (1917) which
    overthrows the tzar, takes Russians out of the
    war
  • In April 1917, America enters the war tipping the
    balance against Germany
  • November 9, 1918 German emperor abdicates,
    republic declared led by socialists
  • November 11, 1918 Armistice signed ending
    hostilities

3
The Treaty of Versailles
  • January June 1919 heads of France, Britain
    and US hammer out treaty, signed by German
    representatives at the Palace of Versailles
  • Terms
  • Territory
  • Alsace-Lorraine to France gains for Poland
  • Germany army limited to 100,000 soldiers,
    creation of Rhineland demilitarized zone (DMZ)
  • Vague references to reparations not specified
  • Peace to be maintained by a League of Nations
  • International body to maintain diplomatic
    relations
  • Idea proposed by US president Woodrow Wilson
  • U.S. fails to ratify treaty, does not join League
  • Opposed by Senator Henry Cabot Lodge on grounds
    that it violated Congresss right to declare war
  • France agrees to treaty out of promises of mutual
    defense
  • Gives up demands for buffer state on the
    French/German border
  • Forced to take steps to build up defenses

4
The Treaty of Versailles
From left, UK Prime Minister Lloyd George,
Italian Prime Minister Orlando, French Prime
Minister Clemenceau, and US President Wilson
5
The Treaty of Versailles
  • Territorial Concessions
  • Article 42 Germany is forbidden to maintain or
    construct any fortifications either on the left
    bank of the Rhine or on the right bank to the
    west of a line drawn 50km to the east of the
    Rhine
  • Article 45 The High Contracting Parties,
    recognizing the moral obligation to redress the
    wrong done by Germany in 1871 both to the rights
    of France and to the wishes of the population of
    Alsace and Lorraine agree upon the following
    articles treaty goes on to return
    Alsace-Lorraine to France.
  • Articles 84, 87 Independence granted to
    Czechoslovakia and Poland.
  • Article 119 Germany renounces all imperial
    possessions

6
Treaty of Versailles
7
The Treaty of Versailles
  • Military Reductions
  • Article 159 The German military forces shall be
    demobilized and reduced.
  • Article 160 By March 31, 1920, the German Army
    must not comprise more than seven divisions of
    infantry and three divisions of cavalry. After
    that date the total number of effectives in
    Germany must not exceed one hundred thousand men.
  • Article 180 All fortified works, fortresses, and
    field works situated in German territory to the
    west of a line drawn 50km to the east of the
    Rhine shall be disarmed and dismantled.
  • Article 181 After two months the German naval
    forces must not exceed 6 battleships .. 6 light
    cruisers, 12 destroyers, 12 torpedo boats No
    submarines are to be included.
  • Article 198 The armed forces of Germany must not
    include any military or naval air forces.

8
The Treaty of Versailles
  • Reparations
  • Article 231 The Allied and Associated
    Governments affirm and Germany accepts the
    responsibility of Germany and her allies for
    causing all the loss and damage to which the
    Allies and their nationals have been subjected
    as a consequence of the war imposed upon them by
    the aggression of Germany and her allies.
  • Article 232 The Allies recognize that the
    resources of Germany are not adequate to make
    complete reparation for all such loss and damage.
    The Allies, however, require and Germany
    undertakes, that she will make compensation for
    all damage doent ot he civilian population and
    to their property
  • Article 233 The amount of the above damage for
    which compensation is to be made by Germany shall
    be determined by an Inter-Allied Commission, to
    be called the Reparation Commission. The
    findings of the Commission as to the amount of
    damage shall be concluded and notified to the
    German Government on or before May 1, 1921.

9
Reparations
  • April 1921- Reparations Commission sets the
    amount to be repaid at 132 billion gold marks
    (33 billion)
  • Germany was to make reparations in annual
    installments of 2.5 billion marks
  • The new German republic (Weimar Republic) is
    only able to make the first payment in 1921.
  • When Germany failed to make its second payment in
    1922 French and Belgian armies seized the rich
    coal deposits and industries of the Ruhr valley
  • Leads to international crisis
  • 1924 - Dawes Plan
  • Germanys ability to make payments assessed on a
    yearly basis
  • US agrees to make large loans to stimulate the
    German economy
  • This settlement along with other political
    agreements creates a sense of cautious political
    optimism in the late 1920s

10
The Lost Generation
  • The scale of slaughter
  • Battle of the Somme (July 1-18, 1916)
  • British and French 600,000 casualties
  • German 500,000 casualties
  • Total 1.1 million casualties
  • Total gain 125 square miles
  • Battle of Verdun (February 21 December 18,
    1916)
  • British and French 700,000 casualties
  • German 700,000 casualties
  • Total 1.4 million casualties

11
The Lost Generation
  • WWI had profound social and cultural consequences
    for the 20th century
  • Nearly 10 million young men killed, 20 million
    permanently wounded physically or psychologically
  • Total of 30 million young men become casualties
    of war
  • Psychological effects of trench warfare, shell
    shock devastating
  • Survivors profoundly affected by the failure of
    liberal democracy, capitalism - the fruits of the
    Enlightenment to prevent Global War

12
The Lost Generation
  • The Hollow Men (1925)
  • We are the hollow men
  • We are the stuffed men
  • Leaning together
  • Headpiece filled with straw. Alas!
  • Our dried voice, when
  • We whisper together
  • Are quiet and meaningless
  • As wind in dry grass
  • Or rats feet over broken glass
  • In our dry cellar
  • Shape without form, shade without colour,
  • Paralysed force, gesture without motion
  • Those who have crossed

13
The Lost Generation
  • The Second Coming (1919)
  • TURNING and turning in the widening gyreThe
    falcon cannot hear the falconerThings fall
    apart the centre cannot holdMere anarchy is
    loosed upon the world,The blood-dimmed tide is
    loosed, and everywhereThe ceremony of innocence
    is drownedThe best lack all conviction, while
    the worstAre full of passionate
    intensity. W. B. Yeats (1865-1939)

14
The Lost Generation
15
The Lost Generation
Otto Dix, Stormtroops Advancing Under Gas
16
The Lost Generation
Otto Dix, Flanders
17
The Lost Generation
Otto Dix, Triptych on War
18
Dada
Hannah Höch, Cut with the Dada Kitchen Knife
through the Last Weimar Beer-Belly Cultural Epoch
in Germany, 1919,
19
Dada
Raoul Hausmann, Dada Siegt, 1920
20
Dada
Marcel Duchamps, Mona Lisa, 1919
21
Dada
Marcel Duchamp, Fountain, 1917
22
Surrealism
Max Ernst, The Elephant Celebes, 1921
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