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Chapter 12 Section 1: Things to Know

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Title: Chapter 12 Section 1: Things to Know


1
Chapter 12 Section 1 Things to Know
  • What did Social Darwinism believe that the best
    nation would do in the constant competition among
    countries?
  • What countries made up the Triple Alliance?
  • What was the Western Front?
  • Why did Woodrow Wilson want the US to remain
    neutral during WWI?
  • The German-Americans and the Irish Americans
    were most likely to support which power?
  • What did internationalists think that the US
    should use to try to end the war?
  • What was the buildup of the US military in 1916
    an example of?
  • Why did the US create the National Defense Act
    and the Naval Construction Act?
  • What was the immediate cause of the USs entry
    into WWI?
  • What were the immediate factors leading up to the
    involvement of the US in World War I?

2
Chapter 12 World War I and Beyond
1914-1920Section 1 From Neutrality to War
3
Why It Matters
  • In 1914, nationalism, militarism, imperialism,
    and entangling alliances combined with other
    factors to lead the nations of Europe into a
    brutal war. The war quickly stretched around the
    globe. The United States remained neutral at
    first but ended up abandoning its long tradition
    of staying out of European conflicts.

4
What Caused World War I?
  • Until 1914, there had not been a large-scale
    European conflict for nearly one hundred years.
    Things were rapidly changing.
  • What were some of the tensions that brought about
    World War I?
  • Nationalism
  • Regional tensions
  • Economic rivalries
  • Imperial ambitions
  • Militarism

5
What Caused World War I?
  • Nationalism and competition heighten regional
    tensions.
  • Nationalism, or the devotion to ones nation,
    kick-started international and domestic tensions.
  • Europeans began to reject the idea of a nation as
    a collection of different ethnic groups.
  • Instead, they believed that a nation should
    express the nationalism of a single ethnic group.
  • This created an intense form of nationalism which
    sparked the belief that your nation is better
    than any other. It also heightened international
    rivalries.
  • The problem lies in the thought that a country
    existed as the expression of its people, or the
    majority ethnic group. But now, where did the
    minorities fit in?

6
What Caused World War I?
  • The idea of Social Darwinism did not help
    tensions throughout Europe.
  • The idea of only the strong survive, or
    survival of the fittest made each nation want
    to strive to be the best, or strongest nation,
    again heightening rivalries.
  • What did Social Darwinism believe that the best
    nation would do in the constant competition among
    countries?
  • That the best nation would come out ahead in the
    constant competition among countries.

7
What Caused World War I?
  • The newfound nationalist sentiments of the period
    sometimes spilled over into the economic goals of
    the nation.
  • They measured their wealth and greatness by their
    industrial output, trade and possessions of
    overseas empires.
  • The main measure of greatness was by gaining
    overseas empires, such as nations claiming
    empires in the Pacific, Africa, and China.

8
What Caused World War I?
  • Militarism produces an arms race, which again led
    to increased tensions.
  • Most European leaders did not wonder if a great
    war would start but wondered when it would.
  • In order to prepare, they created large
    stockpiles of weapons.
  • Which nation readied itself the most for war?
  • Germany. By 1914, it had a huge standing army
    and the largest, deadliest collection of guns in
    the world.
  • Germany also built up its navy enough to rival
    England, which was the strongest in the world.
  • Britain responded by increasing its navy.
  • A spirit of militarism, or glorification of the
    military, grew in the competing countries and
    fueled this arms race even more.

9
What Caused World War I?
  • The contest between Germany and Britain at sea
    and between Germany, France, and Russia on land
    guaranteed one thing The next major war would
    involve more troops and more technologically
    advanced weapons than ever before.
  • Machine guns, mobile artillery, tanks,
    submarines, and airplanes would change the nature
    of warfare.

10
What Caused World War I?
  • Alliances between countries did nothing but throw
    fuel on the nationalist fires. European leaders
    used alliances to prepare for war.
  • Before 1914, what two major alliances emerged?
  • The Triple Alliance and the Triple Entente
  • What countries made up the Triple Alliance?
  • The Triple Alliance Made up of Germany,
    Austria-Hungary, and Italy.
  • What countries made up the Triple Entente?
  • The Triple Entente Made up of France, Russia,
    and Great Britain.
  • Alliances actually allowed leaders to become
    reckless. They knew that if they did declare
    war, their allies would be obliged to fight along
    with them.
  • Some leaders actually saw some benefits of war.
    They thought that war could smooth over domestic
    problems.

11
What Caused World War I?
  • What major event sparked World War I?
  • The assassination of Archduke Francis Ferdinand,
    heir to the throne of Austria-Hungary, and his
    wife Sophie.
  • On June 28, 1914, they left for a routine visit
    of Sarajevo, the capital of the Austro-Hungarian
    province of Bosnia.
  • Ethnic Serbs that believed that Bosnia rightfully
    belonged to Serbia, also saw Ferdinand as a
    tyrant.
  • When the Archdukes driver made a wrong turn,
    Gavrilo Princip, one of the Serbian conspirators,
    noticed the Archduke and his wife in the car. He
    pulled out a pistol, fired twice, killing both
    the Archduke and his wife.
  • People around the world were shocked by the
    senseless murder but didnt believe it would lead
    to a great war, but it did!

12
The Fighting Begins
  • Everything was in place for a large conflict
    nationalist ambitions, large armies, stockpiles
    of weapons, alliances, and military plans.
  • The nations of Europe were racing towards a great
    collision.
  • Archduke Ferdinands murder was the spark that
    lit the wars fire and now a great war had begun.

13
The Fighting Begins
  • Soon after the Archdukes assassination Germanys
    emperor, Kaiser William II, assured
    Austria-Hungary that Germany would stand by its
    ally if war came.
  • Austria-Hungary then sent a harsh ultimatum to
    Serbia demanding Serbias total cooperation in an
    investigation into the assassination. Serbia did
    not agree and Austria-Hungary declared war on
    Serbia on July 28, 1914.

14
The Fighting Begins
  • Because of the alliance system, this quarrel
    would have been more localized. But instead,
    Germany, a part of the Triple Alliance, brought
    its allies into the fighting.
  • In early August, Russia mobilized to help its
    ally, Serbia against Austria.
  • This caused Germany to declare war on Russia.
  • France, Russias ally, was forced to declare war
    on Germany.
  • Germany then declared war on neutral Belgium, so
    that it could launch an invasion of France
    through Belgium.
  • Great Britain, an ally of France and Belgium,
    then declared war on Germany.
  • In less than a week, the Central Powers of
    Germany and Austria-Hungary were at war against
    the Allied Powers of Britain, France, Russia, and
    Serbia.
  • With the German advance only 30 miles from Paris,
    the French and British counterattacked and
    stopped the German forces near the Marne River.

15
The Fighting Begins
  • After the Battle of the Marne, the Germans
    settled onto high ground, dug trenches, and
    fortified their position. When the French and
    British attacked, the German troops used machine
    guns and artillery to kill thousands of them.
  • The French and British then dug their own
    trenches and used the same tactics to kill
    thousands of counteracting Germans.
  • Soon, 450 mile of trenches stretched like a huge
    scar from the coast of Belgium to the border of
    Switzerland.
  • What was the Western Front?
  • It was a section of French border that was
    critical to winning the war.
  • Although fighting went on in Eastern Europe, the
    Middle East, and in other parts of the world,
    this Western Front in France became the critical
    battle front. If you controlled the Western
    Front, you would win the war.
  • Look at the map on page 364.

16
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17
The Fighting Begins
  • The war dragged on for years, and it was hideous
    and deadly. It was much worse than anyone had
    thought
  • It was so bad, mainly because of the fact that
    the defensive weapons were more advanced and
    better than the offensive weapons.
  • Generals threw their soldiers against the enemy
    without fully considering the new technology.
  • Artillery and heavy machine guns were the
    defensive weapons that accounted for large
    portion of the fatalities of the war.
  • As an offensive measure, soldiers used poison gas
    to try to break away the enemy lines, but made
    little difference besides its horrifying effects.

18
The Fighting Begins
  • The stalemate led to gruesome conditions for the
    men in the trenches of the Western Front.
  • As they settled in for this newfound trench
    warfare, the soldiers began to suffer the
    conditions of the life of trench warfare.
  • Soldiers began to get trench foot from standing
    for long hours in wet, muddy trenches. They
    contracted lice from the millions of rats that
    infested the trenches.
  • The soldiers lived in constant fear while in the
    trenches. They were afraid to pop their heads
    out of the trenches for fear of getting shot.

19
The Fighting Begins
  • Between the opposing trenches was an area known
    as no mans land.
  • This no mans land had been barraged by
    artillery so badly that and trees, fields, or
    homes that had once existed there were charred
    beyond all recognition.
  • Soldiers went over the top of their trenches
    into this muddy, nearly impassable wasteland when
    they attempted to attack the entrenches enemy.

20
The Fighting Begins
  • Casualties mounted first in the thousands, then
    hundreds of thousands, and finally in millions.
  • Almost one million French soldiers were killed or
    wounded in just the first three months of the
    war.
  • The Germans lost only slightly fewer.
  • In two battles in 1916 Verdun and Somme
    British, French, and Germans sustained more than
    2 million casualties.
  • The British suffered 60,000 casualties on the
    first day alone at Somme and achieved virtually
    nothing.
  • The war promised to be a long and deadly.

21
END FOR TODAY!
  • We will finish Section 1 tomorrow.
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