Title: The Causes of the First World War
1The Causes of the First World War
2 A slow march to war
- The First World War is sometimes referred to
as The Great War or The War to End All
Wars. It began in the summer of 1914 and ended
in the fall of 1918. - Tensions had built up, over many years,
between the powerful nations of Europe. There
were four long-term causes for all the tension - Militarism
- Alliances
- Imperialism
- Nationalism
3The M.A.I.N. Causes
Alliances
Militarism
Imperialism
Nationalism
4Imperialism
- The practice of establishing and controlling
colonies - Competition is fierce and Britain and France are
in the lead
5Nationalism
- The patriotic feelings for ones country or
ethnic group - Many colonies are seeking independence
- Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire are made
up of many different ethnic groups
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8Militarism
- The glorification of the military.- A
willingness to use the military.
9Artillery/Scale of War
- Artillery pieces had become much more powerful.
Battlefields got bigger as the range of artillery
pieces got bigger. Larger battlefields, made it
impossible for commanders to alter plans once
they had been set in motion.
10War was highly attractive to the generation of
Europeans before 1914.
- Europeans had not fought a major war since 1815,
so they had forgotten how horrible wars could be. - The small wars they had fought were short and did
not have heavy casualties. - Winning a war was seen as a quick and easy way to
accomplish something for the nation.
11Big Ass Cannon
12Mobilization Plans
- The side who got the most men in the field, the
earliest, gave their side the advantage. - Each nation opted for drafting masses of men, and
for rapid mobilization plans to utilize them.
13Barbed Wire
- Barbed wire made it difficult for attackers to
get to the men they wished to attack. This gave
the machine gun and artillery crews more time to
shoot the soldiers attacking them.
14Alliances
A network of agreements that commit countries to
support each other, specifically in times of war.
15Setting the Stage
- Several factors made a European war likely.
- Constant military build up/success of
mobilization. - Rivalry due to colonization
- Nationalism and the strive for prestige
- Above all, Europeans made alliances which ended
the possibility of traditional two country
warfare. - Alliances grew out of a fear of France.
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17The Schlieffen Plan
- Germany, like the rest of Europe, felt a war was
coming, and made a battle plan early. - Germany had a big problem, if war broke out, they
would most likely be attacked from 2 directions. - Their plan was that as soon as fighting began,
they must immediately invade and conquer France
by surprise, then focus on the other side of
Europe. - Thought it would take Russia, and other larger
countries longer to mobilize, buying them time to
take over France. - Would most likely attack through Belgium, less
defended. - http//www.youtube.com/watch?vlJXAcl8D51Y
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19- Archduke Franz
Ferdinand, heir to the
throne of the Austro-
Hungarian Empire
married a woman,
Countess Sophie Cotek,
who was
unacceptable
to Emperor Franz Joseph and the
rest of the Austrian nobility. As a result,
Franz Ferdinand liked to get his wife out of the
capital, Vienna, whenever possible so that she
could receive the royal treatment he felt she
deserved.
20Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife pay an
unfortunate visit to Sarajevo, Bosnia. Add
Sarajevo and Serbia to map.
21The Serbian terrorists group, The Black Hand,
wanted to assassinate Archduke Ferdinand and his
wife. One of the members of The Black Hand threw
a bomb into the car Ferdinand was riding in. The
bomb was thrown out of the car before it could
explode.
The numbers indicate the location where assassins
were stationed along the parade route.
The place where the bomb exploded
22Franz Ferdinand and Countess Sophie arrive safely
at Sarajevos city hall.
23Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife got back
into their car to drive to the hospital to
check on the people hurt when the assassins bomb
exploded. The driver of their car took a wrong
turn. As the driver stopped the car to turn
around, one of the members of The Black Hand
rushed up to the car and shot Archduke Franz
Ferdinand and his wife.
The place where the assassin shot Archduke Franz
Ferdinand and his wife.
24A Tragic Wrong Turn
The assassin was caught just seconds after he
shot the Archduke and his wife.
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vK_tNXFbx0VYfeature
related
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vVC_26YXMZd4
25The Situation Continued
- Austria annexes Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the Austrian
throne, is assassinated in Sarajevo in 1914. In
retaliation, the Austro-Hungarian Empire invades
Serbia. - Looks to Russia For help
- Austria is upset and must get backing from what
country? - Germany b/c knows Serbia is backed by Russia
- Germany gives blank check to Austria
- Austria offers Serbia an ultimatum and Serbia
accepts - Austria rejects ultimatum and invades Serbia
- http//wwi.lib.byu.edu/index.php/The_Austro-Hungar
ian_Ultimatum_to_Serbia_28English_translation29
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27The Situation Continued
- Russian troops align along Austria/German border
- Germany declares war on Russia b/c fearful Russia
will declare war on them - Who is Russia allied with?
- France
- Von Schlieffen Plan says attack on Western front,
then Eastern front. - French troops aligned along border, so how
invade? - Through Belgium and down to Paris
- Belgium neutral, so Great Britain and Italy
declare war - German troops blockade Britain, sink Lusitania
(and other causes), get America involved in WWI
28Reading
- Franz Ferdinands
- Car of Death
29- Path to War
- Austria-Hungary declares war on Serbia
- Russia mobilizes to help Serbia
- Germany declares war on Russia and then its ally
France-invades through Belgium.
30- Britain declares war on Germany for violating the
neutrality of Belgium - Britain calls for soldiers from former and
current colonies, including Canada, Australia,
New Zealand, India - Italy backs out of Triple Alliance due to German
attack, saying it was only for defensive purposes - First is neutral and then joins the Allies
- Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria join Germany and
Austria-Hungary to form the Central Powers
31The Dominoes Fall
32- II. A European conflict becomes a true world war
- European powers fight for control of African
colonies as battles spread to Africa - Allies fight Ottoman Empire to gain access to the
Black Sea and assist Arab nationalists fighting
the Ottoman Empire for control of territory in
the Middle East - Japan declares war on Germany and seizes Asian
colonies
33 34- Western Front
- French troops able to force retreat of invading
German forces at the Marne in September 1914 - Germany realizes it must fight a two-front war
- Trench Warfare
- Each side developed a series of mazelike trenches
- Attacks took place in No Mans Land, the area
between the trenches - Conditions were bad mud, trench foot, rats,
disease - Little land is exchanged with high rates of
casualties
35Reading
- Trench Warfare
- Going Over the Top
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vRRv56gsqkzsfeature
relatedsafety_modetruepersist_safety_mode1
36Trench systems
37Trench Warfare Weapons
38Troops in Action
39Places for soldiers to hide. Bunkers, dug deep
underground, provided protection during artillery
bombardments.
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44Trench Rats
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49- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vRRv56gsqkzsfeature
relatedsafety_modetruepersist_safety_mode1
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51Miserable living conditions rats, lice,
mud.Dead people became the floor. Trenchfoot.
52Activity
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vgo0LprJwxaw
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?v0KzqzIR8x4Ufeature
relatedsafety_modetruepersist_safety_mode1 - http//www.youtube.com/watch?vzJZttzblHFQfeature
related Weapons DETAILS - Poison Gas DETAILS
53- IV. New Technology Changes Warfare
- Technology at the outset of war
- Europeans still planned on a fairly quick war
- Mounted cavalry was making its final appearance
54- New weapons change warfare
- Machine Guns placed in positions to guard
trenches - Crossing No Mans Land nearly impossible
- Helps cause stalemate on Western front
55- Poison Gas most feared weapon of war
- Introduced by Germans at Bolimow in East and
Ypres, Belgium on Western Front - Most casualties were not fatal, but crippling
- Mustard Gas damage to skin and lungs
- Chlorine/Phosgene damages lungs by internal
blistering, causing lung flooding and suffocation - http//www.youtube.com/watch?vVY-3BNnbV_ofeature
related -
56Weapon Poison gas
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58Use Terrorize enemy troops.Inflicts crippling
and fatal injuries.
59Increased the barbarism of the war.Caused
blindness, choking, vomiting, blisters.
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61- Airplanes move from spying to outright warfare
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vmF4wIQt6vhwfeature
relatedsafety_modetruepersist_safety_mode1
Initially used for photographing enemy positions - Adapted to drop bombs, then mounted with guns
- Submarines brought naval warfare to new level
- Introduced by the Germans and called U-Boats
- Destroyed ships carrying supplies with torpedoes
- German policy of unrestricted submarine warfare
helps cause US entry into World War I
62The German U - boats in Kiel in May 1914.
63This is a view of the control room of a German
U-boat used in World War 1.
64World War I
- III. U.S. Involvement in the War
- President Wilson claims neutrality at the
beginning of the war - Wilson wins reelection in 1916, campaigning that
He kept us out of the war - Wilson wants to avoid US entanglement in Europe
and issues caused by revolution in Mexico and
crisis with Pancho Villa - US attempts to continue trade as a neutral party
65- Citizens begin taking sides
- Many in US favored Allies, due to connection to
Britain by culture and France as a past ally - Many in Midwest strongly favor Germany due to
heritage - Recent immigrants often torn, as many came from
Eastern and Southern Europe - Propaganda from Europe that reached US often
pro-British or anti-German
66- Economic factors for the War
- US traded much more with Allies
- American banks loaned nearly 2 billion to Allies
that would only be paid back if Allies are
victorious - German submarine warfare harmed US trade
- Political and military causes
- Submarine Warfare unannounced sinking of trade
vessels against law and caused loss of American
life - Lusitania British passenger ship destroyed in
1915, killing 128 Americans - Wilson gets Germany to temporarily end strategy
after second incident (Sussex)
67New York Times Headline
68New York Tribune Headline
69Reading
- Calls the Situation Critical
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vuRygTO3pyUYfeature
relatedsafety_modetruepersist_safety_mode1 - Baltimore, Md. on the sinking of the Lusitania
70- Zimmerman Telegram from Germany advising Mexico
to attack the US if it declares war on Germany
(Jan. 1917) - US/Mexican relations strained due to attack on
New Mexico by Pancho Villa - Germany offers to help Mexico recapture territory
lost in Mexican-American War - Germany wants to keep US occupied to provide time
to defeat Britain and France - Telegram is intercepted by British and given to
US - Germany resumes unrestricted submarine warfare in
Feb. 1917, sinking six US ships
71Zimmerman TelegramReading The Zimmerman Note
72America Joins the Ranks
73World War I
- IV. United States in World War I
- Declaration of War
- Wilson asks Congress to declare war on April 2,
1917 - Congress votes to declare war on Germany (82-6
Senate and 373-50 House)
74Readings
- Declaration of War
- If We Dont Lick the Huns Now
75World War I
- US mobilization for war
- To protect troops, US uses convoy system of
merchant, troop transport, and warships to get
troops across Atlantic - US soldiers doughboys arrive in France in late
1917 and boost both Allied morale and numbers - Nearly 2 million US soldiers will fight in World
War I
76- US military action in World War I
- US enters the war near beginning of German
offensive - Russia withdraws from war after Bolshevik
revolution, essentially ending the war on the
Eastern Front - 3.3 million killed, 4.9 million military wounded
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vHd51pue58U0safety_
modetruepersist_safety_mode1 - Germany concentrates nearly all troops in the
West - Germany advances to almost 40 miles of Paris but
turned back at Chateau-Thierry and Belleau Wood - US involved in massive counterattack in the
Argonne Forest, eventually driving a hole in the
German lines
77- V. The American Home Front
- Mobilization for war
- Conscription (draft) Selective Service created
using a lottery and draft boards to select
soldiers - Control of supplies
- Rationing used to reduce civilian consumption
- Herbert Hoover leads increased food production
and decreased consumption - Energy concerns caused introduction of daylight
savings time and factory restrictions
7816th Amendment
- The Congress shall have power to lay and collect
taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived,
without apportionment among the several States
and without regard to any census or enumeration. - The origins of the 16th Amendment (1913) date
back to 1895, when the Supreme Court declared a
federal income tax unconstitutional. To overturn
this decision, this amendment authorizes an
income tax that is levied on a direct basis.
79- Paying for the war (32 billion or 44 million a
day) - US raised income taxes, allowed by 16th Amendment
- War bonds sold to Americans paid for 20 billion
- Changing populations
- African Americans and Hispanics
- Great Migration African Americans moved to the
North to take jobs that were vacated by white
workers going to war - Political turmoil in Mexico and job opportunities
spike large immigration by Hispanics - African Americans and Hispanics joined the
military in segregated units
80- Women
- Over 1 million join workforce, although most
leave after the war - Women enlisted or hired by military for mainly
clerical and support positions - Army Nursing Corps only women sent overseas
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vXonhwLrAUVssafety_
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81Women in the Work Force
- Turn to women to work in factories and build
products for war
82- Social and political issues
- Restricting anti-war actions and speech
- Climate of suspicion surrounded country,
especially immigrants or those of German descent - Espionage Act of 1917 penalized those spying or
interfering with the war effort - Schenck v. United States Charles Schenck
unsuccessfully argued that free speech protected
distribution of anti-draft materials - Free speech can not constitute a clear and
present danger and wartime allowed more
restrictive circumstances - Sedition Act of 1918 made it illegal to publicly
express opposition to the war
83Readings
- The U.S. Sedition Act
- Make America Safe for Democracy First
- Robert La Follette Demands His Rights (1917)
84- Economic and worker issues
- Increased production for World War I causes
inflation - Conflicts increase between unions and owners
- Large strikes occur throughout US, including the
general strike (all workers) in Seattle - Increased labor concerns raise fear of the spread
of socialism and help lead to the Red Scare in
1920s
85Ending of WWI
- Germany and its allies are exhausted
- All fighting has taken place Outside of Germany
to this point. - Seeing very little damage done at home, Germany
calls for an end to the war - Returning German Soldiers treated as heroes
- Cease-Fire agreed on November 8th 1918
- Goes into effect 3 days later at 11am.
- France and Britain deal with Germany harshly, and
threaten to restart war if Germany does no accept
Treaty of Versailles - http//www.youtube.com/watch?vOuw3OdcL5GIsafety_
modetruepersist_safety_mode1
86The Ending of World War I and its Consequences
- I. Ending of World War I
- Popular misconception is that World War I ended
with just the Treaty of Versailles - Ended with a series of treaties between the
Allies and separate members of the Central Powers
- War on Eastern Front ended earlier with Treaty of
Brest-Litovsk, where Russia gave vast territory
to Central Powers
87- II. Treaty of Versailles (November 11, 1918)
- Ended war between Allies and Germany only
- Germany and Russia given no say in treaty
- Each of the major Allied Powers came in with
different goals - France punish Germany for the war
- Britain decrease German power and punish, but
leave it enough to counterbalance France - Italy Obtain territory promised at outset of war
- United States Achieve a lasting peace in Europe
as planned through Woodrow Wilsons Fourteen
Points
88Discussion
- President Woodrow Wilsons Fourteen Points
89- Fourteen Points
- A League of Nations would help resolve
international disputes to avoid future wars - Self-determination to allow ethnic groups
formerly part of larger empires to determine
status as new nations - Restoration of territories seized by European
powers previous to the war - Wilson is forced to concede many goals about a
less harsh settlement in order to obtain the
League of Nations
90Peace, Diplomacy Reparation
91- Results of the Treaty of Versailles
- Germany must accept total blame for war and pay
32 billion in war reparations - Germans lose territory to creation of new
European nations and enemies - Germany must demilitarize
- Germany loses African and Chinese colonies
- Germany is both crippled economically and
politically angry, helping lead to World War II - http//www.youtube.com/watch?vyj_eiyBsSScfeature
related
92- US fails to ratify Treaty of Versailles
- Many in US fearful of League of Nations as an
entangling international alliance - US Senate fails to approve Treaty of Versailles
- US does not join League of Nations, lessening the
overall strength of the organization
93Wilsons Last Days
94- Recognition of Armenia as independent
- Armenians were subjected to genocidal actions
during the war - Armenians were a Christian minority viewed as
siding with Russia in the war - Forced marches to camps with high death rates,
rape, robbery, murder were all used against the
Armenians - Nearly one million Armenians were killed
- Lack of prosecution viewed as partially
influential on later Holocaust - Today though viewed by many as a genocide,
including 20 nations and 39 US states (including
MO, but not US as a whole)
95Armenian Genocide Did it really happen? Was it
the worlds first genocide?
A telegram sent by Ambassador Henry Morgenthau
Sr. to the State Department on July 16, 1915
describes the massacres as a "campaign of race
extermination."
96Armenian Genocide Did it really happen? Was it
the worlds first genocide?
The bodies of dead Armenians lie in a grove of
trees in eastern Ottoman Empire, 1915.
97Armenian Genocide Did it really happen? Was it
the worlds first genocide?
Starving Armenian children
98Armenian Genocide Did it really happen? Was it
the worlds first genocide?
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vYomWds4VVzYfeature
relatedsafety_modetruepersist_safety_mode1
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vHbjCyOjmTS8
99Aftermath of the War
- Germany is left devastated by the treaty.
- German citizens angry at Allies
- German money left worthless due to inflation
- Inflation causes massive depression.
- Wilson breaks ties with England and France
getting his League of Nations passed. - US takes a policy of isolation
- Japans Power in the Pacific is unchecked by
Russia because of the Bolshevik Revolution - Desperate German citizens begin to look
everywhere for help. - http//www.youtube.com/watch?vmTuIzGe2Nz8
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