The Paris Peace Conference and the Treaty of Versailles.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Paris Peace Conference and the Treaty of Versailles.
Advertisements

World War One The Treaty of Versailles. Paris Peace Conference World War One ended at 11am on 11th November In 1919, Lloyd George of England, Orlando.
GCSE MODERN WORLD HISTORY INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS THE PARIS PEACE CONFERENCE INTERACTIVE How successful were the peace treaties?
WWI Comes to an End The Terms of Peace & Creating a New Europe.
Stalemate  By 1917 both sides were fighting a defensive war  Neither could put together a massive attack  Trench warfare was wearing on the soldiers.
After WWI After WWI After the armistice was signed, the leaders of the Allies and the Central Powers met in Paris to discuss the terms of the peace.
THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES. What happens when a war has just finished?
Treaty of Versailles 1919.
The Treaty of Versailles
The Paris Peace Conference and the Treaty of Versailles
WORLD HISTORY Have out your bell work paper and World War I packets.
Chapter 21, Lesson 4 Why do politics often lead to war?
“the war to end all wars”
Ch 11 Sec 4 Making the Peace Influenza Pandemic of 1918 Killer of 20+ Million Worldwide!!!
The End of Fighting. I. Germany Collapses Germany needed to deal a decisive blow to the allied powers before the U.S. had time to raise an army, train.
The Treaty of Versailles WHII 9b. Peace In July 1918, the Allies started winning more victories and gaining more ground from Germany. In July 1918, the.
The Treaty of Versailles
Paris Peace Conference January 18 – June 28, 1919
Treaty of Versailles Paris Peace Conference January 18 – June 28, 1919.
The aim of today’s lesson is: to understand why the Germans hated the Treaty of Versailles.
What was the Treaty of Versailles? David Lloyd George – British PM George Clemenceau – French PM Woodrow Wilson – American President Britain, France and.
Warm up You have 5 minutes after the bell rings to complete the 5 map questions on page 69.
The Treaty of Versailles Clemenceau, Wilson and Lloyd George met to determine the terms of Germany’s surrender of WWI, Germany was not allowed to give.
The Paris Peace Conference and the Treaty of Versailles.
World War One What are the results of the war?. American Expeditionary Force Led by John J. Pershing 2 million soldiers sent to fight Used “convoy” system.
Lesson Objectives To understand the attitudes of the “Big 3” towards Germany after World War I To explain the terms of the Treaty of Versailles To evaluate.
Attack on British Trench. Gas Attack Trench Another Trench.
WORLD WAR I THE END The War’s End  When the U.S. entered the war, the Allied Powers had fresh soldiers and supplies  German troops.
Chapter 27 Lesson 3 Notes: The Paris Peace Conference – Jan., 1919.
THE END OF WWI: 11/11/1918 Germany surrenders to the Allies and ends WWI.
Content Objectives: Explain the outcomes of the Paris Peace Conference and the Treaty of Versailles.
From January to June 1918, president Woodrow Wilson and the European powers met at the Palace of Versailles, outside of Paris, to decide the peace terms.
1/8/15 Treaty of Versailles (The Effects of WWI).
THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES June In 1919, Lloyd George of England, Orlando of Italy, Clemenceau of France and Woodrow Wilson from the US met to discuss.
The Treaty of Versailles June 28, The Paris Peace Conference ► Armistice (end of fighting) happened on November 11, 1918 ► War ended formally with.
The Versailles Treaty June 28, 1919 …The treaty that ended WWI only to plant the seeds for WWII. … first, an overview of eventsoverview of events.
Essential Objective Question: Which country was to blame for WWI?
Danni Ross and Anna Gallacher. Treaty of Versailles The Treaty of Versailles was signed on 28 June The allies signed the Treaty in the Hall of Mirrors.
❧ Chapter 24 Section 4 The Failed Peace.. ❧ TOTAL WAR ❧ The channeling of a nation’s entire resources into a war effort. ❧ Important to control public.
Paris Peace Conference and The Treaty of Versailles.
Treaty of Versailles 1919 An Uneasy Peace. The Architects of the Treaty The Treaty of Versailles was put together at the Paris Peace Conference starting.
The Treaty of Versailles. WW1 Ends with a Treaty A truce, or temporary peace was declared at 11:00, on 11/11/1918. This was the flawed peace treaty that.
The Paris Peace Conference and the Treaty of Versailles.
The Treaty of Versailles
Problem, problems! Here are some of the problems facing world leaders at the end of WWI. What advice would you offer them? 1. Who should pay for the destruction?
A Flawed Peace.
Paris Peace Conference
Chapter 21, Lesson 4 Why do politics often lead to war?
The Treaty of Versailles
WORLD WAR I.
End of World War I (WWI) Learning Target #20: I can evaluate the Fourteen Points and Treaty of Versailles and their influence on the globe following World.
World War I “The Great War” --the war to end all wars--
Paris Peace Conference
The First World War: Peace in Paris
Warm Up – April 23 Answer the following questions on a post it:
The Treaty of Versailles
Fourteen Points & Versailles Treaty
The Treaty of Versailles
Paris Peace Conference
BELLWORK: Block 2 List four problems Russia faced during WWI.
Day 40 October 3 Who was the czar during The Russian Revolution?
Agenda Day 4 Get out your Prompt & Paper, I will walk around and look at your prompt while you are working with your partner. Group work with partner (Act.
The Treaty of Versailles
13.4 A Flawed Peace Allies’ conference table, Treaty of Versailles; Paris, 1919.
The First World War: Peace in Paris
The Treaty of Versailles
End of WWI.
“The Big three” David Lloyd George (Britain), George Clemenceau (France) and Woodrow Wilson (U.S.A.) met at the Paris Peace Conference to determine what.
Warm-up Make a web with Causes of WWI in the middle, and the four underlying causes surrounding it. Causes of WWI.
Paris Peace Conference January 18 – June 28, 1919
Presentation transcript:

The Paris Peace Conference and the Treaty of Versailles

Please do not talk at this timeMarch 25 HW: Test on WWI (Chpt. 13) on Friday Cornell Notes for 13.4 due Wed/Thurs. Project Work day! With Laptops WWI Test Study Hall at lunch on Thursday

Please do not talk at this timeMarch 26 Tell your partner: Have you ever been blamed for something you didn’t do? What happened? How did you feel? HW: Test on WWI (Chpt. 13) on Friday Cornell Notes for 13.4 due Wed/Thurs.

Treaty of Versailles APPARTS ► Please see the files Treaty of Versailles APPARTS and Versailles APPARTS Handout, Pg. 121A

Key Vocabulary ► A Treaty is a written agreement between countries in which they agree to do or not do particular things ► A League is a group of countries that have joined together for a particular purpose. ► Reparations are amounts of money paid by one country to another for damages caused during the war. ► Vengeance is harming a person or country because they have harmed you. ► Collective Security means that an attack on one country would be considered an attack on all countries. Therefore, an attacking country would be opposed by Every Other County, making attack too dangerous an option to consider. ► Demilitarize is to take a country’s army away from them. All soldiers have to give up their weapons and go home.

APPARTS We are going to read parts of the Treaty of Versailles. This treaty formally ended WWI. It was signed June 28 th, 1919 During discussion, make sure you add things that other groups talk about to your own paper. But first some vocab!

As we go over the Treaty of Versailles, add to your APPARTS paper.

Who Really Wrote the Peace? Prime Minister Lloyd George of England Prime Minister Vittorio Orlando of Italy President Georges Clemenceau of France President Woodrow Wilson of the USA The Big Four

Please do not talk at this timeMarch 27/28 HW: WWI Test on Friday! Projects due Wed/Thursday NEXT WEEK! Please get out your APPARTS paper for the Treaty of Versailles Please get out 13.4 to be checked off.

What’s Due Next Week? ► WWI Project Essay ► WWI Research Log  For an A- Bibliography Format, more than 3 sources, complete log. ► WWI Product  PPT, Video, Diorama, Paper dolls, whatever you made to teach the class  JUST your Most Important info ► WWI Presentation  With Formal Dress (and note cards!)

► Review: What was so bad about the War Guilt clause? Give me two reasons. ► Territorial Changes: Who loses territories? Who gains territories? What group do all these countries belong to? WHo is missing from this list? WHy is that a problem? ► Military Changes: What happens to Germany's military? What could other countries do to Germany? How do the Germans feel about this? How will this affect their choices in the future? ► What is the League of Nations supposed to do? Who belongs to the League? Why won't a League of Nations like this work?

What Kind of a Peace Was It? ► A Peace of Justice  Leaders of the Allies and the Central Powers met together at the Palace of Versailles  President Wilson’s 14 Points supported self determination and called for a Peace Without Victory. ► Peace of Vengeance  Italy and Britain wanted more territory  France wanted to punish Germany.

In the End… ► loses all her colonies. ► loses the Saar Valley where all her best mines are for 15 years. ► loses the Alsace and Lorraine regions to France. ► citizens lose their property abroad. ► must disband all its armed forces. No army, navy or air force and no merchant marine. ► is charged $32 billion in war reparations which they must pay to the Allies. ► is blamed for the WHOLE war. They sign a Guilt Clause that claims they were responsible for all the deaths and losses and pain and suffering of the war. Germany…

Get a Consequences of WWI ► Get a new partner. Get a new seat. Get a highlighter. ► Read this paper out loud with your partner, back and forth. Then highlight the most important information.

► What was the most horrifying thing you read? ► What was the most surprising? ► What do you think had the biggest impact on the future?

Other WWI Treaties Peace Treaty of Brest-Litovsk - (March 3, 1918) Conditions of an Armistice with Germany (signed November 11, 1918) The Peace Treaty of Versailles- The Allies (except the US) and Germany (signed June 28, 1919) Treaty of Neuilly- The Allies and Bulgaria (November 27, 1919) Treaty of Trianon- The Allies and Hungary (signed June 4, 1920) US Peace Treaties with Austria, Hungary and Germany (August, 1921) Treaty of Lausanne- The Allies (except the US) and Turkey (July 24, 1923)

And more Treaties… League of Nations Protocol- Established the League of Nations (1920) Washington Conference Establishing a Commission of Jurists to Consider Laws of War (February 4, 1922) Washington Treaty in Relation to the Use of Submarines and Noxious Gases in Warfare (February 6, 1922) San Remo Convention- Gives control of Palestine to Britain (24 July, 1922) Geneva Protocol for the Prohibition of Poisonous Gases and Bacteriological Methods of Warfare (June 17, 1925) Treaty Providing for the Renunciation of War as an Instrument of National Policy - Signed by nearly every country in the war. (Kellogg-Briand Pact) (August 27, 1928)

► Use the CLOZE reading Technique with your partner to read the first side of this Handout. ► Trade off Bullet Points! ► Then fill out the parts on the back~ Consequences of WWI- Please get a Consequences of WWI Handout (Pg 122A/B)

Get Three Colors- Pens, Highlighters or pencils… ► Now color code the information in your reading: ► Social- ► Political- ► Economic-

Categorizing Events in History! Social People Religion Education Culture Music Media Language Role in Society Political Government Leaders Laws Voting Type of Gov. War Fighting Weapons Economic Money Depressions Trade Economic collapse/ Bankruptcy Economic system Capitalism Communism Taxes Resources

To be collected Fri ► Treaty of Versailles APPARTS ► WWI Consequences

Please do not talk at this timeMarch 29 HW: Projects due Wed/Thursday NEXT WEEK! Please take a moment to review for your test. Turn in: ► Treaty of Versailles APPARTS (Pg 121) ► Consequences of WWI Handout (pg. 122)

WWI Test ► Please get a scantron paper and a piece of binder paper for your short answer section. ► This test will be scored on percentage of points. Each multiple choice question is worth 1 pt. The short answer is worth 5 points.

When you are done with this test… ► Please get out your yellow WWI Project packet. ► Take some time to look at what you need for YOUR project. ► Read ALL the Words. ► Underline and Specific Items you find. ► Then look at the two Rubrics I will use to grade your work.

► Pg 121- Treaty of Versailles APPARTS ► Pg 122- Consequences of WWI