Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byChristian Goodman Modified over 8 years ago
1
The Great War: The World in Upheaval Nations Choose Sides
2
The Drift Toward War Nationalism creates a “place in the sun” mentality –threatens the stability of Austro-Hungarian Empire and Ottoman –combustible relationships between Nationalist rivals grow with industrial, colonial and military competition –fear of isolation leads to the Triple Alliance(Germany, Austria-Hungary and Italy) and the Triple Entente(Great Britain. France and Russia)
3
New Alliances Triple Alliance/Central Powers grows out of close German/Austro- Hungarian relationship The Allies (Britain France and Russia sign a military pact in 1914
4
Kaiser Wilhelm Personal interest in naval escalation Orders Krupp works to increase weapon production Frustrated by British dominance in Africa Activated nationalist pride
5
“Whatever happens we have got, the Maxim gun and they have not” Assassination of Archduke Ferdinand “spark” that ignites rivalries Russia backs Pan- Slavism concept (self-determination) colonial disputes and competition fuel the fire
6
Small Spark Causes Great Conflagration Gavrilo Princip and The Black Hand Serbian Nationalism Austro-Hungarian power struggle Germany supports anti-Nationalist movements
7
War Plans The Schlieffen Plan swift knockout of France defensive action against Russia move 180,000 soldiers and supplies into France and Belgium French Plan XVII ATTACK series of offensive plans without thought of enemies intentions or casualties
8
The Guns of August New technologies define the “Great War” Dreams of glory and honor Gott mit uns Declaration of war results in attach on Belgium
9
Global War Alliance systems bring in one nation after another –many nations had no idea what the fight was about Enormous scope of WWI creates terms like homefront and total war Technological advances create new weapons of death –tanks, grenades, chemical gas,machine guns, barbed wire and air warfare
11
Concerns of the Entente Cultural similarities of German, Austro- Hungary Worries over two-front war Worries over English domination of the sea Worries over possibility of French attack, Russian interference over Austrian Balkan policies
12
Trench Warfare and the Western Front August 1914, 20 million soldiers dispatched to the Western Front for “God, King and Country” both sides “dug in” in trenches which ran from the English Channel to Switzerland war of attrition fought for three years stalemate forces use of new technologies(p.980)
13
The Great War 1914-1918
15
The Horrors of Trench Warfare
16
Stalemate Use of poisonous gas to create advantage Air reconnaissance –“–“Ace fighters” Machine guns and repeating rifle no- man’s land
17
No Man’s Land "But No Man's Land is a goblin sight When patrols crawl over at dead o' night; Boche or British, Belgian or French, You dice with death when you cross the trench“ -James H. Adkin - No Man's Land
18
Manfred von Richthoven The Red Baron
19
Brutality of New Warfare Unprecedented casualities Verdun, 1916 –315,000 French killed –280,000 German casualties –Less than 160,000 bodies recovered The Somme, British gain few thousand yards –420,000 casualties –No significant strategic advantage
20
War Propaganda
21
Role of Public Opinion Beginning of media age Availability of cheap newspapers Little accountability Awkward pressure on politicians –Sacrifice diplomatic expediency for public support
22
USA Enters the War US and the war economy –Sale of goods to the Allies –Debts to American banks –US neutrality a mirage German blockade of British overseas trade Submarine patrols Sinking of Lusitania, 7 May 1915 –1,198 lives lost (128 US) –Carried munitions US declares war April 1917
23
Americans Entering the War
24
End of the Great War U.S. Enters the war in 1917 as a response to German submarine warfare war leaves Europe’s peoples decimated/estimated 15 million casualties Treaty of Versailles leaves a bitter legacy –no Central Powers allowed to participate –Russia/Soviet Union not present because of revolution –Germany punished heavily
27
The End of the Ottoman Empire Treaty of Sèvres (1920) removes Balkan and Arab provinces, allows for European occupation of south and east Anatolia Mustafa Kemal (Atatürk) leads uprising against Sultanate, creates Republic of Turkey Allies recognize republic in Treaty of Lausanne (1923) Intensely secular government, women’s rights
28
Territorial changes in southwest Asia after the Great War
29
Treaty of Versailles French demanded permanent weakening of Germany –Germany must accept full guilt and responsibility of the war –no navy or air force, army of only 100,000 troops for peacekeeping –Central Powers must pay reparations –no alliances Wilson accepts in order to pass his League of Nations
30
Revolution in Russia WWI decimates Russia Tsar Nicholas II steps down in 1917 dedicated socialist Lenin uses Bolshevik party to seize power and provide leadership to the workers (Source 991) under “Peace, Land and Bread” motto Lenin leads October revolution
31
Collapse of the Russian Empire Russia: February Revolution, 1917 Germany smuggles Lenin into Provisional Government Russia October Revolution, creation of the USSR Treaty of Brest-Litovsk cedes Poland, Baltic countries, Ukraine to central Powers
32
Lenin
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.