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SOCIAL CONSEQUENCES OF THE FIRST WORLD WAR Inflation: the cost of living doubled in France and Great Britain, and tripled in Germany. Food shortages (especially in Germany, Russia, and the Ottoman Empire). Influx of women into jobs formerly dominated by men. Increased government intervention in the economy. Labor unrest as the war continued (unravelling the German Burgfrieden and French Union sacrée).
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The Oratory of Jean Jaurès, 1910: The socialist leader was assassinated by an ill informed French nationalist on July 31, 1914, just before his party agreed to join the “Sacred Union” for the war’s duration
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The Army Command wanted to arrest all SPD leaders, but Bethmann Hollweg persuaded the Kaiser to promote national reconciliation: “I no longer see parties, I only see Germans!”
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The SPD Reichstag delegation voted unanimously to approve war credits, endorsing the Burgfrieden (truce of the castle). Here the dead August Bebel says: “Well done! Defend our Reich. If I were still alive, I would be among you” (German postcard, 1914)
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Edouard Vuillard, “A Munitions Factory in Lyons: The Forge” (1917): All countries scrambled to convert factories to munitions production. In France the Socialist Albert Thomas led this effort
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When did women gain the right to vote? 1893: New Zealand 1906: Finland 1913: Norway, Denmark 1918: Great Britain, Germany, Austria, USSR, Sweden 1920: USA 1931: Spain 1944/45: France, Italy 1971: Switzerland 1984: Liechtenstein
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Rally of the Women’s Social and Political Union, ca. 1908
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Emmeline Pankhurst arrested outside Buckingham Palace Picture of her prison cell, 1911
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J. Barnard Davis, “The Workroom of the Gerrard’s Cross War Hospital Supply Depot” (1918)
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“Preserve Perishable Produce” (Food Production Department, London, 1917/18)
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H.G. Gawthorn, “National Service Women’s Land Army,” Great Britain, 1917
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“On Her their Lives Depend” (recruitment poster for the British munitions industry, ca. 1916): Economic mobilization required the recruitment of women and government intervention to prevent strikes.
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Workers in a British shell factory, 1918
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Women miners haul clay to be fired into bricks in Wales
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A Frenchwoman operates a lathe in a metalworking factory
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German women at work in a munitions factory, 1916
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Albert Sterner, “We need you,” USA, 1918
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“We give our work, our men, our lives if need be. Will you give us the Vote?” USA, 1917
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The Ottoman Empire still included 20 million people in 1914
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THE BRITISH MADE MANY PROMISES IN THEIR CAMPAIGN TO DESTROY THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE December 1914: Lord Kitchener in Cairo suggests to the Emir of Mecca that he should inherit the Khalifate November 1914: The British seize Basra, but their advance suffers defeat at Kut in 1916 March-December 1915: Failed invasion at Gallipoli April 1915: Beginning of the Armenian Massacres January 1916: The Sykes-Picot Agreement partitions Arab lands between the French & British empires June 1916: Opening of the “Arab Revolt,” advised by Col. T.E. Lawrence November 1917: The Balfour Declaration promises to create a Jewish homeland in Palestine
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LORD KITCHENER SEEKS A NEW “KHALIF” AMONG THE HASHEMITES OF MECCA Hussein bin Ali, Emir of Mecca since 1908, self-proclaimed King of the Hejaz, 1917-24 Faisal bin al Hussein, elected King of Syria in 1920; appointed King of Iraq, 1921- 33 Abdullah bin al-Hussein, Emir of Transjordania, 1921-46, then King of Jordan, 1946-49
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Sir Winston Churchill and the assault on Gallipoli, March/April 1915 (see Strachan, pp. 115-23)
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British troops land at Suvla Bay, August 7, 1915
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Australian & New Zealander troops at ANZAC Cove, April 25, 1915
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Australian troops pinned down at ANZAC Cove, May 3, 1915
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A battery of British 60-pounders shells Turkish positions A well camouflaged Turkish 77-mm Krupp cannon returns fire
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General Mustapha Kemal (1881-1939), commander of the 19 th Division at Gallipoli: “Kemal Ataturk”
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The Sykes- Picot Agreement of 1916: The British Foreign Office paid little attention to the promises to the Hashemites
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Lt. Col. T.E. Lawrence (1888-1935) and “Emir Faisal’s camel- mounted irregulars” (photos in the British press, 1917)
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Theodor Herzl at the Sixth Zionist Congress in 1903 and his famous book published in 1896, The Jewish State
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Jewish farmers at the new settlement of Metulla, 1896/97
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ZIONISTS IN THE BRITISH CABINET? Arthur James Balfour: PM 1902-05; Foreign Secretary 1916-19 Balfour’s advisor, Leopold Amery, became Colonial Secretary, 1924-29: “I was keen on an advance into Palestine on military grounds, and the idea of establishing in Palestine a prosperous community bound to Britain by ties of gratitude and interest naturally appealed to me. I already had doubts as to the permanence of our protectorate in Egypt.”
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THE BALFOUR DECLARATION (from a letter of November 2, 1917, by Foreign Secretary Balfour to Lord Rothschild and the Zionist Federation) “His Majesty's Government view with favour the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people, and will use their best endeavours to facilitate the achievement of this object, it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine, or the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country.”
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The British military commander of Jerusalem, Borton Pasha, on December 11, 1917
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The Ottoman Empire conscripted 3 million men but could not keep more than 500,000 supplied in the field
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THE PEACE SETTLEMENT IN THE MIDDLE EAST
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Emir Faisal’s delegation at Versailles, with T.E. Lawrence. The French expelled his supporters from Damascus in 1921
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