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Published byClemence Hall Modified over 9 years ago
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Causes of World War I
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France Russia Germany Austria- Hungary Great Britain Italy Serbia Ottoman n Empire Romania Bulgaria Greece Belgium
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Militarism Expansion of military power and resources in European Nations Belief that military power was essential to maintaining the balance of influence Arms race Powerful military leaders Social Darwinism
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Alliances Agreements among nations to help/support each other in case of attack Made it impossible for some countries to stay out of conflict
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France Germany Austria Hungary Italy Great Britain Serbia Ottoman Empire Russia Belgium Romania Bulgaria
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Imperialism Goal and process of building empires Economic rivalries Race to amass colonies Suspicion
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Nationalism Patriotic feelings, principles or efforts Sense of ‘us’ and ‘them’ Led to feelings of national superiority
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The Stage Serbia was angry over the annexation of Bosnia by Austria Hungary- considered it a Serbian homeland- fought several small wars to gain territory Russia, Britain, France- The Triple Entente- would become the Allied Powers Germany, Austria Hungary, Italy (who would switch sides) the Ottoman Empire- The Triple Alliance- would become the Central Powers
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The Spark June of 1914- Archduke Franz Ferdinand- heir to the Austria-Hungarian throne- and his wife Sophie visit Sarajevo, Bosnia Gavrillo Princip- Serbian nationialist and member of the terrorist organization the Black Hand plan the assassination Despite initial failure, the Archduke’s car makes a wrong turn, and Princip shoots both of them
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Rising Action After securing Germany’s support, Austria-Hungary issues a set of demands to Serbia –Serbia calls on its ally Russia, and refuses/is unable to meet Austria- Hungary’s demands
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Dominos Falling July 28, 1914- Austria Hungary declares war on Serbia –Germany declare war on Russia, then attacks Russia’s ally, France –Travel through Belgium to attack France, violating Belgium’s neutrality- forcing Great Britain to enter the war
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Works Cited Mintz, S., & McNeil, S. (2016). World War I. Digital History. Retrieved January 28, 2016, from http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/era.cfm ?eraID=11&smtID=2
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