Chapter 29: Great War 1914-1918
Marching Towards War
At the turn of the 20th century, the nations of Europe had been largely at peace with one another for nearly 30 years
Efforts to outlaw war and achieve a permanent peace had been gaining momentum in Europe since the middle of the 1800s (Congress of Vienna)
By 1900, peace congresses convened regularly between 1843 and 1907
Some people believed that progress made war a thing of the past; yet in a decade, a war would engulf the world
I. Rising Tensions in Europe: The Rise of Nationalism
Many gradual developments would eventually propel Europe into war
One such development was the rise of nationalism, or deep devotion to one’s country
It can serve as a unifying force within a country, but also cause intense competition among nations when seeking power
By the 20th Century, a rivalry developed between Europe’s Great Powers—Germany, Austria-Hungary, Great Britain, Russia, Italy and France
The Rise of Nationalism
This increasing rivalry among European nations stemmed from several sources
Competition for materials and markets
Territorial disputes—France still angry over losing land to Germany in the Franco-Prussian War; Austria-Hungary and Russia were both trying to dominate the Balkans; and within the Balkans there was intense nationalism of the Serbs, Bulgarians, Romanians, and other ethnic groups which eventually leads to demands for independence
Imperialism and Militarism
Another force that helped set the stage for war in Europe was imperialism
Imperialism is fierce competition among the European nations for colonies in Africa and Asia which often almost pushed the countries to war and often increased their rivalry and their mistrust of one another
Another troubling development throughout the early years of the 20th century was the rise of a dangerous European arms race
The nations of Europe believed that to be truly great, they needed to have a powerful military
By 1914, all the Great Powers besides Britain had large standing armies; military experts stressed the importance of being able to quickly mobilize in case of war; Generals developed plans for mobilization
The policy of glorifying military power and keeping an army prepared for war was called Militarism
Having large standing armies made citizens feel more patriotic which increased their sense of nationalism, but it also frightened some people
II. Tangled Alliances: Bismarck Forges Early Pacts
Alliances were originally formed among the Great Powers in the 1870s to keep peace, but it eventually helped push Europe into war
Between 1864-1871, Prussia’s chancellor, Otto von Bismarck, freely used war to unify Germany
After 1871, however, Bismarck declared Germany a “satisfied power” and turned his energies to maintaining peace in Europe
Bismarck Forges Early Pacts
Bismarck saw France as greatest threat to peace so he tried to isolate France so they would have no allies
He still believed that France wanted revenge for its defeat in the Franco-Prussian War
In 1879, he created the Dual Alliance between Germany and Austria-Hungary.
Italy joined three years later making it the Triple Alliance
In 1881, Bismarck took another potential ally away by signing a treaty with Russia
Shifting Alliances Threaten Peace
In 1890, Germany’s foreign policy changed dramatically
Kaiser Wilhelm II, the ruler of Germany forced Bismarck to resign in 1890 because he did not wish to share power with anyone
Kaiser Wilhelm wanted to show the world how strong Germany had become
The army was his greatest pride
Wilhelm let Germany’s treaty with Russia expire in 1890.
Russia responded by forming a defense military alliance with France in 1892 and 1894
This alliance is what Bismarck feared since it would make Germany the enemy of both France and Russia
Germany would be forced to fight a two-front war
Wilhelm next started a shipbuilding program so that the German fleet would be equal to the British fleet
This alarmed Britain who then made another entente with both France and Russia, The Triple Entente in 1907
This alliance did not bind Britain to fight with France and Russia, but it did ensure that Britain would not fight against them
By 1907, there were two rival camps in Europe
On one side was the Triple Alliance, Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy
On the other side was the Triple Entente, Great Britain, France and Russia
A dispute between two rival powers could draw all the nations of Europe into war
III. Crisis in the Balkans
The Balkan Peninsula was a likely place where that dispute would occur
With a long history of nationalist uprisings and ethnic clashes, the Balkans were known as the “powder keg” of Europe
A Restless Region
By the early 1900s the Ottoman Empire, which included the Balkan region (Bulgaria, Greece, Montenegro, Romania and Serbia) was in decline
All had freed themselves from their Turkish rulers and nationalism was strong here
Nationalism was a strong force in these countries
Serbia had a large Slavic population and wanted to absorb all of the Slavs on the Balkan Peninsula
Russia supported Serbian nationalism, but Austria-Hungary did not because they feared that efforts to create a Slavic state would stir rebellion among its Slavic people
In 1908, Austria annexed (took over) Bosnia and Herzegovina (these were two Balkan areas with large Slavic populations)
Serbian leaders, who had sought to rule these provinces, were outraged
Tensions grew between Serbia and Austria over the next few years because Serbia vowed to take Bosnia and Herzegovina away from Austria
Austria said they would crush any Serbian effort to undermine their authority in the Balkans
f) A Shot Rings Throughout Europe
Archduke Franz Ferdinand, the heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne and his wife Sophie went to Sarajevo (Bosnian capital) on June 28, 1914
They were shot at point-blank range as they rode through Sarajevo by a 19 year old Serbian and member of the Black Hand named Gavrilo Princip
The Black Hand was a secret society committed to ridding Bosnia of Austrian rule
Austria decided to punish Serbia since the assassin was a Serbian
On July 23, Austria presented Serbia with an ultimatum containing numerous demands
Serbia realized that refusing Austria’s demands would lead to war, so they agreed to most of the demands and offered to settle the rest at an international conference
Austria was in no mood to negotiate and declared war on July 28
That same day, Russia, an ally of Serbia, mobilized troops toward the Austrian border
The British foreign minister, the Italian government, and even Kaiser Wilhelm urged Austria and Russia to negotiate
It was too late, war had already been set into motion
Europe Plunges Into War
By 1914, Europe was divided into two rival camps: the Triple Entente—Great Britain, France, and Russia; the Triple Alliance—Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy
Austria-Hungary’s declaration of war against Serbia set off a chain reaction within the alliance system
The countries of Europe followed through with their pledges to support one another; as a result most of Europe joined the largest, most destructive war the world had ever seen
I. The Great War Begins
Since Austria declared war on Serbia, Serbia’s ally, Russia, moved its army toward the Russian-Austrian border
Expecting Germany to join Austria, Russia also mobilized along the German border
To Germany, Russia’s mobilization basically was a declaration of war so they declared war on Russia on August 1.
Russia looked to its ally France for help
Germany didn’t wait for France to act, two days after declaring war on Russia, the Germans declared war on France on August 3.
Soon after, Great Britain declared war on Germany; most of Europe was locked into battle
Nations Take Sides
By mid August 1914, the battle lines were clearly drawn
The Central Powers, Germany and Austria-Hungary were allied, eventually Bulgaria and the Ottoman Empire would join them
The Allied Powers or Allies--Great Britain, France and Russia.
Japan joined within weeks and Italy later joined even though they were once part of the Triple Alliance with Germany and Austria-Hungary
Italy joined because they accused their former partners of unjustly starting the war
By later summer, 1914, soldiers went off to war
A Bloody Stalemate
As the summer of 1914 turned to fall, the war turned into a long and bloody stalemate, or deadlock, along the fields of France
This deadlocked region in northern France became known as the Western Front
The Conflict Grinds Along
Since Germany was facing war on two fronts, a battle strategy was developed by General Alfred Graf von Schlieffen that called for attacking and defeating France in the west and then rushing east to fight Russia
This battle strategy was called the Schlieffen Plan
The Germans felt they could achieve this goal since Russia was behind Europe industrially and it would take them longer to supply their front lines
Speed was vital to this plan in order to defeat France.
At first it appeared the Germans would succeed
By early September, German forces had swept into France and reached the outskirts of Paris; victory was days away
On September 5, the Allies regrouped and attacked the Germans NE of Paris in the valley of the Marne River; after 4 days of fighting, the Germans retreated
First Battle of the Marne—first major clash on the Western Front and the single most important event of the war—the defeat of the Germans left the Schlieffen Plan in ruins because a quick victory in the west was no longer possible
In the east, Russian forces were already invading Germany
Germany was going to have to fight a long war on two fronts
Realizing this, the German High Command sent thousands of troops from France to aid its forces in the east
Meanwhile, the war on the Western Front settled into a stalemate
War in the Trenches
By early 1915, opposing armies on the Western Front fought each other from miles of parallel trenches that were dug opposite of each other in order to protect soldiers from enemy fire
This set the stage for what became known as trench warfare
In this type of warfare, soldiers fought each other from trenches
Armies traded huge losses of human life for pitiful small land gains
Life in the trenches was miserable; it was muddy, there were rats, fresh food was non-existent and sleep was almost impossible
The space between the opposing trenches won the grim name “no man’s land” because soldiers usually met murderous rounds of machine gun fire
The Western Front had become a “terrain of death.”
Military strategists were at a loss
New tools of war (machine guns, poison gas, armored tanks, and larger artillery) did not speed up the war like military strategists had hoped, instead it just killed more people more effectively
Slaughter reached a peak in 1916
In February Germans launched major attack against French near Verdun where each side lost 300,000 men (Battle of Verdun). Germans only gained 4 miles of territory
In July 1916, the British army tried to relieve the pressure on the French so they attacked the Germans at the Battle of the Somme (NW of Verdun) and lost massive numbers. British only gained about 5 miles. Each side had suffered more than half a million casualties
II. The Battle on the Eastern Front
As thousands of lives were lost on the Western Front, both sides were sending millions more men to fight on the Eastern Front
This area was a stretch of battlefield on the German and Russian border where Russians and Serbs battled Germans and Austro-Hungarians
Early Fighting
At the beginning of the war, Russian forces attacked both Austria and Germany
At the end of August 1915, the Germans had counterattacked near the town of Tannenberg
Battle of Tannenberg was a 4 day battle where the Germans crushed the invading Russians and drove the Russian army into a full retreat, more than 30,000 Russian soldiers were killed
The Russians fared much better against the Austrians
In September 1914, Russians defeated the Austrians twice driving them deep into their country
In December 1914, Austria finally defeated the Russians and pushed them out of Austria-Hungary
Russia Struggles
By 1916, Russia’s war effort was about to collapse, especially since Russia had yet to become industrialized
As a result, Russia was short on supplies—food, guns, ammo, clothes, boots and blankets
Also, Allied shipments were limited because Germans controlled the Baltic Sea, and they had submarines which attacked in the North Sea and beyond
The Ottomans controlled the straits leading from the Mediterranean to the Black Sea
The Russian army had only one asset, its numbers
Because of the country’s enormous population, they tied up the Germans in the east which meant the Germans could not send a full fighting force in the west
Germany and its allies were concerned with more than just the Western and Eastern Front
As the war raged on, the fighting spread to Africa and Southwest Asia thus making the European conflict a World War
Trench Facts
Each battalion had its own supply of rum that it distributed to its soldiers.
Each division of 20,000 men received 300 gallons.
Every soldier carried iron rations -- emergency food that consisted of a can of bully bee, biscuits and a tin of tea and sugar.
A single pair of rats could produce up to 880 offspring in a year.
A total of 3,894 men in the British Army were convicted of self-inflicted wounds. A firing-squad offense -- none were executed, but all served prison terms.
The British Army treated 20,000 soldiers for trench foot during the winter of 1914-15.
One-third of all casualties on the Western Front may have been killed or wounded in a trench.
A lit candle was fairly effective in removing lice, but the skill of burning the lice without setting yourself on fire was difficult to learn.
Soldiers in the trenches often depended on impure water collected from shell-holes or other cavities, causing dysentery.
“If you have never had trench foot described to you, I will explain. Your feet swell to two to three times their normal size and go completely dead. You can stick a bayonet into them and not feel a thing. If you are lucky enough not to lose your feet and the swelling starts to go down, it is then that the most indescribable agony begins. I have heard men cry and scream with pain and many have had to have their feet and legs amputated. I was one of the lucky ones, but one more day in that trench and it may have been too late.” (Harry Roberts)
A Global Conflict
World War I was much more than a European conflict
Australia and Japan fought alongside the Allied forces; the Ottoman Turks and Bulgaria allied themselves with Germany and the Central Powers
As the war promised to be a grim, drawn out affair, all the Great Powers looked for other allies around the globe to tip the balance
They sought new war fronts to achieve victory
I. War Affects the World
As the war dragged on, the main combatants looked beyond Europe for a way to end the stalemate
However, no new alliances or new battlefronts did much to end the grinding conflict
The Gallipoli Campaign
A promising strategy for the Allies seemed to be to attack a region in the Ottoman Empire known as the Dardanelles
This narrow sea strait was the gateway to the Ottoman capital, Constantinople
By securing the Dardanelles, the Allies believed that they could take Constantinople, defeat the Turks, and establish a supply line to Russia
The effort to take the Dardanelles began in February 1915
Known as the Gallipoli Campaign, British, French, and Australian troops made repeated assaults on the Gallipoli Peninsula
The Turks vigorously defended the region and by May both sides dug trenches; the region turned into another stalemate
By December, the Allies gave up the campaign and began to evacuate; suffered about 250,000 casualties
Battles in Africa and Asia
In various parts of Africa and Asia, German colonies began to come under assault
Japan quickly overtook German outposts in China and captured Germany’s Pacific island colonies; French and British forces attacked German colonies in Africa
America Joins the Fight
In 1917, the focus of the war shifted to the high seas
The Germans intensified the submarine warfare that had raged in the Atlantic Ocean since shortly after the war began
In January 1917, the Germans announced that their submarines would sink without warning any ship in the waters around Britain
This policy was called unrestricted submarine warfare
On May 7, 1915, a German submarine or U-boat, had sunk the British passenger ship Lusitania
The attack left 1,198 people dead, including 128 U.S. citizens
Germany claimed that the ship had been carrying ammunition, which turned out to be true
Still, the American public was outraged; President W. Wilson sent a strong protest to Germany and the Germans agreed to stop attacking neutral ships
Desperate for an advantage, the Germans eventually returned to unrestricted submarine warfare in 1917
They knew it might lead to war against the United States
They gambled that their naval blockade would starve Britain into defeat before the U.S. could mobilize
U-boat attacks sank three American ships, despite Wilson’s warnings
In February 1917, U.S. officials intercepted a telegram written by Germany’s foreign secretary, Arthur Zimmerman
It stated that Germany would help Mexico “reconquer” the land it had lost to the United States if Mexico would ally itself with Germany
This telegram proved to be the last straw
A large part of the American population already favored the Allies
Also, America felt a bond with England; the two shared a common ancestry and language as well as similar democratic institutions and legal systems
More important, America’s economic ties were stronger with the Allied Powers than with the Central Powers
April 2, 1917, America declared war on Germany
II. War Affects the Home Front
By the time the U.S. joined the Allies, the war had been raging for more than three years
Europe had lost more men in battle than in all the wars of the previous three centuries
The Great War, as it came to be known, had changed millions of lives forever
Not only were the soldiers in the trenches affected, but civilians as well
Governments Wage Total War
World War I soon became a total war, or that countries devoted all their resources to the war effort
In each country involved, the wartime government took control of the economy
Governments told factories what to produce and how much
Numerous facilities were converted to munitions factories; nearly every able-bodied civilian was put to work; unemployment all but disappeared
So many goods were in short supply that governments turned to rationing
Under this system, people could only buy small amounts of those items that were also needed for the war effort; ranged from butter to shoe leather
Governments also suppressed anti-war activity
Censoring news about the war became common because many leaders feared it would turn people’s opinion against the war
Governments also used propaganda, one sided information designed to persuade, to keep up morale and support for the war
e) Women and the War
Help was needed from women as well
Thousands of women replaced men in factories, offices, and shops
Women built tanks and munitions, plowed fields, paved streets, and ran hospitals
Although women left the workplace once the war was over, it changed many people’s views about what women were capable of
Women also saw the horrors of war firsthand, working near the frontlines as nurses
III. The Allies Win the War
With the U.S. entered into the war, it seemed that the scales were tipping in the Allies favor
However, events in Russia gave Germany a victory on the Eastern Front and a new hope for winning the conflict
Russia Withdraws
In March 1917, civil unrest in Russia due to war related shortages of foods and fuel, forced Czar Nicholas II to step down
The new provisional government promised to continue fighting the war
However, by 1917, nearly 5.5 million Russian soldiers had been wounded, killed, or captured
The war, weary Russian army refused to fight any longer
8 months into the new government, revolution took place in Russia
November 1917, Communist leader Vladimir Ilyich Lenin seized power
Lenin insisted on ending Russia’s involvement in the war
One of his first acts was to offer Germany a truce
In March 1918, Germany and Russia signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, which ended the war between them
The Central Powers Collapse
Russia’s withdrawal from the war allowed Germany to move nearly all its forces to the Western Front
In March 1918, the Germans mounted one last major offensive against the Allies in France
The Germans crushed everything in their path
By late May 1918, the Germans again reached the Marne River; 40 miles away from Paris
The German military push weakened because the effort to reach the Marne had exhausted men and supplies
The Allies sensing this and with the aid of 140,000 fresh U.S. troops, launched a counterattack
July 1918, the Allies and Germans met at the Second Battle of the Marne
350 Allied tanks smashed through the German lines
2 million more U.S. troops arrived to help the Allies advance steadily toward Germany
Soon, the Ottomans Turks and Bulgarians surrendered
In October 1918, revolution swept through Austria-Hungary
In Germany, soldiers mutinied and the people turned against the Kaiser
November 9, 1918, Kaiser Wilhelm II stepped down and Germany declared itself a republic
A representative of the German government met with French Commander Marshal Foch near Paris
The two signed an armistice, or agreement to stop fighting; November 11, 1918, World War I came to an end
The Legacy of War
World War I was a new kind of war
It involved new technologies and ushered in war on a grander scale
Also, death and destruction had never been seen like this before
8.5 million soldiers died and another 21 million were wounded; countless civilians also died due to starvation, disease, and slaughter
Basically an entire generation of Europeans were wiped out
The war also had a devastating impact on the European economy
The treasuries of European countries were completely drained; total cost of war--$338 billion
Farmlands, homes, villages, and towns were all destroyed
A sense of great disillusionment, despair, and insecurity was left amongst the survivors
The peace treaties of this time were also compromised quickly and rushed; it brought forth a lot of anger and resentment amongst some of the countries
A Flawed Peace
World War I was over and the killing had stopped
The terms of peace still had to be worked out
On January 18, 1919, a conference to establish those terms began at the Palace of Versailles, outside Paris
32 countries were represented and bitter debate would take place; the Allied Powers struggled to solve their conflicting aims
I. The Allies Meet and Debate
Despite representatives from numerous countries, the meetings major decisions were made by a group known as the Big Four
Woodrow Wilson of the United States, Georges Clemenceau of France, David Lloyd George of Great Britain, and Vittorio Orlando of Italy
Russia was in the middle of a civil war and Germany and its allies were not represented
Wilson’s Plan for Peace
In January 1918, while the war was still going on, President Wilson had drawn up a series of peace proposals
Known as the Fourteen Points, they outlined a plan for achieving a just and lasting peace
The first four points included an end to secret treaties, freedom of the seas, free trade, and reduced national armies and navies
The fifth goal was the adjustment of colonial claims with fairness toward colonial peoples
The sixth through thirteenth points were specific suggestions for changing borders and creating new nations
The idea behind these points was self determination —allowing people to decide for themselves under what government they wished to live
Finally, the fourteenth point proposed a “general association of nations” that would protect “great and small states alike”
Reflected the hope for an organization that could negotiate solutions to world conflicts
The Versailles Treaty
As the Paris Peace Conference opened, Britain and France showed little enthusiasm for Wilson’s vision
They were concerned about national security; also wanted to strip Germany of its war making power
The differences between the U.S., France and Britain led to heated arguments between the countries leaders
A compromise was finally reached with the Treaty of Versailles between Germany and the Allied powers on June 28, 1919—5 years to the day of Archduke Ferdinand’s assassination in Sarajevo
Adopting Wilson’s fourteenth point, the treaty created a League of Nations
The league was to be an international association whose goal would be to keep peace among nations
The treaty also punished Germany
They lost substantial territory and had severe restrictions placed on its military operations
As harsh as these provisions were, the harshest was Article 231, the “war guilt” clause
It placed sole responsibility for the war on Germany’s shoulders; reparations had to be paid to the Allies
All of Germany’s territories in Africa and the Pacific were declared mandates or territories to be administered by the League of Nations
The Allies would govern, until they were judged ready for independence
A Troubled Treaty
The Versailles treaty was just one of five treaties negotiated by the Allies
In the end, these agreements created feelings of bitterness and betrayal
Both among the victors and the defeated
The Creation of New Nations
The Western powers signed separate peace treaties in 1919 and 1920 with each of the other defeated nations
Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, and the Ottoman Empire included
The treaties led to huge land losses for the Central Powers
Austria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, and Yugoslavia separated from Austria-Hungary and were independent nations
The Ottoman Turks were forced to give up almost all of their former empire
They retained only the territory that is today the country of Turkey
The land that the Ottomans lost were Palestine, Iraq, and Transjordan to the British; Syria and Lebanon went to France
Russia who left the war early lost land was well; Romania and Poland gained Russian territory and Finland, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania became independent nations
“A Peace Built on Quicksand”
The Treaty of Versailles did little for lasting peace
The United States, considered the dominant nation after the war, rejected the treaty
Many Americans objected to the settlement and Wilson’s League of Nations
Americans believed the best hope for peace was to stay out of European affairs
So the U.S. worked out a separate treaty with Germany and its allies several years later
The treaty with Germany, in particular the war guilt clause, left a legacy of bitterness and hatred in the hearts of the German people
Throughout Africa and Asia mandated territories were angry at the way the Allies disregarded their desire for independence
European powers talked about self determination, but European colonialism, disguised as the mandate system, continued in Asia and Africa
Allied powers were upset as well
Both Japan and Italy, which had entered the war to gain territory, had gained less than they wanted
Lacking the support of the United States, the League of Nations was in no position to take action on these or other complaints
The Treaty of Versailles, like quicksand, would eventually give way
In a little more than two decades, the treaties’ legacy of bitterness would help plunge the world into another catastrophic war.
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