SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 94
The Great War:
  1914-1918
C a u s e s o f W o r l d M A N II- - A
                                   Wa r
                     -
M ilitarism – policy of building up strong military forces to
   prepare for war

A lliances - agreements between nations to aid and protect
  one another

N ationalism – pride in or devotion to one’s country

I mperialism – when one country takes over another country
 economically and politically

A ssassination – murder of Austrian Archduke Franz
  Ferdinand
Nationalism
Imperialism
Alliances
Militarism
International Anarchy
NationalismPan-Slavism: The
         Balkans, 1914



                         The
                    “Powder Keg”
                      of Europe
Causes of World War I - Nationalism
Pan-Slavism  - movement to unify all of the Slavic people
Causes of World War I - Nationalism

Pan-Germanism  - movement to unify the people of all
German speaking countries

                   Germanic Countries
         Austria *                      Luxembourg
         Belgium                        Netherlands
         Denmark                        Norway
         Iceland                        Sweden
         Germany *                      Switzerland *
         Liechtenstein *                United Kingdom

              * = German speaking country
Aggressive Nationalism
Causes of World War I - Imperialism
Causes of World War I - Imperialism
Imperialism:
 European
conquest of
   Africa
Causes of World War I – Alliances-map,
   Triple Entente: page 816 Triple Alliance:
    Great Britain              Germany




       France                Austria-Hungary

                   Tension


      Russia                      Italy
Order of International Crises leading to
               the assassination!!
• European powers…before WWI confronted each other
  in a series of diplomatic clashes that could have
  resulted in war.
• Moroccan Crisis of 1905:
(also known as the Tangier Crisis) was the international
  crisis over the international status of Morocco between
  March 1905 and May 1906.
Kaiser Wilhelm II protested Fr. dominance of Morocco, a
Territory considered by the Fr. to be a private sphere of
Influence. Wilhelm II advocated Moroccan indep. & sent
a warship to the country.
Balkans Crisis of 1908-09
• The Balkan Crisis of 1908 was the Annexation of
  Bosnia by Austria-Hungary despite the vocal
  complaints from the Serbs who wanted the territory
  with its 3 million Serbs. Map, pg. 820
• Russia sides with Serbia
• Crisis is checked when Germany joined Austria’s
  cause & balanced
the Russian threat.
Second Moroccan Crisis 1911
• Also known as the Agadir Crisis, or the Panther
  Sprung
• the international tension sparked by the
  deployment of the German gunboat Panther, to
  the Moroccan port of Agadir on July 1, 1911




             Gunboat Panther on Agadir
             harbor
First Balkan War 1912-13
• pitted the Balkan League (Serbia, Greece,
  Montenegro and Bulgaria) against the Ottoman
  Empire
Second Balkan War 1913
• Serbia(backed by Russia), Montenegro, Greece,
  Rumania, & Turkey joined to defeat Bulgaria.
• This crisies brought Russia & Serbia closer together &
  intensified the animosity of Russia & Serbia for the A-
  H empire
Sarajevo, Bosnia – June 28, 1914
Causes of World War I - Assassination
Causes of World War I - Assassination




Archduke Franz Ferdinand and Duchess Sophie
         Sarajevo, Bosnia - June 28th, 1914.
Causes of World War I - Assassination

Austrian
Archduke Franz Ferdinand
 was killed in
Bosnia by a
Serbian
nationalist
who believed
that Bosnia
should belong
to Serbia.
The Assassination! June 28,
          1914



              Black Hand (Serbian: Црна рука,
              Crna ruka), officially Unity or Death
Causes of World War I - Assassination




Gavrilo Princip after his
assassination of Austrian
Archduke Franz Ferdinand.
COUNTRIES TAKE A SIDE

           •   Shocked Francis Joseph
               blames Serbia, feels Serb
               Gov’t knew of the plot
           •   Believed that Serbia wanted
               south Slav empire
           •   Wanted to deal harshly with
               the Serbs
           •   Needed German backing
               first
           •   Kaiser Wilhelm II told Austria
               that Germany would support
               any action they saw fit
           •   Essentially giving Austria a
               blank check to do anything.
AUSTRIA vs. SERBIA
• Austria sends Serbia a severe ultimatum or final set of
  demands 7/23/14
• Serbia must end all anti-Austrian agitation and punish
  and Serbian official involved in the murder.
• Dismiss all officials hostile to Austria-Hungary
• Allow Austrian officials into Serbia to investigate the
  Archduke’s murder themselves
• Serbia agrees to all of the terms except the last, rejecting
  it as an infringement on Serbian sovereignty.
• 7/28/14 Austria and declares war on the Serbs—1 Month
  after the assassination!!
“Blank Check”
• Germany issues “blank check” to Austria
• Will back her up no matter what course they take
• Serbia agree’s to most terms but wants to
  negotiate others
• A-Hungaryabsolutely not!
• July 28, 1914 Austria declares war on Serbia!!
The Point of No Return:
       The Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand

Austria blamed Serbia for Ferdinand’s death and declared war
on Serbia.


    Germany pledged their support for Austria -Hungary.
          · example of Pan-German nationalism



           Russia pledged their support for Serbia.
            · example of Pan-Slavic nationalism
The Point of No Return:
        The Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand

             Germany declares war on Russia.


          France pledges their support for Russia.


             Germany declares war on France.

      Germany invades Belgium on the way to France.


Great Britain supports Belgium and declares war on Germany.
The Major Players: 1914-17
Allied Powers:                             Central
                                           Powers:

Nicholas II

   [Rus]
                                                Wilhelm II [Ger]
              George V [Br]

                         Victor Emmanuel
                              II [It]




                                                     Enver Pasha
                                                      [Turkey]
           Pres. Poincare [Fr]
                                      Franz Josef [A-H]
Allied Powers:                 Central Powers:
Great Britain                    Germany



  France                       Austria-Hungary
                 World War I

  Russia                       Ottoman Empire



                                   Italy
July 28, 1914 – Austria-Hungary
declared war on Serbia
July 30, 1914 – Russia prepared
to defend Serbia
August 1, 1914 – Germany
declares war on Russia
August 3, 1914 – Germany declared
war on France
August 3, 1914 – Germany invaded
neutral Belgium
August 4, 1914 – British declared
war on Germany
WWI: A “FAMILY AFFAIR”
• many of the European monarchies - many of which fell
  during the war (including those of Russia, Germany
  and Austria-Hungary) - were inter-related
• The British monarch George V's predecessor, Edward
  VII, was the German Kaiser's uncle and, via his wife's
  sister, uncle of the Russian Tsar as well. His niece,
  Alexandra, was the Tsar's wife. Edward's daughter,
  Maud, was the Norwegian Queen, and his niece, Ena,
  Queen of Spain; Marie, a further niece, was to
  become Queen of Romania.
Lecture 2: Course of the war
•   Schlieffen Plan
•   Maginot Line
•   Trench Warfare
•   New Kind of War
•   “Total War”
•   Slaughter
•   Battles
“The lamps are going out all
over Europe; we shall not see lit
     again in our lifetime.”
British Foreign Minister Edward Grey




           What does this mean?
Schlieffen Plan
Maginot Line
After André Maginot (1877-1932), French
  Minister of War
The Maginot Line was a line of concrete and
  steel defenses that stretched between
  Luxembourg and Switzerland along France's
  border with Germany
How effective was it?????
Maginot Line
Legacy of the “line”
• Considered one of the great failures of the war
• Metaphor for someting that is relied upon
  despite being ineffectual
STRATEGIES
                TRENCH WARFARE

    In trench warfare both armies
       could fight from fortified
    positions. It was a slow form of
    combat with heavy reliance on
       defense. The soldiers built
      complex trench and dugout
    systems and stocked them with
         weapons. Barbed wire
      protected the trenches. The
        space between opposing
       armies’ trenches was “no
     man’s land.” Attacks almost
     always resulted in injury and
         death for the attacking
The Horror’s of Trench warfare
• Confined to the western front in WWI
• It has become a byword for stalemate in
  conflict, with a slow wearing down of opposing
  forces
• Trenches & dugouts opposed each other,
  protected by barbed wire
• “no man’s land-” land in between; not occupied!
• One reason the war dragged on for 4 years!
Trench Warfare
Trench Warfare – type of fighting during World War I in
which both sides dug trenches protected by mines and barbed
wire; on the Western Front!




            Cross-section of a front-line trench
British trench, France, July 1916
     (during the Battle of the Somme)
French soldiers firing over their own dead
All Quiet on the Western Front – trench warfare (9:27)
An aerial
photograph of the
opposing trenches
and no-man's land
in Artois, France,
July 22, 1917.
German trenches
are at the right and
bottom, British
trenches are at the
top left. The
vertical line to the
left of centre
indicates the
course of a pre-war
road.
Officers walking through a flooded communication trench.
A photograph of a man suffering from trench foot.
Soldiers digging trenches while protected against gas attacks
War Is H E L L
      !!
Trench Rats
Many men killed in the trenches were buried almost where
they fell. These corpses, as well as the food scraps that littered
the trenches, attracted rats.

Quotes from soldiers fighting in the trenches:

"The rats were huge. They were so big they would eat a
wounded man if he couldn't defend himself."

"I saw some rats running from under the dead men's
greatcoats, enormous rats, fat with human flesh. My heart
pounded as we edged towards one of the bodies. His helmet
had rolled off. The man displayed a grimacing face, stripped
of flesh; the skull bare, the eyes devoured and from the
yawning mouth leapt a rat."
Rats
Schematic Illustration of trenches from a French
                    magazine.
German trenches
All is Quiet on the Western Front
             Film Released 1930
• All Quiet on the Western Front
  is a novel by Erich Maria
  Remarque, a German veteran of
  World War I, who experienced
  trench warfare first-hand, wrote
  about the horrors of that war and
  also the deep detachment from
  German civilian life felt by many
  men returning from the front. The
  book was first published in
  German as Im Westen nichts
  Neues in January 1929.
Weapons of War

WORLD WAR 1 WAS THE FIRST MODERN WAR.
THERE WERE MANY DIFFERENT VARIETIES OF
BATTLE EQUIPMENT. THERE WERE MANY TYPES
OF NEW, DIFFERENT KINDS OF GUNS SUCH AS ,
MACHINE GUNS, LEBELM1866.THERE WERE NEW
WAYS OF BATTLE TECHNOLOGY SUCH AS
TANKS ,PLANES AND EXPLOSIVES. THESE NEW
TECHNOLOGIES WERE WAYS THAT MADE WW 1
THE FIRST MODERN WAR.
New Weapons of War
     Poisonous Gas                    Tanks                 Airplanes
•   German military           • When soldiers          • Both sides used
    scientists                                           planes to map and
                                began to carry gas       to attack trenches
    experimented with           masks, they still        from above.
    gas as a weapon.
                                faced a stalemate.     • Planes first
•   Gas in battle was                                    dropped brinks and
    risky: Soldiers didn’t    • British forces soon
                                                         heavy objects on
    know how much to            developed armored        enemy troops.
    use, and wind               tanks to move into
                                                       • Soon they
    changes could               no-man’s-land.           mounted guns and
    backfire the gas.                                    bombs on planes.
                              • These tanks had
•   Then Germans threw          limited success        • Skilled pilots
    canisters of gas into       because many got         sought in air
    the Allies’ trenches.                                battles called
                                stuck in the mud.        dogfights.
•   Many regretted using
                              • Germans soon           • The German Red
    gas, but British and
    French forces began         found ways to            Baron downed 80
                                destroy the tanks        Allied planes, until
    using it too, to keep                                he was shot down.
    things even.                with artillery fire.
WEAPONS


  land               hand grenade      barbed wire
ship/tank



poison gas           submarine        Maxim machine
                                           gun
              bi-
             plane    CICERO © 2008
Rifle




the main weapon used by British soldiers in the
trenches was the bolt-action rifle. 15 rounds
could be fired in a minute and a person 1,400
metres away could be killed.
Machine Guns
         • Machine guns
           needed 4-6 men to
           work them and had to
           be on a flat surface.
           They had the fire-
           power of 100 guns.
         • Could fire anywhere
           from 400 to 600
           rounds per minute.
         • Overheated and
           jammed easily. Had
           to be cooled with
           water or later with air.
Machine Guns
Gernades
Flamethrowers
Periscope Rifle
Poison gas
• There types were
  used:
  – Chlorine- used at the
    Battle of Ypres in 1915
    killing thousands.
  – Phosgene
  – Mustard- burned the
    lungs of the inhaler
    leaving them to die in
    agony.
Gas




The German army were the first to use chlorine gas at the battle of Ypres in
1915. Chlorine gas causes a burning sensation in the throat and chest pains.
Death is painful - you suffocate! The problem with chlorine gas is that the
weather must be right. If the wind is in the wrong direction it could end up killing
your own troops rather than the enemy.

 Mustard gas was the most deadly weapon used. It was fired into the trenches
in shells. It is colourless and takes 12 hours to take effect. Effects include:
blistering skin, vomiting, sore eyes, internal and external bleeding. Death can
take up to 5 weeks.
Phosphorus Grenade Exploding
Artillery
• These were the new
  versions of cannons. Never
  in the history of man were
  so many cannons used,
  than in WW1.
• Germans developed a
  stronger artillery nicknamed
  “Big Bertha”
• It could fire a shot at Paris
  from 120 km away.
• Improved shells that would
  explode with tiny pellets.
French 120mm guns
Advent of the Tank
Tanks were used for the first time in the First World War
at the Battle of the Somme. They were developed to
cope with the conditions on the Western Front. The first
tank was called 'Little Willie' and needed a crew of 3. Its
maximum speed was 3mph and it could not cross
trenches.

The more modern tank was not developed until just
before the end of the war. It could carry 10 men, had a
revolving turret and could reach 4mph.
Tanks
    • Tanks were known as
      “Chariots of God”
    • The first tanks were giant
      blocks of metal and would
      carry 1 to 2 people at
      speeds of 3-4 mph.
    • Scientist worked on this and
      by 1918 had developed a
      tank that would carry 8 men
      and fire 208 shells and
      13,000 bullets.
    • These tanks were not
      reliable.
French Renault PT-17 tank
Original British tank prototype "Little
                Willie"
British Mark I tank
German A7V tank
Planes      • The Zeppelin, also known
                                  as blimp, was an airship
                                  that was used during the
                                  early part of the war in
• New types of weapons use        bombing raids by the
  in advanced warfare.            Germans. They carried
• Had everything from mini        machine guns and bombs.
  scout planes to huge            However, they were
  zeppelins.                      abandoned because they
• At first they were used to      were easy to shoot out of
  deliver bombs and for           the sky.
  spying work but became
  fighter aircraft armed with
  machine guns, bombs and
  some times cannons. Fights
  between two planes in the
  sky became known as
  'dogfights'
Planes




Planes were also used for the first time. At first they
were used to deliver bombs and for spying work but
became fighter aircraft armed with machine guns,
bombs and some times cannons. Fights between two
planes in the sky became known as 'dogfights'
The Flying Aces of World War I




    Eddie         Francesco       Eddie “Mick”
Rickenbacher,     Barraco, It.    Mannoch, Br.
     US




                  Rene Pauk       Manfred von
Willy Coppens
                  Fonck, Fr.     Richtoffen, Ger.
      de
                                    [The “Red
Holthust, Belg.
                                     Baron”]
2 Famous Flying Aces
  Manfred von Richthofen better known as
  the Red Baron.
  likely the most famous flying ace of all time
  This German fighter scored the most kills.
  Richthofen was killed just after 11 a.m. on
  21 April 1918, while flying over Morlancourt
  Ridge, near the Somme River. Richthofen
  was hit by a single .303 bullet…then a
  crash landing.
  Controversy and contradictory hypotheses
  continue to surround the identity of the
  person who fired the shot that actually killed
  Richthofen.
Looking for the “Red Baron?”
2 Famous Flying Ace
nd

     •Eddie Rickenbacker
     •American fighter ace in WWI & Medal of Honor
     receipient
     •American "Ace of Aces." He recorded 26
     official victories against German aircraft during
     World War I
     •pioneer in air transportation, particularly as the
     longtime head of Eastern Air Lines
     • In 1995, the United States Postal Service
     issued a postage stamp in honor of
     Rickenbacker's accomplishments as an aviation
     pioneer
     •He died in 1973, the same year he published
     Fighting the Flying Circus(Rickenbacker's
     account of the airwar during World War 1).
Naval Units

• British specialized in
  battleships
• Germans specialized in
  submarines also called
  U-boats.
• The primary weapon of a
  U-boat was a torpedo,
  self propelled under water
  missiles.
• The Germans had 375 U-
  Boats in WW1.
U-boats




Torpedoes were used by submarines(U-boats).
The Germans used torpedoes to blow up ships
carrying supplies from America to Britain.
Terms
• Total war
War activities which involved mass civilian populations
  that require rationing, employing both men & women
  in war industry, exciting society with propaganda
• Victory gardens:
vegetable, fruit & herb plants planted at private
  residences in US, Canada, & Br. During WWI & WW
  II.
• Slaughter
Describes extent of the killing, violence & destruction
Otto Dix: War
Battles
•   1st Battle of the Marne(Sept. 1914)
•   Battle of Verdun(Feb.-Dec. 1916)
•   Battle of Jutland(May-June 1916)
•   Battle of the Somme(1916)
•   2nd Battle of the Marne(Jul.-Aug. 1918)
•   REFER TO CLASS HANDOUT!
OBJECTIVES



    ALLIED POWERS                          CENTRAL POWERS
  The main objective of the Allied    The main objective of the Central
 Powers was to stop Germany and        Powers was to acquire as much
  the Central Powers’ attempts to      land as possible in Europe and
 expand their land in Europe and      Asia. Germany believed France,
 Asia. The American conflict with
                                       England, and Russia prevented
      Germany stemmed from
Germany’s violation of a neutrality      its expansion. Germany was
     agreement when German                 determined to expand its
  submarines attacked American                     borders.
         passenger ships.
Armenian Atrocities during WW I-
                  pg. 826-827
• aka.,Armenian Holocaust, the Armenian
  Massacres
• deliberate and systematic destruction (genocide)
  of the Armenian population of the Ottoman
  Empire during and just after World War
• one of the first modern genocides
• the second most-studied case of genocide after
  the Holocaust
• starting date of the genocide is conventionally
  held to be April 24, 1915
Turkish Genocide Against Armenians




    A Portent (omen) of Future Horrors to
                   Come!
Armenian Atrocities, con’t
• Ottoman military uprooted Armenians from their homes and
  forced them to march for hundreds of miles, depriving them of
  food and water, to the desert of what is now Syria.
• The Republic of Turkey, the successor state of the Ottoman
  Empire, denies the word genocide is an accurate description of
  the events




    The remains of Armenians
    massacred at Erzinjan-
Results
• Estimates vary between 300,000 (per the modern Turkish state)
  to 1,500,000 (per modern Armenia, Argentina, and other
  states). Encyclopædia Britannica references the research of
  Arnold J. Toynbee, an intelligence officer of the British Foreign
  Office, who estimated that 600,000 Armenians "died or were
  massacred during deportation" in the years 1915–1916.
• The Republic of Turkey's formal stance is that the deaths of
  Armenians during the "relocation" or "deportation" cannot aptly
  be deemed "genocide," a position that has been supported with
  a plethora of diverging justifications: that the killings were not
  deliberate or were not governmentally orchestrated, that the
  killings were justified because Armenians posed a Russian-
  sympathizing threat
The Eastern Front of the War
• The Eastern Front was a theatre of war during
  World War I in Central and, primarily, Eastern
  Europe.
• In Russian sources, the war was sometimes
  called the Second Fatherland War
• Started under Czar Nicholas II & will end with
  the rise of Lenin and the collapse of The
  Russian Empire, as Lenin will get Russian out
  of the war(Treaty of Brest-Litovsk)
The Eastern Front
• Russian army moved into
  Eastern Germany on
  August 30, 1914
   – Defeated
• The Austrians kicked out
  of Serbia
• Italians attacked Austria
  in 1915
• G. came to Austrian aid
  and pushed Russians
  back 300 miles into own
  territory

More Related Content

What's hot

WWI presentation
WWI presentationWWI presentation
WWI presentationbharris20
 
World War 1
World War 1World War 1
World War 1chrdavi
 
WWII and The Holocaust
WWII and The HolocaustWWII and The Holocaust
WWII and The Holocaustklgriffin
 
Origins of World War I
Origins of World War IOrigins of World War I
Origins of World War Irakochy
 
The Rise of Hitler ppt
The Rise of Hitler pptThe Rise of Hitler ppt
The Rise of Hitler pptquillinn
 
World War One: Paris Peace Settlement, Treaty of Versailles, 1919
World War One: Paris Peace Settlement, Treaty of Versailles, 1919World War One: Paris Peace Settlement, Treaty of Versailles, 1919
World War One: Paris Peace Settlement, Treaty of Versailles, 1919cinbarnsley
 
Causes of ww1
Causes of ww1Causes of ww1
Causes of ww1MrWaugh7
 
D Day Invasion
D Day InvasionD Day Invasion
D Day InvasionBen Dover
 
Truman Doctrine and Marshall Plan
Truman Doctrine and Marshall PlanTruman Doctrine and Marshall Plan
Truman Doctrine and Marshall Planalmiklas
 
THE ROAD TO WAR 1939 - RHINELAND 1936
THE ROAD TO WAR 1939 - RHINELAND 1936THE ROAD TO WAR 1939 - RHINELAND 1936
THE ROAD TO WAR 1939 - RHINELAND 1936George Dumitrache
 
The Treaty Of Versailles
The Treaty Of VersaillesThe Treaty Of Versailles
The Treaty Of Versaillesguest0a59f4
 
The aftermath of first world war
The aftermath of first world warThe aftermath of first world war
The aftermath of first world warMaria Jesus Campos
 
World war i timeline
World war i timelineWorld war i timeline
World war i timelinelherzl
 
HISTORY YEAR 10: CAUSES OF WORLD WAR 1
HISTORY YEAR 10: CAUSES OF WORLD WAR 1 HISTORY YEAR 10: CAUSES OF WORLD WAR 1
HISTORY YEAR 10: CAUSES OF WORLD WAR 1 George Dumitrache
 
US Enters WWI
US Enters WWIUS Enters WWI
US Enters WWIGreg Sill
 

What's hot (20)

D Day
D DayD Day
D Day
 
WWI presentation
WWI presentationWWI presentation
WWI presentation
 
World War 2
World War 2World War 2
World War 2
 
World War 1
World War 1World War 1
World War 1
 
WWII and The Holocaust
WWII and The HolocaustWWII and The Holocaust
WWII and The Holocaust
 
Origins of World War I
Origins of World War IOrigins of World War I
Origins of World War I
 
The Suez Crisis
The Suez CrisisThe Suez Crisis
The Suez Crisis
 
The Rise of Hitler ppt
The Rise of Hitler pptThe Rise of Hitler ppt
The Rise of Hitler ppt
 
World War One: Paris Peace Settlement, Treaty of Versailles, 1919
World War One: Paris Peace Settlement, Treaty of Versailles, 1919World War One: Paris Peace Settlement, Treaty of Versailles, 1919
World War One: Paris Peace Settlement, Treaty of Versailles, 1919
 
Causes of ww1
Causes of ww1Causes of ww1
Causes of ww1
 
D Day Invasion
D Day InvasionD Day Invasion
D Day Invasion
 
Truman Doctrine and Marshall Plan
Truman Doctrine and Marshall PlanTruman Doctrine and Marshall Plan
Truman Doctrine and Marshall Plan
 
THE ROAD TO WAR 1939 - RHINELAND 1936
THE ROAD TO WAR 1939 - RHINELAND 1936THE ROAD TO WAR 1939 - RHINELAND 1936
THE ROAD TO WAR 1939 - RHINELAND 1936
 
The Treaty Of Versailles
The Treaty Of VersaillesThe Treaty Of Versailles
The Treaty Of Versailles
 
The aftermath of first world war
The aftermath of first world warThe aftermath of first world war
The aftermath of first world war
 
World war i timeline
World war i timelineWorld war i timeline
World war i timeline
 
HISTORY YEAR 10: CAUSES OF WORLD WAR 1
HISTORY YEAR 10: CAUSES OF WORLD WAR 1 HISTORY YEAR 10: CAUSES OF WORLD WAR 1
HISTORY YEAR 10: CAUSES OF WORLD WAR 1
 
US Enters WWI
US Enters WWIUS Enters WWI
US Enters WWI
 
32 4 the allied victory
32 4 the allied victory32 4 the allied victory
32 4 the allied victory
 
Trench Warfare PPT
Trench Warfare PPTTrench Warfare PPT
Trench Warfare PPT
 

Viewers also liked

World War 1 PowerPoint (US Perspective)
World War 1 PowerPoint (US Perspective)World War 1 PowerPoint (US Perspective)
World War 1 PowerPoint (US Perspective)Cassidy Baker
 
Judge ch15 lecture
Judge ch15 lectureJudge ch15 lecture
Judge ch15 lecturejaske78
 
The Tanks In Ww1
The Tanks In Ww1The Tanks In Ww1
The Tanks In Ww1bill balina
 
Unit 8 - The First World War- 4º bil
Unit 8 - The First World War-   4º bilUnit 8 - The First World War-   4º bil
Unit 8 - The First World War- 4º bilRocío G.
 
The Causes of the First World War: Alliance Systems, Morocco, The Balkans
The Causes of the First World War: Alliance Systems, Morocco, The BalkansThe Causes of the First World War: Alliance Systems, Morocco, The Balkans
The Causes of the First World War: Alliance Systems, Morocco, The BalkansMissAnaHall
 
1 the main causes of wwi slideshare version
1 the main causes of wwi slideshare version1 the main causes of wwi slideshare version
1 the main causes of wwi slideshare versiondumouchelle
 
WORLD WAR 1 CAUSES AND EFFECTS
WORLD WAR 1 CAUSES AND EFFECTSWORLD WAR 1 CAUSES AND EFFECTS
WORLD WAR 1 CAUSES AND EFFECTSJason Pacaway
 
Italian and German Unification
Italian and German UnificationItalian and German Unification
Italian and German UnificationPaqui Sánchez
 

Viewers also liked (13)

World War 1 PowerPoint (US Perspective)
World War 1 PowerPoint (US Perspective)World War 1 PowerPoint (US Perspective)
World War 1 PowerPoint (US Perspective)
 
Judge ch15 lecture
Judge ch15 lectureJudge ch15 lecture
Judge ch15 lecture
 
Mongolia
MongoliaMongolia
Mongolia
 
The Tanks In Ww1
The Tanks In Ww1The Tanks In Ww1
The Tanks In Ww1
 
The Balkan wars
The Balkan warsThe Balkan wars
The Balkan wars
 
WWI Causes Notes
WWI Causes NotesWWI Causes Notes
WWI Causes Notes
 
Unit 8 - The First World War- 4º bil
Unit 8 - The First World War-   4º bilUnit 8 - The First World War-   4º bil
Unit 8 - The First World War- 4º bil
 
PPT - First World War - IIB1
PPT - First World War - IIB1PPT - First World War - IIB1
PPT - First World War - IIB1
 
The Causes of the First World War: Alliance Systems, Morocco, The Balkans
The Causes of the First World War: Alliance Systems, Morocco, The BalkansThe Causes of the First World War: Alliance Systems, Morocco, The Balkans
The Causes of the First World War: Alliance Systems, Morocco, The Balkans
 
1 the main causes of wwi slideshare version
1 the main causes of wwi slideshare version1 the main causes of wwi slideshare version
1 the main causes of wwi slideshare version
 
WWI Powerpoint
WWI PowerpointWWI Powerpoint
WWI Powerpoint
 
WORLD WAR 1 CAUSES AND EFFECTS
WORLD WAR 1 CAUSES AND EFFECTSWORLD WAR 1 CAUSES AND EFFECTS
WORLD WAR 1 CAUSES AND EFFECTS
 
Italian and German Unification
Italian and German UnificationItalian and German Unification
Italian and German Unification
 

Similar to Wwi ppt-maz-a_ppt1

WORLD WAR ONE SLIDE SHOW, STUDENTS ARE TO WATCH AND BE READY FOR TEST TO FOLLOW
WORLD WAR ONE SLIDE SHOW, STUDENTS ARE TO WATCH AND BE READY FOR TEST TO FOLLOWWORLD WAR ONE SLIDE SHOW, STUDENTS ARE TO WATCH AND BE READY FOR TEST TO FOLLOW
WORLD WAR ONE SLIDE SHOW, STUDENTS ARE TO WATCH AND BE READY FOR TEST TO FOLLOWdemetrickcheairs
 
Wwimania 090324132710-phpapp01
Wwimania 090324132710-phpapp01Wwimania 090324132710-phpapp01
Wwimania 090324132710-phpapp01JessieNorth1
 
War and society, 1914-1920
War and society, 1914-1920War and society, 1914-1920
War and society, 1914-1920afrancksjrcs
 
Ch.20 WW1
Ch.20 WW1Ch.20 WW1
Ch.20 WW1cmonafu
 
Hogan's History- World War I [Updated 18 Apr 2015]
Hogan's History- World War I [Updated 18 Apr 2015]Hogan's History- World War I [Updated 18 Apr 2015]
Hogan's History- World War I [Updated 18 Apr 2015]William Hogan
 
Causesof wwi
Causesof wwiCausesof wwi
Causesof wwitar358
 
Causes of World War One
Causes of World War OneCauses of World War One
Causes of World War OneLewisGray14
 
CausesWorldWarI.ppt
CausesWorldWarI.pptCausesWorldWarI.ppt
CausesWorldWarI.pptlmoss
 

Similar to Wwi ppt-maz-a_ppt1 (20)

World War I
World  War IWorld  War I
World War I
 
WORLD WAR ONE SLIDE SHOW, STUDENTS ARE TO WATCH AND BE READY FOR TEST TO FOLLOW
WORLD WAR ONE SLIDE SHOW, STUDENTS ARE TO WATCH AND BE READY FOR TEST TO FOLLOWWORLD WAR ONE SLIDE SHOW, STUDENTS ARE TO WATCH AND BE READY FOR TEST TO FOLLOW
WORLD WAR ONE SLIDE SHOW, STUDENTS ARE TO WATCH AND BE READY FOR TEST TO FOLLOW
 
World war one
World war oneWorld war one
World war one
 
WWI
WWI WWI
WWI
 
Wwimania 090324132710-phpapp01
Wwimania 090324132710-phpapp01Wwimania 090324132710-phpapp01
Wwimania 090324132710-phpapp01
 
War and society, 1914-1920
War and society, 1914-1920War and society, 1914-1920
War and society, 1914-1920
 
Ch.20 WW1
Ch.20 WW1Ch.20 WW1
Ch.20 WW1
 
Causes of WW1
Causes of WW1Causes of WW1
Causes of WW1
 
Hogan's History- World War I [Updated 18 Apr 2015]
Hogan's History- World War I [Updated 18 Apr 2015]Hogan's History- World War I [Updated 18 Apr 2015]
Hogan's History- World War I [Updated 18 Apr 2015]
 
Unit 7 ww1
Unit 7 ww1Unit 7 ww1
Unit 7 ww1
 
Road_to_WWI.ppt
Road_to_WWI.pptRoad_to_WWI.ppt
Road_to_WWI.ppt
 
Wwi
WwiWwi
Wwi
 
Ch 19 WWI
Ch 19 WWICh 19 WWI
Ch 19 WWI
 
Road to WWI PPT (1).pptx
Road to WWI  PPT (1).pptxRoad to WWI  PPT (1).pptx
Road to WWI PPT (1).pptx
 
Causesof wwi
Causesof wwiCausesof wwi
Causesof wwi
 
World war I
World war IWorld war I
World war I
 
Causes of World War One
Causes of World War OneCauses of World War One
Causes of World War One
 
World War I
World War IWorld War I
World War I
 
The great war
The great warThe great war
The great war
 
CausesWorldWarI.ppt
CausesWorldWarI.pptCausesWorldWarI.ppt
CausesWorldWarI.ppt
 

More from Kenan Rajjoub (20)

Ww ipt 2
Ww ipt 2Ww ipt 2
Ww ipt 2
 
Ch. 24 austria--russia nationalism
Ch. 24  austria--russia nationalismCh. 24  austria--russia nationalism
Ch. 24 austria--russia nationalism
 
'12 t. herzl zionism
'12  t. herzl zionism'12  t. herzl zionism
'12 t. herzl zionism
 
Unif. of italy
Unif. of italyUnif. of italy
Unif. of italy
 
Ap ch.20
Ap ch.20Ap ch.20
Ap ch.20
 
Ap ch. 17 enlight.teach.copy-lect.1
Ap ch. 17 enlight.teach.copy-lect.1Ap ch. 17 enlight.teach.copy-lect.1
Ap ch. 17 enlight.teach.copy-lect.1
 
Ch.16
Ch.16Ch.16
Ch.16
 
Apeh ch. 17-sc.rev.teacher-sc.rev
Apeh ch. 17-sc.rev.teacher-sc.revApeh ch. 17-sc.rev.teacher-sc.rev
Apeh ch. 17-sc.rev.teacher-sc.rev
 
Constiutionalism
ConstiutionalismConstiutionalism
Constiutionalism
 
Ch.16
Ch.16Ch.16
Ch.16
 
Ch.16
Ch.16Ch.16
Ch.16
 
Constiutionalism
ConstiutionalismConstiutionalism
Constiutionalism
 
'11 ap exploration
'11 ap exploration'11 ap exploration
'11 ap exploration
 
Baroque + #44 50
Baroque + #44 50Baroque + #44 50
Baroque + #44 50
 
Ch14 ref
Ch14 refCh14 ref
Ch14 ref
 
Ch.13 ren. ap
Ch.13 ren. apCh.13 ren. ap
Ch.13 ren. ap
 
#6 7 race-ethnicity
#6 7 race-ethnicity#6 7 race-ethnicity
#6 7 race-ethnicity
 
#5 m.ages
#5 m.ages#5 m.ages
#5 m.ages
 
Ap m.ages#3 4
Ap m.ages#3 4Ap m.ages#3 4
Ap m.ages#3 4
 
The middle ages #2
The middle ages #2The middle ages #2
The middle ages #2
 

Recently uploaded

2024 02 15 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes_FINAL_20240228.docx
2024 02 15 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes_FINAL_20240228.docx2024 02 15 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes_FINAL_20240228.docx
2024 02 15 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes_FINAL_20240228.docxkfjstone13
 
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Rajokri Delhi >༒8448380779 Escort Service
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Rajokri Delhi >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceEnjoy Night⚡Call Girls Rajokri Delhi >༒8448380779 Escort Service
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Rajokri Delhi >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceDelhi Call girls
 
Nurturing Families, Empowering Lives: TDP's Vision for Family Welfare in Andh...
Nurturing Families, Empowering Lives: TDP's Vision for Family Welfare in Andh...Nurturing Families, Empowering Lives: TDP's Vision for Family Welfare in Andh...
Nurturing Families, Empowering Lives: TDP's Vision for Family Welfare in Andh...narsireddynannuri1
 
Nara Chandrababu Naidu's Visionary Policies For Andhra Pradesh's Development
Nara Chandrababu Naidu's Visionary Policies For Andhra Pradesh's DevelopmentNara Chandrababu Naidu's Visionary Policies For Andhra Pradesh's Development
Nara Chandrababu Naidu's Visionary Policies For Andhra Pradesh's Developmentnarsireddynannuri1
 
Dynamics of Destructive Polarisation in Mainstream and Social Media: The Case...
Dynamics of Destructive Polarisation in Mainstream and Social Media: The Case...Dynamics of Destructive Polarisation in Mainstream and Social Media: The Case...
Dynamics of Destructive Polarisation in Mainstream and Social Media: The Case...Axel Bruns
 
HARNESSING AI FOR ENHANCED MEDIA ANALYSIS A CASE STUDY ON CHATGPT AT DRONE EM...
HARNESSING AI FOR ENHANCED MEDIA ANALYSIS A CASE STUDY ON CHATGPT AT DRONE EM...HARNESSING AI FOR ENHANCED MEDIA ANALYSIS A CASE STUDY ON CHATGPT AT DRONE EM...
HARNESSING AI FOR ENHANCED MEDIA ANALYSIS A CASE STUDY ON CHATGPT AT DRONE EM...Ismail Fahmi
 
Beyond Afrocentrism: Prerequisites for Somalia to lead African de-colonizatio...
Beyond Afrocentrism: Prerequisites for Somalia to lead African de-colonizatio...Beyond Afrocentrism: Prerequisites for Somalia to lead African de-colonizatio...
Beyond Afrocentrism: Prerequisites for Somalia to lead African de-colonizatio...Muhammad Shamsaddin Megalommatis
 
KAHULUGAN AT KAHALAGAHAN NG GAWAING PANSIBIKO.pptx
KAHULUGAN AT KAHALAGAHAN NG GAWAING PANSIBIKO.pptxKAHULUGAN AT KAHALAGAHAN NG GAWAING PANSIBIKO.pptx
KAHULUGAN AT KAHALAGAHAN NG GAWAING PANSIBIKO.pptxjohnandrewcarlos
 
Lorenzo D'Emidio_Lavoro sullaNorth Korea .pptx
Lorenzo D'Emidio_Lavoro sullaNorth Korea .pptxLorenzo D'Emidio_Lavoro sullaNorth Korea .pptx
Lorenzo D'Emidio_Lavoro sullaNorth Korea .pptxlorenzodemidio01
 
How Europe Underdeveloped Africa_walter.pdf
How Europe Underdeveloped Africa_walter.pdfHow Europe Underdeveloped Africa_walter.pdf
How Europe Underdeveloped Africa_walter.pdfLorenzo Lemes
 
Defensa de JOH insiste que testimonio de analista de la DEA es falso y solici...
Defensa de JOH insiste que testimonio de analista de la DEA es falso y solici...Defensa de JOH insiste que testimonio de analista de la DEA es falso y solici...
Defensa de JOH insiste que testimonio de analista de la DEA es falso y solici...AlexisTorres963861
 
Israel Palestine Conflict, The issue and historical context!
Israel Palestine Conflict, The issue and historical context!Israel Palestine Conflict, The issue and historical context!
Israel Palestine Conflict, The issue and historical context!Krish109503
 
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Indirapuram Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Indirapuram Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceBDSM⚡Call Girls in Indirapuram Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Indirapuram Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceDelhi Call girls
 
Minto-Morley Reforms 1909 (constitution).pptx
Minto-Morley Reforms 1909 (constitution).pptxMinto-Morley Reforms 1909 (constitution).pptx
Minto-Morley Reforms 1909 (constitution).pptxAwaiskhalid96
 
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 143 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 143 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceBDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 143 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 143 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceDelhi Call girls
 
如何办理(BU学位证书)美国贝翰文大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(BU学位证书)美国贝翰文大学毕业证学位证书如何办理(BU学位证书)美国贝翰文大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(BU学位证书)美国贝翰文大学毕业证学位证书Fi L
 
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Iffco Chowk Gurgaon >༒8448380779 Escort Service
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Iffco Chowk Gurgaon >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceEnjoy Night⚡Call Girls Iffco Chowk Gurgaon >༒8448380779 Escort Service
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Iffco Chowk Gurgaon >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceDelhi Call girls
 
Kishan Reddy Report To People (2019-24).pdf
Kishan Reddy Report To People (2019-24).pdfKishan Reddy Report To People (2019-24).pdf
Kishan Reddy Report To People (2019-24).pdfKISHAN REDDY OFFICE
 
₹5.5k {Cash Payment} Independent Greater Noida Call Girls In [Delhi INAYA] 🔝|...
₹5.5k {Cash Payment} Independent Greater Noida Call Girls In [Delhi INAYA] 🔝|...₹5.5k {Cash Payment} Independent Greater Noida Call Girls In [Delhi INAYA] 🔝|...
₹5.5k {Cash Payment} Independent Greater Noida Call Girls In [Delhi INAYA] 🔝|...Diya Sharma
 
29042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
29042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf29042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
29042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
 

Recently uploaded (20)

2024 02 15 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes_FINAL_20240228.docx
2024 02 15 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes_FINAL_20240228.docx2024 02 15 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes_FINAL_20240228.docx
2024 02 15 AZ GOP LD4 Gen Meeting Minutes_FINAL_20240228.docx
 
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Rajokri Delhi >༒8448380779 Escort Service
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Rajokri Delhi >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceEnjoy Night⚡Call Girls Rajokri Delhi >༒8448380779 Escort Service
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Rajokri Delhi >༒8448380779 Escort Service
 
Nurturing Families, Empowering Lives: TDP's Vision for Family Welfare in Andh...
Nurturing Families, Empowering Lives: TDP's Vision for Family Welfare in Andh...Nurturing Families, Empowering Lives: TDP's Vision for Family Welfare in Andh...
Nurturing Families, Empowering Lives: TDP's Vision for Family Welfare in Andh...
 
Nara Chandrababu Naidu's Visionary Policies For Andhra Pradesh's Development
Nara Chandrababu Naidu's Visionary Policies For Andhra Pradesh's DevelopmentNara Chandrababu Naidu's Visionary Policies For Andhra Pradesh's Development
Nara Chandrababu Naidu's Visionary Policies For Andhra Pradesh's Development
 
Dynamics of Destructive Polarisation in Mainstream and Social Media: The Case...
Dynamics of Destructive Polarisation in Mainstream and Social Media: The Case...Dynamics of Destructive Polarisation in Mainstream and Social Media: The Case...
Dynamics of Destructive Polarisation in Mainstream and Social Media: The Case...
 
HARNESSING AI FOR ENHANCED MEDIA ANALYSIS A CASE STUDY ON CHATGPT AT DRONE EM...
HARNESSING AI FOR ENHANCED MEDIA ANALYSIS A CASE STUDY ON CHATGPT AT DRONE EM...HARNESSING AI FOR ENHANCED MEDIA ANALYSIS A CASE STUDY ON CHATGPT AT DRONE EM...
HARNESSING AI FOR ENHANCED MEDIA ANALYSIS A CASE STUDY ON CHATGPT AT DRONE EM...
 
Beyond Afrocentrism: Prerequisites for Somalia to lead African de-colonizatio...
Beyond Afrocentrism: Prerequisites for Somalia to lead African de-colonizatio...Beyond Afrocentrism: Prerequisites for Somalia to lead African de-colonizatio...
Beyond Afrocentrism: Prerequisites for Somalia to lead African de-colonizatio...
 
KAHULUGAN AT KAHALAGAHAN NG GAWAING PANSIBIKO.pptx
KAHULUGAN AT KAHALAGAHAN NG GAWAING PANSIBIKO.pptxKAHULUGAN AT KAHALAGAHAN NG GAWAING PANSIBIKO.pptx
KAHULUGAN AT KAHALAGAHAN NG GAWAING PANSIBIKO.pptx
 
Lorenzo D'Emidio_Lavoro sullaNorth Korea .pptx
Lorenzo D'Emidio_Lavoro sullaNorth Korea .pptxLorenzo D'Emidio_Lavoro sullaNorth Korea .pptx
Lorenzo D'Emidio_Lavoro sullaNorth Korea .pptx
 
How Europe Underdeveloped Africa_walter.pdf
How Europe Underdeveloped Africa_walter.pdfHow Europe Underdeveloped Africa_walter.pdf
How Europe Underdeveloped Africa_walter.pdf
 
Defensa de JOH insiste que testimonio de analista de la DEA es falso y solici...
Defensa de JOH insiste que testimonio de analista de la DEA es falso y solici...Defensa de JOH insiste que testimonio de analista de la DEA es falso y solici...
Defensa de JOH insiste que testimonio de analista de la DEA es falso y solici...
 
Israel Palestine Conflict, The issue and historical context!
Israel Palestine Conflict, The issue and historical context!Israel Palestine Conflict, The issue and historical context!
Israel Palestine Conflict, The issue and historical context!
 
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Indirapuram Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Indirapuram Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceBDSM⚡Call Girls in Indirapuram Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Indirapuram Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
 
Minto-Morley Reforms 1909 (constitution).pptx
Minto-Morley Reforms 1909 (constitution).pptxMinto-Morley Reforms 1909 (constitution).pptx
Minto-Morley Reforms 1909 (constitution).pptx
 
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 143 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 143 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceBDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 143 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
BDSM⚡Call Girls in Sector 143 Noida Escorts >༒8448380779 Escort Service
 
如何办理(BU学位证书)美国贝翰文大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(BU学位证书)美国贝翰文大学毕业证学位证书如何办理(BU学位证书)美国贝翰文大学毕业证学位证书
如何办理(BU学位证书)美国贝翰文大学毕业证学位证书
 
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Iffco Chowk Gurgaon >༒8448380779 Escort Service
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Iffco Chowk Gurgaon >༒8448380779 Escort ServiceEnjoy Night⚡Call Girls Iffco Chowk Gurgaon >༒8448380779 Escort Service
Enjoy Night⚡Call Girls Iffco Chowk Gurgaon >༒8448380779 Escort Service
 
Kishan Reddy Report To People (2019-24).pdf
Kishan Reddy Report To People (2019-24).pdfKishan Reddy Report To People (2019-24).pdf
Kishan Reddy Report To People (2019-24).pdf
 
₹5.5k {Cash Payment} Independent Greater Noida Call Girls In [Delhi INAYA] 🔝|...
₹5.5k {Cash Payment} Independent Greater Noida Call Girls In [Delhi INAYA] 🔝|...₹5.5k {Cash Payment} Independent Greater Noida Call Girls In [Delhi INAYA] 🔝|...
₹5.5k {Cash Payment} Independent Greater Noida Call Girls In [Delhi INAYA] 🔝|...
 
29042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
29042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf29042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
29042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
 

Wwi ppt-maz-a_ppt1

  • 1. The Great War: 1914-1918
  • 2. C a u s e s o f W o r l d M A N II- - A Wa r - M ilitarism – policy of building up strong military forces to prepare for war A lliances - agreements between nations to aid and protect one another N ationalism – pride in or devotion to one’s country I mperialism – when one country takes over another country economically and politically A ssassination – murder of Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand
  • 4. NationalismPan-Slavism: The Balkans, 1914 The “Powder Keg” of Europe
  • 5. Causes of World War I - Nationalism Pan-Slavism  - movement to unify all of the Slavic people
  • 6. Causes of World War I - Nationalism Pan-Germanism  - movement to unify the people of all German speaking countries Germanic Countries Austria * Luxembourg Belgium Netherlands Denmark Norway Iceland Sweden Germany * Switzerland * Liechtenstein * United Kingdom * = German speaking country
  • 8. Causes of World War I - Imperialism
  • 9. Causes of World War I - Imperialism
  • 11. Causes of World War I – Alliances-map, Triple Entente: page 816 Triple Alliance: Great Britain Germany France Austria-Hungary Tension Russia Italy
  • 12. Order of International Crises leading to the assassination!! • European powers…before WWI confronted each other in a series of diplomatic clashes that could have resulted in war. • Moroccan Crisis of 1905: (also known as the Tangier Crisis) was the international crisis over the international status of Morocco between March 1905 and May 1906. Kaiser Wilhelm II protested Fr. dominance of Morocco, a Territory considered by the Fr. to be a private sphere of Influence. Wilhelm II advocated Moroccan indep. & sent a warship to the country.
  • 13. Balkans Crisis of 1908-09 • The Balkan Crisis of 1908 was the Annexation of Bosnia by Austria-Hungary despite the vocal complaints from the Serbs who wanted the territory with its 3 million Serbs. Map, pg. 820 • Russia sides with Serbia • Crisis is checked when Germany joined Austria’s cause & balanced the Russian threat.
  • 14. Second Moroccan Crisis 1911 • Also known as the Agadir Crisis, or the Panther Sprung • the international tension sparked by the deployment of the German gunboat Panther, to the Moroccan port of Agadir on July 1, 1911 Gunboat Panther on Agadir harbor
  • 15. First Balkan War 1912-13 • pitted the Balkan League (Serbia, Greece, Montenegro and Bulgaria) against the Ottoman Empire
  • 16. Second Balkan War 1913 • Serbia(backed by Russia), Montenegro, Greece, Rumania, & Turkey joined to defeat Bulgaria. • This crisies brought Russia & Serbia closer together & intensified the animosity of Russia & Serbia for the A- H empire
  • 17. Sarajevo, Bosnia – June 28, 1914
  • 18. Causes of World War I - Assassination
  • 19. Causes of World War I - Assassination Archduke Franz Ferdinand and Duchess Sophie Sarajevo, Bosnia - June 28th, 1914.
  • 20.
  • 21. Causes of World War I - Assassination Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand was killed in Bosnia by a Serbian nationalist who believed that Bosnia should belong to Serbia.
  • 22. The Assassination! June 28, 1914 Black Hand (Serbian: Црна рука, Crna ruka), officially Unity or Death
  • 23. Causes of World War I - Assassination Gavrilo Princip after his assassination of Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand.
  • 24.
  • 25. COUNTRIES TAKE A SIDE • Shocked Francis Joseph blames Serbia, feels Serb Gov’t knew of the plot • Believed that Serbia wanted south Slav empire • Wanted to deal harshly with the Serbs • Needed German backing first • Kaiser Wilhelm II told Austria that Germany would support any action they saw fit • Essentially giving Austria a blank check to do anything.
  • 26. AUSTRIA vs. SERBIA • Austria sends Serbia a severe ultimatum or final set of demands 7/23/14 • Serbia must end all anti-Austrian agitation and punish and Serbian official involved in the murder. • Dismiss all officials hostile to Austria-Hungary • Allow Austrian officials into Serbia to investigate the Archduke’s murder themselves • Serbia agrees to all of the terms except the last, rejecting it as an infringement on Serbian sovereignty. • 7/28/14 Austria and declares war on the Serbs—1 Month after the assassination!!
  • 27. “Blank Check” • Germany issues “blank check” to Austria • Will back her up no matter what course they take • Serbia agree’s to most terms but wants to negotiate others • A-Hungaryabsolutely not! • July 28, 1914 Austria declares war on Serbia!!
  • 28. The Point of No Return: The Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand Austria blamed Serbia for Ferdinand’s death and declared war on Serbia. Germany pledged their support for Austria -Hungary. · example of Pan-German nationalism Russia pledged their support for Serbia. · example of Pan-Slavic nationalism
  • 29. The Point of No Return: The Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand Germany declares war on Russia. France pledges their support for Russia. Germany declares war on France. Germany invades Belgium on the way to France. Great Britain supports Belgium and declares war on Germany.
  • 30. The Major Players: 1914-17 Allied Powers: Central Powers: Nicholas II [Rus] Wilhelm II [Ger] George V [Br] Victor Emmanuel II [It] Enver Pasha [Turkey] Pres. Poincare [Fr] Franz Josef [A-H]
  • 31. Allied Powers: Central Powers: Great Britain Germany France Austria-Hungary World War I Russia Ottoman Empire Italy
  • 32. July 28, 1914 – Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia July 30, 1914 – Russia prepared to defend Serbia August 1, 1914 – Germany declares war on Russia
  • 33. August 3, 1914 – Germany declared war on France August 3, 1914 – Germany invaded neutral Belgium August 4, 1914 – British declared war on Germany
  • 34. WWI: A “FAMILY AFFAIR” • many of the European monarchies - many of which fell during the war (including those of Russia, Germany and Austria-Hungary) - were inter-related • The British monarch George V's predecessor, Edward VII, was the German Kaiser's uncle and, via his wife's sister, uncle of the Russian Tsar as well. His niece, Alexandra, was the Tsar's wife. Edward's daughter, Maud, was the Norwegian Queen, and his niece, Ena, Queen of Spain; Marie, a further niece, was to become Queen of Romania.
  • 35. Lecture 2: Course of the war • Schlieffen Plan • Maginot Line • Trench Warfare • New Kind of War • “Total War” • Slaughter • Battles
  • 36. “The lamps are going out all over Europe; we shall not see lit again in our lifetime.” British Foreign Minister Edward Grey What does this mean?
  • 38. Maginot Line After André Maginot (1877-1932), French Minister of War The Maginot Line was a line of concrete and steel defenses that stretched between Luxembourg and Switzerland along France's border with Germany How effective was it?????
  • 40. Legacy of the “line” • Considered one of the great failures of the war • Metaphor for someting that is relied upon despite being ineffectual
  • 41. STRATEGIES TRENCH WARFARE In trench warfare both armies could fight from fortified positions. It was a slow form of combat with heavy reliance on defense. The soldiers built complex trench and dugout systems and stocked them with weapons. Barbed wire protected the trenches. The space between opposing armies’ trenches was “no man’s land.” Attacks almost always resulted in injury and death for the attacking
  • 42. The Horror’s of Trench warfare • Confined to the western front in WWI • It has become a byword for stalemate in conflict, with a slow wearing down of opposing forces • Trenches & dugouts opposed each other, protected by barbed wire • “no man’s land-” land in between; not occupied! • One reason the war dragged on for 4 years!
  • 43. Trench Warfare Trench Warfare – type of fighting during World War I in which both sides dug trenches protected by mines and barbed wire; on the Western Front! Cross-section of a front-line trench
  • 44.
  • 45. British trench, France, July 1916 (during the Battle of the Somme)
  • 46. French soldiers firing over their own dead All Quiet on the Western Front – trench warfare (9:27)
  • 47. An aerial photograph of the opposing trenches and no-man's land in Artois, France, July 22, 1917. German trenches are at the right and bottom, British trenches are at the top left. The vertical line to the left of centre indicates the course of a pre-war road.
  • 48. Officers walking through a flooded communication trench.
  • 49. A photograph of a man suffering from trench foot.
  • 50. Soldiers digging trenches while protected against gas attacks
  • 51. War Is H E L L !!
  • 52. Trench Rats Many men killed in the trenches were buried almost where they fell. These corpses, as well as the food scraps that littered the trenches, attracted rats. Quotes from soldiers fighting in the trenches: "The rats were huge. They were so big they would eat a wounded man if he couldn't defend himself." "I saw some rats running from under the dead men's greatcoats, enormous rats, fat with human flesh. My heart pounded as we edged towards one of the bodies. His helmet had rolled off. The man displayed a grimacing face, stripped of flesh; the skull bare, the eyes devoured and from the yawning mouth leapt a rat."
  • 53. Rats
  • 54. Schematic Illustration of trenches from a French magazine.
  • 56. All is Quiet on the Western Front Film Released 1930 • All Quiet on the Western Front is a novel by Erich Maria Remarque, a German veteran of World War I, who experienced trench warfare first-hand, wrote about the horrors of that war and also the deep detachment from German civilian life felt by many men returning from the front. The book was first published in German as Im Westen nichts Neues in January 1929.
  • 57. Weapons of War WORLD WAR 1 WAS THE FIRST MODERN WAR. THERE WERE MANY DIFFERENT VARIETIES OF BATTLE EQUIPMENT. THERE WERE MANY TYPES OF NEW, DIFFERENT KINDS OF GUNS SUCH AS , MACHINE GUNS, LEBELM1866.THERE WERE NEW WAYS OF BATTLE TECHNOLOGY SUCH AS TANKS ,PLANES AND EXPLOSIVES. THESE NEW TECHNOLOGIES WERE WAYS THAT MADE WW 1 THE FIRST MODERN WAR.
  • 58. New Weapons of War Poisonous Gas Tanks Airplanes • German military • When soldiers • Both sides used scientists planes to map and began to carry gas to attack trenches experimented with masks, they still from above. gas as a weapon. faced a stalemate. • Planes first • Gas in battle was dropped brinks and risky: Soldiers didn’t • British forces soon heavy objects on know how much to developed armored enemy troops. use, and wind tanks to move into • Soon they changes could no-man’s-land. mounted guns and backfire the gas. bombs on planes. • These tanks had • Then Germans threw limited success • Skilled pilots canisters of gas into because many got sought in air the Allies’ trenches. battles called stuck in the mud. dogfights. • Many regretted using • Germans soon • The German Red gas, but British and French forces began found ways to Baron downed 80 destroy the tanks Allied planes, until using it too, to keep he was shot down. things even. with artillery fire.
  • 59. WEAPONS land hand grenade barbed wire ship/tank poison gas submarine Maxim machine gun bi- plane CICERO © 2008
  • 60. Rifle the main weapon used by British soldiers in the trenches was the bolt-action rifle. 15 rounds could be fired in a minute and a person 1,400 metres away could be killed.
  • 61. Machine Guns • Machine guns needed 4-6 men to work them and had to be on a flat surface. They had the fire- power of 100 guns. • Could fire anywhere from 400 to 600 rounds per minute. • Overheated and jammed easily. Had to be cooled with water or later with air.
  • 66. Poison gas • There types were used: – Chlorine- used at the Battle of Ypres in 1915 killing thousands. – Phosgene – Mustard- burned the lungs of the inhaler leaving them to die in agony.
  • 67. Gas The German army were the first to use chlorine gas at the battle of Ypres in 1915. Chlorine gas causes a burning sensation in the throat and chest pains. Death is painful - you suffocate! The problem with chlorine gas is that the weather must be right. If the wind is in the wrong direction it could end up killing your own troops rather than the enemy. Mustard gas was the most deadly weapon used. It was fired into the trenches in shells. It is colourless and takes 12 hours to take effect. Effects include: blistering skin, vomiting, sore eyes, internal and external bleeding. Death can take up to 5 weeks.
  • 69. Artillery • These were the new versions of cannons. Never in the history of man were so many cannons used, than in WW1. • Germans developed a stronger artillery nicknamed “Big Bertha” • It could fire a shot at Paris from 120 km away. • Improved shells that would explode with tiny pellets.
  • 71. Advent of the Tank Tanks were used for the first time in the First World War at the Battle of the Somme. They were developed to cope with the conditions on the Western Front. The first tank was called 'Little Willie' and needed a crew of 3. Its maximum speed was 3mph and it could not cross trenches. The more modern tank was not developed until just before the end of the war. It could carry 10 men, had a revolving turret and could reach 4mph.
  • 72. Tanks • Tanks were known as “Chariots of God” • The first tanks were giant blocks of metal and would carry 1 to 2 people at speeds of 3-4 mph. • Scientist worked on this and by 1918 had developed a tank that would carry 8 men and fire 208 shells and 13,000 bullets. • These tanks were not reliable.
  • 74. Original British tank prototype "Little Willie"
  • 77. Planes • The Zeppelin, also known as blimp, was an airship that was used during the early part of the war in • New types of weapons use bombing raids by the in advanced warfare. Germans. They carried • Had everything from mini machine guns and bombs. scout planes to huge However, they were zeppelins. abandoned because they • At first they were used to were easy to shoot out of deliver bombs and for the sky. spying work but became fighter aircraft armed with machine guns, bombs and some times cannons. Fights between two planes in the sky became known as 'dogfights'
  • 78. Planes Planes were also used for the first time. At first they were used to deliver bombs and for spying work but became fighter aircraft armed with machine guns, bombs and some times cannons. Fights between two planes in the sky became known as 'dogfights'
  • 79. The Flying Aces of World War I Eddie Francesco Eddie “Mick” Rickenbacher, Barraco, It. Mannoch, Br. US Rene Pauk Manfred von Willy Coppens Fonck, Fr. Richtoffen, Ger. de [The “Red Holthust, Belg. Baron”]
  • 80. 2 Famous Flying Aces Manfred von Richthofen better known as the Red Baron. likely the most famous flying ace of all time This German fighter scored the most kills. Richthofen was killed just after 11 a.m. on 21 April 1918, while flying over Morlancourt Ridge, near the Somme River. Richthofen was hit by a single .303 bullet…then a crash landing. Controversy and contradictory hypotheses continue to surround the identity of the person who fired the shot that actually killed Richthofen.
  • 81. Looking for the “Red Baron?”
  • 82. 2 Famous Flying Ace nd •Eddie Rickenbacker •American fighter ace in WWI & Medal of Honor receipient •American "Ace of Aces." He recorded 26 official victories against German aircraft during World War I •pioneer in air transportation, particularly as the longtime head of Eastern Air Lines • In 1995, the United States Postal Service issued a postage stamp in honor of Rickenbacker's accomplishments as an aviation pioneer •He died in 1973, the same year he published Fighting the Flying Circus(Rickenbacker's account of the airwar during World War 1).
  • 83. Naval Units • British specialized in battleships • Germans specialized in submarines also called U-boats. • The primary weapon of a U-boat was a torpedo, self propelled under water missiles. • The Germans had 375 U- Boats in WW1.
  • 84. U-boats Torpedoes were used by submarines(U-boats). The Germans used torpedoes to blow up ships carrying supplies from America to Britain.
  • 85. Terms • Total war War activities which involved mass civilian populations that require rationing, employing both men & women in war industry, exciting society with propaganda • Victory gardens: vegetable, fruit & herb plants planted at private residences in US, Canada, & Br. During WWI & WW II. • Slaughter Describes extent of the killing, violence & destruction
  • 87. Battles • 1st Battle of the Marne(Sept. 1914) • Battle of Verdun(Feb.-Dec. 1916) • Battle of Jutland(May-June 1916) • Battle of the Somme(1916) • 2nd Battle of the Marne(Jul.-Aug. 1918) • REFER TO CLASS HANDOUT!
  • 88. OBJECTIVES ALLIED POWERS CENTRAL POWERS The main objective of the Allied The main objective of the Central Powers was to stop Germany and Powers was to acquire as much the Central Powers’ attempts to land as possible in Europe and expand their land in Europe and Asia. Germany believed France, Asia. The American conflict with England, and Russia prevented Germany stemmed from Germany’s violation of a neutrality its expansion. Germany was agreement when German determined to expand its submarines attacked American borders. passenger ships.
  • 89. Armenian Atrocities during WW I- pg. 826-827 • aka.,Armenian Holocaust, the Armenian Massacres • deliberate and systematic destruction (genocide) of the Armenian population of the Ottoman Empire during and just after World War • one of the first modern genocides • the second most-studied case of genocide after the Holocaust • starting date of the genocide is conventionally held to be April 24, 1915
  • 90. Turkish Genocide Against Armenians A Portent (omen) of Future Horrors to Come!
  • 91. Armenian Atrocities, con’t • Ottoman military uprooted Armenians from their homes and forced them to march for hundreds of miles, depriving them of food and water, to the desert of what is now Syria. • The Republic of Turkey, the successor state of the Ottoman Empire, denies the word genocide is an accurate description of the events The remains of Armenians massacred at Erzinjan-
  • 92. Results • Estimates vary between 300,000 (per the modern Turkish state) to 1,500,000 (per modern Armenia, Argentina, and other states). Encyclopædia Britannica references the research of Arnold J. Toynbee, an intelligence officer of the British Foreign Office, who estimated that 600,000 Armenians "died or were massacred during deportation" in the years 1915–1916. • The Republic of Turkey's formal stance is that the deaths of Armenians during the "relocation" or "deportation" cannot aptly be deemed "genocide," a position that has been supported with a plethora of diverging justifications: that the killings were not deliberate or were not governmentally orchestrated, that the killings were justified because Armenians posed a Russian- sympathizing threat
  • 93. The Eastern Front of the War • The Eastern Front was a theatre of war during World War I in Central and, primarily, Eastern Europe. • In Russian sources, the war was sometimes called the Second Fatherland War • Started under Czar Nicholas II & will end with the rise of Lenin and the collapse of The Russian Empire, as Lenin will get Russian out of the war(Treaty of Brest-Litovsk)
  • 94. The Eastern Front • Russian army moved into Eastern Germany on August 30, 1914 – Defeated • The Austrians kicked out of Serbia • Italians attacked Austria in 1915 • G. came to Austrian aid and pushed Russians back 300 miles into own territory

Editor's Notes

  1. 1914 Bosnia was controlled by Austria-Hungary, and Serbia was independent. Some Serbs lived in Bosnia Archduke Francis Ferdinand,heir to the Austrian throne, was scheduled to visit Sarajevo, Bosnia on June 28, 1914
  2. Members of the Servian Terrorist group, The Black Hand, planned an assasination. They killed Ferdinand during a Motorcade through Sarajevo The Austrian Emperor, blamed Serbia for the murder of his nephew, and Issued an ultimatum to Serbia in order to avoid war: 1. Serbia must end all anti-Austrian Agitations 2. Serbia must punish any Serbian official involved in the murder plot. Serbia partially agreed – that was not enough July 28, 1914 – Austria declared war on Serbia
  3. July 30 – Pan Slavism August 1 – Germans demanded that Russia stop mobilization of troops, and the Russians refused August 3, Germany asked the French their intentions – the answer was that they “would act in accordance with its interests” August 3 – The Schlieffen Plan August 4 – British gave the Germans an ultimatum to withdraw from neutral Belgium. They rejected the ultimatum and Britain joined the war.