Unit VI. The Great War. D. The End WWI D. The End of World War I 1. Major Turning Points of the War...

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Unit VI. The Great

Transcript of Unit VI. The Great War. D. The End WWI D. The End of World War I 1. Major Turning Points of the War...

Page 1: Unit VI. The Great War. D. The End WWI D. The End of World War I 1. Major Turning Points of the War a. Entry of the United States, April 6, 1917 *U.S.

Unit VI. The Great War

Page 2: Unit VI. The Great War. D. The End WWI D. The End of World War I 1. Major Turning Points of the War a. Entry of the United States, April 6, 1917 *U.S.

D. The End WWI

Page 3: Unit VI. The Great War. D. The End WWI D. The End of World War I 1. Major Turning Points of the War a. Entry of the United States, April 6, 1917 *U.S.

D. The End of World War I

1. Major Turning Points of the Wara. Entry of the United States, April 6, 1917

*U.S. had an isolationist foreign policy so had decided to remain neutral during WWI

*The gov’t had allowed American ships to carry supplies to the Allies

*In 1917, Germany used unrestricted submarine warfare*Entry of the U.S. refreshed Allied troops

and

helped win the war

b. Russia’s Withdrawal

*Dissatisfaction with the imperial gov’t and major economic issues resulted in the Bolshevik or Communist Revolution in 1917

-Czar Nicolas abdicated, he and his family were assassinated

-Early 1918, Russia’s new leader, Vladimir

Lenin signed a treaty with Germany that

took Russia out of the war

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E. The End of the Great War (cont’d)2. Costs of the War

a. On November 11, 1918, an armistice was declared

b. Human Casualties

*The cost of the war in terms of human lives were staggering

-More than 8.5 million people had died

-More than 17 million had been wounded

-Famine threatened most regions of Central Europe

-Disease was widespread and rampant in many regions (e.g. Influenza)

c. Economic Losses

*All over the world economic and political losses plagued nations

-Factories, farms, and home had been destroyed

-Nations had huge war debts to repay

-The Allies, bitter at the destruction, insisted that the central Powers make reparations

-Europe was “re-zoned” in many areas, new nations created

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E. The End of the Great War (cont’d)

3. The Treaty of Versailles, Jan 1919

a. The Paris Peace Conference

*Victorious Allies gathered at the Palace of

Versailles to work out terms of peace

*Each had different goals and expectations

-United States wanted to stress self-determination; wanted to create an international peace-keeping organization

-Britain and France wanted to punish Germany and prevent it from becoming a threat again

b. Harsh Provisions for Germany

*Britain and France governed most of the treaty’s provisions

*Territorial Losses

-Land taken from Germany; lost most of it’s overseas colonies

*Military Restrictions:

-Germany’s army and navy were drastically limited

-Had to remove its troops from the Rhineland

*War Guilt:

-Germany had to accept full responsibility for war and pay huge reparations

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E. The End of the Great War (cont’d)

4. The League of Nationsa. Formed by the Treaty of Versailles

*Pushed heavily by Pres. Wilson, but never joined by the United States

-Many Americans feared the League would drag the U.S. into future European conflicts

-By refusing to join, the U.S. weakened the League

*Made up of more than 40 nations that hoped to settle problems and conflict through negotiation, not war

-These nations promised to take cooperative economic and military action against any aggressor states

-Was largely unsuccessful due to its lack of military backing

“All bark and no bite”