World war i: The Beginnings

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World war i: The Beginnings

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World war i: The Beginnings. Immediate Causes. Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary was assassinated by Gavrilo Princip - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of World war i: The Beginnings

Page 1: World war i: The Beginnings

World war i:The Beginnings

Page 2: World war i: The Beginnings

Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary was assassinated by Gavrilo Princip

Princip was a member of the Serbian nationalist group Black Hand

Immediate Causes

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Why Assassination? Ferdinand planned to give the Slavs of Bosnia-Herzegovina an equal voice in the Austro-Hungarian government

This threatened the movement for a separate Slavic state

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What Next? Austria-Hungary held the Serbian government responsible for the assassination of Ferdinand

Austria-Hungary sought backup from Germany in the event of war

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What Next? Germany issued a Blank Check to Austria-Hungary

Blank Check: William II agreed to support any actions that Austria-Hungary might take against Serbia

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The Ultimatum: Austria-Hungary demanded entrance into Serbia

Why? Suppress subversive organizations

Conduct an investigation

Tensions Build!!

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Tensions Build!! Austria-Hungary gave Serbia 48 hours to agree to the ultimatum

Serbia REFUSED to agree July 28, 1914: Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia!

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Others Get Involved Russia, an ally of Serbia, mobilized troops along the borders of Germany & Austria-Hungary

Germany warned Russia to stop

Russia refused!

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Others Get Involved Germany issued an ultimatum to France

Gave France 18 hours to decide whether or not it would support Russia

France gave an inconclusive answer!

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08/01/1914: Germany declared war on Russia

08/03/1914: Germany declared war on France

Declarations of War

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Declarations of War Great Britain hoped to remain neutral

DID NOT want to become involved in a war

HOWEVER…

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Germany demanded passage across Belgium in order to fight France

Part of Germany’s Schlieffen Plan

The Belgium Issue

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The Belgium Issue In 1839 Britain, Russia, France & Germany signed a treaty that guaranteed Belgium’s neutrality

Due to the fact that Belgium was a neutral nation, Great Britain protested Germany’s demand

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The Belgium Issue Despite Belgium’s neutrality, Germany invaded on August 14, 1914

Great Britain demanded that Germany immediately withdraw from Belgium

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Germany responded by referring to the treaty as nothing more than a “scrap of paper”

As a result Great Britain declared war on Germany

The Belgium Issue

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The Schlieffen Plan Germany’s plan to deal with a TWO-FRONT war

The German army DID NOT want to fight the war on BOTH fronts at the SAME time

The Schlieffen Plan

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Germany believed that the Russian army was slow

Believed they could defeat FR on the Western Front in 5 to 6 weeks

The Schlieffen Plan

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Planned to invade Belgium & encircle Paris

They would then be able to fight Russia on the Eastern Front

The Schlieffen Plan

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Both sides thought that the war would be a quick ordeal…

EXPECTATIONS

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World War I:Opposing Sides

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Opposing Sides The Triple Entente became the Allied Powers

The Triple Alliance became the Central Powers

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Allied powers

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Allied powers Major Players: France, Great Britain, Russia Italy (1915) Japan (1915) United States (1917) 28 other countries

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Allied powers Strengths: More soldiers More money Greater industrial potential Great Britain – best navy France – excellent army

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Allied powers Weaknesses: Russia was WEAK & POOR No unified command Each country acted independently until the end of the war

Fighting on their OWN territory

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Central powers

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Central powers Major Players: Germany, Austria-Hungary

Bulgaria Ottoman Empire (Turkey)

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Central powers Strengths: Germany – best army Germany – excellent navy Superior weapons Fighting in enemy territory

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Central powers Excellent lines of communication

Unified command Everyone under German control

Control of the Dardanelles

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Central powers Weaknesses: Fighting a two-front war