Our World Since 1500 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 27
About This Presentation
Title:

Our World Since 1500

Description:

... Ferdinand and his wife, Sophie, were assassinated by ultranationalist Serbs. ... at the front, his wife, Alexandra, and a debauched monk, Rasputin, shared power. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:26
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 28
Provided by: yliu9
Category:
Tags: world

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Our World Since 1500


1
Our World Since 1500
  • Chapter 27 The Great Break War Revolution

2
The Bismarckian System of Alliances
  • Bismarcks response to the diplomatic challenges
    of the late nineteenth century was a shifting
    series of alliances designed to restrain Russia
    and Austria-Hungary, to prevent war between them,
    and to isolate France.
  • The Three Emperors League linked
    Austria-Hungary, Germany, and Russia.
  • Bismarcks balancing act was a precarious one.

3
Hopes for a world order of progress and peace
  • Benefits of modern science as solutions for
    social problems
  • Material wealth filtering down to the poor
  • Era of permanent, international peace seemed to
    have dawned
  • Growth of international cooperation
  • Creation of a wide variety of international
    organizations

4
Origins of World War I
  • Competitive Nationalism
  • Entangling Alliances
  • --Triple Alliance Germany, Austria-Hungary,
    Italy
  • --Triple Entente England, France, Russia
  • A Growing Arms Race
  • --1st German Navy

5
The Rival Blocs
  • William IIs dismissal of Bismarck led to a
    breakdown in the relationship between Russia and
    Germany.
  • France and Russia became allies in 1894, pledging
    to stay allies as long as the Triple Alliance of
    Austria, Germany, and Italy existed.
  • The Anglo-French Entente of 1904 settled all
    outstanding colonial disputes between Great
    Britain and France.
  • Germany tried to weaken the entente by
    precipitating the Moroccan crisis, but became
    even more isolated.
  • By 1914, Europe was divided into two hostile
    blocs.

6
Pan-Slavic Nationalism The Catalyst for War
  • Russias Support for Pan-Slavism
  • Austrias Problem with Serbian nationalism
  • Assassination in Sarajevo
  • -- Black Hand
  • --Archduke Franz Ferdinand
  • --June 28, 1914

7
The Outbreak of War
  • Conflicting nationalist forces made war in the
    Balkans inevitable.
  • In 1912, the First Balkan War pitted Serbia,
    Greece, and Bulgaria against the Ottoman Empire.
  • The destruction of the Ottoman Empire created
    fears in Austria-Hungary that it would be next.
  • On June 28, 1914, Archduke Francis Ferdinand and
    his wife, Sophie, were assassinated by
    ultranationalist Serbs.
  • With confidence inspired by Germanys blank
    check, Austria declared war on Serbia on July
    28.
  • Long-settled military plans helped create a
    domino effect that pulled Russia, Germany,
    France, and Great Britain into the conflict.

8
Pan-Slavic Nationalism
The Austrian Response The Russian
Reaction --General Mobilization on July
30th Mobilization out of control --German
Declaration of War on August 1st (Russia) and
August 3rd (France) --British Declaration of War
on August 4th Popular War
9
Stalemate, slaughter, widening of the war
  • In 1914, almost all observers thought that the
    war would end in a few months.
  • Trench warfare on the western front soon
    dispelled that illusion.
  • By 1915, Germany was winning the war in Russia.
  • The war spread to the Middle East, to parts of
    East Asia, and to Africa.
  • The entry of the United States into the war in
    1917 tipped the balance in favor of the allies.

10
A Massive Meat Grinder The Western Front
Early Battles of the War --The Battle of the
Marne (September 6, 1914) Immovable front for two
and a half years Trench warfare --25,000 miles
of trenches Cavalry gives way to infantry
11
The Western Front
  • The Race with Death
  • -- Going over the top
  • -- No Mans Land
  • Gap between officers and enlisted men
  • Daily routine of the World War I soldier

12
Industrial Death
  • Impact of Heavy Artillery
  • The importance of the hand grenade and the
    machine gun
  • Tanks and airplanes
  • Increasingly not seeing the enemythe
    dehumanization of warfare
  • All Quiet on the Western Front
  • The role of poison gas
  • --Chlorine
  • --Phosgene
  • --Mustard Gas
  • The emotional toll of gas warfare
  • The use of pets

13
Case Studies in Industrial Warfare
  • Battles of Attrition
  • The Battle of Verdun (February-June, 1916)
  • --German attack opened by most massive military
    bombardment in history
  • --longest single battle of the war
  • --The sacred road
  • --600,000 men died

14
Case Studies of Industrial Warfare
  • The Battle of the Somme (July-November, 1916)
  • --Seven Days and Seven Nights of British
    bombardment
  • --60,000 British dead in 12 minutes
  • --1 million dead for just 7 miles of land
  • The Changing atmosphere of War
  • --complete breakdown of human existence

15
Going Over the Top at the Battle of the Somme
16
Mobilizing for Total War
  • In 1914, most people were in favor of the war.
  • As it became clear that World War I was a new
    kind of war, it also became clear that a new kind
    of effort would be needed to prosecute it
    successfully.
  • Governments instituted planned economies,
    strengthening the cause of socialism in the
    process.
  • In 1917, Germanys military leaders declared that
    all of the countrys resources, human and
    material, were to be dedicated to the war effort,
    thus making Germany the first totalitarian
    society.
  • By December 1916, the British economy was largely
    under state control.

17
The Home Front
  • The concept of total
  • Government management of the war effort
  • Food and energy shortages
  • Increasingly demoralized and disillusioned
  • No realistic war aims

18
Social impact and political tensions
  • The demands of the war ended unemployment.
  • Labor unions increased in power and prestige.
  • Women worked in industry, transportation, and
    offices.
  • The war promoted social equality.
  • The strains of war created disunity and unrest
    among civilian populations.
  • Germany and Austria-Hungary faced the most
    internal dissent.

19
The fall of imperial Russia
  • Russian unity began to falter soon after the war
    began.
  • Russia faced a crisis of leadership when Nicholas
    II refused to share power with the Duma.
  • While Nicholas was at the front, his wife,
    Alexandra, and a debauched monk, Rasputin, shared
    power.
  • On March 12, 1917, the Duma declared a
    provisional government and on March 15 the tsar
    abdicated.

20
The provisional government
  • The March Revolution was positively received
    throughout the country.
  • Under the leadership of Alexander Kerensky, the
    provisional government tried to steer a moderate
    course at home while continuing to fight the war.
  • Conflict between the provisional government and
    the Petrograd Soviet led to anarchy.
  • Anarchy created opportunities for radical
    socialist leaders such as Vladimir Ilyich Lenin.

21
Lenin and the Bolshevik Revolution
  • Lenins political philosophy was based on three
    ideas capitalism could only be destroyed through
    violent revolution, socialist revolution did not
    depend on a fully developed industrial working
    class, and a disciplined party controlled by a
    dedicated elite was crucial to the success of the
    revolution.
  • Russian Marxists did not all agree with Lenin.
  • In April 1917, the Germans allowed Lenin to
    return to Russia, hoping that he would undermine
    Russias war effort.
  • The Bolsheviks came to power because they took
    advantage of anarchy, superior leadership, and
    the eagerness of soldiers and urban workers to
    end the war.

22
Dictatorship and Civil War
  • Lenins response to Russias situation in 1917
    was successful, in large part, because it was
    pragmatic.
  • The 1918, Treaty of Brest-Litovsk was harsh, but
    it did bring peace.
  • In 1918, civil war between Whites and Reds
    engulfed Russia.
  • Lenin and the Bolsheviks won because they were
    more unified and because they had a better army.
  • War communism, revolutionary terror, and
    foreign intervention all contributed to Communist
    victory.

23
The End of the War
  • U.S. troops played a decisive role in halting
    Germanys last great offensive.
  • On November 11, 1918, the war ended.
  • The German Revolution began in the same month the
    war ended.

24
The End of the War
  • American Entry into the War April of 1917
  • The illusion of German strength
  • The realization of German military disaster
  • Formation of the Weimar Republic (November, 1918)
  • The Collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire

25
The Costs of the War
  • A Generation of Men Lost
  • International Flu Epidemic
  • A Leadership Vacuum was created in Western Europe
  • European Economies were destroyed
  • Individual Emotional Damage
  • The Great Interruption

26
The Treaty of Versailles
  • The real powers at the Versailles peace
    conference were the United States, Great Britain,
    and France.
  • President Wilson wanted the conference to focus
    on the League of Nations. France and Great
    Britain were more concerned with punishing
    Germany.
  • The treaty signed on June 28, 1919, was a
    credible first step toward lasting peace.

27
The Paris Peace Conference
  • The Emotional Atmosphere
  • The Popularity and Idealism of Woodrow Wilson
  • --The Fourteen Points
  • Wilsons Political Handicaps
  • Attempt at Self-Determination
  • Provisions of the Treaty of Versailles
  • German Reaction to the Diktat
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com