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MAIN Causes of WWI

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Do Now What were the 4 main causes of World War I? * Does this information help you to understand why so many people wanted revenge after the war? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MAIN Causes of WWI


1
MAIN Causes of WWI
  • Militarism growth of militaries
  • Alliances
  • Imperialism
  • Nationalism pride in your country

2
Militarism
  • The build up of armies, navies and weaponry
  • Imperialist nations had sparked an arms race to
    defend their holdings and possibly gain or regain
    territory.

3
Alliances
  • Created to protect national security and provide
    aide in the event of an attack.

4
Imperialism
  • Dividing up areas of the world among the more
    powerful countries
  • European powers competed with each other for raw
    materials and colonies

5
Imperialism
This map shows Africa in 1914 and shows how much
land the major nations had taken over.
BRITAIN
FRANCE
GERMANY
ITALY
BELGIUM
6
(No Transcript)
7
Nationalism
  • Nations who wanted back land that had natives
    living there (France and Russia)
  • Areas that wanted to gain national independence
    from countries that had engulfed their culture
    (Czechs and Poles)

8
Nationalism
Ethnic Map of Europe in 1914
9
Europe is a Powder Keg!
  • One spark would start a war!

10
Assassination!
  • Sarajevo June 28,1914
  • Archduke Franz Ferdinand and wife shot
  • Black Hand
  • Gavrilo Princip

11
The Black Hand
  • Serbian terrorist organization
  • Sent a small group of teenage operatives to
    assassinate the Archduke!

12
Sarajevo June 28th 1914
13
The Wrong Turn!
14
World War I Timeline
  • Austria-Hungry declares war on Serbia
  • Germany backs Austria-Hungry
  • Russia backs Serbia declares war on Germany
  • Russia and France have a secret Alliance, France
    wants revenge over the Franco-Prussian War
    Declares war on Germany
  • Germany invades Belgium England Decalres war on
    Germany

15
How did they find this photo? The man who took
this photo was named Heinrich Hoffman and will
later become Hitlers personal photographer. One
night after a dinner party they discussed Where
were you when the great war began and discovered
they were in the same place. They searched his
old photos and sure enough, Hoffman caught the
young Hitler! At the dinner was also Hoffmans
personal assistant, a young woman named Eva Braun
16
  • Trench Warfare
  • No Mans Land

17
The Treaty of VersaillesThe Peace Treaty that
led to Hitler
This is not a peace treaty. It is a 20 year
truce- Marshall Foch (Supreme Allied
Commander) If I was a German I would not sign
it President Woodrow Wilson
18
Casualties World War I
19
Before and after Verdun Hotel de la Princerie
20
Village of Esnes
21
Palace of Justice
22
Discuss
  • How long do you think it would take to rebuild
    this?
  • How much would it cost?
  • Can a community ever really recover from that
    destruction
  • Based on these photographs, speculate what might
    be Frances goals during peace negotiations

23
After reading this source, how do you think the
Germans felt at the end of World War One?
Through the doors at the endcome four officers
of France, Great Britain, America and Italy. And
then, isolated and pitiable, come the two
Germans, Dr. Muller and Dr. Bell. The silence is
terrifyingThey keep their eyes fixed away from
those two thousand staring eyes, fixed on the
ceiling. They are deathly paleThere is general
tension. They sign. There is general
relaxationWe kept our seats while the Germans
were conducted like prisoners from the dock.
(Harold Nicolson, Peacemaking, 1919.)
Peace
24
Treaty Of Versailles Treaty Of Versailles Treaty Of Versailles
Leaders Wanted Did not want
David Lloyd George
Woodrow Wilson
George Clemenceau
25
Great Britain, America and France were the three
most powerful Allies and they wanted to exert
their influence upon the Treaty of Versailles.
Yet they wanted different things.
26
  • David Lloyd George (UK)
  • Germany to be justly punished, but not too
    harshly
  • Germany to lose its navy and colonies as these
    were a threat to Britain's own navy and empire
  • Germany and Britain to become trading partners

BUT Overall, Lloyd George did not want to punish
Germany too harshly as he did not want Germany
seeking revenge in the future
27
Clemenceau (France)Clemenceau liked the harsh
things that were in the Treaty, especially
reparations, because they would weaken Germany
while helping France to recover. He had one very
simple belief - Germany should be brought to its
knees so that she could never start a war again.
He liked the idea of a small German army, and
the demilitarised zone in the Rhineland, because
he thought that this would protect France from
attack in the future. Also, he was pleased that
France received Alsace-Lorraine as this had been
taken from France by Germany in 1871. In truth
though, he wanted the Treaty to be harsher.
What did Clemenceau like and dislike about the
Treaty?
28
  • Wilson (USA)
  • a better and more peaceful world
  • a League of Nations that would help and support
    each other and help to promote world peace
  • the right to self-determination. The right to
    decide which country you wish to be governed by
  • The U.S.A. had joined war late (1917) and hadn't
    suffered as much as the other Allies in terms of
    human and material costs.

29
Wilson (USA)Wilson got self-determination for
the peoples of Eastern Europe, and a League of
Nations, but he was disappointed with the Treaty
because few of his ideas were acted upon. Worst
of all, when Wilson went back to America, the
Senate refused to join the League of Nations, and
refused to sign the Treaty of Versailles! In
America, there was a growing desire for the
government to adopt a policy of isolation and
leave Europe to its own devices. Wilson believed
that Germany should be punished, but in a way
that would lead to European reconciliation
(peace) as opposed to revenge (war).
What did Wilson like and dislike about the treaty?
30
The terms of The Treaty of Versailles
What would members of the public in Allied
countries think of the Germans in 1918?
31
What does this source tell you about the British
publics feelings towards Germany in 1918?
The Germans, if this government is elected, are
going to pay every penny they are going to be
squeezed, as a lemon is squeezed, until the pips
squeak. (Sir Eric Geddes, December 1918)
Sir Eric Geddes was Minister of Munitions in
Britain, Controller of the Navy and First Lord of
the Admiralty at different points during The
First World War.
32
Does this information help you to understand why
so many people wanted revenge after the war?
Around 8 million people had been killed The cost
of the war was roughly 36 Billion Dollars The
destruction of land, homes, farms and factories
was huge Millions more people died after the war
due to famine and disease
In France and Belgium, where most of the war was
fought, 300,000 houses, 6,000 factories, 1,000
miles of railway, 2,000 breweries and 112 coal
mines were destroyedIn some ways, mankind has
never recovered from the horrors of the First
World War. John D. Clare, First World War (1994)
33
The British General Election in December 1918
was flooded by the belief that the Kaiser should
be hanged, that Germany should pay up.Few
realised the harmful effects of uniformed and
aggressive public opinion which had been aroused
by years of war propaganda, and whipped up by the
popular press Martin Kitchen, Europe Between
The Wars, 1988.
Discuss how difficult must it have been for the
Allies to get the right balance between
punishment and creating a lasting peace?
34
The Main Allied Powers Can you name them by
their flags?
  • World War One ended when Germany and the allies
    signed the Treaty of Versailles. The victorious
    nations, especially France, wanted to ensure that
    Germany would never be able to fight another
    world war. Their aim was to devastate Germany
    militarily and economically. The Germans were
    excluded from the creation of the treaty and were
    even barred from discussing it with the allies.
  • On the following pages we will discuss the terms
    of the Treaty.

What is this cartoon conveying?
35
Germany Loses Territory
  • Germany lost 1/8 of her land.
  • This also accounts for six million of her people.
  • Which territorial loss is the most devastating to
    Germany? Why?
  • What is that land called?

36
  • An Allied Army was to occupy the Rhineland for a
    period of 15 years.
  • No German troops were to be allowed into the
    occupation zone.

Did you know? The French used African troops to
occupy the Rhineland. This led to a generation of
½ African, ½ German children. The Nazis referred
to them as The Rhineland Bastards'
  • How would you feel if foreign troops occupied
    your country?

37
The Military
  • The army was limited to 100,000 men. Tanks and
    planes were not allowed.

38
  • Germany had to accept total responsibility for
    starting the World War One. This was called the
    War Guilt Clause.
  • As a consequence Germany had to pay reparations
    to the allies totaling 132 Billion Gold Marks.
    Thats over 450 Billion US dollars in todays
    money!

39
What differences do you see in the 2 maps?
To what extent is self-determination reflected in
your differences?
40
Term of the treaty How can Germans view this as unfair? How can a man like Hitler use this to his advantage?
Germany loses 1/8 of her land and 6 million of her people.
Germanys army was reduced to 100,000 men with no modern weapons like tanks or planes.
Allied troops to occupy the Rhineland for 15 years
Germany had to accept full responsibility for starting the war.
Germany had to pay 132 billion in reparations.

41
Recap...
The German government publicly denounced the
treaty, and for the first time all Germans of
every social class and political party were
united in against it. But refusal to sign the
treaty would mean continuing the war, something
Germany couldnt do. Many Germans also thought
the financial penalties that the treaty imposed
upon their country and her people to be immoral
and unjust. The signing of this treaty was a blow
to the new Republic from which it never fully
recovered. For a majority of people their faith
in democracy was destroyed.
42
Quick Test
  • 1. What was the peace treaty called?
  • 2. What was the treaty designed to do?
  • 3. Why was the loss of the Polish Corridor so
    devastating to Germany?
  • 4. What was the Rhineland?
  • 5. How many soldiers were the German army allowed
    to retain under the treaty?

43
  • 6. How much were the Germans supposed to pay the
    Allies in reparations?
  • 7. What did the War Guilt Clause mean?
  • 8. What would happen if the Germans refused to
    sign the treaty?
  • 9. If you were a German would you be opposed or
    for this treaty?
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