World History Honors - Mrs. Collins and Mr. T's Class Page
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Transcript World History Honors - Mrs. Collins and Mr. T's Class Page
World History
Imperialism and WWI Notes
Overview
The outbreak of WWI evolved over a
few hundred years as European
powers lobbied for power and wealth
as they attempted to build large and
powerful nations
One of the tools for attaining power
and wealth was Imperialism
Imperialism
Definition: The domination of 1
country of the political, economic, or
cultural life of another country or
region
What does this mean
European countries
conquering territories
Why?
Resources, power, wealth, and prestige
Imperialism Assignment
Reading: Chapter 25 Section 1 (p.632-634)
What were the FOUR main causes of Imperialism?
Define Social Darwinism.
How did European powers attempt to justify their
Imperialism? Is this moral? Please explain.
What specific products did European powers
acquire?
Why did Imperialism succeed?
What is direct rule? What is indirect rule?
What are colonies, protectorates, and spheres of
influence? Define each. How did each of them
benefit European powers?
Asian Imperialism
African Imperialism
British Empire in 1914
Imperialism Discussion
What impact did Imperialism have on
the world from 1750-1914?
Did it directly cause WWI?
How did Imperialism lead to
Nationalism and Militarism?
Nationalism
Reading: p.694-696
What is Nationalism?
What would a modern day example be?
How would this cause a war?
What is the difference between “Inclusive
Nationalism” and “Ethnic Nationalism?”
How does The German Fatherland portray
German superiority?
How does Rule Britannia portray British
superiority?
Militarism
Countries began to build up their
military in order to use it as a tool of
diplomacy
By 1890, Germany had the most
powerful military in Europe
Tips the balance of power
Threatens the other Great Powers and
they began to build up their militaries
Militarism & Arms Race
Total Defense Expenditures for the Great Powers
[Germany, A-H, Italy, France, GB, Russia]
in millions
1870
1880
1890
1900
1910
1914
94
130
154
268
289
398
1910-1914 Increase in
Defense Expenditures
France
10%
Britain
13%
Russia
39%
Germany
73%
Alliance System
With the advent of militarism in Europe,
countries became threatened and signed
into mutual defense treaties
By 1914, two major alliances
Triple Entente (Allies)
Great Britain, France, Russia (Russia also had an
alliance with Serbia)
Triple Alliance (Central Powers)
Germany, Austria-Hungary, Italy (Ottoman)
The Alliance System
Triple Entente:
Triple Alliance:
Militarism and the Alliance
System
What is Militarism?
How does this make Europe and the world a scary
place?
How did Militarism indirectly cause WWI?
What was the Alliance System?
What is a Mutual Defense Treaty?
What main countries made up the Triple Entente?
What main countries made up the Triple Alliance?
Why did these countries sign into these alliances?
Did the Alliance System cause WWI? Please
explain.
Nationalism and Militarism
Nationalism
The 19th century belief that national interests
should take precedent over international
cooperation and global affairs. It also bound
people together through pride and devotion in
common ancestry, country, ethnic group,
religion, or language group.
Militarism
The buildup of armies/militaries to use as a tool
of diplomacy.
Alliance System
Reading: p.696-697
Mutual Defense Treaty
Triple Entente
Great Britain, France, Russia
Russia had a separate alliance with Serbia
Allies
Triple Alliance
Austria-Hungary, Germany, Italy
Central Powers
Alliance System (continued)
Did the Alliance System cause WWI?
The Spark that Ignited the First World War
Why didn’t France and Germany get along in the late 19th century?
What is Pan-Slavism?
Why did Russia view itself as the protector of Slavic peoples?
Why was Austria-Hungary fearful that Nationalism might foster a
rebellion in their own country?
Why was Ottoman Turkey threatened by the new nations near its
borders?
Who was Archduke Franz Ferdinand?
Who was Gavrilo Princep?
What was the Black Hand?
Why did the Black Hand want to kill Franz Ferdinand?
Create a concept map/web that illustrates how the assassination of
Franz Ferdinand led to the outbreak of WWI
Why do you think that this is commonly referred to as the Domino
Theory?
So, What Sparked WWI?
Assassination of Franz Ferdinand,
June 28th, 1914
Heir to the Austria-Hungarian
Throne
P.697-698, chapter 27.2
Killed in Sarajevo, Bosnia which was the
home to many Serbs and also ruled by
Austria-Hungary’s Hapsburg Empire.
The Killer
Black Hand
Serbian Nationalist group led by Gavrillo
Princip.
Anti-Austrian-Hungary
Why did this group want to kill Franz
Ferdinand?
Goal was to organize all South Slav into
a single nation.
The “Powder Keg” of Europe
The “Spark”
June 28, 1914
The Assassin
Black Hand
Gavrillo Princip
The Domino Effect
Austria-Hungary declared war on
Serbia
Serbia had an alliance with Russia,
who had an alliance with Great Britain
and France
Austria-Hungary had an alliance with
Germany and Italy
One by one they all fell into war
Who’s to Blame?
Two Armed Camps!
Allied Powers:
Central Powers:
Great
Britain
France
Russia
Italy
Germany, AustriaHungary, Ottoman
Empire
The Schlieffen Plan
Germany did NOT want to fight a war on
two fronts.
The plan reasoned that Russia would
be slow to mobilize its military,
therefore Germany first had to defeat
France quickly.
This required Germany to march through
neutral Belgium into southern France.
= BRITAIN DECLARES WAR ON GERMANY!
The Fighting During WWI
WWI Video Clip
What was trench warfare?
What was the purpose/point of trench
warfare?
Western Front
Eastern Front
Trench Warfare
What was trench warfare?
Warring armies burrowed into a vast
system of trenches, stretching from the
Swiss frontier to the English Channel.
An underground network of bunkers,
communications trenches, and gun
emplacements.
Trench Warfare continued
What was the purpose of trench
warfare?
Gain land ?
Kill the enemy?
?
?
Two Fronts to Fight
Western Front was the fighting line
between France and Germany
Eastern Front was the fighting line
between Russia and the shared
boarders of Germany and AustriaHungary
Trench Warfare
Problems with Trench Warfare
No Man’s Land
Poison Gas
Cold/Wet
Trench Foot
Trench Mouth
Disease
Rats
Boring
The Mechanization/Industrialization
of Warfare
What made WWI so
destructive?
Page 703
Chart
Total War
Mobilization of
civilians
No difference
between “home front”
and “war front”
Soldiers and
civilians are
targeted
The Industrialization of Warfare
“Big Bertha”
Tanks
The Industrialization of Warfare
(continued)
Poison Gas
Industrialization of Warfare
(continued)
Machine Gun
Rifle/Bayonet
Trench Warfare
WWI Map Assignment
Use the map on page 704
Draw the Invasion route of Germany on your map
Why did Germany first invade the neutral country of
Belgium?
Label the Western and Eastern Fronts
Label the Allies and Central Powers countries
Label the following battle sites
Verdun, Somme River, Tannenberg, Caporetto, and
the Dardanelles
Also label Sarajevo
Briefly explain how this war became a global conflict
Use the reading from the text
A Global War
Western Front
Germany, Austria-Hungary vs. France, Great
Britain
Eastern Front
Germany, Austria-Hungary, Ottoman Empire vs.
Russia, Serbia
Atlantic Ocean
Germany vs. Great Britain, United States?
Map p.703
Colonies
Nations attacked other nations colonies
Why?
Some nations used people of their colonies to fight
A Multi-Front War
Total War: Women and the War
Effort
Financing the war
Recruiting
Munitions Workers
French Women in Factories
German Women Factory Workers
Female Ambulance Driver
Red Cross Nurses
Women in the Army Auxiliary
Russian Women Soldiers
Spies
“Mata Hari”
Real Name:
Margareetha
Geertruide Zelle
A German Spy!
U.S. Joins the Allies, 1917
German U-Boats
Lusitania
Cunard
U.S. Joins the Allies (continued)
Zimmerman Note
Cultural ties
Money?
Allies
Russian Revolution
Russia largely unprepared for WWI
Huge military, but didn’t have leadership,
adequate training, or supplies to fight a
global war
1916-1917
Russian soldiers fighting on the Eastern Front
Lacked supplies
Food
Citizens starving at home and running out of
fuel
February Revolution, 1917
Czar Nicholas II abdicated the throne
Revolutionary groups
Mensheviks
Electoral politics
Bolsheviks
Led by Vladimir Lenin
Marxist
Petrograd - April 1917 proposed immediate
peace and transfer of land to peasants and
factory rights to workers
Hundreds of thousands soldiers quit fighting
Whose support was Lenin able to gain?
Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
March 3, 1918 peace with Germany
and Austria-Hungary
Lost Poland, Finland, Estonia, Latvia,
and Lithuania
Russian Civil War
Fought for 3 years
Burned farms and destroyed crops causing
famine and widespread starvation
Over 3 million died
By 1921, the Bolsheviks had defeated their
enemies
1922 Ukraine merged with Russia forming
the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
Americans in the Trenches
What impact did U.S. involvement
have on WWI?
Defeat of the Central Powers
U.S. boosts morale
German Final Offensive
Naval Mutiny
British Blockade
Winning the War
Total War
Military Conscription
Taxes
Rationing
Forbade Strikes
Borrowed Money
United States Enters WWI, 1917
German U-Boats
Cultural Ties
Zimmerman Note
Allies
Money?
What impact did American involvement have on WWI?
Winning the War (continued)
Defeat of Central Powers
U.S. boosts morale
German Final Offensive
Naval Mutiny
British Blockade
“The Biggest Blunder in World
History”
The Big Four
“The Biggest Blunder in World
History”
The Treaty of Versailles
Punishment of Germany
New countries
League of Nations
Mandate System
Balfour Declaration
Making the Peace
Big Three
Great Britain (David Lloyd George)
France (Georges Clemenceau)
United States (Woodrow Wilson)
Fourteen Points Plan
Wilson’s main goals and beliefs about
why the war started
Making the Peace
The Treaty of Versailles
Provisions
War-Guilt Clause
Reparations
Reduced Military
Lost Alsace and Lorraine
New Countries
Who lost a lot of territory?
Mandate System
Self-Determination
Making the Peace
How does the Treaty of Versailles
compare with Wilson’s Fourteen
Points Plan
Which one made more sense?
Why is the Treaty of Versailles known
as “The Biggest Blunder in World
History?”
Final Question
What could have been changed in the
Treaty of Versailles to create peace in
Europe?
Imperialism and WWI Review
Chapter 25 Sections 1,2,4,5 & Chapter 27 Sections 1,2,3,4,5
Imperialism (motives, causes,
consequences)
Goods sought after in Africa, China,
India
Effect of Industrialization
Colony
Protectorate
Sphere of Influence
“Scramble for Africa”
Opium Wars
India
Missionary
Christianity
Social Darwinism
Resistance to Imperialism
WWI (causes, consequences)
Nationalism
Imperialism
Militarism
Alliance System
Triple Entente
Triple Alliance
Industrialization/Mechanization of
Warfare
Franz Ferdinand
Black Hand
Gavrilo Princip
Domino Effect
Allies
Central Powers
Stalemate
Eastern Front
Western Front
Weapons of WWI
Total War
Why U.S. Entered WWI/Impact
Russian Revolution
(causes/consequences)
Bolsheviks/Mensheviks
Treaty of Versailles
Reparations
War-Guilt Clause
Mandate System
Big Three