World War I and the Russian Revolution: 1914-1920

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Transcript World War I and the Russian Revolution: 1914-1920

WORLD WAR I AND THE
RUSSIAN REVOLUTION:
1914-1920
Chapter 23
Big Questions to Think About
• Did the reasons for going to war in 1914 turn out to be worth it? In
other words if everyone in Europe could do it over again would they
still choose to go to war in 1914?
• Why did some empires (Russian, German, Austro-Hungarian,
Ottoman) collapse while other empires (British, French, Italian)
didn’t?
• What are the consequences of a total war for society?
• Are wars beneficial to human civilization? Are there ever any good
consequences of a war? If so how do we handle this paradox?
• What made WWI different from earlier wars?
World War I: How was it Unique?
Reason #1: Industrial Revolution
• New warfare technologies
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Battleship
Machine gun
Repeating rifle
Airplane
Submarine
Poison gas/chemical warfare
Tanks
Railroads
Automobile
• Production on a massive scale previously unknown in world history
Industrial Revolution
Reason #2: Imperialism
• When European countries go to war what happens to their
colonies, imperial territories?
• Example: In 1914 when Britain goes to war so does
• Canada, Australia, New Zealand, India, South Africa, Egypt, Kenya, Nigeria, the
Bahamas, etc.
• Natural Resources from around the world used to fight WWI
• People from around the world fought in WWI
Indian Soldiers Fighting in Europe During WWI
Countries Involved in WWI
Reason #3: New Ideas
• Nationalism: harnessing the power of the people
• People were devoted to their nations and countries, would do crazy things
for national pride (like die)
• Non-soldiers were willing to make immense sacrifices for the nation as well
• Socialism: harnessing the power of the economy
• Government control of the economy
• Entire economy could be planned out in order to maximize efficiency, make
as much stuff as possible
• Total War
• When the all the human and economic resources of a country are totally
devoted to fighting a war—happened during WWI
• Communism
• Many communists saw WWI as the beginning of the world wide communist
revolution that Marx had predicted
Marching of to War in 1914 (With a Smile!)
Waiting in Line to Volunteer for WWI
WWI: The Basics
• When: 1914 to 1918 (cease fire)
• Where: mostly in Europe, but battles around the world—Middle
East, Africa, East Asia, Atlantic Ocean
• Who: Allied Powers vs Central Powers
• Why: It’s complicated
Allied Powers vs. Central Powers
Allied Powers (Entente Powers)
Central Powers
Britain
Germany
France
Austria-Hungary
Russia
Ottoman Empire (Turkey)
Italy (after 1915)
Bulgaria
United States (after 1917)
Japan
Romania
Serbia
Belgium
Greece
Portugal
Lots of Others
(starting to figure out why they lost?)
Causes of WWI: It’s Complicated
• Long term Background Causes
• Pre-War Alliance System: France vs. Germany
• Triple Entente vs. Triple Alliance
• Military buildup
• Competition over lots of things
• Economics, Imperialism, Nationalism
• Austria-Hungary expanding into the Balkans
• Nationalists in the Balkans upset at Austria-Hungary
• Immediate Cause: Assassination of Franz Ferdinand
• Summer 1914 heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne killed by Serbian
nationalists in Sarejevo, Bosnia
Aftermath of Assassination: Alliances go into
Effect
• Austria-Hungary declared ultimatum to Serbia—surrender or fight
• Russia viewed itself as Serbia’s protector, threatened to go to war
with Austria-Hungary if they invaded Serbia
• Germany had an alliance with Austria-Hungary, that meant war
between Germany and Russia
• Russia had an alliance with France, that meant war between
Germany and France
• In order to invade France Germany needed to pass through
Belgium, that meant invading Belgium
• Britain had an alliance with Belgium, that meant war between
Britain and Germany
• World War I begins
Other Major Countries
• Italy 1915
• Had an alliance with Austria-Hungary and Germany but stayed out of the
war at first, eventually sided with the Allied Powers 1915
• Ottoman Empire 1914
• Had a rivalry with Russia, friendly with Germany, joined the war on the
German side
• Japan 1914
• Joined the war to take over German imperial colonies in East Asia
• United States 1917
• More on this later
What was the War Like?
The Western Front
• Where? Belgium and Northeast France
• Who? Belgium, France, Britain, (eventually US) vs. Germany
• What was it like? Trench Warfare and Stalemate
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Initial German advance
Eventually stalemate
Trenches
Lots of casualties very little movement
• Verdun (Feb-Dec 1916) – 300,000 dead, no movement in the front lines
• Somme (July-Dec 1916) – 300,000 dead, British/French advanced 6 miles
• War of attrition
The Western Front
Arial View of the Trenches
Inside the Trenches
Going “Over the Top”
Stalemate Leads to New Technologies:
Chemical Weapons
Poison Gas Casualties
Airplanes
Submarines
Armored Tanks
Eastern Front
• Where? Russia
• Who? Germany, Austria-Hungary vs. Russia
• What was it like? War of Movement: Big distances, lots of soldiers
• No trench warfare, why?
• Germans took large chunks of Russian territory
Fighting in Other Places
• Balkans
• Austria-Hungary took control of most of the Balkans
• Serbia, Romania, Greece
• Italy
• Stalemate in the Alps example: 12 Battles of the Isonzo
• Middle East
• Ottoman Empire vs. Great Britain, France, and Arab countries
• Allies took over most of the Middle East
• Africa
• Germans lost control of their colonies in Africa
• Asia
• Japanese took control of German colonies in Asia
Total War: A New Kind of Warfare
• Total War: when a country uses all of its human and economic
resources to fight a war
• Elements of Total War
• Mandatory military draft: young men were forced to join the military
• for example: 5.5 million men in the military in Germany during WWI out of a
population of 65 million (25 to 30% of the adult male population)
• Planned Economy: Government took control of economic activity
• For example: food and fuel rationed, wages and prices fixed by the government
• Consequences of total war
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Large armies previously unseen in world history
Nations capable of sustaining war for a long time
High casualties
What about civilians? Are they still “non-combatants?”
Social and Political Effects of Total War
• Effect of total war on women
• With so many adult males off fighting and with such a high demand for food,
weapons, and other war materials how would total war impact the role women
played in society?
• Other implications of women’s increased role in the war effort/society?
• Effect of total war on the poor
• What would happen to unemployment and wages in a country fighting a total
war?
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Effect of total war on racial minorities (in the USA mostly)
Effect of total war on the political power of the lower class
What effect did total war have on the size and power of governments?
What type of government do you think would be best able to survive the
stresses of total war?
• Democracy? Dictatorship? .. . . . ?
Russian Revolution 1917-1921
• Russia before the Revolution
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Very backwards—least advanced country in Europe
Least industrialized country in Europe
Eliminated serfdom in 1862
Used an inaccurate outdated Calendar (Julian Calendar)
Not very democratic—Czar had almost total power
Large amount of income inequality
• Russia during WWI
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Czar Nicholas II took control of the military
Alexandra and Rasputin in control of affairs back home
Military disasters
Hardships of total war—many deaths due to the war, shortages of all sorts
of products, especially food
Russian Revolution 1917-1921
• February/March Revolution of 1917 (Revolution #1)
• Women marched in Petrograd (St. Petersburg) for food
• Women’s protest becomes a revolution against the Czar
• Czar overthrown March 1917
• Provisional Government
• Czar replaced by the Provisional Government led by Alexander Kerensky
• Moderate, wanted a liberal representative govt., wanted to keep fighting
the war
• Provisional Government Problems
• War keeps going badly, people blame Kerensky
• Most towns have soviets, soviets are very radical, want the revolution to
go further
• Lenin comes to Russia 1917, stirs up opposition to government, demands
“peace, land, bread”
Russian Revolution 1918-1921
• October/November Revolution 1917 (Revolution #2)
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Lenin and the Bolsheviks overthrow the Provisional govt.
Czar is killed, why?
Kerensky overthrown
Lenin makes peace with the Germans (Brest-Litovsk) 1918
Lenin promised the soviets a democratic election, but didn’t have open
elections once he took power
• Russian Civil War 1918-1921
• Many upset with Lenin, felt betrayed, civil war begins
• Reds—Lenin’s communist supporters (very radical)
• Whites—Lenin’s opponents, grab bag of random groups (not as radical, or
very conservative)
Russian Civil War 1918-1921
• Crisis Period for Lenin and the Reds
• Military crisis—had to fight the whites and foreign countries (UK, US,
Japan, France)
• Economic Crisis—shortage of food, clothes, war material
• Internal Crisis—lots of dissent and opposition to the Reds inside their own
territory and throughout Russia
• Solutions
• Military: draft and the creation of the Red Army
• Economy: War Communism—planned economy and total war
• Internal Dissent—Cheka (secret police force) and the Red Terror
• Result
• 1921 Whites defeated, foreign countries had left Russia, Reds had won
• Creation of a communist state in Russia under Lenin’s control
• Russia = Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR)
US Entry into WWI
• German Submarine Warfare
• Unrestricted submarine warfare—sank any ship heading towards Britain or
France (even US ships, even unarmed merchant ships)
• Germans agreed to abandon unrestricted submarine warfare after neutral
countries (like US) protested
• 1917 Russian Revolution—Russia basically out of the war
• Germans make a gamble, restart unrestricted submarine warfare
• Use soldiers from the Russian Front plus submarine warfare to finish off
Britain and France before US enters the war
• US Enters WWI April 1917
• Response to German submarine warfare
• Problems: small military, geographic problems??
End of WWI: 1917-1918
• Spring/Summer Offensives 1918
• German surprise attacks in the Western Front
• Germans almost captured Paris but didn’t
• End of Germany
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German gamble didn’t pay off
1 million US soldiers on the Western Front
German soldiers exhausted
German civilians tired of war
German generals realized the war was over
• Revolution in Germany
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Kaiser overthrown
Civilian Government established
New government asks Allies for an armistice (cease fire)
Nov. 11, 1918 fighting stops
Paris Peace Conference and the Versailles Treaty
1918-1919
• Representatives from all the allied countries met in Paris to write a
permanent peace treaty, negotiations dominated by the big three
• Britain: David Lloyd George
• France: Georges Clemenceau
• USA: Woodrow Wilson
• Problems:
• What countries weren’t invited?
• Different allied countries wanted different things
• How do you treat Germany? Punishment or forgiveness?
Paris Peace Conference
• USA
• Wilson wanted to follow his roadmap for peace—14 Points
• Freedom of the Seas
• National self-determination—people get to decide their own government
• Disarmament
• League of Nations
• Treat Germany leniently
• Britain
• Punish Germany for the war, but not too much (afraid of Communism
spreading to Germany from USSR)
• France
• Punish Germany, break the country apart, have them pay for the war
• Question: Why such differences between US and Britain/France?
Versailles Treaty an Imperfect Peace
• Punish Germany
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Germany had to accept blame for starting WWI
Germany had to pay for the entire cost of the war
Germany lost all its old imperial colonies (given to Britain/France)
Germany had to destroy all its submarines, give up most of its navy, destroy its
entire air force, and have an army of only 100,000 men
• Germany lost some of its territory (but not a lot)
• The part of Germany on the French/German border (the Rhineland) was
demilitarized (no soldiers or military fortifications)
• League of Nations Created
• Prevent another world war through cooperation and negotiation
• US never joined
• Imperial Colonies
• European colonies were not given independence
• Territories from Germany and the Ottoman Empire were made League of
Nations mandates (controlled by Britain and France)
League of Nations Mandates in Africa
League of Nations Mandates in the Middle East