World History: WWI to Modern Day
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Transcript World History: WWI to Modern Day
World History:
WWI to Modern Day
Roots of WWI
World
War I
– “The Great War”
Nationalism-
The
loyalty to one’s country
Balkans
– Ethnic groups launching revolutions against
the Ottoman Empire
– Some annexed by Austria-Hungary
– Poland v. Russia
– Ireland v. Britain
Roots of WWI
Militarism
– Countries began building up their
militaries to intimidate others
Alliances
– Agreements between nations to help
each other in case of war
The War Begins
June
28, 1914- Archduke Francis
Ferdinand, heir to Austria-Hungary, was
assassinated by a Serbian nationalist
– Austria-Hungarian/German alliance
– Serbian/Russian alliance
Triple
Entente
– Great Britain, France, Russia
Central
Powers
– Germany, Austria-Hungary, Ottoman Empire
The War Front
Weapons
– Machine guns
– Poison gasses
– Tanks and airplanes
Stalemate
develops
Trench warfare
– Dirty ditches
– “no man’s land” in between
The End and Aftermath
1917- the US enters the war
1918- the war ends when Germany is defeated
– 20 million Europeans dead
President Wilson wanted peace but the allies
wanted to punish Germany
Treaty of Versailles
– Forced Germany to accept blame
– Germany to pay reparations ($)
Hapsburg Dynasty (ruling European family) fell
Ottoman Empire- no longer existed
The Aftermath
Allies
redrew national borders to
benefit themselves
New countries created causing
conflict
Promised independence to Arab
nations but went back on their word
– Mandate system
Germans
left resentful
Laid the path for WWII
League of Nations
President
Wilson proposed it
Was meant to provide a place where
countries could peacefully discuss
solutions
Many countries joined but no the
USA
Could not enforce anything
Russian Revolution
Czar
Nicholas II- lead Russia in
WWI but was overthrown in 1917
Lenin
– Marxist/Communist
– Bolsheviks- socialist party
– Gained control of the Russian
government
Western
nations sided with the
non-communist
Soviet Union= Communist Russia
Joseph Stalin
Became
communist dictator of Russia
Five Year Plan
– Sought to increase industrialization in the
USSR
– State owned farms and starvation
Purge
– Stalin eliminated those he saw as a threat;
some killed some sent to prisons
– Murdered millions of his own people
Effects of the Revolution
End
of the Romanov Dynasty
transferring power to the lower
classes
Urbanization and technology
Mistrust between the Russia and the
west
Later led to the Cold War after WWII
Totalitarian v. Authoritarian
Governments
Democracy does not exist in either
Authoritarian
– Only interested in political power
– Conservatives who want to preserve traditional way
of life
– Expects people to accept government policies and
carry on with their lives
Totalitarian
– Government seeks to control politics, economy,
culture, and social life
– Terror and fear used to force citizens
Italy
Fascism
– Nationalistic movement that is antidemocratic and anti-communist
– Rules by intimidation
Benito
Mussolini
– Used violence to settle unrest
– Became dictator of Italy after gaining support
from the middle class
– Repressive government
Adolf Hitler
Took control of Germany with the Nazi Party
Rose in power through Nationalism and
promised of rebuilding
“Third Reich”
Began militarily expanding
– Empire building
– Appeasement
Anti-Semitism-hatred of the Jewish people
– “Final Solution”-called for the total elimination of the
Jewish people
– The Holocaust
Japan
Emperor
Hirohito
– Did not have complete control of Japanese
government
– Militarily controlled
Hideki
Tojo
– Japan’s premier and led Japan through WWII
Leading to War
Hitler’s
invasion on the Rhineland,
Austria, and the Sudetenland
Japan expanding in the Pacific and
into China
Axis Powers
– Germany
– Italy
– Japan
WWII
Hitler
invades Poland
Britain and France enter the war
Hitler takes over France
Battle of Britain
– Thousands of German planes bomb
Britain
– Winston Churchill- British prime minister
– Britain holds on
US Involvement
US
had remain neutral until
December 7, 1941 attack on Pearl
Harbor
– US declares war
Allies
– United States
– Britain
– Soviet Union/Russia
Hitler
invades Soviet Union
Strategy
Stalin
wanted US and Britain to open the
western front of Europe to help him out
Churchill and Roosevelt decided to attack
Germany in Africa, Italy, and then the
Western European Front
Tehran Conference
– Allies agree to invade Europe
– D-day
– Significance: Paved way for Western
European invasion that would end the war
France
is won back
Yalta Conference
“Big Three”
– Roosevelt/Truman (US)
– Churchill (Britain)
– Stalin (USSR)
Yalta Conference
– After German defeat USSR would help with Japan
– Eastern European countries to get elections
– USSR gets land in Poland and some in China
– USSR gets most reparations because they were the
hardest hit
– Germany divided into four zones after the war (US,
Britain, France, USSR)
Significance: Laid out post-WWII Europe between the
west and the communist
Potsdam Conference
War in Europe ended May 1945
Potsdam
– Truman meets with Stalin and Churchill
– Unconditional Surrender of Japan
– Significance: led to the decision of the atomic
bombs at Hiroshima and Nagasaki
War on both fronts were finally ended
Use of the atomic bombs led to the
nuclear arms race between the US and the
USSR
– Hydrogen bomb created
Post WWII
Cold War
– Tension b/w the US and USSR that many feared
would lead to nuclear war
Marshall Plan
– Money given to help Western Europe’s economy and
help rebuild countries
Post War Japan
– Created democratic government ad helped rebuild
– Today a modern, industrial, and wealthy nation
United Nations
– Organization of different countries to find peaceful
solutions to problems
– Permanent Members: US, Britain, France, Russia,
China
Indian Independence
Decolonization
India was under control of Britain
Mohandas Gandhi
– Leader of the Indian Independence
Movement
– Supported non-violent protests even through
beatings by the British
– Unity b/w Hindus and Muslim Indians
Gained independence but not religious peace
Pakistan created as a Muslim state
Gandhi was assassinated but inspired many
China’s Communist Revolution
Nationalists
Mao
v. Communists
Zedong
– Communist leader who gained control of
China
– USSR supported
Israel
Zionism-
Jewish nationalism
increased after the Holocaust
1948 Israel created for Jewish people
Arabs upset because part of Palistine
was taken
Wars have broken out and still
tension
Latin America
US was backing governments in Latin America
that nationalists did not support
Latin American nationalism associated itself
more with the Soviet Union
Cuba (Castro), Chile (Salvador Allende),
Nicaragua (Sandinistas), Mexican attempt
(Zapatistas)
US backed anti-communist takeovers
Today’s anti-US Latin American governments
– Venezuela and Hugo Chavez
– Bolivia and Juan Evo Morales Ayma
Southeast Asia
Decolonizing
after WWII
Many of the countries experienced
unrest
Vietnamese Nationalist led by Ho Chi
Minh fought the French and the US
– Communist nationalist won in the end
Africa
African
nationalism also came about after
decolonization
Several African countries gained
independence
South Africa
– Apartheid- official policy of racial segregation
in South Africa
– Nelson Mandela- arrested for his leadership
for 27 years but 1994 was elected president
– 1994 South African elections where black
population was allowed to participate
Middle East
Arab
National arose after the
founding of Israel
Abdul Nassar became president of
Egypt and united Arabs in standing
against the west and supporting
Palestine
Ethnic Conflicts
African
tribes fighting one another
Kurds, Persians, Arabs, and Jews
fighting in the Middle East
Eastern Europe
– Serbs, Bosnians, and Croats fighting
– Serbians conquered Bosnia and began
ethnic cleansing killing many Bosnians
– NATO helped to maintain peace
Terrorism
Terrorism
– Use of violence against innocent people in
the name of a cause
Al-Qaeda
– Largest and most active terrorist group
– Led by Osama bin Laden
– Sept. 11, 2001
– War on Terror- invasion into Afghanistan
How
does this affect us today?
Globalization
Globalization-
worldwide interdependence
United Nations
– Allows representatives to negotiate
peacefully, provide aid, and back military
forces to maintain stability
World
Trade Organization
– Monitors countries making sure they stick to
international trade agreements
OPEC
(Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries)
– Several oil producing nations that control the
cost and supply of oil