Transcript PowerPoint

WORLD WAR I
Background Causes of
World War I
• Alliances
• Nationalism
• Imperialism
• Militarism
Alliances
An agreement between between countries to come
to each other’s aid in case of war.
Two major alliances:
Triple Alliance: Germany, Austria-Hungary, Italy
(does not enter war on this side, replaced with
Ottoman Empire)
Triple Entente: France, Russia, and Great Britain
If one nation was pulled in war, all would enter
Nationalism
Extreme loyalty to a nation and concern for
its welfare
Multi-ethic empires (Austria-Hungary and the
Ottoman Empire) had many groups seeking
independence
Balkans are ready to explode (“powder keg
of Europe, Balkan Peninsula)—Serbia and
Bosnia in Balkans
Imperialism
A nation’s attempt to gain control of a
weaker nation
Nations wanted control to gain raw materials,
Europe had divided Africa in 1884
Militarism
A nation’s policy to maintain strong armed
forced
Britain and Germany competed for the
strongest navy
Militarism included complex plans in case
war broke out
Immediate Cause:
Assassination of Archduke Ferdinand
of Austria-Hungary (heir to the throne)
Shot by a
Serbian
nationalist in
Bosnia, part
of AustriaHungary
(A.H.)
Assassination is considered the “spark” of
the war
A.H. blamed Serbia and Germany gave A.H. a
“blank check” saying they would back them
no matter what
A.H. then gave Serbia an “ultimatum” saying
they must agree to all their demands or they
would declare war—A.H. declared war
anyway
Russia then mobilized in case of war—
Germany then declares war on Russia and
France
Germany then
invaded Belgium in
order to get to
France.
Britain then
declares war on
Germany as
Belgium was
neutral.
Main Players
•Allied Powers
•Central Powers
Allied Powers
• France
• Great Britain
• Russia (withdrew in 1917 due
to Bolshevik Revolution)
•Italy
•Romania
•United States
Central Powers
• Austria-Hungary
• Germany
• Ottoman Empire (Bulgaria
and Turkey)
A New Kind
of War
Machine Gun
Trenches
Poison Gas
Tanks
U-Boat
America Neutral?
•America sympathetic to Allies
•Lusitania
•Sussex Pledge
•Zimmerman Note
Lusitania
• May 1915, a German submarine sank the
British ocean liner Lusitania.
• Among the hundreds killed, 128 were
American.
• President Wilson warned Germany not to
continue to violate international law, which
required warships to provide for the safety
of the passengers and crews of trading
ships they sank.
• Germany apologized.
Zimmerman Telegram
• The British intercepted and decoded a
secret radio message from Germany to
Mexico
• In this “Zimmerman Telegram,” Germany
urged Mexico to attack the United States
in return for regaining the southwestern
United States.
• This was the final straw!
America
Readys for
War
The United States enters the
War
• The US declares war on April 6, 1917
• Over 100,000 Georgian men and women
contributed to the Allied victory
Georgia in the War
•Soldiers trained in GA at Fort Benning, Fort
McPherson, and Camp Gordon—helped state’s
economy
•Textile mills made uniforms
•Railroads carried troops and goods to port
•Victory Gardens—citizens planted gardens to raise
their own veggies so there would be more food for
the military
•Women helped
•3,000 from Georgia died in the war
War Ends—
Wilson’s Fourteen Points
Three Goals:
•Elimination of War Causes
•Right to choose government
•League of Nations (Wilson’s dream)
Treaty of Versailles
--Very harsh on Germany who is
forced to agree
--Strip Germany of territory, military
reduced
--Must take blame for entire war
--Must pay reparations (payments for
war damages)
Lives Lost
Russia
France
Great Britain
United States
Germany
Austria
1,700,000
1,357,000
908,000
130,174
1,800,000
1,200,000
Diseases, hunger, and other war-related causes 20,000,000
Mangled
6,000,000
WW I
Causes
WW II