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- title = What were the causes and effects of World War I
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- World War I was a military conflict from 1914 to 1918. It began as a local
- European war between Austria - Hungary and Serbia on July 28, 1914. It was
- transformed into a general European struggle by declaration of war against Russia on
- August 1, 1914 and eventually became a global war involving 32 nations. Twenty - eight
- of these nations, known as the Allies and the Associated Powers, and including Great
- Britain, France, Russia, Italy, and the United States, opposed the coalition known as the
- Central Powers, consisting of Germany, Austria - Hungary, Turkey, and Bulgaria. The
- immediate cause of the war between Austria - Hungary and Serbia was the assassination
- of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand on June 28, 1914, at Sarajevo in Bosnia by Gavrilo
- Princip, a Serb nationalist. (Microsoft Encarta, 1996)
- On July 28 Austria declared war against Serbia, either because it felt Russia would
- not actually fight for Serbia, or because it was prepared to risk a general European conflict
- in order to put an end to the Greater Serbia movement. Russia responded by partially
- mobilizing against Austria. Germany warned Russia that continued mobilization would
- cause war with Germany, and it made Austria agree to discuss with Russia a possible
- change of the ultimatum to Serbia. Germany demanded, however, that Russia demobilize.
- Russia refused to do so, and on August 1, Germany declared war on Russia. (Microsoft
- Encarta, 1996)
- The French began to mobilize on the same day. On August 2, German troops
- invades Luxembourg and on August 3, Germany declared war on France. On August 2,
- the German government informed the government of Belgium of its intention to march on
- France through Belgium in order, as it claimed, to prevent an attack on Germany by
- French troops marching through Belgium. The Belgian government refused to allow the
- passage of German troops and called on the witnesses of the Treaty of 1839, which
- guaranteed the justice of Belgium in case of a conflict in which Great Britain, France, and
- Germany were involved, to observe their guarantee. Great Britain, one of the witnesses,
- on August 4, sent an ultimatum to Germany demanding that Belgian justice be respected.
- When Germany refused, Britain declared war on it the same day. Italy remained
- uninvolved until May 23, 1915, when, to satisfy its claims against Austria, it broke with
- the Triple Alliance and declared war on Austria - Hungary. In September 1914, Allied
- unity was made stronger by the Pact of London, signed by France, Great Britain, and
- Russia. As the war progressed, other countries, including Turkey, Japan, the U.S., and
- other nations of the western hemisphere, were drawn into the conflict. Japan, which had
- made an alliance with the Great Britain in 1902, declared war on Germany on August 23,
- 1914. The United States declared war on Germany on April 6, 1917. (Microsoft Encarta,
- 1996)
- The outbreak of war in 1914 set in motion forces more gigantic than any previous
- war had seen. Two million Germans were on the march, the greater part of them against
- France, and there were another 3,000,000 trained men to back them up. France had
- nearly 4,000,000 trained men at call, although they relied on only 1,000,000 active troops
- in the first clash. Russia had more millions to draw upon than any, but their mobilization
- process was slow, a large part of their forces were in Asia and even their great potential
- strength was to a large extent canceled out by lack of munitions. (Captain Sir Basil Liddell
- Hart, 1984)
- The growth of these tremendous forces had been due primarily to a military gospel
- of mass. Known by Clausewitz, the Prussian military philosopher, who drew his
- inspiration from NapoleonÆs example, the spread of this gospel had been stimulated by the
- victories of the Prussian conscript armies in 1866 against Austria and in 1870 against
- France. It had been assisted also by the development of railways, which enabled far larger
- numbers of men to be assembled, moved and supplied than had been possible previously.
- Therefore the armies of 1914 - 1918 came to be counted in their millions compared with
- the hundreds of thousands of half a century earlier. (Captain Sir Basil Liddell Hart, 1984)
- The essential causes of World War I were the attitude of intense nationalism that
- permeated Europe throughout the 19th and into the 20th century, the political and
- economic rivalry among the nations, and the establishment and maintenance in Europe
- after 1871 of large armaments and of two hostile military alliances.
- The French Revolution and the Napoleonic era had spread throughout most of
- Europe the idea of political democracy, with the resulting idea that the people of the same
- ethnic origin, language, and political ideals had the right to independent states. The
- principle of national self - determination, however, was largely ignored by the dynastic and
- retrogressive forces that dominated in the settlement of European affairs at the Congress
- of Vienna in 1815. Several peoples who desired national independence were made subject
- to local dynasts or to other nations. Notable examples were the German people, whom
- the Congress of Vienna left divided into numerous duchies, principalities, and kingdoms;
- Italy, also left divided into many parts, some of which were under foreign control; and the
- Flemish - and French - speaking Belgians of the Austrian Netherlands, whom the congress
- placed under Dutch rule. Revolutions and strong nationalistic movements during the 19th
- century succeeded in canceling much of the retrogressive and antinationalist work of the
- congress. Belgium won its independence from the Netherlands in 1830, the unification of
- Italy was accomplished in 1861, and that of Germany in 1871. At the close of the century,
- however, the problem of nationalism was still unresolved in other areas of Europe,
- resulting in tensions both within the regions involved and between various European
- nations. One particularly noticeable nationalistic movement, Panslavism, figured heavily in
- the events preceding the war. (Microsoft Encarta, 1996)
- The attitude of nationalism was also visible in economic conflict. The Industrial
- Revolution, which took place in Great Britain at the end of the 18th century, followed in
- France in the early 19th century, and then in Germany after 1870, caused an immense
- increase in the manufactures of each country and a consequent need for foreign markets.
- The principal field for the European policies of economic expansion was Africa, and on
- that continent colonial interests frequently clashed. Several times between Germany on
- one side and France and Great Britain on the other, almost precipitated a European war.
- (Microsoft Encarta, 1996)
- The dispute between the United States and Germany was far more serious. In
- order to prevent food, munitions, and other supplies from reaching Great Britain,
- Germany in 1915 declared the waters surrounding Great Britain and Ireland a war zone
- in which German submarines would sink all enemy vessels without the visit or search
- ordered by international law. To avoid the possibility that uninvolved vessels might be
- sunk by mistake, or that uninvolved might be killed, Germany warned uninvolved ships
- not to enter the zone. They also advised citizens of uninvolved nations not to travel on
- ships of the Allied nations. Germany remained intolerant in the face of U.S. protests
- against this declaration. In May 1915 a German submarine torpedoed the British
- passenger liner Lusitania off the Irish coast without warning, causing the deaths of 1198
- people, of whom 128 were U.S. citizens. The Germans claimed that the Lusitania was
- carrying munitions to Britain, and later research has proven this to be true. But the
- American public was outraged by the sinking, and strong protests by the U.S. State
- Department brought a promise from Germany not to sink any passenger liners without
- taking precautions to protect the lives of civilians. (Alistair Horne, 1970)
- In March 1916, however, a German submarine sank an unarmed French Channel
- steamer, the Sussex, with the loss of two Americans. President Wilson threatened to
- separate diplomatic relations with the German government unless it abandoned ôits present
- methods of submarine warfare against passenger and freight-carrying vessels.ö In May,
- the German government pledged not to sink merchant vessels without warning and
- without saving the lives of those aboard. For nine months the pledge was kept generally
- to the satisfaction of the United States. Wilson's powerful diplomacy seemed to have
- averted war with Germany, and as the Democratic candidate in the presidential election of
- 1916, Wilson was elected over the Republican nominee, Charles Evans Hughes, largely
- because ôhe kept us out of war.ö The war, however, was near.
- At the end of January 1917, Germany broke the so-called Sussex Pledge by
- declaring unrestricted submarine warfare in a zone even larger than the one it had
- proclaimed in 1915. On February 3, Wilson replied by breaking off diplomatic relations
- with Germany. Later in the month, at his request, Congress passed a bill permitting U.S.
- merchant vessels to arm. After new depredations by German submarines against
- uninvolved shipping, and the discovery of a plan made by the German Foreign Office to
- unite Germany, Mexico, and Japan against the United States if it entered the war,
- Wilson on April 2, 1917, requested Congress to declare war. On April 6, Congress
- passed a resolution declaring a state of war with Germany. (Alistair Horne, 1970)
- The early part of 1918 did not look favorable for the Allied nations. On March
- 3, Russia signed the Treaty of Brest - Litovsk, which put a formal end to the war
- between that nation and the Central Powers on terms more favorable to the latter; and
- on May7, Romania made peace with the Central Powers, signing the Treaty of
- Bucharest, by the terms of which it ceded the Dobruja region to Bulgaria and the passes
- in the Carpathian Mountains to Austria - Hungary, and gave Germany a long - term
- lease on the Romanian oil wells. (Microsoft Encarta, 1996)
- On November 6, the German delegates left Berlin to apply for an armistice.
- Meanwhile, the Allied advance in the west continued, and, on the American sector at least,
- with fresh incentive. The Americans reached Sedan on the same day that the German
- delegates reached General Ferdinand FochÆs rendezvous. (Alistair Horne, 1970)
- The terms he laid down were severe - sufficient to cripple the German forces more
- decisively than any battle. But the collapse of the home front, even more than the military
- menace in front and flank, ensured their acceptance. In any event, the stranglehold of the
- blockade was stifling to power of resistance, so the Germans had no choice but to sign.
- And at the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month of 1918 the war came
- to an end.
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- Bibliography
- Hart, Captain Sir Basil Liddell. (1984). The Marshall Cavendish illustrated encyclopedia
- of World War I. New York: Marshall Cavendish.
- Horne, Alistair. (1970). Death of a Generation. New York: American Heritage Press.
- Microsoft Encarta 96 (1996). [CD - ROM Disk]. Microsoft Corporation.
- Please put your paper here.
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