English Certificate Project: The International Computer Highschool of Bucharest
English Certificate Project: The International Computer Highschool of Bucharest
English Certificate Project: The International Computer Highschool of Bucharest
OF BUCHAREST
ENGLISH CERTIFICATE
PROJECT
CONTENTS
1. INTRODUCTION.....3
WORLD WAR I
2. CAUSES OF THE WAR...4
THE RISE OF NATIONALISM.
A BUILD-UP OF MILITARY MIGHT.
COMPETITION FOR COLONIES.
A SYSTEM OF MILITARY ALLIANCES.
3. BEGINNING OF THE WAR6
THE ASSASSINATION OF AN ARCHDUKE.
HOW THE CONFLICT SPREAD.
THE WESTERN FRONT.
THE EASTERN FRONT.
FIGHTING ELSEWHERE.
4. THE DEADLOCK ON THE WESTERN FRONT.9
TRENCH WARFARE.
THE BATTLE OF VERDUN.
THE BATTLE OF THE SOMME.
5. THE WAR ON OTHER FRONTS.11
THE ITALIAN FRONT.
THE DARDANELLES.
EASTERN EUROPE.
THE WAR AT SEA.
THE WAR IN THE AIR.
6. THE FINAL STAGE...13
ALLIED FAILURES.
THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION.
THE UNITED STATES ENTERS THE WAR.
THE LAST CAMPAIGNS.
THE FIGHTING ENDS.
7. CONSEQUENCES OF THE WAR17
DESTRUCTION AND CASUALTIES.
ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES.
POLITICAL CONSEQUENCES.
SOCIAL CONSEQUENCES.
8. THE PEACE SETTLEMENT19
THE FOURTEEN POINTS.
THE PARIS PEACE CONFERENCE.
PROVISIONS OF THE TREATIES.
THE POSTWAR WORLD.
9. RESOURCES...22
INTRODUCTION
World War I (1914-1918) involved more countries and caused greater
destruction than any other war except World War II (1939-1945). An assassin's
bullets set off the war, and a system of military alliances (agreements) plunged the
main European powers into the fight. Each side expected quick victory. But the war
lasted four years and took the lives of nearly 10 million troops.
Several developments led to the awful bloodshed of the Great War, as World
War I was originally called. War plants kept turning out vast quantities of newly
invented weapons capable of extraordinary slaughter. Military drafts raised larger
armies than ever before, and extreme patriotism gave many men a cause they were
willing to die for. Propaganda whipped up support for the war by making the enemy
seem villainous.
1914. The opposing armies then fought from trenches that stretched across Belgium
and northeastern France. The Western Front hardly moved for 31/2 years in spite of
fierce combat. On the Eastern Front, Russia battled Germany and Austria-Hungary.
The fighting seesawed back and forth until 1917, when a revolution broke out in
Russia. Russia soon asked for a truce.
The United States remained neutral at first. But many Americans turned against
the Central Powers after German submarines began sinking unarmed ships. In 1917,
the United States joined the Allies. U.S troops gave the Allies the manpower they
needed to win the war. In the fall of 1918, the Central Powers surrendered.
World War I had results that none of the warring nations had foreseen. The war
helped topple emperors in Austria-Hungary, Germany, and Russia. The peace treaties
after the war carved new nations out of the defeated powers. The war left Europe
exhausted, never to regain the controlling position in world affairs that it had held
before the war. The peace settlement also created conditions that helped lead to
World War II.
attack, such an agreement guaranteed that other members of the alliance would come
to the country's aid or at least remain neutral.
Although military alliances provided protection for a country, the system
created certain dangers. Because of its alliances, a country might take risks in
dealings with other nations that it would hesitate to take alone. If war came, the
alliance system meant that a number of nations would fight, not only the two involved
in a dispute. Alliances could force a country to go to war against a nation it had no
quarrel with or over an issue it had no interest in. In addition, the terms of many
alliances were kept secret. The secrecy increased the chances that a country might
guess wrong about the consequences of its actions.
The Triple Alliance. Germany was at the center of European foreign policy
from 1870 until the outbreak of World War I. Chancellor Otto von Bismarck,
Germany's prime minister, formed a series of alliances to strengthen his country's
security. He first made an ally of Austria-Hungary. In 1879, Germany and AustriaHungary agreed to go to war if either country were attacked by Russia. Italy joined
the agreement in 1882, and it became known as the Triple Alliance. The members of
the Triple Alliance agreed to aid one another in the case of an attack by two or more
countries.
Bismarck also brought Austria-Hungary and Germany into an alliance with
Russia. The agreement, known as the Three Emperors' League, was formed in 1881.
The three powers agreed to remain neutral if any of them went to war with another
country. Bismarck also persuaded Austria-Hungary and Russia, which were rivals for
influence in the Balkans, to recognize each other's zone of authority in the region. He
thus reduced the danger of conflict between the two countries.
Germany's relations with other European countries worsened after Bismarck left
office in 1890. Bismarck had worked to prevent France, Germany's neighbor on the
west, from forming an alliance with either of Germany's two neighbors to the east-Russia and Austria-Hungary. In 1894, France and Russia agreed to mobilize (call up
troops) if any nation in the Triple Alliance mobilized. France and Russia also agreed
to help each other if either were attacked by Germany.
The Triple Entente. During the 1800's, Britain had followed a foreign policy
that became known as "splendid isolation." But Germany's naval build-up made
Britain feel the need for allies. The country therefore ended its isolation. In 1904,
Britain and France settled their past disagreements over colonies and signed the
Entente Cordiale (Friendly Agreement). Although the agreement contained no
pledges of military support, the two countries began to discuss joint military plans. In
1907, Russia joined the Entente Cordiale, and it became known as the Triple Entente.
The Triple Entente did not obligate its members to go to war as the Triple
Alliance did. But the alliances left Europe divided into two opposing camps.
World War I began in the Balkans, the site of many small wars. In the early
1900's, the Balkan states fought the Ottoman Empire in the First Balkan War (19121913) and one another in the Second Balkan War (1913). The major European
powers stayed out of both wars. But they did not escape the third Balkan crisis.
The assassination of an archduke. Archduke Francis Ferdinand, heir to the
throne of Austria-Hungary, hoped that his sympathy for Slavs would ease tensions
between Austria-Hungary and the Balkans. He arranged to tour Bosnia-Herzegovina
with his wife, Sophie. As the couple rode through Sarajevo on June 28, 1914, an
assassin jumped on their automobile and fired two shots. Francis Ferdinand and
Sophie died almost instantly. The murderer, Gavrilo Princip, was linked to a Serbian
terrorist group called the Black Hand.
The assassination of Francis Ferdinand gave Austria-Hungary an excuse to
crush Serbia, its long-time enemy in the Balkans. Austria-Hungary first gained
Germany's promise of support for any action it took against Serbia. It then sent a list
of humiliating demands to Serbia on July 23. Serbia accepted most of the demands
and offered to have the rest settled by an international conference. Austria-Hungary
rejected the offer and declared war on Serbia on July 28. It expected a quick victory.
How the conflict spread. Within weeks of the archduke's assassination, the
chief European powers were drawn into World War I. A few attempts were made to
prevent the war. For example, Britain proposed an international conference to end the
crisis. But Germany rejected the idea, claiming that the dispute involved only
Austria-Hungary and Serbia. However, Germany tried to stop the war from
spreading. The German kaiser (emperor), Wilhelm II, urged Czar Nicholas II of
Russia, his cousin, not to mobilize.
Russia had backed down before in supporting its ally Serbia. In 1908, AustriaHungary had angered Serbia by taking over Bosnia-Herzegovina, and Russia had
stepped aside. In 1914, Russia vowed to stand behind Serbia. Russia first gained a
promise of support from France. The czar then approved plans to mobilize along
Russia's border with Austria-Hungary. But Russia's military leaders persuaded the
czar to mobilize along the German border, too. On July 30, 1914, Russia announced
it would mobilize fully.
Germany declared war on Russia on Aug. 1, 1914, in response to Russia's
mobilization. Two days later, Germany declared war on France. The German army
swept into Belgium on its way to France. The invasion of neutral Belgium caused
Britain to declare war on Germany on August 4. By the time the war ended in
November 1918, few areas of the world had remained neutral.
The Western Front. Germany's war plan had been prepared in 1905 by Alfred
von Schlieffen. Schlieffen was chief of the German General Staff, the group of
officers who provided advice on military operations. The Schlieffen Plan assumed
that Germany would have to fight both France and Russia. It aimed at a quick defeat
of France while Russia slowly mobilized. After defeating France, Germany would
deal with Russia. The Schlieffen Plan required Germany to strike first if war came.
Once the plan was set in motion, the system of military alliances almost assured a
general European war.
The Schlieffen Plan called for two wings of the German army to crush the
French army in a pincers movement. A small left wing would defend Germany along
its frontier with France. A much larger right wing would invade France through
Belgium; encircle and capture France's capital, Paris; and then move east. As the
right wing moved in, the French forces would be trapped between the pincers. The
success of Germany's assault depended on a strong right wing. However, Helmuth
von Moltke, who had become chief of the General Staff in 1906, directed German
strategy at the outbreak of World War I. Moltke changed the Schlieffen Plan by
reducing the number of troops in the right wing.
Belgium's army fought bravely but held up the Germans for only a short time.
By Aug. 16, 1914, the right wing of the German army could begin its pincers motion.
It drove back French forces and a small British force in southern Belgium and swept
into France. But instead of swinging west around Paris according to plan, one part of
the right wing pursued retreating French troops east toward the Marne River. This
maneuver left the Germans exposed to attacks from the rear.
Meanwhile, General Joseph Joffre, commander in chief of all the French armies,
stationed his forces near the Marne River east of Paris and prepared for battle. Fierce
fighting, which became known as the First Battle of the Marne, began on September
6. On September 9, German forces started to withdraw.
The First Battle of the Marne was a key victory for the Allies because it ended
Germany's hopes to defeat France quickly. Moltke was replaced as chief of the
German General Staff by Erich von Falkenhayn.
The German army halted its retreat near the Aisne River. From there, the
Germans and the Allies fought a series of battles that became known as the Race to
the Sea. Germany sought to seize ports on the English Channel and cut off vital
supply lines between France and Britain. But the Allies stopped the German advance
to the sea in the First Battle of Ypres in Belgium. The battle lasted from mid-October
until mid-November.
By late November 1914, the war reached a deadlock along the Western Front as
neither side gained much ground. The battlefront extended more than 450 miles (720
kilometers) across Belgium and northeastern France to the border of Switzerland.
The deadlock on the Western Front lasted nearly 31/2 years.
The Eastern Front. Russia's mobilization on the Eastern Front moved faster
than Germany expected. By late August 1914, two Russian armies had thrust deeply
into the German territory of East Prussia. The Germans learned that the two armies
had become separated, and they prepared a battle plan. By August 31, the Germans
had encircled one Russian army in the Battle of Tannenberg. They then chased the
other Russian army out of East Prussia in the Battle of the Masurian Lakes. The
number of Russian casualties--that is, the number of men killed, captured, wounded,
or missing--totaled about 250,000 in the two battles. The victories made heroes of the
commanders of the German forces in the east--Paul von Hindenburg and Erich
Ludendorff.
Austria-Hungary had less success than its German ally on the Eastern Front. By
the end of 1914, Austria-Hungary's forces had attacked Serbia three times and been
beaten back each time. Meanwhile, Russia had captured much of the AustroHungarian province of Galicia (now part of Poland and Ukraine). By early October, a
humiliated Austro-Hungarian army had retreated into its own territory.
Fighting elsewhere. The Allies declared war on the Ottoman Empire in
November 1914, after Turkish ships bombarded Russian ports on the Black Sea.
Turkish troops then invaded Russia. Fighting later broke out in the Ottoman
territories on the Arabian Peninsula and in Mesopotamia (now mostly Iraq), Palestine,
and Syria.
Britain stayed in control of the seas following two naval victories over Germany
in 1914. The British then kept Germany's surface fleet bottled up in its home waters
during most of the war. As a result, Germany relied on submarine warfare.
World War I quickly spread to Germany's overseas colonies. Japan declared
war on Germany in late August 1914 and drove the Germans off several islands in the
Pacific Ocean. Troops from Australia and New Zealand seized other German
colonies in the Pacific. By mid-1915, most of Germany's empire in Africa had fallen
to British forces. However, fighting continued in German East Africa (now Tanzania)
for two more years.
jobs. At night, patrols fixed the barbed wire and tried to get information about the
enemy.
Enemy artillery and machine guns kept each side pinned in the trenches. Yet
the Allies repeatedly tried to blast a gap in the German lines. Allied offensives
(assaults) followed a pattern. First, artillery bombarded the enemy front-line trenches.
The infantry then attacked as commanders shouted, "Over the top!" Soldiers
scrambled out of trenches and began the dash across no man's land with fixed
bayonets. They hurled grenades into enemy trenches and struggled through the
barbed wire. But the artillery bombardment seldom wiped out all resistance, and so
enemy machine guns slaughtered wave after wave of advancing infantry. Even if the
attackers broke through the front line, they ran into a second line of defenses. Thus,
the Allies never cracked the enemy's defensive power.
Both the Allies and the Central Powers developed new weapons, which they
hoped would break the deadlock. In April 1915, the Germans first released poison
gas over Allied lines in the Second Battle of Ypres. The fumes caused vomiting and
suffocation. But German commanders had little faith in the gas, and they failed to
seize that opportunity to launch a major attack. The Allies also began to use poison
gas soon thereafter, and gas masks became necessary equipment in the trenches.
Another new weapon was the flame thrower, which shot out a stream of burning fuel.
month, Hindenburg and Ludendorff--the two German heroes of the Eastern Front-replaced Falkenhayn on the Western Front. Hindenburg became chief of the General
Staff. Ludendorff, his top aide, planned German strategy.
General Henri Petain had organized the defense of Verdun and was hailed a
hero by France. The Battle of Verdun became a symbol of the terrible destructiveness
of modern war. French casualties totaled about 315,000 men, and German casualties
about 280,000. The city itself was practically destroyed.
The Battle of the Somme. The Allies planned a major offensive for 1916 near
the Somme River in France. The Battle of Verdun had drained France. Thus, the
Somme offensive became mainly the responsibility of the British under General
Douglas Haig.
The Allies attacked on July 1, 1916. Within hours, Britain had suffered nearly
60,000 casualties--its worst loss in one day of battle. Fierce fighting went on into the
fall. In September, Britain introduced the first primitive tanks. But the tanks were too
unreliable and too few in number to make a difference in the battle. Haig finally
halted the useless attack in November. At terrible cost, the Allies had gained about 7
miles (11 kilometers). The Battle of the Somme caused more than 1 million
casualties--over 600,000 Germans, over 400,000 British, and nearly 200,000 French.
In spite of the tragic losses at Verdun and the Somme, the Western Front stood as
solid as ever at the end of 1916.
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strait that formed part of the waterway, in February and March 1915. The Allies
hoped to open a supply route to Russia. However, underwater mines halted the
assault.
In April 1915, the Allies landed troops on the Gallipoli Peninsula on the west
shore of the Dardanelles. Troops from Australia and New Zealand played a key role
in the landing. Ottoman and Allied forces soon became locked in trench warfare. A
second invasion in August at Suvla Bay to the north failed to end the standstill. In
December, the Allies began to evacuate their troops. They had suffered about
250,000 casualties in the Dardanelles.
Eastern Europe. In May 1915, the armies of Germany and Austria-Hungary
broke through Russian lines in Galicia, the Austro-Hungarian province that Russia
had invaded in 1914. The Russians retreated about 300 miles (480 kilometers) before
they formed a new line of defense. In spite of the setback, Czar Nicholas II staged
two offensives to relieve the pressure on the Allies on the Western Front. The first
Russian offensive, in March 1916, failed to pull German troops away from Verdun.
The second Russian offensive began in June 1916 under General Alexei
Brusilov. Brusilov's army drove Austria-Hungary's forces back about 50 miles (80
kilometers). Within a few weeks, Russia captured about 200,000 prisoners. To halt
the assault, Austria-Hungary had to shift troops from the Italian Front to the Eastern
Front. The Russian offensive nearly knocked Austria-Hungary out of the war. But it
also exhausted Russia. Each side suffered about a million casualties.
Bulgaria entered World War I in October 1915 to help Austria-Hungary defeat
Serbia. Bulgaria hoped to recover land it had lost in the Second Balkan War. In an
effort to aid Serbia, the Allies landed troops in Thessaloniki (Salonika), Greece. But
the troops never reached Serbia. By November, the Central Powers had overrun
Serbia, and Serbia's army had retreated to Albania.
Romania joined the Allies in August 1916. It hoped to gain some of AustriaHungary's territory if the Allies won the war. By the end of 1916, Romania had lost
most of its army, and Germany controlled the country's valuable wheat fields and oil
fields.
The war at sea. Great Britain's control of the seas during World War I caused
serious problems for Germany. The British navy blockaded German waters,
preventing supplies from reaching German ports. By 1916, Germany suffered a
shortage of food and other goods. Germany combated British seapower with its
submarines, called U-boats. In February 1915, Germany declared a submarine
blockade of the British Isles and warned that it would attack any ship that tried to get
through the blockade. Thereafter, U-boats destroyed great amounts of goods headed
for Britain.
On May 7, 1915, a U-boat torpedoed without warning the British passenger
liner Lusitania off the coast of Ireland. Among the 1,198 passengers who died were
128 Americans. The sinking of the Lusitania led U.S. President Woodrow Wilson to
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In April 1917, shortly before Nivelle's offensive began, Canadian forces seized
a hill called Vimy Ridge. Many Allied troops had fallen in earlier attempts to
dislodge the Germans from that height in northern France.
Nivelle's offensive opened on April 16, 1917. By the end of the day, it was
clear that the assault had failed. But fighting continued into May. Mutinies broke out
among the French forces after Nivelle's offensive collapsed. The troops had had
enough of the pointless bloodshed and the horrid conditions on the Western Front.
They no longer had faith in their leaders. Men who had fought bravely for almost
three years refused to go on fighting. Petain, the hero of Verdun, replaced Nivelle in
May 1917. Petain improved the soldiers' living conditions and restored order. He
promised that France would remain on the defensive until it was ready to fight again.
Meanwhile, any further offensives on the Western Front remained Britain's
responsibility.
General Haig was hopeful that a British offensive near Ypres would lead to
victory. The Third Battle of Ypres, also known as the Battle of Passchendaele, began
on July 31, 1917. For more than three months, British troops and a small French
force pounded the Germans in an especially terrible campaign. Heavy Allied
bombardment before the infantry attack began had destroyed the drainage system
around Ypres. Drenching rains then turned the water-logged land into a swamp where
thousands of British soldiers drowned. Snow and ice finally halted the disastrous
battle on November 10. In late November, Britain used tanks to break through the
Siegfried Line. But the failure at Ypres had used up the troops Britain needed to
follow up that success.
In 1917, first France and then Britain thus saw their hopes for victory shattered.
Austria-Hungary drove the Italians out of its territory in the Battle of Caporetto in the
fall. A revolution in Russia made the Allied situation seem even more hopeless.
The Russian Revolution. The Russian people suffered greatly during World
War I. By 1917, many of them were no longer willing to put up with the enormous
casualties and the severe shortages of food and fuel. They blamed Czar Nicholas II
and his advisers for the country's problems. Early in 1917, an uprising in Petrograd
(now St. Petersburg) forced Nicholas from the throne. The new government
continued the war.
To weaken Russia's war effort further, Germany helped V. I. Lenin, a Russian
revolutionary then living in Switzerland, return to his homeland in April 1917. Seven
months later, Lenin led an uprising that gained control of Russia's government. Lenin
immediately called for peace talks with Germany. World War I had ended on the
Eastern Front.
Germany dictated harsh peace terms to Russia in a peace treaty signed in BrestLitovsk, Russia, on March 3, 1918. The Treaty of Brest-Litovsk forced Russia to give
up large amounts of territory, including Finland, Poland, Ukraine, Bessarabia, and the
Baltic States--Estonia, Livonia (now Latvia), and Lithuania. The end of the fighting
on the Eastern Front freed German troops for use on the Western Front. The only
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obstacle to a final German victory seemed to be the entry of the United States into the
war.
The United States enters the war. At the start of World War I, President
Wilson had declared the neutrality of the United States. Most Americans opposed
U.S. involvement in a European war. But the sinking of the Lusitania and other
German actions against civilians drew American sympathies to the Allies.
Several events early in 1917 persuaded the United States government to enter
World War I. In February, Germany returned to unrestricted submarine warfare,
which it assumed might bring the United States into the war. But German military
leaders believed that they could still win the war by cutting off British supplies. They
expected their U-boats to starve Britain into surrendering within a few months, long
before the United States had fully prepared for war.
Tension between the United States and Germany increased after the British
intercepted and decoded a message from Germany's foreign minister, Arthur
Zimmermann, to the German ambassador to Mexico. The message, known as the
"Zimmermann note," revealed a German plot to persuade Mexico to go to war against
the United States. The British gave the message to Wilson, and it was published in
the United States early in March. Americans were further enraged after U-boats sank
several U.S. cargo ships.
On April 2, Wilson called for war, stating that "the world must be made safe for
democracy." Congress declared war on Germany on April 6. Few people expected
that the United States would make much of a contribution toward ending the war.
Mobilization. The United States entered World War I unprepared for battle.
Strong antiwar feelings had hampered efforts to prepare for war. After declaring war,
the government worked to stir up enthusiasm for the war effort. Government
propaganda pictured the war as a battle for liberty and democracy. People who still
opposed the war faced increasingly unfriendly public opinion. They could even be
brought to trial under wartime laws forbidding statements that might harm the
successful progress of the war.
During World War I, U.S. government agencies directed the nation's economy
toward the war effort. President Wilson put financier Bernard M. Baruch in charge of
the War Industries Board, which turned factories into producers of war materials. The
Food Administration, headed by businessman Herbert Hoover, controlled the prices,
production, and distribution of food. Americans observed "meatless" and "wheatless"
days in order that food could be sent to Europe.
Manpower was the chief contribution of the United States to World War I. The
country entered the war with a Regular Army of only about 128,000 men. It soon
organized a draft requiring all men from 21 through 30 years old to register for
military service. The age range was broadened to 18 through 45 in 1918. A lottery
determined who served. Many men enlisted voluntarily, and women signed up as
nurses and office workers. The U.S. armed forces had almost 5 million men and
women by the end of the war. Of that number, about 23/4 million men had been
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drafted. Few soldiers received much training before going overseas because the
Allies urgently needed them.
Before U.S. help could reach the Western Front, the Allies had to overcome the
U-boat threat in the Atlantic. In May 1917, Britain began to use a convoy system, by
which cargo ships went to sea in large groups escorted by warships. The U-boats
proved no match for the warships, and Allied shipping losses dropped sharply.
American troops in Europe. The soldiers sent to Europe by the U.S. Army
made up the American Expeditionary Forces (AEF). General John J. Pershing,
commander of the AEF, arrived in France in mid-June 1917. The first troops landed
later that month. Pershing told U.S. military authorities that he needed 3 million
American troops, a third of them within the next year. The American officials were
shocked. They had planned to send only 650,000 troops in that time. In the end,
about 2 million Americans served in Europe.
Britain, France, and Italy knew well how desperately they needed U.S.
manpower by the fall of 1917. In November, the Allies formed the Supreme War
Council to plan strategy. They decided to make their strategy defensive until U.S.
troops reached the Western Front. The Allies wanted Americans to serve as
replacements and fill out their battered ranks. But Pershing was convinced that the
AEF would make a greater contribution by fighting as an independent unit. The
argument was the major wartime dispute between the Europeans and their American
ally. Pershing generally held firm, though at times he lent troops to France and
Britain.
The last campaigns. The end of the war on the Eastern Front boosted German
hopes for victory. By early 1918, German forces outnumbered the Allies on the
Western Front. In spring, Germany staged three offensives. Ludendorff counted on
delivering a crushing blow to the Allies before large numbers of American troops
reached the front. He relied on speed and surprise.
Germany first struck near St.-Quentin, a city in the Somme River Valley, on
March 21, 1918. By March 26, British troops had retreated about 30 miles (50
kilometers). In late March, the Germans began to bombard Paris with "Big Berthas."
The enormous guns hurled shells up to 75 miles (120 kilometers). After the disaster
at St.-Quentin, Allied leaders met to plan a united defense. In April, they appointed
General Ferdinand Foch of France to be the supreme commander of the Allied forces
on the Western Front.
A second German offensive began on April 9 along the Lys River in Belgium.
British troops fought stubbornly, and Ludendorff called off the attack on April 30.
The Allies suffered heavy losses in both assaults, but German casualties were nearly
as great.
Germany attacked a third time on May 27 near the Aisne River. By May 30,
German troops had reached the Marne River. American soldiers helped France stop
the German advance at the town of Chateau-Thierry, less than 50 miles (80
kilometers) northeast of Paris. During June, U.S. troops drove the Germans out of
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Belleau Wood, a forested area near the Marne. German forces crossed the Marne on
July 15. Foch ordered a counterattack near the town of Soissons on July 18.
The Second Battle of the Marne was fought from July 15 through Aug. 6, 1918.
It marked the turning point of World War I. After winning the battle, the Allies
advanced steadily. On August 8, Britain and France attacked the Germans near
Amiens. By early September, Germany had lost all the territory it had gained since
spring. In mid-September, Pershing led U.S. forces to easy victory at St.-Mihiel.
The last offensive of World War I began on Sept. 26, 1918. About 900,000
U.S. troops participated in heavy fighting between the Argonne Forest and the Meuse
River. Ludendorff realized that Germany could no longer overcome the superior
strength of the Allies.
The fighting ends. The Allies won victories on all fronts in the fall of 1918.
Bulgaria surrendered on September 29. British forces under the command of General
Edmund Allenby triumphed over the Ottoman army in Palestine and Syria. On
October 30, the Ottoman Empire signed an armistice. The last major battle between
Italy and Austria-Hungary began in late October in Italy. Italy, with support from
France and Great Britain, defeated Austria-Hungary near the town of Vittorio Veneto.
Austria-Hungary signed an armistice on November 3.
Germany teetered on the edge of collapse as the war continued through October.
Britain's naval blockade had nearly starved the German people, and widespread
discontent led to riots and rising demands for peace. Kaiser Wilhelm gave up his
throne on November 9 and fled to the Netherlands. An Allied delegation headed by
Foch met with German representatives in a railroad car in the Compiegne Forest in
northern France.
In the early morning on Nov. 11, 1918, the Germans accepted the armistice
terms demanded by the Allies. Germany agreed to evacuate the terrorities it had
taken during the war; to surrender large numbers of arms, ships, and other war
materials; and to allow the Allied powers to occupy German territory along the Rhine
River. Foch ordered the fighting to stop on the Western Front at 11 a.m. World War I
was over.
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battle deaths in relation to its total number of servicemen. It lost about 11/3 million
soldiers, or 16 per cent of those mobilized. No one knows how many civilians died of
disease, starvation, and other war-related causes. Some historians believe as many
civilians died as soldiers.
Property damage in World War I was greatest in France and Belgium. Armies
destroyed farms and villages as they passed through them or, even worse, dug in for
battle. The fighting wrecked factories, bridges, and railroad tracks. Artillery shells,
trenches, and chemicals made barren the land along the Western Front.
Economic consequences. World War I cost the fighting nations a total of about
$337 billion dollars. By 1918, the war was costing about $10 million an hour.
Nations raised part of the money to pay for the war through income taxes and other
taxes. But most of the money came from borrowing, which created huge debts.
Governments borrowed from citizens by selling war bonds. The Allies also borrowed
heavily from the United States. In addition, most governments printed extra money to
meet their needs. But the increased money supply caused severe inflation after the
war.
The problem of war debts lingered after World War I ended. The Allies tried to
reduce their debts by demanding reparations (payments for war damages) from the
Central Powers, especially Germany. Reparations worsened the economic problems
of the defeated countries and did not solve the problems of the victors.
World War I seriously disrupted economies. Some businesses shut down after
workers left for military service. Other firms shifted to the production of war
materials. To direct production toward the war effort, governments took greater
control over the economy than ever before. Most people wanted a return to private
enterprise after the war. But some people expected government to continue to solve
economic problems.
The countries of Europe had poured their resources into World War I, and they
came out of the war exhausted. France, for example, had lost nearly one-tenth of its
work force. In most European countries, many returning soldiers could not find jobs.
In addition, Europe lost many of the markets for its exports while producing war
goods. The United States and other countries that had played a smaller role in the war
emerged with increased economic power.
Political consequences. World War I shook the foundations of several
governments. Democratic governments in Britain and France withstood the stress of
the war. But four monarchies toppled. The first monarch to fall was Czar Nicholas II
of Russia in 1917. Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany and Emperor Charles of AustriaHungary left their thrones in 1918. The Ottoman sultan, Muhammad VI, fell in 1922.
The collapse of old empires led to the creation of new countries in the years
after World War I. The prewar territory of Austria-Hungary formed the independent
republics of Austria, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia, as well as parts of Italy, Poland,
Romania, and Yugoslavia. Russia and Germany also gave up territory to Poland.
Finland and the Baltic States--Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania--gained independence
from Russia. Most Arab lands in the Ottoman Empire were placed under the control
of France and Britain. The rest of the Ottoman Empire became Turkey. European
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leaders took national groups into account in redrawing the map of Europe and thus
strengthened the cause of nationalism.
World War I gave the Communists a chance to seize power in Russia. Some
people expected Communist revolutions to break out elsewhere in Europe.
Revolutionary movements gained strength after the war, but Communist governments
did not take hold.
Social consequences. World War I brought enormous changes in society. The
death of so many young men affected France more than other countries. During the
1920's, France's population dropped because of a low birth rate. Millions of people
were uprooted by the war. Some fled war-torn areas and later found their houses,
farms, or villages destroyed. Others became refugees as a result of changes in
governments and national borders, especially in central and eastern Europe.
Many people chose not to resume their old way of life after World War I.
Urban areas grew as peasants settled in cities instead of returning to farms. Women
filled jobs in offices and factories after men went to war, and they were reluctant to
give up their new independence. Many countries granted women the vote after the
war.
The distinction between social classes began to blur as a result of World War I,
and society became more democratic. The upper classes, which had traditionally
governed, lost some of their power and privilege after having led the world into an
agonizing war. Men of all classes had faced the same danger and horror in the
trenches. Those who had bled and suffered for their country came to demand a say in
running it.
Finally, World War I transformed attitudes. Middle- and upper-class Europeans
lost the confidence and optimism they had felt before the war. Many people began to
question long-held ideas. For example, few Europeans before the war had doubted
their right to force European culture on the rest of the world. But the destruction and
bloodshed of the war shattered the belief in the superiority of European civilization.
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The Paris Peace Conference largely disregarded the lofty principles of the
Fourteen Points. The major European Allies had sacrificed far more than the
Americans and wanted to be paid back. Wilson focused his efforts on the creation of
the League of Nations. He yielded to France and Britain on many other issues.
In May 1919, the peace conference approved the treaty and presented it to
Germany. Germany agreed to it only after the Allies threatened to invade. With
grave doubts, German representatives signed the treaty in the Palace of Versailles
near Paris on June 28, 1919. The date was the fifth anniversary of the assassination of
Archduke Francis Ferdinand.
In addition to the Treaty of Versailles with Germany, the peacemakers drew up
separate treaties with the other Central Powers. The Treaty of St.-Germain was
signed with Austria in September 1919, the Treaty of Neuilly with Bulgaria in
November 1919, the Treaty of Trianon with Hungary in June 1920, and the Treaty of
Sevres with the Ottoman Empire in August 1920.
Provisions of the treaties that officially ended World War I stripped the
Central Powers of territory and arms and required them to pay reparations. Germany
was punished especially severely. One clause in the Treaty of Versailles forced
Germany to accept responsibility for causing the war.
Under the Treaty of Versailles, Germany gave up territory to Belgium,
Czechoslovakia, Denmark, France, and Poland and lost its overseas colonies. France
gained control of coal fields in Germany's Saar Valley for 15 years. An Allied
military force, paid for by Germany, was to occupy the west bank of the Rhine River
for 15 years. Other clauses in the treaty limited Germany's armed forces and required
the country to turn over war materials, ships, livestock, and other goods to the Allies.
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A total sum for reparations was not set until 1921. At that time, Germany received a
bill for about $33 billion.
The Treaty of St.-Germain and the Treaty of Trianon reduced Austria and
Hungary to less than a third their former area. The treaties recognized the
independence of Czechoslovakia, Poland, and a kingdom that later became
Yugoslavia. Those new states, along with Italy and Romania, received territory that
had belonged to Austria-Hungary. The Treaty of Sevres took Mesopotamia (later
renamed Iraq), Palestine, and Syria away from the Ottoman Empire. Bulgaria lost
territory to Greece and Romania. Germany's allies also had to reduce their armed
forces and pay reparations.
The postwar world. The peacemakers found it impossible to satisfy the hopes
and ambitions of every nation and national group. The settlements they drew up
disappointed both the victors and the defeated powers.
In creating new borders, the peacemakers considered the wishes of national
groups. However, territorial claims overlapped in many cases. For example,
Romania gained a chunk of land with a large Hungarian population, and parts of
Czechoslovakia and Poland had many Germans. Such settlements heightened
tensions between countries. In addition, some Arab nations were bitter because they
had failed to gain independence.
Certain borders created by the peace settlements made little economic sense.
For example, the new countries of Austria and Hungary were small and weak and
unable to support themselves. They had lost most of their population, resources, and
markets. Austria's largely German population had wanted to unite with Germany.
But the peace treaties forbade that union. The peacemakers did not want Germany to
gain territory from the war.
Among the European Allies, Britain entered the postwar world the most content.
The nation had kept its empire and control of the seas. But Britain worried that the
balance of power it wanted in Europe could be upset by a severely weakened
Germany and a victory by the Communists in a civil war in Russia. France had
succeeded in imposing harsh terms on Germany--its traditional foe--but not in
safeguarding its borders. France had failed to obtain a guarantee of aid from Britain
and the United States in the event of a German invasion. Finally, Italy had gained less
territory than it had been promised and felt it deserved.
In the United States, the Senate reflected public opinion and failed to approve
the Treaty of Versailles. It thereby rejected President Wilson. The treaty would have
made the United States a member of the League of Nations. Many Americans were
not yet ready to accept the responsibilities that went along with their country's new
power. They feared that the League of Nations would entangle the country in
European disputes.
The Treaty of Versailles imposed harsher terms than Germany had expected.
The responsibility of having accepted those terms weakened Germany's postwar
government. During the 1930's, a strongly nationalist movement led by Adolf Hitler
gained power in Germany. Hitler promised to ignore the Treaty of Versailles and to
avenge Germany's defeat in World War I. In 1939, Germany invaded Poland. World
War II had begun.
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RESOURCES
Bosco, Peter I. World War I. Facts on File, 1991.
Coffman, Edward M. The War to End All Wars: The American Military Experience
in World War I. 1968. Reprint. Univ. of Wisconsin Pr., 1986.
Gray, Randal. Chronicle of the First World War. 2 vols. Facts on File, 1990, 1991.
Haythornthwaite, Philip J. The World War One Source Book. Arms & Armour, 1992.
Kirchberger, Joe H. The First World War. Facts on File, 1992.
McGowen, Tom. World War I. Watts, 1993. Younger readers.
Schneider, Dorothy and C. J. Into the Breach: American Women Overseas in World
War I. Viking, 1991.
Stewart, Gail B. World War I. Lucent, 1991.
Williamson, Samuel R., Jr. Austria-Hungary and the Origins of the First World War.
St. Martin's, 1991.
Young, Peter, ed. The Marshall Cavendish Illustrated Encyclopedia of World War I.
Cavendish, 1984.
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