File:Chap 13.3 Outline – The World At War.doc
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Chap 13.3 Outline – The World At War - Western Civ Homework 5/10/2006 -Plaz 21:10, 10 May 2006 (EDT)
Grade:15/15
Good
- Intro - The War Expands
- By 1915, it appeared that a swift victory had eluded the warring, European nations
- The war was going to be a long, grim, drawn-out affair.
- Both sides looked for new allies to help them win.
- Also, they looked for new fronts to gain an advantage.
- Italy joined on the side of the Allies in April 1915
- The Ottoman Empire
- Gallipoli campaign
- The Allies wanted to attack an Ottoman region known as the Dardanelles, so they could:
- take Constantinople
- defeat the Turks
- open a supply line to Russia
- possibly- get into Austria through the Danube River
- This front started in Feb. 1915
- Known as the Gallipoli campaign
- British, Australian, New Zealand, and French troops attacked Gallipoli Peninsula
- Turkish Troops, some commanded by German officials, defended
- Soon turned into another stalemate with trenched
- In December 1915, Allies left after 250,000 casualties.
- The Allies wanted to attack an Ottoman region known as the Dardanelles, so they could:
- Still, Allies determined to topple Ottoman Empire
- In southwest Asia, British helped Arab nationalist rise up against Turkish rulers
- On solider that helped a lot was T.E. Lawrence aka. Lawrence of Arabia
- Led guerilla raids against Turks
- With help of Arabs, Allies got Baghdad, Jerusalem, and Damascus
- Gallipoli campaign
- In parts of Asia and Africa, Germany’s colonies were threatened
- Japan quickly took Germany’s positions in China and the Pacific Islands.
- English and French troops attacked German’s colonies in Africa and got three.
- In Asia and Africa, British and French got help for the Allies. Help (troops and labors: brought supplies to the lines) came from:
- India
- South Africa
- Senegal
- Egypt
- Algeria
- Indonesia
- Many volunteered because they hoped their services would be repaid with independence.
- In India: Mohandas Gandhi supported the war and helped Britain in their “Hour of need”
- United States Enters
- In 1917, Germans intensified submarine warfare
- Failed crops and British blockades made it hard on Germans
- In Jan. 1917 Germans announced unrestricted submarine warfare, or that they would attack any ship for any reason
- On May 7, 1915 a u-boat sunk British passenger ship Lusitania that was carrying 1,198 passengers including 128 Americans.
- The Germans claimed it was carrying ammunition (It was)
- America was outraged
- President Woodrow Wilson sent strong letter to Germans
- After two more attacks, Germans backed down
- However, in 1917, they started again because they hoped they could get the US involved in the war.
- They though the blockade would hurt Britain before the USA could mobilize
- Ignoring warnings, Germans sank three US ships
- Zimmermann Note
- In Feb. 1917 the British intercepted a telegram from Germans to Mexicans promising Mexico would get its land back (Texas, New Mexico, Arizona) that it lost to the US before.
- This sparked the war
- Common Ties
- Also, before this, many Americans supported the British due to its common language and law system
- Also their were reports (both true and false) of German war atrocities
- Our economic ties were stronger with Allies then Central Powers
- On April 2, 1917 the US joined the war on the Allied side
- Total War
- In the 3 years before the US joined, the war was turning into a Total War; or a war which the countries involved change all aspects of their society to support the war
- Mostly Britain, Germany, Austria, Russia, and France
- The wartime gov. took control of economy
- Factories were told how much and of what to produce
- Bike factories turned into munitions and tank factories, etc.
- Almost every citizen was put to work
- Almost no unemployment
- Foreign workers sought
- Factories were told how much and of what to produce
- Rationing started – people could only buy certain amounts of items needed for war
- Anti-war activities were suppressed
- Sometimes even forcibly and even in democratic countries
- Propaganda (one-sided information) posters were turned out
- Woman were needed
- Thousands of woman replaced men in factories and offices
- Kept troops supplied
- Although most woman left the work force after the war, it changed the idea of what woman could do
- Allies Win!
- When the US joined, the balance shifted, but before, Russia was weakening and would pull out
- Russia Withdraws
- Russia did not have the infrastructure to support war.
- They were mostly kept alive due to the vast amounts of soldiers they could send out to die
- By March 1917, civil unrest in Russia hit home.
- Czar Nicholas’s government was on the brink of collapse, when he quit on March 15, 1917.
- A provincial government was put up in it’s place
- They vowed to continue fighting
- But by 1917, 5.5 million Russians had been killed, wounded, or taken hostage
- The Russian army wouldn’t fight any longer.
- In November 1917, Communist Vladimir Iiyich Lenin sized power through a revolution
- He wanted to end the war
- He offered Germany a truce
- In March 1918, the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk ended the war, but forced Russia to give up:
- Finland
- Poland
- Ukraine
- Estonia
- Latvia
- Lithuania
- After the war, the treaty was invalidated, but these countries became independent.
- Russia’s withdraw let Germany send all of its troops to the Western Front
- They made one strong push in March 1918
- More then 6000 cannons attacked France at once
- Germans crushed everything in their path, and made massive advances.
- By late May 1918, they were back to the Marne River, 40 miles from Paris
- But the Germans were weakened
- The Allies, with the help of fresh American troops could launch a counter attack with Marshal Ferdinand Foch
- The US soldiers sere inexperienced, but strong, and ready to fight - unlike the exhausted, meek French (the strong ones were mostly dead)
- Russia did not have the infrastructure to support war.
- In July 1918, at the Second Battle of the Marne, 350 Allied tanks and 2 million Americans pushed the Germans back
- The Central Powers begin to crumble
- First Bulgarians, then the Ottoman Empire surrendered
- In October 1918, a revolution in Austria-Hungary ended that empire.
- In Germany, soldiers mutinied and the public turned on Kaiser
- On November 9, 1918, Kaiser Wilhelm II stepped down and Germany became a republic
- On November 11, 1918, representatives from the new German government met with Marshal Foch in a railcar to sign an armistice or agreement to stop fighting
- Leaders then gathered in Paris to make a shaky peace, that left countries feeling bitter and betrayed
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current | 22:59, 17 August 2007 | (130 KB) | ThePlaz (Talk | contribs) | Chap 13.3 Outline – The World At War - Western Civ Homework 5/10/2006 -Plaz 21:10, 10 May 2006 (EDT) {{rev-word|http://theplaz.com/wiki/images/Chap_13.3_Outline_%E2%80%93_The_World_At_War.doc}} {{grade|15|15|Good}} ---- #Intro - T |
01:10, 11 May 2006 | (114 KB) | ThePlaz (Talk | contribs) | Chap 13.3 Outline – The World At War - Western Civ Homework 5/10/2006 -~~~~ Category:Western Civ |
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