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World War I (1914тАУ1918), previously known as "The Great War," was triggered by a specific event, but the massive powder keg had been building in Europe for decades due to four underlying long-term causes, often abbreviated as M.A.I.N.:
Militarism:
Alliances:
Imperialism:
Nationalism:
The powder keg exploded in Sarajevo, Bosnia. Archduke Franz Ferdinand, the heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne, was assassinated by Gavrilo Princip, a Serbian nationalist. Austria-Hungary explicitly blamed Serbia. Driven by the secret alliance system, nations rapidly mobilized: тАв Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia. тАв Russia mobilized to defend Serbia. тАв Germany mobilized to defend Austria-Hungary, declaring war on Russia and its ally France. тАв When Germany invaded neutral Belgium to attack France, Great Britain immediately entered the war against Germany.
The war was fought on two primary European fronts, and quickly expanded globally into the colonies.
The Western Front (Trench Warfare): Germany's plan to quickly defeat France failed. Instead, armies ground to a halt and dug a continuous 400-mile line of muddy, rat-infested trenches from Switzerland to the North Sea. The war here resulted in a horrific, years-long stalemate. Generals repeatedly ordered men "over the top" into heavily defended "No Man's Land" to face industrial slaughter from rapid-fire machine guns, enormous artillery, and horrific new inventions like poison gas. Battles like the Somme and Verdun resulted in millions of casualties for practically no territorial gain.
The Eastern Front: The war between Germany/Austria-Hungary and Russia was much more mobile. Despite having massive numbers of soldiers, Russia was poorly industrialized and ill-equipped. Germany continuously crushed the Russian army. The massive devastation combined with internal poverty led directly to the Russian Revolution in 1917, forcing Russia to sign a humiliating treaty and exit the war.
Global Nature: The Ottoman Empire joined the Central Powers (Germany). Battles raged in the Middle East, Africa, and at sea (submarine warfare). France and Britain heavily utilized troops recruited from their colonies, including over a million soldiers from India fighting valiantly for the British Empire.
US Entry (1917): The United States had remained neutral. However, GermanyтАЩs use of Unrestricted Submarine Warfare (sinking American civilian ships like the Lusitania in 1915) and the Zimmermann Telegram (a German proposal to Mexico to attack the US) forced America into the war in 1917. Fresh American troops and vast industrial supplies tipped the balance, finally exhausting the German military by November 1918.
The devastation was unparalleledтАФaround 20 million soldiers and civilians died, and entire empires collapsed (German, Russian, Austro-Hungarian, and Ottoman).
The victorious Allies (Britain, France, US) met in Paris to sign peace treaties. The most significant was the Treaty of Versailles with Germany. The treaty was extremely punitive (driven largely by FranceтАЩs desire to permanently cripple Germany):
The deep resentment and economic misery caused by Versailles laid the perfect breeding ground for the rise of Adolf Hitler and WWII just two decades later.
Championed by US President Woodrow Wilson in his "Fourteen Points," the League of Nations was created as the first worldwide intergovernmental organization. Its sole purpose was to maintain world peace through collective security and disarmament, resolving disputes through negotiation rather than war.
Failure of the League: Despite its noble goals, the League possessed severe fatal flaws:
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