Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Chapter 11: Accelerating Global Change and Realignments, c. 1900 to Present
- World War I
- Shifting Alliances
- Triple Alliances negotiated by Otto von Bismarck
- Germany
- Austria-Hungary
- Italy
- Triple Entente
- France
- Russia
- Britain
- Assassination
- Archduke Franz Ferdinand assassinated by Gavrilo Princip in 1914
- "dominoes" alliances
- Central Powers
- Germany
- Ottoman Empire
- Austria-Hungary
- Allied Powers
- Britain
- France
- Russia
- 40+ countries
- Isolationism
- US maintained neutrality
- Germans sunk the Lusitania
- Zimmermann telegram
- Consequences
- deaths
- 8.5 million soldiers
- 20 million civilians
- social
- governments took over
- instituting price controls
- rationing of products
- men moved into factories to fill empty positions
- League of Nations
- President Wilson's Fourteen Points
- establishing future peace
- workable balance of power
- did not agree,
therefore US did
not sign
- Treaty of Versaille
- forced Germany to
- pay war reparations
- release territory
- downsize its military
- Russian Revolution
- 1905, protesters encouraged Nicholas II to enact Enlightened reforms, but he felt threatened and fired on the protesters
- attempt to enact legislation through
- appointment of a Prime Minister
- creating the Duma, representative of the Russian people
- Russian Revolution
- Czar Nicholas forced to abdicate his throne due to rising casualties and food shortages in WWI
- Alexander Kerensky
- established an ineffective provisional government
- misinterpreted working class opinions of the war
- 1918, Bolsheviks
- Vladimir Lenin
- April Theses
- demanded peace
- land for peasants
- power to the soviets
- took command of the government within six months
- Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
- ceded a huge piece of western Russia to Germany, so Russia dropped out of WWI
- Soviet Union
- faced nonstop skirmishes between 1918 and 1921
- Bolsheviks created the Red Army
- under command of Leon Trotsky
- Ottoman Empire
- joined losing Central Powers of World War I
- lost remaining land
- ripe for attack from the Greeks, who picked up arms in 1919
- Mustafa Kemal, also known as Ataturk
- led successful military campaigns against the Greeks
- overthrew the Ottoman sultan
- became the first president of modern Turkey
- secularized the overwhelmingly Muslim nation
- changed alphabet from Arabic to Latin
- set up a parliamentary system
- changed the legal code from islamic to Western
- set Turkey on a path toward Europe as opposed to the Middle East
- World War II
- Causations
- The Soviet Union
- New Economic Policy (NEP)
- some capitalistic aspects
- allowed farmers to sell portions of their grain for their own profit
- leadership shifted to Joseph Stalin
- discarded as Stalin believed it was ridiculously slow
- Five Year Plans
- collectivization
- expedient agricultural production by ruthlessly taking over private farms and combining them into state-owned enterprises
- industrialized the USSSR
- improved economic conditions
- relied on terror tactics
- "Great Purge"
- government systematically killed so many of its enemies
- Germany
- suffered under Treaty of Versailles
- American I.O.U.s
- fascism
- Weimar Republic
- fairly conservative democratic republic, rejected socialist or communist systems
- Reichstag
- increasingly rejected by the German people
- National Socialist Party (Nazis) rose to power in the 1920s
- Adolf Hitler
- social Darwinism
- Aryan race was most highly evolved race
- became chancellor in 1933
- seized control of the government, known under his fascist rule as the Third Reich
- began rebuilding German military in 1933
- took back the Rhineland in 1935
- formed alliance with Japan in 1937
- annexed Austria and moved to reclaim the Sudetenland from Czechoslovakia in 1938
- Munich Conference of 1938
- gave the Sudetenland to Hitler in return for the promise to cease his expansionist activities
- appeasement
- invaded remaining territories in Czechoslovakia in 1939
- Britain and France signed a non-aggression pact with Greece, Turkey, Romania, and Poland
- Germans signed the Nazi-Soviet Pact
- agreement that Germany would not invade the Soviet Union if the Soviets stayed out of Germany's military affairs
- determined how Eastern Europe would be divided among them
- German forces marched into Poland
- declaration of war by Allied forces, beginning of WWII
- The Great Depression
- The United States
- 33% unemployment
- Franklin Roosevelt
- Italy
- Benito Mussolini
- National Fascist Party in 1919
- paid Blackshirts to fight socialist and communist organizations
- demanded King Victor Emmanuel III name him to cabinet posts
- faced little opposition to his consolidation of political power
- transformed Italy into a totalitarian fascist regime in 1926
- General Francisco Franco
- installed dictatorship in Spain, stayed neutral
- Japan
- invaded Manchuria, renaming it Manchukuo and establishing a colony
- signed the Anti-Comintern Pact with Germany
- Invasion of China
- "Rape of Nanjing"
- War
- blitzkrieg
- used by Germans, destroyed everything in its path with historically unprecedented speed
- Winston Churchill
- refused to cut a deal with Germany
- Battle of Britain
- Japan
- Tripartite Pact
- bombed Pearl Harbor
- U.S.
- U.S. joined war
- Manhattan Project
- President Truman ordered dropping of atomic bomb on Hiroshima and Nagaski
- Japan surrendered
- end of WWII
- D-Day
- joint Allied offensive
- eventually resulted in liberation of France
- Russia
- defended Stalingrad
- Hitler committed suicide
- Consequences
- Holocaust
- Peace Settlement
- Europe
- Marshall Plan
- billions of dollars of American money was made available for reconstruction offered to all European countries
- Women
- increased employment and education
- International Organizations
- United Nations
- mediate and intervene in international disputes between nations, but expanded to human rights and other social problems
- Cold War
- United States and Soviet Union
- Cold War