Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Joining Up
Anmerkungen:
- Prince Wilhelm of Germany said, "We have lost the War. It will go on for a long time but it is already lost.
- Eventually the War reached a stalemate by Christmasn 1914. The trenches soon became 'home' for the soldiers.
- The Schlieffen Plan
- What was the plan?
- To go through Belgium to conquer Paris in 6 weeks
- Then turn to Russia
- Why did it fail?
- Belgians fought well and very bravely
- Russian troops entered Germany in 10 days
- BEF got organised more quickly than expected
Anmerkungen:
- BEF stands for British Expeditionary Force
- The Germans didn't show any signs of giving up
- Why did people go to war?
- Propaganda
Anmerkungen:
- Definition:
Information or ideas spread to promote or damage a cause, movement, nation etc.
- Advertisements showed that Germans were evil
and the soldiers should be proud that they are in
the army
- Posters said is was a 'Just War'
- Lord Kitchener was
Secretary for War in the
government in 1914
- His job was to persuade men to join up
- Seen as
noble and
glorious,
weren't sure
of the risks
- Pals Battalions
- This was a scheme to place men
from the same area in a battalion
together
- Knowing other people in the army
would ease the mind of some
recruits
- Some were threatened or
scared into joining up
- Following the crowd
- Would get respect from family,
friends and women
- Trench Lines
- Trenches stretched
from the English
Channel to the Swiss
Border
- There was the Western front where
the Russians and Germans fought
- There was the Western front
where Germans and British
- Ireland
Anmerkungen:
- In 1801 the ACT OF UNION brought Ireland under the control of the United Kingdom
This meant that when the First World War broke out Ireland had no choice but to help out.
However they were on the brink of their own civil war between UNIONISTS and NATIONALISTS.
- NATIONALISTS
- Want Ireland to be independent
- Accepted the HOME RULE
- Meant that Ireland
would have a
separate parliament
in Dublin
Anmerkungen:
- Which meant that the parliament in Dublin would look after all the local affairs but Westminster would still have the overall control.
- It was a moderate aim between demands for
union and independence
- UNIONISTS
- Most Protestants were Unionists
- They were proud to be
apart of the British
Empire and willing to go
fight France and
Germany