Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The Causes of World War 1
- Alliances
- Triple Entente: France, Britain, Russia
- 1894: Franco-Russian Dual Alliance - G had avoided relations with R
and both countries felt isolated
- 1904: Entente Cordiale - F wanted revenge on Germany and B forced to end
splendid isolation, but not a binding agreement
- 1907: Anglo-Russian Agreement - signed due to influence of F
- Triple Alliance: Germany, Austria-Hungary, Italy
- 1879: G and A-H sign Dual Alliance to strengthen against
F, who were bitter after Franco-Prussian War
- 1882: I join Triple Alliance after struggle of unification,
looking for solidarity
- This caused tension as 2 rival factions strived for power
in Europe.
- Military and economic rivalry
- Military
- All powers except B introduced conscription - large armies
- Military spending doubled between 1900-14
- Introduction of Dreadnought made other
battleships obsolete
- Naval race between B and G - by 1914, B had
27 Dreadnoughts, G had 19
- Economic
- 1900: B most powerful, large empire + trade
- 1914: G overtaken, more iron +steel
- This caused tension as paranoia spread around powers, fearing
invasion from one another.
- Colonial rivalry
- Importance of colonies
- Cheap raw materials
- Places to sell home-produced goods
- Important trading/military bases e.g. Suez
Canal shortcut to India
- Kaiser Wilhelm II: "place in the sun" at expense of B and F
- First Moroccan Crisis, 1905-6
- Causes
- Kaiser Wilhelm wanted to test Entente Cordiale
- G opposed to F expansion of empire
- Events
- Kaiser Wilhelm makes speech for independence in Tangier
- F forced to accept international conference
- Algeciras Conference: only A-H support G, Kaiser
backs down
- Results
- F free hand in Morocco
- Entente Cordiale strengthened
- B-G rivalry: Kaiser blamed Britain for
humiliation
- Agadir Crisis, 1911
- Causes
- F occupy Fez due to rebels
- G want compensation
- Events
- Kaiser sent gunboat, Panther, to Agadir
- Lloyd George: Mansion House speech
threatening war
- G back down
- Results
- G unlikely to back down again
- Humiliated with worthless land in Congo
- The Balkans
- Underlying causes
- Ottoman decline -
"sick man of Europe"
- A-H threatened by nationalism
breaking up empire
- Serbia wanted pan-Slavism
- R determined to break up A-H +
gain access to Med
- Bosnian Crisis, 1908-9
- Causes
- A-H administered Bosnia (1878
Congress of Berlin)
- Power vacuum created by Ottoman decline
- Young Turks overthrew Sultan - threatened A-H
- Events
- A-H formally annex Bosnia
- R demand conference but
A-H refuse
- G forced R to back down
- Results
- R humiliated - unlikely to back down
- A-H and G committed allies
- R closer to B and F
- Balkan Wars, 1912-13
- Causes
- Serbia, Greece, Montenegro, Bulgaria
wanted to expel Turks permanently
- Young Turks deposed - Ottomans weak
- Events
- Turks almost driven out of Europe
- Treaty of London ended war
- Bulgaria unhappy and declared war
on former allies
- Serbs, Turks, Romanians
defeated Bulgars
- Results
- Rivalry between stronger
Serbia and A-H increased
- A-H interfered and took Albania
away from Serbia - fury
- Bulgaria driven toward
A-H and G
- Immediate causes
- Schlieffen Plan
- Since 1905, army planned to invade F through Belgium
- Belgium protected by B - 1839 Treaty of Westminster "scrap of paper"
- Assassination of Archduke Ferdinand,
28 June 1914
- Black Hand: terrorist organisation of Serbia,
determined for pan-Slavism
- Archduke on state visit to Sarajevo
- Gavrilo Princip shot Ferdinand + wife Sophie
- A-H issue ultimatum - end of independence BUT Serbia
accepted all but 1 demand
- Steps to war
- 28 July: A-H declare
war on Serbia
- 30 July: R mobilise to
defend Serbia, G warn to
stop
- 1 August: G war on R, I neutral
- 2 August: F mobilise
- 3 August: G war on F
- 4 August: Schlieffen
Plan enacted, B war on G