Notes: World War I (including the Russian Revolution): Spielvogel Chapter 25
- The Road to World War I
- Nationalism
- The early 19th century hope that the nation-state system would lead to international brotherhood backfired
- Instead of cooperation it became competition
- Rivalries over colonial and commercial interests grew
- Alliances had formed
- Sad reality – govts that exercised restraint to avoid war are humiliated – those who were willing to go to the brink of war for national honor were praised
- Each state demanded its sovereignty
- Nationalism left some ethnic groups behind
- Slavs in Balkans and Austrian Empire
- Irish in British Empire
- Poles in Russian Empire
- Internal state problems were covered up by focusing on external problems
- Eg – socialist labor strikes and class divisions
- Militarism
- European state armies doubled between 1890-1914
- Size of military is obvious measure of strength – brought on by Bismarck’s creation of Germany
- Russia largest but most poorly trained and equipped
- Military leaders gain more political power and influence
- Orientation toward war is inevitable
- Outbreak of War
- Second Balkan Crisis
- Hatred between Serbia and Austria at a high
- Russia and Austria at odds because of Serbia
- Archduke Franz and Ferdinand and wife assassinated June 28, 1914 in Sarajevo, Bosnia by member of Black Hand terrorist organization – immediate cause of war
- Austria makes harsh demands on Serbia that would end its sovereignty
- International negotiations for peace continue for a month
- Austria declares war on Serbia July 28
- Serbia supported by Russia
- Russia mobilizes for War – July 30
- Germany declares war on Russia – August 1st
- Austria is supported by Germany
- Germans convinced France would help Russia – the dreaded “war on two fronts” (Bismarck) would befall them
- Germany puts the “Schlieffen Plan” into effect
- Germany would invade France – knock her out of the war before Russia could fully mobilize
- Germany asks France what its intentions were – France replies – we’ll do what we want when the time comes
- Germany declares war on France – Aug 3, 1914
- British claim neutrality but Schlieffen Plan has the invasion of France going through Belgium
- Britain will not allow Belgian territory invaded
- Aug 4 – Britain declares war on Germany
- Europe is at war – everyone excited – would becomes a disaster
- Central powers – Germany, Austria, Ottomans, Bulgaria (old Triple Alliance)
- Allied powers – England, France, Russia, Italy, USA by 1917 (old Triple Entente)
- The War
- 1914-15: Illusions and Stalemate
- Beliefs
- Everyone believed their own nation had a just cause to fight (propaganda) – enthusiasm
- All thought it would be short (Bismarck’s had been) – home for Christmas
- Hope of national patriotic rebirth
- People were bored with a world grown “old, cold, and weary.” Would be a glorious adventure
- The western front
- Germans drive through Belgium and Luxembourg into France
- Plans to take France frustrated by though resistance from Belgians, quick arrival of British, French resistance, dividing German army east and west
- Schlieffen Plan fails to work (most important consequence – stalemate
- Germans stopped along Marne River (Fist Battle of the Marne – Sep. 6-12 – 1914) – changed character of the war – German retreated
- Trench warfare from North Sea to Switzerland – 300 miles
- Battle for weeks or months for a few yards or miles
- The eastern front
- Russia invades East Prussia – 1914 – some trenches – more territorial gains & losses - mobility
- Germans and Austrians hold the line – Battle of Tannenberg (Aug. 1914)
- Russians trounced by General Paul von Hindenburg
- Russia too weak to be effective by 1915 – begin retreating – no guns, ammo, food
- Continue to fight – Germany must keep some troops on eastern front
- Russian revolution begins 1917
- Russia pulls out of war early (1918)
- 1916-17: The Great Slaughter
- Success in east allow Germans to move more troops to western front
- War bogs down to ugly war of attrition or total war (who would get tired and quit first?)
- Required tremendous manpower – hand to hand – bayonets – after artillery softening – poison gas (1915)
- Machine guns took heavy toll – Germans try to take French fortress at Verdun (Feb-July 1916)
- Legendary for French resistance after 6 months – lost 350,000 men (450K Germans) – no victory
- Commanders on both sides would try again and again – no one gaining decisive advantage
- Had lost touch with men in the field – were trying to satisfy political leaders who wanted victory at any cost
- Opposing soldiers develop their own survival agreements – live and let live idea (don’t attack certain areas (latrines, mess tents)
- Battle of the Somme – (July-Nov. 1916) no major gain (7-mile allied advance) – 500,000 Gers, 400,000 Brits, 200,000 Fr. – first use of tanks, Britain used to counter machine guns – 18 used – British army had drug feet on development
- The Widening War
- U.S. entry
- Attempts at Neutrality
- May 1916 – Battle of Jutland – British and German navies – Germany cannot advance against British – Germans return home and don’t come back
- Allies set up blockade of German coast – sea war more shipping and blockade rather than fighting
- Ships are stopped and searched
- Angers neutral countries – especially U.S.
- Causes shortages in Germany
- Submarine warfare is new weapon – 1915 – U-boats – developed by an American – U.S. didn’t want to use it.
- Germans declare English and French coasts a war zone
- Sub thought barbaric – international law says ships to be evacuated before sinking – if subs surfaced they were shot and sunk
- Several ships sunk including American
- Most memorable – Lusitania May 1915 (1,000 die, 100+ Americans)
- U.S. protest causes Germans to limit sub use
- Blockade put up to starve Germany
- 1917 – Germany starts unlimited sub warfare again – needed to starve out British before U.S. could mobilize – violation of freedom of the seas
- U.S. enters war Apr. 1917 – turns the tide – gives allied powers a psychological boost
- The Impact of Total War
- Social
- Brought an end to unemployment
- Trade unions accepted as part of the production process – collective bargaining – govts. Trying to ensure no production disruptions
- New roles for women
- More clerical jobs
- Truck drivers, farm laborers, factory workers
- Male resistance continues – a threat
- Minimum wage laws help women
- Women gain the right to vote right after the war
- 1918 – Britain, Germany, Austria
- 1920 – U.S.A.
- Women’s gains short lived
- Expected to return to normal at war’s end
- Many women remained more independent – smoking in public, short dresses, boyish hairdos
- War became the great equalizer – narrowed the gap between upper and lower classes
- The Russian Revolution
- Russia totally unprepared for WWI
- 6-8M soldiers K-W-C between 1914-16
- Lost its will to fight
- Political parties challenging the tsar
- Social Revolutionaries
- Most popular – believed in “land socialism”. Government gives to each peasant the amount of land he can cultivate
- Equality of Russians and non-Russians
- Their appeal was to poorer peasants and non-Russians – mostly non-violent but had some extremists who used terrorism
- Social Democrats (from Marx – 1875)
- Marxist – believed Russia must be industrialized before a social revolution could take place
- Industrialization – overthrow of tsar – bourgeois democracy – proletariat overthrow – communist state – must be dominated by an elite group
- Key leader – Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov – Lenin
- Lenin’s followers in SD party – Bolsheviks – Mensheviks were less radical
- Weakness of the Govt.
- Unrest in Russia caused by:
- Shortage of land – peasant inheritances subdivided generation after generation – individual holdings smaller
- Rapid industrialization – no leadership to bring about needed changes in lives of peasants and workers
- WWI showed inefficiency in military machine – poor transportation, no supplies, outmoded warfare techniques, soldier morale dropped so low it supported revolution
- Rasputin
- Tsar Nicholas II weak and ineffective – influenced by wife determined to maintain autocratic govt. – gets help from Grigori Rasputin (Siberian monk, ignorant and evil; had empress under his spell – seemed to be healing her diseased son)
- 1915 – Nicholas II goes to front lines to direct troops – mostly to get away from wife and Rasputin
- Able ministers dismissed (Rasputin becomes unbearably despotic)
- 1916 – group of high nobles assassinate Rasputin – faith in Tsar’s govt. cannot be reestablished
- The February (March) Revolution
- Late Feb.- early March (1917), revolution begins without any real plan or leadership – like 1905
- Petrograd bread lines, workers strike, demand food
- Nicholas orders Duma home – refused – orders police to fire on strikers – like 1905 – didn’t work this time – soldiers defect to other side
- Duma sets up committee to stay in session – and soldiers set up Soviets (councils) of workers and soldiers deputies
- Ordinary people look to these two groups for leadership
- Soldiers patrol streets, Duma tries to create govt.
- March 15 – Nicholas abdicates – provisional govt. begins (300 years of Romanov rule is over)
- Provisional govt. weak due to difficult circumstances
- Alexander Kerensky – leader – belonged to Social Revolutionary Party – conservative member – not in tune with the majority
- Wanted orderly western style govt. – civil liberties and voting rights – too ideal
- Peasants and workers wanted peace, worker control of factories, peasant control of land – listened more and more to Petrograd Soviet (Socialist)
- New govt. can’t win wide support – Kerensky kept Russia in war
- April 1917 – Germans help smuggle Lenin into Russia (from exile in Switzerland) – he begins agitating for communism (Germans wanted Russia out of war)
- Lenin’s “April Theses” opposes the provisional government
- A step backward from the revolutionary ideas
- Too much like governments of capitalist nations
- The Bolshevik (October) (communist) Revolution
- Kerensky govt. loses control of country
- Bolsheviks have gained control of Petrograd Soviet
- Leading Bolsheviks
- Lenin – powerful personality, self assurance, knows way to success, intolerant of opposition – undisputed chief – Revisionist socialist
- Wanted to seize power at once – not wait for bourgeois period espoused by Marx – Justified dictatorship as a transition to dictatorship of the Proletariat
- Promises “peace, land, and bread” and a quick withdrawal from the war – more appealing to masses than Kerensky’s talk of civil rights and votes (also “Worker Control of production” and “all power to the Soviets”)
- Trotsky – the strategist who works out details of govt. seizure – highly disciplined
- (Oct. 24-25) factory militia (Red Guards) and army units of Bolsheviks seize Winter Palace in Petrograd (and other strong places)
- Next day Lenin declared master of new all-Russian Congress of Soviets
- Mensheviks and Social Revolutionaries walk out in protest
- Nov. 7 – world’s first communist govt. takes office – attempted since 1848 – France, Germany, Italy
- Within 3 weeks Bolsheviks get precarious grip on Russia
- Civil War
- Mar. 1918 – Russia withdraws from WWI – treaty of Brest-Litovsk
- Lost much land and population (Poland, Finland, Baltic States, Ukraine, areas in Caucasus = 62M people)
- Petrograd too close to foreign border – capital moved to Moscow (1918)
- Bolsheviks opposed within Russia – govt. seized – not country
- White armies oppose Red Communists
- Many Russians opposed to Bolsheviks – included non-Russians, aristocracy, army officers, clergy, factory owners, landlords, (truly a proletariat revolution)
- Full scale civil war erupts
- Tsar Nicholas and family killed – July 1918
- Red terror made old Jacobin terror of Fr. Rev. look like a Sunday School party
- Cheka (secret police) formed to become KGB – reign of terror – many killed if not supportive of Bolsheviks
- Trotsky organizes Red army – fires them with zeal – win or die by 1921 – white armies defeated
- Too many different groups – poorly organized
- Almost all people above peasants or workers had been killed, jailed, exiled, fled – no place for them in the new Russia – had been sacrificed to Bolshevik Revolution (war communism)
- Did away with any institution they couldn’t control (set standard for 20th century totalitarian state)
- Constitutional convention
- Abolished Zemstvos, destroyed tsarist army
- Anti-religion
- Put education in hands of govt.
- Retained support of Marxist followers
- Allowed peasants to seize large estates (like great fear) – land would eventually be taken away
- Abolished class privileges (citizen – comrade)
- Created a constitution for workers – peasant soviets – real power with leaders
- Created the true Marxist Socialist state – communist becomes name of their political party
- Last Year of the War - 1918
- With Russia out, Germany makes one last attempt to win on western front
- Lose due to fresh American troops
- Germany suffers a mini revolution like Russia
- Force Kaiser Wilhelm II to abdicate – set up a republic
- Germans sue for peace – armistice – Nov. 11, 1918 (11th hour, etc.)
- Revolutionary changes in Germany and Austria
- Germany
- Communists led by Karl Liebnecht and Rosa Luxemburg attempt overthrow of German Republic
- Fails – leaders brutally murdered
- Creates an overpowering fear of communism in Germany
- The fear will be manipulated by Adolph Hitler
- Austria
- Empire dissolves – Franz Joseph abdicates
- New nations appear – Austria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia
- Other areas join
- Italy, Poland, Romania
- The Peace Settlement (Paris Peace Conference)
- The Treaty of Versailles
- Key decision makers – “Big Four”
- Woodrow Wilson – U.S.
- Georges Clemenceau – France
- Lloyd George – Britain
- Vitorio Orlando - Italy
- Factors influencing the kind of peace to be made
- Hope for better world based on Woodrow Wilson’s 14 points
- Denounced secret treaties, interference with freedom of the seas, high tariffs, large armaments – all these lead to war
- Wanted self-determination for all nations – a war for democracy – rulers law vs. rule of law
- Wanted a league of nations to secure peace
- hoped WWI would be the last war ever
- Attitudes of European allies (France & Britain) toward Germany
- People bitter – blamed Germany for causing all the terrible destruction
- Insist Germans must be punished
- Earlier wartime agreements among allied govts.
- Bound by secret promises written into wartime treaties with each other – winners had secretly plotted to split Europe between them – exposed by Lenin
- 1918 Paris Peace Conference
- Allies represented – no defeated nations represented – Germany and Russia
- Terms of peace
- Germany deprived of important territory
- Alsace-Lorraine – France and coal-producing area of Saar Valley
- Polish Corridor and upper Silesia to Poland (split away E. Prussia)
- Lost all colonies to League of Nations. Administered by Allied countries
- Heavy financial burden
- Germany responsible for all war damage
- No exact amount – became known as “War Guilt Clause”
- Germany forbidden to have military, navy, manufacture weapons, or maintain an army
- Signed in Hall of Mirrors at Versailles Palace –
- déjà vu – creation of the German Empire in 1871
- Germans detest treaty provisions – can do nothing about it
- Other Peace Treaties
- Russia loses areas – Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania become independent – many new nation-states emerge in central and eastern Europe
- Ottoman Empire gone
- Lebanon, Syria controlled by France
- Iraq, Palestine controlled by Britain
- U.S. rejects entry into League of Nations – becomes isolationist
- No one happy – WWII breaks out within 20 years
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