World War I

Europe Plunges Into War

Chapter 13 Section 2 Notes

Introduction

•By 1914, Europe was divided into two ______camps.

–The ______: Great Britain, France and Russia

–The ______: Germany, Austria-Hungary and Italy

•Austria’s declaration of war against Serbia set off a ______within the alliance system…pledged to support each other

The Great War Begins

•Russia began moving its army toward the ______border in response to Austria’s declaration of war against Serbia.

•Russia expected Germany to join Austria, therefore, they also moved their ______to the German border.

•Germany took this as a declaration of ______.

–Germany declared war on ______on 8/1/1914

The Great War Begins (cont.)

•Russia looked to ______for help.

•Before France could react, ______declared war on them, too.

•______declared war on Germany.

Nations Take Sides

Central PowersAllied Powers

I thought Italy was part of the Triple Alliance…

•Italy had been a member of the ______with Germany and A-H.

•However, Italians felt that Germany and A-H ______started a war and changed sides.

A Bloody Stalemate

•Many people felt that the war would be ______.

•By fall of 1914, the war turned into a long and bloody ______.

•This deadlocked region in northern France became known as the ______.

The Conflict Grinds Along

•Germany was facing a war on ______.

•Developed a battle strategy known as the ______.

–Called for attacking and defeating France in the ______then rushing to fight Russia in the ______.

–Why did the Germans think the Schlieffen Plan would work?

The First Battle of Marne

•German leaders needed a ______over France.

•Things looked good for ______at first.

•They entered the outskirts of Paris.

•______, however, regrouped and attacked the Germans.

•After four days of fighting, Germans gave the order to ______.

Single Most Important Event of the War

–Why was the First Battle of the Marne so important?

The Battle on the Eastern Front

•War on the Western Front claimed ______of lives.

•Both sides were still sending millions more men to fight on the ______.

–Stretch of battlefield along the ______border.

•Russians and ______were battling Germans and Austro-Hungarians.

•More ______than in the west.

•______were still common.

Early Fighting

•Russian forces launched an attack into both ______and ______.

•Germans counterattacked and crushed the ______, killing 30,000 Russians.

•Russians drove deep into Austria after two wins.

•Three months later (December 1914) Austrians defeated the Russians and ______out of their country.

Russia Struggles

•Why did Russia struggle so much as the war developed?

Russia’s Asset

•Russian army’s one asset – it’s ______.

•The Russian army, due to it’s ______, managed to hold up hundreds of thousands of German troops on the Eastern Front.

•As a result, Germany could not ______the west.

•Fighting soon spread to ______, Southwest and Southeast ______.

Technology’s Impact on the War

Guided Notes

War in the Trenches

•By 1915, the armies on the Western Front had dug miles of parallel ______to protect themselves from enemy fire.

•This set the stage for ______.

•Soldiers ______each other from the trenches.

•Armies traded huge losses of ______for small land gains.

Trench Life

•Life in trenches was pure ______.

•______

•______

•______– nonexistent

•______– nearly impossible

No Man’s Land

•Space between the trenches = ______.

•When ordered to attack, soldiers would enter this area.

–Faced many rounds of ______

•Stay in the trench?

–Gunfire went right into the trenches, too.

New Tools

•Military strategists were at a loss.

•The new tools of war had not delivered the ______war they expected.

–______

–______

–______

–______

•______

•______killed greater numbers of people more effectively.