EUROPE AT WAR
Agenda:
1. Europe at War Notes
2. Writings of WWI
Worksheet
Extension: Europe at War
Textbook Worksheet
CENTRAL POWERS VS. ALLIES
By the end of the war, the two sides were:
Central Powers
Austria-Hungary
Germany
Bulgaria
Ottoman Empire
Allies
Russia
France
Great Britain
Japan
Italy
U.S.
THE WESTERN FRONT
1914 - Stalemate along the border of France
This was the Western Front
*THE SCHLIEFFEN PLAN*
Germany’s plan to win the war
It was:
Germany planned a long war.
Attack & defeat France FIRST
Then rush East to fight Russia
In order for this to work, what had to happen? What
actually happened?
THE FIRST BATTLE OF THE MARNE
Germany was on track to defeat France
Made it almost all the way to Paris
The First Battle of the Marne
September 5th
French armies regrouped in the Valley of the Marne
600 taxicabs rushed French soldiers from Paris to the
front lines
Finally Germany had to retreat
EFFECTS OF THE FIRST BATTLE
OF THE MARNE
Destroyed the Schlieffen Plan
Russia had already invaded Germany
Germany was going to have to fight a war on two fronts
after all
TRENCH WARFARE
Stalemate on the Western Front
Troops dig trenches to protect themselves
from fire
Trench Warfare
They then fight from those trenches
Why does this make war last longer?
EXPERIENCES OF TRENCH WARFARE
Some soldiers lived in
the trenches for weeks
or months
Lived with rats, dead
bodies, disease,
starvation
Led to huge loss of
human life for little
land gain
TRENCH FACTS
British Army treated 20,000 soldiers for trench foot
To boost morale, there was a trench rotation. A week at the front, a
week in support, and a week on reserve.
1/3 of all casualties on the Western Front may have been killed or
wounded in a trench
Daytime was mostly safe. Raids attacks, and eavesdropping near enemy
lines occurred at night or early morning.
Soldiers in the trenches often drank impure water causing dysentery
New weapons created a “no-man’s land” between enemy lines.
Soldiers would fight days , and many would die, for little or no gain in
land
MACHINE GUNS, POISON GAS, TANKS &
SUBMARINES
Poison Gas – Some caused blindness, others caused death by
choking. Chlorine gas ‘boiled’ you from the inside out.
Machine Guns – Defining feature of WWI, main cause of the
huge death toll, made it difficult for troops to advance
Barbed Wire – Cause soldiers to get stuck trying to cross the
front lines, became easy targets
Tanks – Could cross any type of terrain
Submarines – Changed naval warfare forever
Fighter Planes – Dog fights in the air
WAR ON THE EASTERN FRONT
Meanwhile, troops were also battling
between the German and Russian border
RUSSIA STRUGGLES
By 1916, Russia’s army was on life support
Short on food, guns, ammunition, supplies
The one thing Russia did have: a huge
population
Though the Russian army was not strategically sound or
well-equipped, they tied up German forces in the East
Suffered massive death tolls
TIMELINE
1914 – WWI begins
June 28, 1914 – Franz
Ferdinand shot
1915
Stalemate on the Western
front
Gallipoli Campaign
1916
Feb – Dec – Battle of Verdun
July – Battle of the Somme
Russia struggles
1917
U.S. enters WWI
Russia withdraws from the war
1918 – WWI ends
1919 – Treaty of Versailles
signed
WRITINGS OF WWI
Read In Flanders Fields by John McCrae, 1915
What are your reactions to the poem?
How does this poem symbolize war form the soldiers’ perspectives?
Sea of Ceramic Poppies
In Flanders Fields video
IN FLANDERS FIELDS
BY JOHN MCCRAE - MAY 1915
In Flanders fields the poppies blow
Between the crosses, row on row,
That mark our place; and in the sky
The larks, still bravely singing, fly
Scarce heard amid the guns below.
We are the Dead. Short days ago
We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,
Loved and were loved, and now we lie
In Flanders fields.
Take up our quarrel with the foe:
To you from failing hands we throw
The torch; be yours to hold it high.
If ye break faith with us who die
We shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In Flanders fields.
WRITINGS OF WWI - WORKSHEET
Read the selection from All Quiet on the Western
Front & Answer the questions on the worksheet.
Using info from the document and your own historical
knowledge, also answer the following questions:
How does this selection from the novel depict war?
How did soldiers think about war before experiencing it?
After?
How do you think the war will impact soldiers when they
return home?
Why do you think this generation is called the “Lost
Generation”?
Due tomorrow for a stamp.