Social Sciences En Politieke En Sociale Wetenschappen
European History
Zusammenfassung
Summary of European History L10: WW1
6 mal angesehen 0 mal verkauft
Kurs
European History
Hochschule
Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB)
I got a 20/20 with my summaries.
Abbreviations:
DRTR: divine right to rule
E-G: Estates-General
CC: Catholic Church
AR: Ancien regime
DL: Germany (Deutschland)
WS: Welfare state
SD: Social democracy
SDs: social democrats
CDs: Christian democrats
O1H: on the one hand
OOH: on the oth...
Social Sciences en Politieke en Sociale Wetenschappen
European History
Alle Dokumente für dieses Fach (24)
Verkäufer
Folgen
emmamarchal
Deine Reviews
Inhaltsvorschau
10: First World War
Content:
1. Introduction to WW1 (1914-1918)
1.1. WW1: a local conflict gone ‘global’
1.2. The July Crisis (1914)
1.3. Pre-war alliances
1.4. Allied Powers
1.5. Central Powers
1.6. Timeline
1.7. WW1: a truly global conflict
2. The blame question: causes and responsibilities for WW1
3. The “short war illusion”: trench warfare and attrition
1. Introduction to WW1 (1914-1918)
● Paradox:
- At the beginning of 20C, most Europeans thought they were heading for a historical plateau, full of
benign progress and abundant civilisation.
“Le belle epoque”
- At the same time, European states had never maintained such huge armies during peacetime than at
the start of C20.
- Huge standing armies and trained reserves among the civilian population.
La belle epoque: growth of the MC, improved access to parliament, explosion of artistic creativity.
Long lasting peace on the ECont (except for minor battles). - but relative peace; any rivalries take the form of
colonial battles.
But for the first time in European history, there was military expertise among the civilian population. - Before,
in times of war, adult men were called to duty but often lacked training.
==> So at the same time growing distrust, states investing in military equipment.
==> This paradox emphasises that no single country can be blamed for the outbreak of WW1.
It should be attributed to a general breakdown of IR. - no concert of Europe anymore.
With the rise of Germany as the main power in Europe, the system of balancing the different antagonisms is
completely breaking down.
1.1. WW1: a local conflict gone ‘global’
28 June 1914
Franz Ferdinand - Archduke of Austria-Hungary, heir to the A-H throne.
Shot in Sarajevo by someone from a nationalist movement protesting against the foreign rule of A-H.
Assassination is a trivial event in the spectrum of history.
^ is to be situated at the beginning of the outbreak of WW1.
Austria-Hungary (1867): a multi-ethnic, multi-linguistic empire.
Following a compromise between Austria and Germany, A-H is founded.
~52 million ==> immense empire (3rd most populated empire after DL and Russia)
Split up between 3 big groups:
- Austrian ~ 55% of the population
- Hungarian ~ 40%
- Condominium of Bosnia-Herzegovina (joint control (A and H)): 3.8% pop
Linguistic complexity:
- German-speaking Austrian: 23%
- Hungarian minority: 19%
, ==> Even though it’s split up as Austria-Hungary, there’s still a lot of linguistic and ethnic diversity. (Slovaks,
Czechs, Romanian, … )
==> Makes it very difficult to govern;
End of C19, lots of nationalist sentiments on the rise, creating internal instability to the empire.
A-H (Dual Monarchy): formed in 1867, as a result of a Austrio-Hungarian compromise.
● Result of Austrian Empire’s defeat in the Austro-Prussian War; Austria on the verge of collapse.
● Compromise with the Hungarians - blending their rule saved the Habsburg Monarch and transformed
Austria into a dual monarchy.
○ Hungary received full autonomy within the empire, but accepted that in foreign affairs (IR,
war), the empire would act as one state.
○ No common PM, cabinet or parliament, no common citizenship.
○ A common customs union, coinage and postal service.
○ A Gemeinsamer Ministerrat: Crown Council in which ministers of war and foreign affairs &
the PMs met under the presidency of the monarch.
Lots of conflict broke out over the customs union - its design, which groups it would be affecting.
==> Very federal and confederal logic.
- Very few things are done together; two empires that are merging, but common layer remains very thin.
==> also makes it very difficult to control the territory.
- Some regulations don’t apply in both parts.
- + question of joint control over Bosnia-Herzegovina.
==> Very complex structure.
● Imbalance: German- and Hungarian-speaking groups are minorities: both only ~42% of the
population.
○ ==> foreign minorities’ rule felt fabricated.
● Heightened nationalist sentiment: compromise inspired movements for the restoration of states’
rights in Bohemia, Galicia.
○ Serbia had gained independence before and was laying claim to a part of B-H (so was Croatia).
● 1908: annexation of Bosnia-Herzegovina by A-H.
○ Before that, it was under joint control; now formally annexed.
○ Rejected Serbian and Croatian claims to B-H; promoted Bosnian identity.
■ Tried to make B-H stand out as a separate entity, yet as part of A-H empire. - fuelling
a Bosnian identity to delude the claims of Croatia and Serbia.
A-H - in an attempt to deal with natinoalist sentiment - in the beginning gave lots of rights and even promoted
cultural organisations. (teaching folklore traditions, teach minority languages)
○ Promoted citizen participation in these “cultural movements” because it believed this would
distract them from political affairs. ==> Elites in A-H favored this movement as a way to shift
attention away from political issues.
○ Often failed to grasp that these movements often were fertile ground for political
organisations. -> were often very intertwined.
By 1906 - lots of resistance against annexation of B-H.
Especially from Serbia - it challenged any “Greater Serbian” aspirations. - lots of contestations.
“Greater Serbia” aspirations:
Leads to the creation of
- Various cultural associations - but also increasingly militant, even terrorist ones.
- Ex. Black Hand Secret Society - attack by Gavrilo Princip, Bosnian Serb.
● Assassination = direct threat to Austrian stability.
Alle Vorteile der Zusammenfassungen von Stuvia auf einen Blick:
Garantiert gute Qualität durch Reviews
Stuvia Verkäufer haben mehr als 700.000 Zusammenfassungen beurteilt. Deshalb weißt du dass du das beste Dokument kaufst.
Schnell und einfach kaufen
Man bezahlt schnell und einfach mit iDeal, Kreditkarte oder Stuvia-Kredit für die Zusammenfassungen. Man braucht keine Mitgliedschaft.
Konzentration auf den Kern der Sache
Deine Mitstudenten schreiben die Zusammenfassungen. Deshalb enthalten die Zusammenfassungen immer aktuelle, zuverlässige und up-to-date Informationen. Damit kommst du schnell zum Kern der Sache.
Häufig gestellte Fragen
Was bekomme ich, wenn ich dieses Dokument kaufe?
Du erhältst eine PDF-Datei, die sofort nach dem Kauf verfügbar ist. Das gekaufte Dokument ist jederzeit, überall und unbegrenzt über dein Profil zugänglich.
Zufriedenheitsgarantie: Wie funktioniert das?
Unsere Zufriedenheitsgarantie sorgt dafür, dass du immer eine Lernunterlage findest, die zu dir passt. Du füllst ein Formular aus und unser Kundendienstteam kümmert sich um den Rest.
Wem kaufe ich diese Zusammenfassung ab?
Stuvia ist ein Marktplatz, du kaufst dieses Dokument also nicht von uns, sondern vom Verkäufer emmamarchal. Stuvia erleichtert die Zahlung an den Verkäufer.
Werde ich an ein Abonnement gebunden sein?
Nein, du kaufst diese Zusammenfassung nur für 4,79 €. Du bist nach deinem Kauf an nichts gebunden.