Skip to main content icon/video/no-internet

WORLD WAR I, ALSO known as the First World War and the Great War, was a conflict occurring from 1914 to 1918. It was by far the largest war in history until the advent of World War II.

World War I radically changed the face of Europe. The German, the Austro-Hungarian, the Ottoman, and the Russian Empires along with their four dynasties, whose roots went back to the days of the Crusades, all fell during or after the war. The collapse of the existing world order precipitated deep political, social, and economic changes. The communist revolutions spread throughout Europe and led to the establishment of the first communist state, the Soviet Union, in 1922. From the ravages of absolutist monarchies, several new states emerged or were re-created, including Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, and Poland.

The war losses were tremendous. The casualties dwarfed those of previous wars. A conservative estimate is that more than nine million people died and more than 20 million were wounded. Widespread poverty, starvation, and epidemics raised the total in the immediate postwar years by another 20 million people.

Tensions and War

The outbreak of World War I emerged as an interplay of the long-term tendencies and impulsive reactions among the imperialistic powers, particularly Great Britain, Germany, France, Russia, and Austria-Hungary.

The struggle for national liberation and emancipation mounted tensions within the multinational yet heavily Germanized Austro-Hungarian Empire. Numerous Slavic populations within the empire were anxious to break from the Austrian and Hungarian domination. The situation was particularly tense in Bosnia and Herzegovina, where the majority of the population was Serb and openly advocated unification with neighboring Serbia.

The legacy of the Franco-Prussian War (1870–71), in which France was humiliated and lost regions of Alsace and Lorraine, left France with a nationalist fervor seeking revenge against Germany. The decline of the Ottoman Empire created the so-called Eastern Question and intensified the rivalry among the Great Powers. Furthermore, rapid industrialization and economic growth, prompted an aggressive colonial expansion of imperial Germany, which intensified friction with France and Great Britain over colonial possessions in Africa. The growing friction among the Great Powers led to an arms race and strengthening hostile alliances known as the Triple Entente and the Triple Alliance.

Despite these complex real origins of the war, the assassination of the Austro-Hungarian Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo has often been cited as the direct trigger for World War I.

The relationship between Serbia and Austria-Hun-gary deteriorated continuously after the dynastic change in Serbia in 1903. The Tariff War (1906–11) and the Austrian annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (1908), and Serbian victories in the Balkan Wars further incited nationalist feelings among millions of Serbs living in Austria-Hungary. Anxious to settle accounts with Serbia, the Austrian “war party” headed by Count Berchtold was poised to use the first opportunity to attack Serbia.

At the same time, Serbian nationalist organizations, and in particular the secret society Unification or Death, continued subversive activity against Austria-Hungary. Supported and encouraged by Unification or Death, a group of young people, mostly Serbs, members of the revolutionary organization Mlada Bosna (Young Bosnia), assassinated Archduke Ferdinand on June 28, 1914, in Sarajevo.

...

  • Loading...
locked icon

Sign in to access this content

Get a 30 day FREE TRIAL

  • Watch videos from a variety of sources bringing classroom topics to life
  • Read modern, diverse business cases
  • Explore hundreds of books and reference titles

Sage Recommends

We found other relevant content for you on other Sage platforms.

Loading