Deck 25: The Beginning of the Twentieth-Century Crisis: War and Revolution

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Talk about:
No Man's Land
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Question
Why did the nations of Europe go to war in 1914? What did they hope to gain from the conflict, and how did their goals change during the course of the war?
Question
How did the Russian Revolution alter the dynamics of European statecraft and policy during the waning months of the war and into the time of the Paris Peace Conference?
Question
What is meant by the concept of total war, and how applicable is that concept to World War I?
Question
How did wartime governments maintain public order and mobilize public opinion during the course of the war? Compare these actions with those taken by governments in nineteenth-century wars.
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Talk about:
mobilization
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Talk about:
"blank check"
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Talk about:
Black Hand
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Talk about:
militarism
Question
What caused the Russian Revolution? How did Lenin and the Bolsheviks manage to seize and hold power despite their small numbers? How did the Bolsheviks secure their power during the civil war?
Question
Can the Treaty of Versailles be viewed as a successful settlement of the war? Why or why not?
Question
Were there any realistic alternatives to the provisions of the Treaty of Versailles, given the causes and the consequences of the war and its impact upon Western civilization?
Question
Discuss the course of the first two years of World War I: Why did many people expect a short war? Why was it not a short war? Why did World War I become a "war of attrition"? Why did the warring nations, worn out by the end of 1916, not make peace?
Question
Why can 1917 be viewed as the year that witnessed the decisive turning point of World War I?
Question
In what ways did the ideologies of the nineteenth century fuel the antagonisms that led to the outbreak of World War I?
Question
Talk about:
General Paul von Hindenburg
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Talk about:
conscription
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Talk about:
First Battle of the Marne
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Talk about:
the Schlieffen Plan
Question
Is it accurate to consider World War I as primarily a European civil war? Why or why not?
Question
Talk about:
"Peace, land, and bread"
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Talk about:
Germany's War Raw Materials Board
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Talk about:
unrestricted submarine warfare
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Petrograd
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Central Powers
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Defence of the Realm Act
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trench warfare
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Talk about:
Ireland's Easter Rebellion
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Talk about:
Rasputin
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the Nineteenth Amendment
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tanks
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Verdun and the Somme
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Talk about:
Britain's Ministry of Munitions
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the machine gun and poison gas
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Talk about:
Georges Clemenceau
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Talk about:
nationalization
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Talk about:
Lawrence of Arabia
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Talk about:
total war
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the Lusitania
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Nicholas II and Alexandra
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genocide
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Alexandra Kollontai and the Zhenotdel
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Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points
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Talk about:
armistice on November 11, 1918
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war communism
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soviets
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War Guilt Clause
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self-determination
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the "April Theses"
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Alexander Kerensky
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V.I. Lenin
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Leon Trotsky
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Reds and Whites
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Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
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Second Battle of the Marne
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Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg and the Free Corp
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Treaty of Versailles
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Bolsheviks
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Talk about:
the Cheka
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Talk about:
League of Nations
Question
Which pair of nations had not practiced conscription prior to World War I?

A) Germany and Austria-Hungary.
B) Great Britain and the United States.
C) France and Great Britain.
D) Italy and Germany.
E) Russia and France.
Question
The underlying motive that led Great Britain to declare war on Germany was

A) the German invasion of Belgium.
B) a desire to plunder on the continent.
C) the desire to maintain world power.
D) fear of German intentions in France.
E) anxiety concerning a possible German invasion of Britain.
Question
Talk about:
Yugoslavia
Question
Talk about:
reparations
Question
The Schlieffen Plan was designed to prevent

A) America's entry into the war.
B) war.
C) a prolonged two-front war.
D) a war of attrition.
E) a European-wide war.
Question
Talk about:
"dictated peace"
Question
Among nineteenth-century European political movements, the one most responsible for triggering World War I was

A) nationalism.
B) liberalism.
C) conservatism.
D) socialism.
E) modernism.
Question
The immediate cause of World War I was

A) an uprising of Catholic peasants in Bavaria.
B) the assassination of Austrian Archduke Francis Ferdinand in Sarajevo.
C) the German invasion of Poland.
D) the German naval blockage of Britain.
E) the French occupation of the Ruhr.
Question
On the eve of the outbreak of war in Europe in 1914, William II of Germany

A) was plotting the overthrow of Nicholas II in Russia.
B) was intentionally provoking the Russians to attack Austria and set off a world war.
C) attempted to engage Nicholas II in a diplomatic dialogue to possibly avoid war.
D) sent ultimatums to England and France that were so clumsy and insulting as to make war inevitable.
E) abdicated in favor of his son, the Crown Prince, and sought exile in Belgium.
Question
The "blank check" had the effect of

A) assuring Russia a sufficient supply of guns.
B) making the war vastly more expensive than it had to have been.
C) making it impossible for England to enter the war.
D) encouraging Austria to attack Serbia.
E) demonstrating Germany's desire for peace.
Question
In August 1914, the general perception of the upcoming war among Europeans was that

A) it would be the dawn of a new socialist Europe.
B) the war would be very short, possibly only weeks in duration.
C) it would mark the end of European civilization.
D) its long-term nature would revive Europe's suffering economy.
E) it would be avoided at the last minute, once the diplomats finally met together.
Question
The most important consequence of the first year of World War I was

A) a deadly stalemate on the western front as a result of the failure of German war plans.
B) Italy's decision to switch sides to the German-Austrian alliance.
C) the collapse of German armies on the Russian front.
D) Serbia's rapid advance into Austria-Hungary.
E) the Ottoman Empire's decision to join the Triple Entente.
Question
Most Europeans believed that the Great War would

A) be much like the American Civil War in length.
B) be an exciting, emotional release from the otherwise dull and boring existence of mass society.
C) last for years and create a rousing state of perpetual heroics as proclaimed by Nietzsche in his writings on the "superman."
D) ultimately bring about the unification of Europe in one centralized and highly militarized government.
E) result in a new balance of power throughout all of Western civilization.
Question
Talk about:
League of Nations' mandates
Question
During 1914, in contrast to events in Western Europe, the war in the east

A) was marked by immobility.
B) was marked by mobility.
C) developed methodically and took months to get heated.
D) was marked by careful diplomacy.
E) involved smaller numbers of troops.
Question
Which of the following trends helped lead to the outbreak of the Great War?

A) The hopes of conservative leaders to crush internal democratic movements through war.
B) The adoption by European generals of new military policies.
C) The belief of European states that they had to uphold the power of their allies for their own internal security.
D) The downward spiral of European economies.
E) The dismantling of Europe's overseas empires.
Question
The leader who remarked, "In questions of honor and vital interests, you don't consult others" was

A) Empire William II of Germany.
B) Tsar Nicholas II of Russia.
C) Archduke Francis Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary.
D) General Paul von Hindenburg.
E) Queen Victoria of Great Britain.
Question
As early as July 28, 1914, European diplomats were becoming incapable of slowing a rush toward war mainly because

A) European kings, tsars, and emperors were too bent on war to heed their advice.
B) the complex, rigid, and demanding mobilization plans devised by European army generals made immediate military action essential.
C) ordinary people everywhere went to the polls and voted for immediate opening of the war on all fronts.
D) European industrialists, seeking to profit from mass destruction, induced the politicians they owned through bribery to push declarations of war through all European legislatures.
E) the slowness of communications in a pre-computer era.
Question
The rivalry between Russia and Austria-Hungary for domination of the new states in southeastern Europe played out largely through a conflict involving

A) Slovenia.
B) Bulgaria.
C) Greece.
D) Italy.
E) Serbia.
Question
The Great War annihilated which of the following basic precepts on which Western civilization seemed to have been founded?

A) The belief in democracy.
B) The belief in progress.
C) The belief in equality.
D) The belief in the benevolence of the Christian God.
E) All of the above.
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Deck 25: The Beginning of the Twentieth-Century Crisis: War and Revolution
1
Talk about:
No Man's Land
Answers may vary.
2
Why did the nations of Europe go to war in 1914? What did they hope to gain from the conflict, and how did their goals change during the course of the war?
Answers may vary.
3
How did the Russian Revolution alter the dynamics of European statecraft and policy during the waning months of the war and into the time of the Paris Peace Conference?
Answers may vary.
4
What is meant by the concept of total war, and how applicable is that concept to World War I?
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5
How did wartime governments maintain public order and mobilize public opinion during the course of the war? Compare these actions with those taken by governments in nineteenth-century wars.
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6
Talk about:
mobilization
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7
Talk about:
"blank check"
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8
Talk about:
Black Hand
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9
Talk about:
militarism
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10
What caused the Russian Revolution? How did Lenin and the Bolsheviks manage to seize and hold power despite their small numbers? How did the Bolsheviks secure their power during the civil war?
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11
Can the Treaty of Versailles be viewed as a successful settlement of the war? Why or why not?
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12
Were there any realistic alternatives to the provisions of the Treaty of Versailles, given the causes and the consequences of the war and its impact upon Western civilization?
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13
Discuss the course of the first two years of World War I: Why did many people expect a short war? Why was it not a short war? Why did World War I become a "war of attrition"? Why did the warring nations, worn out by the end of 1916, not make peace?
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14
Why can 1917 be viewed as the year that witnessed the decisive turning point of World War I?
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15
In what ways did the ideologies of the nineteenth century fuel the antagonisms that led to the outbreak of World War I?
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16
Talk about:
General Paul von Hindenburg
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17
Talk about:
conscription
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18
Talk about:
First Battle of the Marne
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19
Talk about:
the Schlieffen Plan
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20
Is it accurate to consider World War I as primarily a European civil war? Why or why not?
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21
Talk about:
"Peace, land, and bread"
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22
Talk about:
Germany's War Raw Materials Board
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23
Talk about:
unrestricted submarine warfare
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24
Talk about:
Petrograd
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25
Talk about:
Central Powers
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26
Talk about:
Defence of the Realm Act
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27
Talk about:
trench warfare
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28
Talk about:
Ireland's Easter Rebellion
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29
Talk about:
Rasputin
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30
Talk about:
the Nineteenth Amendment
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31
Talk about:
tanks
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32
Talk about:
Verdun and the Somme
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33
Talk about:
Britain's Ministry of Munitions
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34
Talk about:
the machine gun and poison gas
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35
Talk about:
Georges Clemenceau
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36
Talk about:
nationalization
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37
Talk about:
Lawrence of Arabia
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38
Talk about:
total war
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39
Talk about:
the Lusitania
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40
Talk about:
Nicholas II and Alexandra
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41
Talk about:
genocide
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42
Talk about:
Alexandra Kollontai and the Zhenotdel
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43
Talk about:
Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points
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44
Talk about:
armistice on November 11, 1918
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45
Talk about:
war communism
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46
Talk about:
soviets
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47
Talk about:
War Guilt Clause
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48
Talk about:
self-determination
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49
Talk about:
the "April Theses"
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50
Talk about:
Alexander Kerensky
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51
Talk about:
V.I. Lenin
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52
Talk about:
Leon Trotsky
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53
Talk about:
Reds and Whites
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54
Talk about:
Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
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55
Talk about:
Second Battle of the Marne
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56
Talk about:
Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg and the Free Corp
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57
Talk about:
Treaty of Versailles
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58
Talk about:
Bolsheviks
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59
Talk about:
the Cheka
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60
Talk about:
League of Nations
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61
Which pair of nations had not practiced conscription prior to World War I?

A) Germany and Austria-Hungary.
B) Great Britain and the United States.
C) France and Great Britain.
D) Italy and Germany.
E) Russia and France.
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Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
62
The underlying motive that led Great Britain to declare war on Germany was

A) the German invasion of Belgium.
B) a desire to plunder on the continent.
C) the desire to maintain world power.
D) fear of German intentions in France.
E) anxiety concerning a possible German invasion of Britain.
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Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
63
Talk about:
Yugoslavia
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64
Talk about:
reparations
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k this deck
65
The Schlieffen Plan was designed to prevent

A) America's entry into the war.
B) war.
C) a prolonged two-front war.
D) a war of attrition.
E) a European-wide war.
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Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
66
Talk about:
"dictated peace"
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k this deck
67
Among nineteenth-century European political movements, the one most responsible for triggering World War I was

A) nationalism.
B) liberalism.
C) conservatism.
D) socialism.
E) modernism.
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Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
68
The immediate cause of World War I was

A) an uprising of Catholic peasants in Bavaria.
B) the assassination of Austrian Archduke Francis Ferdinand in Sarajevo.
C) the German invasion of Poland.
D) the German naval blockage of Britain.
E) the French occupation of the Ruhr.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
69
On the eve of the outbreak of war in Europe in 1914, William II of Germany

A) was plotting the overthrow of Nicholas II in Russia.
B) was intentionally provoking the Russians to attack Austria and set off a world war.
C) attempted to engage Nicholas II in a diplomatic dialogue to possibly avoid war.
D) sent ultimatums to England and France that were so clumsy and insulting as to make war inevitable.
E) abdicated in favor of his son, the Crown Prince, and sought exile in Belgium.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
70
The "blank check" had the effect of

A) assuring Russia a sufficient supply of guns.
B) making the war vastly more expensive than it had to have been.
C) making it impossible for England to enter the war.
D) encouraging Austria to attack Serbia.
E) demonstrating Germany's desire for peace.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
71
In August 1914, the general perception of the upcoming war among Europeans was that

A) it would be the dawn of a new socialist Europe.
B) the war would be very short, possibly only weeks in duration.
C) it would mark the end of European civilization.
D) its long-term nature would revive Europe's suffering economy.
E) it would be avoided at the last minute, once the diplomats finally met together.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
72
The most important consequence of the first year of World War I was

A) a deadly stalemate on the western front as a result of the failure of German war plans.
B) Italy's decision to switch sides to the German-Austrian alliance.
C) the collapse of German armies on the Russian front.
D) Serbia's rapid advance into Austria-Hungary.
E) the Ottoman Empire's decision to join the Triple Entente.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
73
Most Europeans believed that the Great War would

A) be much like the American Civil War in length.
B) be an exciting, emotional release from the otherwise dull and boring existence of mass society.
C) last for years and create a rousing state of perpetual heroics as proclaimed by Nietzsche in his writings on the "superman."
D) ultimately bring about the unification of Europe in one centralized and highly militarized government.
E) result in a new balance of power throughout all of Western civilization.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
74
Talk about:
League of Nations' mandates
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
75
During 1914, in contrast to events in Western Europe, the war in the east

A) was marked by immobility.
B) was marked by mobility.
C) developed methodically and took months to get heated.
D) was marked by careful diplomacy.
E) involved smaller numbers of troops.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
76
Which of the following trends helped lead to the outbreak of the Great War?

A) The hopes of conservative leaders to crush internal democratic movements through war.
B) The adoption by European generals of new military policies.
C) The belief of European states that they had to uphold the power of their allies for their own internal security.
D) The downward spiral of European economies.
E) The dismantling of Europe's overseas empires.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
77
The leader who remarked, "In questions of honor and vital interests, you don't consult others" was

A) Empire William II of Germany.
B) Tsar Nicholas II of Russia.
C) Archduke Francis Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary.
D) General Paul von Hindenburg.
E) Queen Victoria of Great Britain.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
78
As early as July 28, 1914, European diplomats were becoming incapable of slowing a rush toward war mainly because

A) European kings, tsars, and emperors were too bent on war to heed their advice.
B) the complex, rigid, and demanding mobilization plans devised by European army generals made immediate military action essential.
C) ordinary people everywhere went to the polls and voted for immediate opening of the war on all fronts.
D) European industrialists, seeking to profit from mass destruction, induced the politicians they owned through bribery to push declarations of war through all European legislatures.
E) the slowness of communications in a pre-computer era.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
79
The rivalry between Russia and Austria-Hungary for domination of the new states in southeastern Europe played out largely through a conflict involving

A) Slovenia.
B) Bulgaria.
C) Greece.
D) Italy.
E) Serbia.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
80
The Great War annihilated which of the following basic precepts on which Western civilization seemed to have been founded?

A) The belief in democracy.
B) The belief in progress.
C) The belief in equality.
D) The belief in the benevolence of the Christian God.
E) All of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
locked card icon
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.