The Battles of World War I: Everything You Need to Know Series

Book Title The Battles of World War I: Everything You Need to Know Series
Author Name Christopher Catherwood
Publishing house Allison and Busby
Country – city UK
Date of issue 2014
Number of pages 288

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The Battles of World War I: Everything You Need to Know Series

Our understanding of the twentieth century and beyond hinges upon the First World War. In this new and comprehensive book, the fascinating facts are presented in an accessible way, allowing anyone to brush up on the devastating conflict that changed the world we live in.Discover everything you need to know about:

The battle of Ypres

The Somme

The forgotten wars between Italy, Austrالسومia and Russia

The invention of the tank and how it changed the war

The role of the USA

The siege of Kut

The battle the Germans won

and much more…

World War I was an extremely bloody war that engulfed Europe from 1914 to 1919, with huge losses of life and little ground lost or won.

Fought mostly by soldiers in trenches, World War I saw an estimated 10 million military deaths and another 20 million wounded.

While many hoped that World War I would be “the war to end all wars,” in actuality, the concluding peace treaty set the stage for World War II.

The spark that started World War I was the assassination of Austria’s Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife Sophie.

The assassination occurred on June 28, 1914 while Ferdinand was visiting the city of Sarajevo in the Austro-Hungarian province of Bosnia-Herzegovina.

Although Archduke Franz Ferdinand, the nephew of Austria’s emperor and heir-apparent to the throne, was not very well liked by most, his assassination by a Serb nationalist was viewed as a great excuse to attack Austria-Hungary’s troublesome neighbor, Serbia.

However, instead of reacting quickly to the incident, Austria-Hungary made sure they had the backing of Germany, with whom they had a treaty, before they proceeded.

This gave Serbia time to get the backing of Russia, with whom they had a treaty.

The calls for back-up didn’t end there.

Russia also had a treaty with France and Britain.

This meant that by the time Austria-Hungary officially declared war on Serbia on July 28, 1914, an entire month after the assassination, much of Europe had already become entangled in the dispute.

At the start of the war, these were the major players (more countries joined the war later):

  • Allied Forces (a.k.a. the Allies): France, the United Kingdom, Russia
  • Central Powers: Germany and Austria-Hungary

The Battles of World War I: Everything You Need to Know Series

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