The Great War, later known as the First World War, had its origins
in the rivalries and conflicts among the major European powers (in particular,
Britain, France, Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Russia) in the latter half
of the nineteenth century. These empires competed with each other for overseas
colonies as well as for land in Europe. Germany and France were especially
bitter enemies as a result of the 1870-1871 Franco-Prussian War for power
and prestige on the continent. Germany also sought to challenge the dominance
of Great Britain's Royal Navy.
Colonies were essential to imperial powers
because they supplied raw materials for industry and provided markets
for manufactured goods. Great Britain had the largest empire, which
included Canada, Australia, New Zealand, India, the East and West Indies,
South Africa, and other African colonies. France had colonies in Africa
and Asia, but Germany had only a few colonies and was looking to build
its empire. Britain was determined to prevent the Germans from expanding
into the Balkans and the Middle East. Here, the Great Powers quarrel
over the spoils of Egypt. The lion represents Great Britain, the bear
is Russia, and the donkey represents Spain. Germany and Austria -- portrayed
as vultures -- and Italy and Turkey -- depicted as dogs -- hover over
the dead corpse.
"BRITISH NAVAL ESTIMATES FOR THE YEAR
1904-5, £36,889,500. APPROPRIATIONS IN AID: AUSTRALIA, £200,000; CANADA,
NIL."
As Germany and Britain competed for naval
superiority in the years leading up to the Great War, Britain turned
to its colonies for help. In Canada, Robert Borden, the Prime Minister
after the 1911 election, wanted to offer money to Britain as immediate
aid. Wilfrid Laurier, the Liberal leader and Leader of the Opposition
after 1911, wanted to strengthen the Canadian Navy. The Laurier policy
would have taken longer to implement, and Britain believed that it could
not wait. The figure walking alongside Canada represents Australia.
John Bull, who represents Britain, is shouldering the burden of the
naval defence of the Empire.
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By 1914, Europe was divided into two powerful camps. The
Triple Entente of France, Russia, and Great Britain contended against
the allied nations of Germany and Austria-Hungary. Turkey joined in
1915 to form the Triple Alliance (previously Italy had been part of
the Triple Alliance, but it did not join the conflict in 1914 and later
fought on the side of the Triple Entente).
These bitter rivalries between the great powers and the
system of ententes they helped create are often identified as significant
causes of the First World War. Some historians, however, view Germany's
long-standing desire to dominate Europe, and particularly eastern Europe,
as a more important factor. These scholars argue that the German monarchy
and ruling classes welcomed the war as a means to implement expansionist
goals that had their roots in the nineteenth century. German historian
Fritz Fischer, writing in the post-Second World War period, is perhaps
the most influential proponent of this interpretation. His views, first
published in 1961, met initial hostility from Germans but soon came
to be very widely accepted. Indeed, Fischer's interpretation has influenced
German foreign policy and, in particular, Germany's decision to renounce
claims to lost territory in the east. Ironically, the strongest opposition
to Fischer's views has arisen in non-German academic circles. Many critics
outside of Germany have taken Fischer to task for downplaying the role
of diplomatic tensions and other international factors in bringing about
the conflict. The dispute, however, underscores the difficulty scholars
face in attempting to attribute a single cause to the First World War.
The origins of such complex historical events are rarely reducible to
simple explanations. (1)
"BUST MY BULKHEADS AND SHIVER MY
COMPARTMENTS, HAVE I GOT TO LEARN GERMAN AT MY TIME OF LIFE!"
Between 1900 and 1914, Germany
intensified its efforts to eliminate Britain's naval superiority
by building more, and larger, battleships. In this cartoon, Neptune,
the Roman god of the seas, is talking to the German Emperor, Kaiser
Wilhelm II.
The Allies regarded Belgium as a brave
martyr overrun by the treacherous "Hun." Insulting ethnic labels
were commonly applied to the enemy in the Great War.
The incident that brought these two camps to war was the assassination
of Archduke Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary in Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina,
in June 1914. Serbia was formerly under Austria-Hungary's control. All Europe
tensed in anticipation of conflict. Austria-Hungary threatened to invade Serbia;
Russia countered by mobilizing against Austria-Hungary. German war plans were
predicated on the possibility of a two-front war with France and Russia. As
a result, Germany declared war on both powers and Germany invaded Belgium
as part of a massive offensive against the French. This was a clear violation
of Belgian neutrality, and Britain demanded Germany's immediate withdrawal.
When Germany refused, war was declared in August.
Soon, almost all the nations of Europe were drawn into the conflict.
The First World War had begun.
(1) For a recent assessment of
Germany and the legitimacy of Fischer's views, see Paul Johnson, Modern
Times: The World from the Twenties to the Nineties (New York: Harper Collins,
1991), pp. 104ff.