1914History in an Hour
RUPERT COLLEY
Title Page 1914History in an Hour RUPERT COLLEY
Introduction
Turn of the Century: States of the Nations
Treaties and Alliances
Assassination of an Archduke
The Road to War
The Willy and Nicky Telegrams
The Schlieffen Plan
Belgium
Battle Begins
Mons
Marne
The First Battle of Ypres
Eastern Front
Austria-Hungary
War Crimes
The Wider War
The War at Sea and in the Air
The Christmas Truce
Appendix 1: Key Players
Appendix 2: 1914 Timeline
Got Another Hour?
Copyright
About the Publisher
Introduction Contents Title Page 1914History in an Hour RUPERT COLLEY Introduction Turn of the Century: States of the Nations Treaties and Alliances Assassination of an Archduke The Road to War The Willy and Nicky Telegrams The Schlieffen Plan Belgium Battle Begins Mons Marne The First Battle of Ypres Eastern Front Austria-Hungary War Crimes The Wider War The War at Sea and in the Air The Christmas Truce Appendix 1: Key Players Appendix 2: 1914 Timeline Got Another Hour? Copyright About the Publisher
On 4 February 2012, Florence Green died. Born in Edmonton, London in 1901, she was 110 years old. Having been a member of the Women’s Royal Air Force, she was also the last veteran of the First World War. The ‘Great War’, as it was originally called, had truly passed from living memory into history.
It all started in southeastern Europe, in the corner of the Balkans, an area known for its volatile tendencies but isolated enough for it not to concern the average person on the streets of London, Paris or Brussels, let alone the citizens of Sydney, Wellington or Madras. Yet within just over a month of the assassination of the heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne, as the efforts of negotiation and diplomatic bluffs failed, war had erupted, spreading across Europe then across the globe. But no matter, it would be a short war – finished before the fall of the autumn leaves or over by Christmas. Motivated by patriotism and nationalism, and peppered, in varying degrees, by ambition, prestige, fear, revenge, obligation or simply survival, nations went to war.
In 1914, the war of people’s imagination lay in the previous century – colourful uniforms, military bands playing, flags flying and men on horseback, and short, sharp conflicts. But 1914 proved to be different, a watershed, as old notions of war were trampled in the mud. No one could have perceived such a war of unimaginable horror, fought on such an unprecedented scale; a war fought with terrifying new weapons, of death on an industrial magnitude, a war that involved so many nations and reached into the very fabric of society; a war that brought to an end the Belle Époque of Edwardian life. The events of 1914, and the war that followed, changed the world and shaped the twentieth century.
This, in an hour, is 1914.
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