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Total War HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5

HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5

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HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5. Total War. The July Crisis. 28 June: Archduke Franz Ferdinand assassinated at Sarajevo. 5 July: Kaiser Wilhelm II offers Germany’s unconditional support (the ‘blank cheque’) to Austria-Hungary. 23 July: Austria issues her ultimatum to Serbia. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5

Total War

HI136 History of GermanyLecture 5

Page 2: HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5

The July Crisis 28 June: Archduke Franz Ferdinand

assassinated at Sarajevo. 5 July: Kaiser Wilhelm II offers Germany’s

unconditional support (the ‘blank cheque’) to Austria-Hungary.

23 July: Austria issues her ultimatum to Serbia.

28 July: Austria-Hungary declares war on Serbia. Russia orders ‘partial mobilisation’ of her armed forces.

30 July: Russia orders general mobilisation. Austria orders general mobilisation.

1 August: Germany declares war on Russia. France orders mobilisation.

2 August: Germany issues an ultimatum to Belgium, demanding to be allowed to move troops through Belgian territory.

3 August: Germany declares war on France. Italy proclaims her neutrality.

4 August: German troops cross the Belgian frontier. Britain declares war on Germany.

Page 3: HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5

The ‘Spirit of 1914’

August 1, 1914, in Berlin by Arthur Kampf (1914)

Enthusiasm and Sympathy for Austria on the Streets of Berlin

(August 1, 1914)

Page 4: HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5

Burgfriede A political truce called by the

parties in the Reichstag for the duration of hostilities.

Even the SPD agreed to this and voted for War Credits.

The SPD supported the war because: They had been convinced that

this was a defensive war against autocratic Russia.

Many Socialists were also patriots and were proud of Germany and her achievements.

The party leadership hoped to gain political legitimacy through supporting the nation in its hour of need.

Page 5: HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5

The Schlieffen Plan Drawn up by General

Alfred von Schlieffen (1833-1913), chief of the general staff from 1891 to 1905.

Designed to cope with the prospect of a war on two fronts.

Its objective was to quickly knock out France, leaving the German army free to face Russia.

Several flaws in the plan, which were compounded by unexpected reverses once operations commenced.

Page 6: HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5

The Schlieffen Plan

Page 7: HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5

The Failure of the Schlieffen Plan

The invasion of Belgium made Germany seem like the aggressor and brought Britain into the War.

The plan had not been updated to take recent Russian and French military reforms into account.

Moltke weakened the thrust through Belgium by diverting troops to Alsace and Lorraine and East Prussia.

The Germans faced stiffer resistance than anticipated – in particular they had not expected to have to fight the British Expeditionary Force (BEF).

The German advance halted at the First Battle of the Marne (4-10 Sept. 1914) and the Battle of the Aisne (15-18 Sept. 1914).

September-December: The ‘race for sea’.

By December 1914 the front had stagnated into a 400 mile system of trenches running from the Swiss border to the North Sea.

The War as it was supposed to be fought: German Infantrymen March Singing into the Battle of

Langemarck, November 10, 1914

… And the war as it was fought: digging in to defensive positions, 1914

Page 8: HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5

Paul von Hindenburg (1847-1934)

1847: Born at Poznan in Prussian Poland, the son of an East Prussian landowner.

Educated at cadet schools in Wahlstadt and Berlin.

Fought at Königgrätz (1866) and in the Franco-Prussian War.

1878: Joined the General Staff. 1905: Promoted to the rank of

General. 1911: Retired from active service. 22 August 1914: Brought out of

retirement to command the German Eighth Army in East Prussia.

Victory at Tannenberg and the Masurian Lakes made him a national hero.

In many ways the archetypal Prussian Junker.

Page 9: HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5

Paul von Hindenburg, Erich Ludendorff, Max Hoffmann and August von Mackensen by Oskar Bruch

The ‘Easterners’

Page 10: HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5

Trench Warfare

Postcard: Resting in the Trenches,c. 1914

The Battlefield in the Argonne Forest (1916)

Page 11: HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5
Page 12: HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5

Trench Warfare

German troops attacking, July 1916 (Top Left), posedphotograph of a ‘Storm Trooper’ (Bottom Left), German soldier wearing First World War trench armour (Above)

Page 13: HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5

Verdun (1916)

Page 14: HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5

State Intervention 1915: Kreigsrohstoffabteilung (Raw

Materials Department, KRA) – ensures the acquisition, storage and distribution of materials vital to the war effort.

1915: Bread rationing introduced. 1916: Zentral-Einkaufs-Gesellschaft

(Central Purchasing Company) – acquisition of goods from neutral countries.

1916: Reichsgetreidstelle (Imperial Gain Office) – controlled food supplies and issued ration cards .

Hindenburg Programme (1916) – Intended to concentrate industry on the production of munitions.

Auxiliary Service Law (1916): Government could conscript workers and decide where they should work.

Walter Rathenau (1867-1922), industrialist

and founder of the Kreigsrohstoffabteilung

Page 15: HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5

Germany already had a large budget deficit before 1914.

Taxation not sufficient to finance the war, and proposals to raise taxes vetoed on political grounds and the fiscal privileges of Junkers continued unabated.

Only 16% of the cost of the war met by taxation.War financed by printing money and war loans.This led to massive inflation – by 1918 the mark had

lost 75% of its value.Also a fall of real wages (20% in war industry, 40%

in other branches).

War Finance

Page 16: HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5

Food Shortages By the autumn of 1916 food

shortages,Inflation and mounting casualties beginning to effect the public mood.

1916-17: The ‘Turnip Winter’ – exceptionally cold weather and a poor potato harvest lead to a severe food and fuel crisis.

Between 1916 and 1917 deaths from hypothermia and malnutrition rose from 121,000 to 293,000.

Infant Mortality at 50% by 1918.

German Food rations (October 1918):50 g. (1.8 oz.) of meat, 57 g. (2 oz.) of fat, 25 g. (.9 oz.) of butter, 5 lb. of bread, 125 g. (4.4 oz.) of legumes, 250 g. (.6 lb.) of flour, 4-5 lb. of potatoes, 1 lb. of marmalade, ½ litre (1 pint) of milk, and 1 g. (.04 oz.) of sugar.

Page 17: HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5

Measures War Raw Materials Office: coordination

of industrial products. Food rationing in 1915. War Food Office 1916. Substitutes – clothes with paper fibres. Gaps in the labour force filled by

women (emancipation – double burden).

Auxiliary Labour Law (1916): Government could conscript workers and decide where they should work.

‘Dictatorship’ of Oberste Heeresleitung (OHL) – Hindenburg and Ludendorff – loss of influence for civil government – strengthening of army influence.

Scarcity of clothing, soap, food. Agricultural production fell, meat

consumption only 12% of pre-war level. Malnutrition and starvation – ‘turnip

winter’ 1916/17 (consequence: up to 750,000 dead).

Polarisation: pro ‘Siegfrieden’ (victorious peace) with far reaching war aims, pro peace without contributions and annexations.

Middle Classes: pauperisation, living conditions closer to working class – but many now more nationalist, angst (loss of status) .

Working Class: spontaneous strikes in 1916 and 1917.

Mobilisation for Total WarFailures

Page 18: HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5

The Treaty of Brest-Litovsk (March 1918)

Source: G. Layton, From Bismarck to Hitler: Germany, 1890-1933

Page 19: HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5

The Final Gamble:The 1918 Spring Offensive

Source: P. J. Haythornthwaite, The World War One Sourcebook

Page 20: HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5

Dolchstoßlegende(Stab in the Back Myth)

The co-chairman of the SPD Philipp Scheidemann and Matthias Erzberger betray the troops.

Page 21: HI136 History of Germany Lecture 5

  Known dead Seriously wounded

Otherwise wounded

Prisoners or missing

Russia 2,762,064 1,000,000 3,950,000 2,500,000 Germany 1,611,104 1,600,000 2,183,143 772,522 France 1,427,800 700,000 2,344,000 453,500 Austria-Hungary 911,000 850,000 2,150,000 443,000 Great Britain 807,451 617,714 1,441,394 64,907 Serbia 707,343 322,000 28,000 100,000 Italy 507,160 500,000 462,196 1,359,000 Turkey 436,924 107,772 300,000 103,731 Rumania 339,117 200,000 ...... 116,000 Belgium 267,000 40,000 100,000 10,000 United States 107,284 43,000 148,000 4,912 Bulgaria 101,224 300,000 852,339 10,825 Greece 15,000 10,000 30,000 45,000 Portugal 4,000 5,000 12,000 200 Japan 300 ........ 907 3 Total 9,998,771 6,295,512 14,002,039 5,983,600

Casualties of the War