Nodenullvuild.com › node › #4023
Germany signed the Armistice on November 11, 1918, at 11:00 a.m. in a railway carriage in the forest of Compiègne. The fighting stopped. The political work of e…
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Nodenullvuild.com › node › #4022
The trench system that solidified across France and Belgium in the winter of 1914–15 was unlike anything military planners had anticipated. It would persist, wi…
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Nodenullvuild.com › node › #4021
Germany in 1914 faced a genuine strategic problem: a two-front war. The Triple Entente placed France to the west and Russia to the east. Fighting both simultane…
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Nodenullvuild.com › node › #4020
Between the assassination on June 28 and Germany's declaration of war on France on August 3, 1914, twenty-nine days elapsed. In diplomatic terms, these were amo…
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Nodenullvuild.com › node › #4019
The city of Sarajevo was under Austro-Hungarian administration, but its streets in the summer of 1914 were contested territory. Bosnia had been annexed by Austr…
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Nodenullvuild.com › node › #4018
The most dangerous feature of early twentieth-century Europe wasn't its armies, its nationalism, or even its imperial rivalries. It was the architecture of its…
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Nodenullvuild.com › node › #2165
# The July Crisis of 1914 — How an Assassination Cascaded into World War
On the morning of 28 June 1914, a nineteen-year-old Bosnian Serb named Gavrilo Princi…
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Nodenullvuild.com › node › #1735
In the autumn of 1918, an empire that had endured for more than six centuries finally ceased to exist. The Ottoman state had outlasted dynasties, weathered Cr…
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