Posted on 06/28/2014 7:33:17 AM PDT by TurboZamboni
The shot that changed the world rang out on a sunny summer's morning in Southeastern Europe. No one knew then that the assassin's bullet would spell the death not just of an Austrian aristocrat but the entire global order, with four empires and millions of lives lost in a conflict on a scale never before seen..
Exactly 100 years ago Saturday, Franz Ferdinand, heir to the throne of the Austro-Hungarian empire, and his wife, Sophie, were shot at close range by a young Serbian nationalist on the streets of Sarajevo.
The assassination set off a chain reaction that, barely a month later, culminated in a continent at war.
(Excerpt) Read more at latimes.com ...
In the U.S., history books always say something like that but don't specify exactly what was the cause.
However some English historians link the cause of the war to the rejection of monarchies, Seeing that the battle lines were between those with and those without, I would say that's right.
So why is this seldom mentioned in U.S. history books ?
Britain (monarchy), Italy (monarchy) and Russia (monarchy) joined by France and eventually the United States against Germany (monarchy) and Austria-Hungary (monarchy). Not quite following you here.
MARK
Not entirely true. There were multiple mutual defense treaties. Once one country began to observe its treaty obligations then others followed suit. Soon the cross purposes of the treaties became the catalyst of a global conflict. Monarchies tumbled but the treaties IMHO were the driving force.
There has been as many books written on the causes of World War 1 as the war itself. There were forces at work for decades before Princip fired his shots. Was it inevitable with or without Princip? Nobody can answer that. We do know his shots lit the powder keg.
Some very good books on the origin of the war:
Dreadnought by Robert Massie
The Arming of Europe and the Making of the First World War by by David Herrmann
Europe’s Last Summer by David Fromkin
Catyclysm, The First World War as Political Tragedy by David Stevenson
Twilight of the Hapsburgs by Alan Palmer
and the standard reference, The Guns of August by Barbara Tuchman
If there is blame to be placed on any one person, the current weight of historical opinion seems to place it squarely on the shoulders of Helmuth von Moltke, Chief of the German General Staff. He was the one person determined to take a local conflict and deliberately turn it into a world war.
When it was over ' Four monarchies were destroyed: the Hohenzollers (Germany), the Romanovs (Russia), the Hapsburgs (Austria-Hungary), and the Ottomans (Turkey); '
So my question is why do U.S. historians not mention this ?
Thanks I'll look these up....
...and brought freedom to millions of otherwise oppressed people.
I believe the BBC or PBS did a series called the Fall of Eagles in the early or mid 1970’s It is on Youtube.
Patrick Steward (Captain Picard) performance as Lenin was
quite good. It cover the period 1870-1918 rather nicely.
Teufelhunden.
Because the communists don’t want our kids to have the ability to discern those issues as a catalyst for uprising. They have been manipulating our school books since before WW2.
The 20th century was about chucking monarchies.
The outcome of the chucking was not uniform nor all good. The Russian chucking was hijacked as was the Chinese. The hijackers are out of power.
The Arabian chucking was stolen by the Brits and the Frogs. The current events are the reversion to an idealized, older more primitive rule. It will not be tolerated and will not prevail
And U.S. troops thinking they were off to some kind of picnic.
The Illusion Of Victory: America In World War I
true
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