7.1 Causes of World War I

  • 3 Activities
  • 2 Articles
  • 4 Videos

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Unit Problem

What were the causes of global conflict from c. 1900 to the present?

Learning Objectives

  1. Analyze the causes and consequences of World War I.
  2. Assess the impacts of World War I on different regions of the world.
Activity

What is This Asking?

Preparation

Activity

Purpose

This quick skill-building activity is intended to help you understand what is being asked of you when you’re presented with historical prompts, particularly those you’ll encounter in assessment prompts such as document-based questions (DBQs) and long essay questions (LEQs).

Process

In this activity, you will revisit the process of how to parse a prompt. Remember, parsing a prompt is the process of analyzing a string of words—that is, trying to figure out what something is saying and asking!

Take out the Question Parsing Tool and write down the following AP® World History prompt at the top of the tool:

“Evaluate the extent to which the experience of the First World War changed relationships between Europeans and colonized peoples.”

Now, follow the tool directions. Be prepared to discuss your answers with the class!

Article

What Caused the First World War?

Preparation

Article
Activity

Summary

Historians don’t agree on one definitive factor that caused the First World War. There were a lot of different factors at play. This article explores the three different approaches that historians have taken to explaining how the world went to war in 1914. Perhaps the most common explanation was the assassination of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand. But other historians point to deeper, systemic factors that led the world to war, like alliance systems, nationalism, and imperialism. And still other historians argue that the war was an accident of catastrophic proportions. Outdated diplomatic technology was unprepared to stop an industrial war.

Purpose

This article provides three different historical approaches to explaining the same event. The evidence provided for each of the three approaches will help you to respond to the Unit Problem: “What were the causes of global conflict from c. 1900 to the present.” As you read, consider how political, economic, and technological transformations during the long nineteenth century led the world to war.

Process

Think about the following question as you read the article: To what extent does this article explain the causes and consequences of World War I? Write this question at the top of the Three Close Reads worksheet. You will be asked to respond to this question again after the third read in the Evaluating and Corroborating section of the worksheet.

Read 1—Skimming for Gist

Fill out the Skimming for Gist section of the Three Close Reads worksheet as you complete your first close read. As a reminder, this should be a quick process!

Read 2—Understanding Content

For this reading, you should be looking for unfamiliar vocabulary words, the major claim and key supporting details, and analysis and evidence. By the end of the second close read, you should be able to answer the following questions:

  1. Who killed Franz Ferdinand? Why did they kill him?
  2. How did the European alliance system help start the war?
  3. How did imperialism help start the war?
  4. Why does the author argue that industrialization made the war inevitable once preparations were started?
  5. How might the First World War have happened on accident?

Read 3—Evaluating and Corroborating

At the end of the third close read, respond to the following questions:

  1. To what extent does this article explain the causes and consequences of World War I?
  2. This article gives three broad explanations for the origins of the First World War. Which view, or argument, do you agree with the most, and why? Why not the others?

Video

How World War I Started: Crash Course World History #209

Summary

In this video, John Green gives an explanation for why war erupted in Europe in 1914. World War I was a transformative conflict. The event that kicked it all off was the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand by Serbian nationalists. But there are deeper and more complex cause-and-effect relationships that caused such a huge, deadly, and transformative war to break out.

How World War I Started: Crash Course World History #209 (9:09)

Key Ideas

As this video progresses, key ideas will be introduced to invoke discussion.

Purpose

This video provides evidence at the global level to help you respond to the Unit Problem: “What were the causes of global conflict from c. 1900 to the present?” In particular, the video will help you understand how the war was a result of global transformations and local events.

Process

Think about the following question as you watch the video: To what extent does this video explain the causes and consequences of World War I? You will be asked to respond to this question again at the end of the video.

Preview—Skimming for Gist

As a reminder, open and skim the transcript, and read the questions before you watch the video.

Key Ideas—Understanding Content

Think about the following questions as you watch this video:

  1. Why did Princeps and his co-conspirators target Archduke Franz Ferdinand?
  2. Why didn’t Franz Ferdinand’s uncle, the Austrian emperor, like him?
  3. Why was Austria’s ultimatum to Serbia important? And why was it important that it took a month for Austria to issue it?
  4. John Green lays out the chronology that led up to World War I. What action taken by a national government started the hostilities?

Evaluating and Corroborating

  1. To what extent does this video explain the causes and consequences of World War I?
  2. John Green warns us that it’s really hard to understand the long-term consequences of our actions. Can you think of any historical choices that led to surprising or unfortunate results later on?

Article

The First World War as a Global War

Preparation

Article
Activity

Summary

The First World War started in a relatively small place: Europe. Why did it get so big? This article examines how a European conflict became a war of global proportions. Many of the people who actually fought in the war weren’t from Europe. The main combatants in the war had colonies around the world, and they asked their colonized subjects to fight for them. And, the nations who started the war wanted more colonies, which was part of the reason they fought. Though the main battles of the war were in Europe, the war was fought all over the world.

Purpose

This article focuses on both the causes and the impact of the First World War as a global conflict. It will help you to think through causation in the context of the First World War by addressing the question: How did this conflict become global?

Process

Think about the following question as you read the article: Using evidence from this article, explain how governments used a variety of methods to conduct war. Write this question at the top of the Three Close Reads worksheet. You will be asked to respond to this question again after the third read in the Evaluating and Corroborating section of the worksheet.

Read 1—Skimming for Gist

Fill out the Skimming for Gist section of the Three Close Reads worksheet as you complete your first close read. As a reminder, this should be a quick process!

Read 2—Understanding Content

For this reading, you should be looking for unfamiliar vocabulary words, the major claim and key supporting details, and analysis and evidence. By the end of the second close read, you should be able to answer the following questions:

  1. What were the main alliances in the war?
  2. How does imperialism affect who fought in the war?
  3. What does the author argue were some global motivations for the war?
  4. Where were most of the battles outside of Europe fought?
  5. What are the main consequences of the war that this article mentions?

Read 3—Evaluating and Corroborating

At the end of the third close read, respond to the following questions:

  1. Using evidence from this article, explain how governments used a variety of methods to conduct war.
  2. What elements and experiences of the First World War made it a world war? How did it become global?

Video

Britain and World War I

Summary

Hundreds of thousands of soldiers from Britain and its empire died in the fields of Flanders during World War I. Britain didn’t mean to go to war, but German naval ambition and the invasion of Belgium forced Britain to enter the war. The huge British navy, its experienced Guards Regiments, and its industrial wealth proved decisive in the conflict. Trench warfare and industrial weapons produced an incredibly deadly and miserable war that devastated British communities. In this video, Nick Dennis explores the impacts of the war on Britain through conversations with two experts on Britain’s naval and military history.

Britain and World War I

Key Ideas

As this video progresses, key ideas will be introduced to invoke discussion.

Purpose

The Unit 7 Problem asks you to identify the causes of global conflict. Each nation that participated in the First World War entered the war for different reasons and experienced its impacts in different ways. This video will help you respond to the Unit Problem by providing evidence at the national level for why Britain went to war and why the war was so transformative for the island nation. As you watch, consider how British imperialism and industrialization during the long nineteenth century contributed to its entry into the war and to its eventual victory.

Process

Think about the following question as you watch the video: To what extent does this video explain how governments used a variety of methods to conduct war? You will be asked to respond to this question again at the end of the video.

Preview—Skimming for Gist

As a reminder, open and skim the transcript, and read the questions before you watch the video.

Key Ideas—Understanding Content

Think about the following questions as you watch this video:

  1. Why did Britain have the world’s largest navy?
  2. Why did Britain and Germany get into an arms race and why did Britain win?
  3. What type of person served on the Guards Regiments?
  4. How did Belgium pull Britain into the war?
  5. Why is the poppy a symbol of the war?

Evaluating and Corroborating

  1. To what extent does this video explain how governments used a variety of methods to conduct war?
  2. During World War I, how did Britain’s economic system provide the nation with advantages, but also create vulnerabilities?
  3. How does this video support, extend, or challenge what you have learned about the causes of the First World War?

Video

Southeast Asia and World War I

Summary

In this video, Trevor Getz interviews Heather Streets-Salter about how the First World War affected Southeast Asia. Southeast Asia was a complicated place in 1914. British, French, American, Dutch and Japanese empires claimed control of much of the region. The region was home to many Chinese people and Muslims, who had broad transnational interests. The centerpiece of this video is Singapore, where one captured German submarine crew helped spark an uprising against the British colonial government. The uprising had many transnational connections to India, Europe, and San Francisco.

Southeast Asia and World War I (11:04)

Key Ideas

As this video progresses, key ideas will be introduced to invoke discussion.

Purpose

This video provides you with additional evidence to help you identify the global impacts and connections of the First World War. It will provide you evidence to support, extend, and challenge the governance theme narrative in this unit by illustrating one complex transnational case study of revolt in Southeast Asia.

Process

Think about the following question as you watch the video: Using evidence from this video, explain the causes and consequences of World War I. You will be asked to respond to this question again at the end of the video.

Preview—Skimming for Gist

As a reminder, open and skim the transcript, and read the questions before you watch the video.

Key Ideas—Understanding Content

Think about the following questions as you watch this video:

  1. What was Southeast Asia like in 1914?
  2. Why were people living in Southeast Asia interested in what was happening in the Middle East?
  3. Why was the Russo-Japanese War important?
  4. Why was Singapore a strategic city?
  5. Why was the German submarine crew able to convince the Indian soldiers to revolt against the British?

Evaluating and Corroborating

  1. Using evidence from this video, explain the causes and consequences of World War I.
  2. Dr. Streets-Salter points out that, when we think about the First World War, we mostly think about trench warfare in Europe. But for most of the world, that’s not what the war was like. Clearly, the war was important for Southeast Asia. But do you think what happened in Southeast Asia was important to the war in Europe? Use evidence to support your argument.

Video

The Middle East and World War I

Summary

The end of the First World War redrew the borders of the Middle East, laying the foundations for many modern nation-states, as well as many of the conflicts that exist in the region today. Before the war, in 1914, the region was mostly divided between the Ottoman and British empires. These two powers found themselves on opposing sides of World War I. As the British looked for allies in the region, they found Sharif Hussein, who hoped to lead an independent Arab state after the war. Yet, the ambitions of British imperialists would frustrate his hopes.

The Middle East and World War I (12:49)

Key Ideas

As this video progresses, key ideas will be introduced to invoke discussion.

Purpose

This video provides further evidence to evaluate the impacts and experiences of the First World War, both on a regional and individual level. The video also introduces several important ideologies that would shape the Middle East in the second half of the twentieth century: nationalism, Arab nationalism, and Pan-Islam. These ideologies will provide you with further evidence to evaluate the governance and cultural developments and interactions themes.

Process

Think about the following question as you watch the video: Using evidence from the video, explain the consequences of World War I from a political and cultural point of view. You will be asked to respond to this question again at the end of the video.

Preview—Skimming for Gist

As a reminder, open and skim the transcript, and read the questions before you watch the video.

Key Ideas—Understanding Content

Think about the following questions as you watch this video:

  1. What was the Middle East like in 1914?
  2. According to Dr. Genell, what was the purpose of the Ottoman Declaration of Jihad?
  3. Who was Sharif Hussein, and how did the British convince him to join the war?
  4. Why did Sharif Hussein not get what he wanted after the war?
  5. What were mandates?
  6. What identities became important after the war? Why?

Evaluating and Corroborating

  1. Using evidence from the video, explain the consequences of World War I from a political and cultural point of view.
  2. Looking at the three maps of the Middle East in this video—1914, 1923, and the twenty-first century—what do you think was the most important way that World War I changed the region in the past 100 years?

Activity

Our Interconnected World – World War I

Preparation

Activity

Purpose

Much like the Our Interconnected World yarn activity that you completed earlier in this course to demonstrate the interconnectedness of the world in 1450, 1750, and today, this activity will simulate the extent to which preexisting and newly emerging networks contributed to the global scale of World War I. You’ll use yarn to create a visual representation of direct and indirect regional involvement in the war, which will help you think about how nineteenth-century trends of industrialization, imperialism, and nationalism set the stage for global interactions in the twentieth century and even today.

Practices

Contextualization, causation
The narratives involved in this activity present some global context for the scale of World War I, and you’ll be using your causation skills as you consider the reasons for global involvement around the world from 1914 to 1918.

Process

In this activity, you’ll use yarn, just as you did in the first Our Interconnected World activity to create a visual representation of the networks that existed during World War I. By using string to illustrate the connections between Allied and Central Powers, you’ll begin to see how global this war became in a relatively short time.

Part 1

  1. As you enter the classroom, your teacher will give you a region card with your assigned nations on them. Be sure to sit in your assigned region. It may help to memorize your assigned region so you know to take the yarn when your country is called out in the narrative. Then, your teacher will either hand out or have you download the Our Interconnected World – World War I worksheet.
  2. Do you remember the last time the classroom was arranged in this way? And can you remember what the big idea of that activity was? In this activity, you’ll be taking another look at the world through the exchange networks that connected nations, but this time you’ll be examining the world of 1914.
  3. Think about the top three major events or trends someone would need to know about to understand how the world changed from 1750 to 1914. Be prepared to share the trends you identified with the class.
  4. Your teacher will either nominate a “runner” to carry a ball of yarn to the different locations around the room as the narrative is read, or will have you toss the yarn from one location to the next. When the yarn comes to you, you’ll hold onto the strand until you’ve heard the entire narrative.
  5. Your teacher will project the narrative for the Networks of WWI on the board so you can follow along as they read aloud. Note that the blue portions of the narrative are the Allied Powers and the red portions are the Central Powers. Important locations are in green.

Part 2

Examine the web of yarn to see the alliances and networks of exchange that took place during the war. Then, either individually or in pairs, complete Part 2 of the worksheet. Remember that you can go back through the narrative to pull out pieces of evidence to support your answers. You should be looking for evidence that supports how the trends you identified at the start of this activity were contributing factors to the global scale of the war.

Be prepared to share your answers with the class.