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Tactics & Battles During World War I

Tactics & Battles During World War I. How and where were the major battles of World War I fought?. Schlieffen Plan (Shlee-fun). Germany developed the Schlieffen Plan to avoid fighting on two fronts 1) Attack and defeat France first on the western front

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Tactics & Battles During World War I

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  1. Tactics & BattlesDuring World War I How and where were the major battles of World War I fought?

  2. Schlieffen Plan (Shlee-fun) • Germany developed the Schlieffen Plan to avoid fighting on two fronts • 1) Attack and defeat France first on the western front • Reason: Already beaten France before (Franco-Prussian War) • 2) Attack Russia later on the eastern front • Reason: Russia not able to mobilize troops & supply them due to slow industrialization (few railroads, factories), A-H can hold them off • Germans want to enter Belgium to get to France, Belgians say no so Germany invades neutral Belgium • British upset & enter war. Germans are within a few miles of Paris

  3. Western Front – Battle of the Marne • Four days later, Germans retreat • Allies regroup and counterattack Germany NE of Paris in the Marne River Valley • When more soldiers were needed, 600 taxicabs rushed soldiers from Paris to the fighting front • Battle of Marne is significant because Germans now realize that the Schlieffen Plan will not work – no quick & easy victory in France! German troops near Paris Taxis rush soldiers to the front

  4. After the Battle of Marne, each side began to dig a series of trenches in Northern France The Western Front – Trench Warfare Trench life stinks, time to dream mud • Soldiers fought, lived & slept in the trenches and dealt with artillery fire, rats, lice, disease, smell, contamination, boredom and mud

  5. Bloody Stalemates – Verdun & Battle of the Somme (1916) • “No Man’s Land” was the space above and in between the trenches. It was filled with barbed wire and land mines • New weapons technology results in little territory gained and huge loss of life turning these battles into bloody stalemates • Clip: Describe the preparation for NML and the hazards in NML • During the Battle of Verdun, each side lost 300K (9mos) • The bloodiest was the Battle of the Somme, 20K killed in one day & overall 600K wounded/killed for the Allies and 450K for CP (4mos) • Christmas truce: December 1914 each side stopped fighting for one day and came out of the trenches to celebrate the holidays together

  6. The Eastern Front • Fighting starts in late August 1914 when Russia attacks C Powers • Germany counterattacks in the Battle of Tannenberg forcing Russia to retreat - 30,000 Russian soldiers are killed • Russia winning vs A-H, so Germans & Ottomans cut off Russia’s supply lines (Black Sea) • Due to lack of supplies/clothing – many soldiers freeze to death on the “frozen front” • Russia’s only advantage was a large population allowing them to constantly “rebuild” their army • 1915: Czar Nicholas II decides to take personal command of the troops, worsening the war for Russia

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