Tuesday, 22 April 2014

Outcomes of World War One

Demographic Effects:
  • 722785 deaths, 11.8%
  • The fastest fall of infant mortality in the first thirty years of the twentieth century.
  • Life expectancy at birth rose between 1911 and 1921. From 49-56 for men and from 53-60 for women. 
  • There was better maternity care after the war.
  • More work and better pay for the bulk of the population.
  • Industrial canteens and subsidized meals for workers became more common.
  • The provision of school meals for children was extended.
  • Health insurance was given automatically to all the armed services and their wives received maternity benefits.
Economic Effects:
  • Funding the war had a severe economic cost in the United Kingdom.
  • It went from being the worlds largest overseas investor to becoming one of its biggest debtors with interest payments.
  • Inflation more than doubled between 1914 and its peak in 1920.
  • The value of the pound fell by 61.2%
  • The financial loss was around £300 million.
  • 40% of the British merchant fleet were sunk by German U-boats.
Social Effects:
  • During the war all classes were deemed equal.
  • Women gained rights, including the right to vote and could have jobs.
  • After the war the middle classes faced many issues.
  • The upper class, including owners of businesses benefited from the inflated economy.
Political Effects:
  • The Treaty of Versailles was created between Germany and the allied forces
  • The dissolution of German, Russian, Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman Empires created a large number of new small states in Eastern Europe.
  • These big powers also lost political power.
  • Russian revolution of 1917

People of World War One

Churchill

Winston Churchill (1874-1965) the First Lord of the British admiralty. Churchill is better known for his role as Britain's Prime Minister during World War Two but he played a significant role in World War One too. He was the head of Britain's navy until he was demoted in 1915 following the British failure at the Dardanelles. After, he resigned his post, he served on the western front as a battalion commander.

Kitchener 

Lord Horatio Kitchener (1850-1916) a British military leader and statesman who, as secretary of state for war in the first years of World War one, organised armies on an unprecedented scale. Unlike many in government and the military, he foresaw a war lasting for years and planned accordingly. Kitchener enlisted and trained huge numbers of volunteers for a succession of entirely new 'kitchener armies'. But his cabinet colleagues did not share the public worship of Kitchener and he was gradually relieved of his responsibilities. His support for the disastrous Dardanelles operation, combined with the 'shell crisis' of 1915 eroded his reputation further.

Haig

General Douglas Haig (1861-1928) a British commander on the Western Front for most of World War One. The huge casualties that his military strategy produced has made him a controversial figure. Haig believed that the war could only be won on the Western Front. This caused friction with Lloyd George, secretary of state for war and prime minister from December 1916, who disagreed with this strategy and supported alternate schemes and intrigued against Haig. Between August and November 1918 the allied forces under Haig's command achieved a series of victories against the German army which resulted in the end of the war.  

Other key individuals:
  • Franz Ferdinand - The archduke of Austria, nephew of Emperor Franz Joseph and heir to the Habsburg throne. His assassination on June 28th 1914, by Serbian militant Gavrilo Princip is widely considered the unofficial start of World War One
  • Paul Von Hindenburg - A German general credited with a major victory over Russia at the Battle of Tannenberg in August 1914. One month later, Hindenburg was promoted to commander in chief of the German land armies. He served this position until the end of the war.
  • Constantine I The king of Greece for much of the war. Although Greece remained neutral during his reign, Constantine had strongly pro-German sentiments. But his government favored the Allies. He abdicated on June 12th 1917 under pressure of a threatened Allied invasion. Less than one month later Greece entered the war on the side of the Allied forces.
  • Woodrow Wilson - The President of the United States for the entire period of the war. During the first half of the war, Wilson maintained a strictly neutral position and tried to serve as an active intermediary between the two sides. However, he had to change his position when Germany began unrestricted submarine warfare and the American public was scandalized by the infamous Zimmermann telegram in 1917.

Friday, 11 April 2014

Key Battles of World War One

The war drew in all of the European powers after Germany enacted the Schlieffen Plan. Germany invaded France through the flat and accessible terrain of Belgium on the 1st August 1914. The British, keen to ensure that Germany did not get hold of French and Belgian ports and wishing to protect Belgian neutrality, declared war on Germany.

Phases:

Phase one - the race for the sea (1914):

After the British and French halted the German advance through Belgium and northern France in autumn 1914, both sides raced to control the nearby North Sea coastline.

Phase two - static trench warfare (1915 - 1917):

A Front line was established running through Belgium and northern France. The two sides established trench system. The war was primarily in a situation of stalemate.

Phase three - a war of movement again (1918):

The German high command decided to launch one final push against the Allies on the Western Front in the spring of 1918. Initial successes were short-lived however and by November, the allies had defeated the German army on the Western Front.  

Battles:


  • Battle of the Falkland Islands - December 8th 1914, the British decimated the German East Asia Squadron during an attack on the Falkland Islands in the South Atlantic.
  • Battle of the Marne - September 5th 1914 - September 9th, the Allied forces, following their retreat from Mons, stopped the German forces on the banks of the Marne River and forced them back forty five miles to the river Aisne.
  • Battle of Mons - August 23rd 1914, one of the earliest battles on the Western Front. The German advance in Belgium overwhelmed British and French forces who began a fourteen day retreat to the outskirts of Paris.
  • Battle of Passchendaele - September 20th 1917 - October 12th, the British forces in Belgium continued to push the Germans back. The fighting was especially miserable because it was carried out during periods of heavy rain.
  • Battle of the Somme - July 1st 1916 - November 18th, one of the biggest battles of the war fought in northern France. The battle of the Somme was the result of an allied offensive along a twenty five mile front. Although it ended up as a small victory for the allied powers, it cost them 146000 lives in order to advance less than six miles.    

http://www.home.zonnet.nl/rene.brouwer/majorbattles.htm
http://yesterday.uktv.co.uk/warzone/world-war-one/article/western-front-key-wwi-battles/

Causes of World War One

Long-term rivalry between the Great Powers of Europe:

Tensions between the European powers intensified before the First World War, making conflict more likely. Conflict and competition emerged over the size of armed forces and an arms race developed between Britain and Germany over naval armaments and Germany, France and Russia over army size.

The alliance system:

The formation of two groups of alliances added to tensions in Europe as France, Britain and Russia formed the Triple Entente. Germany, Austria-Hungary and Italy joined together to form the Triple Alliance. Germany feared the possibility of fighting against Russia and France simultaneously and developed the Schlieffen Plan. The Plan assumed that the Russians would take six weeks to be fully ready for war and therefore that in the event of a war, Germany had a chance to defeat France quickly before Russia was ready.

Problems in the Balkans:

Conflicts and power struggles that took place in the Balkans were a source of instability in Europe before the First World War. The Ottomans had controlled this area but their grip had weakened and some countries like Serbia had asserted independence. In 1908, Austria-Hungary annexed Bosnia, a multi-ethnic state containing many Serbs.

Short-term trigger - The murder of Franz Ferdinand (28th June 1914):

The murder of the heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne by Serb nationalists who wanted Bosnia to unite with Serbia caused a crisis as the Austrians blamed Serbia. Russia, concerned to prevent Austria-Hungary gaining more territory from Serbia, mobilised their army and the Austrians, backed by their ally Germany, invaded Serbia on 28th July.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Causes_of_World_War_I
http://www.firstworldwar.com/origins/causes.htm

Monday, 31 March 2014

The Outcomes of the Boer War

In May 1902, the Peace of Vereeniging was signed and The Transvaal and the Orange Free State became part of the British Empire. There were many changes in Britain as well.

Army Reforms

The Esher Reforms:

  • Improvements to army organisation through better defined roles, such as that of the chief of the general staff, who had responsibility for planning and training.
  • Improved training and professionalism through the introduction of new drill books and the establishment of the military training base at Salisbury Plain and officer training at Camberley.
  • New and better weapons were introduced such as an improved Lee-Enfield Rifle.
The Haldane Reforms
  • The British Expeditionary Force (BEF), a permanent, battle-ready fighting force was introduced. The BEF made an important contribution during the First World War.
  • The organisation of the Territorial Army (TA) was improved and it was strengthened. The TA also played an important role during the First World War.
The combined impact of these Army Reforms made the British Army stronger, more effective and more efficient.

Social Reforms 

The Liberal Reforms of 1906 - 1914

These were a range of measures designed to improve the health and well-being of the poorest in society. The reforms were introduced partly as a result of the Boer War. The Interdepartmental Committee of Physical Deterioration of 1904 highlighted how poverty and associated problems such as rickets weakened the physical condition of British people. Among the measures were:
  • The Free School Meals Act of 1906 where local authorities could provide meals for the poorest children in schools.
  • The National Insurance Act of 1911 made it compulsory for the poorest workers and workers in industries most prone to unemployment to participate in a government-backed scheme to provide insurance against sickness and unemployment.
  • Measures were also taken to restrict exploitation of workers and provide medical checks for school children.
http://www.ibatpv.org/projects/wars/boerwar/effects.htm

Key Battles of the Boer War

First Phase (October 1899 - June 1900) : British defeats

On the 12th October 1899, the Boers declared war on the British after the British refused to withdraw the troops they had gathered on the borders of Boer territory. The British suffered a series of humiliating defeats during Black Week and at Spion Kop, and were besieged at Ladysmith, Kimberley and Mafeking. The commander of British forces was General Buller.

Second Phase (February 1900 - June 1900) : British victories

The British managed to break or relieve the sieges and capture key Boer settlements. In February 1900, Kimberley and Ladysmith were relieved, while Bloemfontein was captured in March, and Mafeking finally relieved in May. By June 1900, with Boer capitals Johannesburg and Pretoria taken, the British believed that they had won. The British commander during the second phase was Field Marshall Lord Roberts.

Third Phase (late 1900 and throughout 1901) : Guerrilla war

The Boers fought back with a determined guerrilla campaign. Boer commandos attacked British railways and supply lines. The British responded by destroying Boer farms, clearing Boer areas and establishing concentration camps. Eventually they gained the upper hand and in May 1902 the Peace of Vereeniging was signed: The Transvaal and the Orange Free State became part of the British Empire. The British commander during the third phase was Field Marshall Horatio Kitchener.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Battles_of_the_Second_Boer_War

Friday, 7 March 2014

The People of the Boer War

Chamberlain

Joseph Chamberlain (1836-1914) became Colonial Secretary in Prime Minister Salisbury's government in 1895. He could have been placed in a more senior role however, wanted this job as he would be in control of Britain's colonies. He wanted to forge a closer union between the colonies and Britain, bring together the diverse collection of territories to create an Empire. Chamberlain was pro Boer. But not everybody shared his enthusiasm for the Boer War and subsequently he became the target of the anti-war movements anger. His rivalry with David Lloyd George was legendary. Chamberlains party represented the Conservative Party and imperialism. In 1900 Chamberlains party would storm home under the banner of social imperialism and the coming victory in the Boer War.

Lloyd George

David Lloyd George (1863-1945) was Prime Minister from 1916 to 1922 and becaradicalism and earned notoriety for his opposition to the Boer War. Lloyd George had a huge rivalry with Chamberlain. But in 1906 there was a change as Lloyd George had his hands on the levers of power in Britain and Chamberlains legacy was consigned to the dustbin of history. Lloyd George stressed that the British Empire needed to be based on freedom, but he wasn't an opponent of the British Empire.
me known for his

Milner

Alfred Milner (1854-1925) was selected by Chamberlain to become the most important diplomat in South Africa - the High Commissioner. Although Milner didn't have the power to declare war, his political union with Chamberlain unquestionably made it happen. They both had the same views on the Boer Republics. Milner saw the British as a superior race compared to the Boers. In his opinion the British aristocracy ruled the world and his views allowed the thinking for ethnic cleansing and concentration camps, which came around in a couple of years.

Kitchener

Lord Herbert Kitchener (1850-1916) was a senior British Army Officer and colonial administrator who won fame for his imperial campaigns and later played a central role in the First World War. He felt that the press needed to be controlled and introduced greater censorship during the guerrilla phase of the war in 1900-1901.

Roberts

Frederick Roberts (1832-1914) was a British soldier who was one of the most successful commanders of the 19th Century. He realised the value of  the press in maintaining morale and in generating a positive public image. He tries to get press support by supplying war correspondents with information and allowing them to use army telegraph systems to relay dispatches to London.

Hobhouse

Emily Hobhouse (1860-1926) was a British welfare campaigner. Much like Florence Nightingale and Mary Seacole during the Crimean War, Emily Hobhouse traveled overseas to explore the cruelties of war. In 1901, she visited the concentration camps of Bloemfontein and was shocked by the suffering of the Boer women and children in the camps. She famously took the photograph of the young Boer girl Lizzie Van Zyl who was starving to death. She increased the pressure on leading politicians to come out against the war. And around the country a growing anti-war movement was repulsed by the photograph of what the camps had done to Van Zyl. Hobhouse's photography also continued the tradition of photography bringing people at home closer to the reality of war.

Hobson

John Hobson (1858-1940) was an English economist and critic of imperialism. Hobson was a Marxist writer. He wrote regularly in the anti-war newspaper, The Manchester Guardian. The newspaper, edited by C.P.Scott. gave regular column space to Marxist writers like Hobson to argue fiercely against the war before, during and after it. In The Guardian, Hobson even exposed the fact that Chinese slaves were being used in the gold mines to increase profits further for the fat cats of the Empire. The Marxist political party of the day, the Labour Party was just starting to grow in strength and size, organizing itself through trade unions - ready for a political fight against the aristocracy. Marxists like Hobson would be at the front of the fight, questioning how on earth British working class soldiers were dying for gold profits that go to the aristocrats in South Africa.

Campbell-Bannerman

Henry Campbell-Bannerman (1838-1908) was the leader of the Liberal Party during the Boer War. He wanted to become the next Prime Minister replacing Robert Salisbury of the Conservative Party. But in a time of war that would be incredibly hard because the country was largely supportive of the war and the Empire and the Conservative Party best represented such views. The Liberal Party was less supportive of imperialism and the Boer War, but even if he was strongly against the war, Campbell-Bannerman couldn't come out and say so because in a highly jingoistic country like Britain, it would be equal to political suicide. It took Hobhouse exposing the conditions in the concentration camps to make him finally speak out against the war. He moved the Liberal Party to an anti-war position in the following years but unlike Lloyd George, could never say he fully opposed the war from start until end.


Monday, 3 March 2014

Causes of the Boer War

Countries involved

The Second Boer War was fought between the British Empire and the Boer Republic of South Africa. The British controlled parts of southern Africa while the Boers, who were the descendants of Dutch settlers to the region and usually farmers, controlled the Orange Free State and the Transvaal.

Causes of the war


  • Strategic: the British were interested in expanding their empire in southern Africa as this region was of key strategic importance to them as a route to India and other parts of the British Empire. They did not want to see the Boers join their territories to German possessions nearby.
  • Gold: Boer regions became more attractive to British miners and speculators such as Cecil Rhodes when gold was discovered there in 1886. The discovery of gold also worried the British as they felt that with this new wealth Boer areas would become too powerful.
  • The Uitlanders: the British were annoyed that the so-called Uitlanders, the mainly British foreigners living in Boer lands, were denied the vote in the Transvaal and the Orange Free State

Monday, 3 February 2014

The Outcomes of the Crimean War

Countries 

The 9th September 2855 was the end of the Siege of Sevastopol where the Russians evacuated Sevastopol and the British and French finally attained their target. On the 29th February 1856, armistice in the Crimea meant it was a British, French and Ottoman victory. On the 30th March 1856, The Treaty of Paris was formed which settled the Crimean War. Russia regained the land that had been occupied; the Black Sea was neutralised for open international trade. The treaty marked a severe setback to Russian influence in the region.

Individuals

Lord Cardigan was initially perceived as a hero after the Charge of the Light Brigade after he charged out ahead of his troops. He was later accused of deserting the Brigade at a crucial moment of the battle and of incompetence in relation to his failure to distribute provisions in Balaclava.
Lord Lucan received most of the blame for the Charge. He was accused of implementing an order he knew to be senseless and of failing to seek proper clarification of it.
Lord Raglan died in the Crimea in June 1855 and was held responsible for many of the problems of leadership and organisation during the Crimean campaign.

Changes in Britain

Nightingale's work and her iconic status helped to establish nursing as a respectable profession for women. Her name was used to raise funds to establish nursing training; £45000 was raised by 1859.St Thomas' Hospital in London established a training school for ten nurses in 1860. Nightingale used her statistical work on mortality rates to illustrate the need for sanitary reform in all military hospitals; in 1857 a Royal Commision on the Health of the Army was set up.
One military development after the Crimean war was the establishment of the Victoria Cross in 1856, the highest award for bravery in the British Army. The Victoria Cross embodied the new, more meritocratic approach in the British Army as soldiers of any rank could receive it. The Cardwell Army Reforms (1870-1871) were introduced and involved:

  • Purchase of commision was abolished: promotion in the British Army was now through merit.
  • Conditions for ordinary soldiers were improved: the period of overseas service was reduced from twelve years to six; pay was increased and flogging was abolished in peacetime. 
  • The structure of army organisation was simplified and combined under the responsibility of the War Office.
  • The Commander in Chief of the army was made responsible to the Secretary of War and through him, to Parliament.
  • The country was divided into local regimental districts and each area had two battalions. One would stay at home to train and the other could be sent overseas.

The move to a more meritocratic system in Britain following the Crimean War also extended to the Civil Service where, during Gladstone's first administration (1868-1874), all departments except for the Foreign Office adopted a system of recruiting by competitive examination.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Paris_(1856)

Monday, 20 January 2014

The key battles of the Crimean War

Commanders of the British Army

  • Lord Raglan (Commander-in-chief of the British Army during the Crimean War)
  • The Earl of Lucan (Lord Lucan) (Commander of the Cavalry Division which included the Heavy Brigade and the Light Brigade)
  • The Earl of Cardigan (Lord Cardigan) (Commander of the Light Brigade)
The Thin Red Line

Early on in the Battle of Balaclava, Russian soldiers advanced on the British line, organised in an unusual formation of two rows. The 93rd Highlanders stopped the Russians by firing volleys of musket shots.Watching from the hills above, William Howard Russell memorably depicted the soldiers as a 'thin red streak'. The soldiers of the Thin Red Line have been remembered as a symbol of the determination and heroism of the British soldier.

The Charge of the Light Brigade

During the Battle of Balaclava, Lord Raglan issued a hurried and poorly explained order to Lord Lucan to charge at the Russian guns. Lord Raglan intended Lucan to focus upon retaking British guns that the Russians had taken. His orders were vague and Captain Nolan, the officer in charge of delivering the message to Lord Lucan was not able to clarify the order properly. Lucan pushed ahead with the charge and mistakenly sent the Light Brigade down a valley where they were surrounded by Russian forces who attacked them from higher ground.
The Charge of the Light Brigade had gone down in history as a horrendous military blunder accompanied by astonishing heroism of ordinary soldiers but this had been challenged by recent historians. Of the 661 who set off on the charge, 113 were killed, 134 were wounded and 45 were taken prisoner- the Russian casualty rate was similar. However, the Light Brigade were only saved from complete destruction by a French charge. Eye witness accounts like Russell's created the impression of a monumental error of army leadership and a tragic waste of life. Depictions such as Tennyson's poem reinforced this picture of blunder redeemed by the bravery and heroism of soldiers.

http://poetry.eserver.org/light-brigade.html