!!!Weltkrieg, Erster

World War I, 1914-1918: Its causes date back to the 19%%sup th/%  
century; Germany, Austria-Hungary and Italy formed the Triple Alliance 
in 1882, which was opposed by the Entente, consisting of France, Great 
Britain and Russia from 1907. The conflicts between France and Germany 
(after the war of 1870/71) and between Great Britain and Germany 
(naval rivalry, issue of African colonies) became more serious and, at 
the same time, the political tensions between Serbia, Russia and 
Austria-Hungary increased after 1903. Pan-Slavism, Serbian territorial 
claims in the Balkans, the Austro-Hungarian annexation of the formerly 
Ottoman provinces of Bosnia and Herzegovina (occupied in 1878) in 1908 
as well as the Balkan wars of 1912 and 1913 aggravated European 
rivalries in the Balkans.

\\
Following the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, the 
Austro-Hungarian successor to the throne, by a Serbian Nationalist 
group of students in Sarajevo on June 28, 1914 Austria-Hungary 
presented an ultimatum to Serbia on July 23, 1914, demanding 
official Austrian participation in the investigation against the 
instigators. Although Serbia´s answer was moderate in tone and 
content, it was considered unsatisfactory and Austria declared war 
against Serbia on July 28, 1914, who had started mobilisation on 
July 25, 1914. Austria-Hungary and Russia ordered general 
mobilisation on July 31, 1914. Germany declared war against 
Russia on August 1, 1914 and against France on August 
3, 1914 and invaded neutral Belgium. The next day Great Britain 
declared war on Germany. Austria-Hungary declared war against Russia 
on August 6, 1914; and by that time Montenegro had already 
declared war against Austria-Hungary on August 5, 1914. France 
declared war against Austria on August 11, followed by Great Britain 
the next day and by Belgium on August 28; Austria declared war against 
Japan on August 23. Italy remained neutral, referring to the statutes 
of the Triple Alliance contract, according to which it only formed 
part of a defensive alliance.

\\
Around 1.3 million men had been called up to join the imperial army in 
a first wave of mobilisation by September 1914 (in addition to the 
peacetime strength of 415,000 people), another million soldiers were 
recruited by the end of the year. Count F.  Conrad von Hoetzendorf, 
chief of the general staff, was responsible for military operations, 
A.  Arz von Straussenburg) from March 1, 1917; commander-in-chief 
of the army was Archduke Friedrich (until December 1, 1916, from 
then until the armistice of November 3, 1918 Emperor 
Karl I).

\\
Even though the Central Powers had not worked out a common war 
strategy, Germany started an offensive according to the 
"Schlieffen Plan", sending large parts of its troops via 
Belgium to northern France, with the aim of trapping Paris on the west 
in a pincer movement and encircling large parts of the French army and 
the British Expeditionary Forces; Germany subsequently tried to defeat 
the Russian army with the help of Austro-Hungarian troops. However, 
after the Allies´ success in the Battle of the Marne, the German 
advance came to a standstill from mid-September 1914. A continuous 
front line was set up stretching from the Flanders coast to the Swiss 
border from the end of October, which basically remained unchanged 
until the summer of 1918; on either side territorial gains were only 
made at the cost of an enormous number of victims (Verdun, Somme, 
Ypers, Cambrai). The fight against Russia was largely fought by 
Austro-Hungarian troops who, after only a few weeks, had to realise 
that Russia´s deployment had been organised much more quickly 
than expected. The Russian troops were not only superior in numbers, 
they also used excellent equipment. The battles in the autumn of 1914 
in Galicia resulted in heavy casualties for the imperial army (with 
approximately 500,000 dead, missing and captured); despite some 
successful operations (Krasnik, Komarow, Limanowa) large parts of 
Galicia had to be given up (loss of Lemberg, confinement of 
Przemyśl), and the Austro-Hungarian troops had to retreat to the 
north-eastern range of the Carpathian mountains.

\\
The Austro-Hungarian forces fighting in the Balkans also greatly 
underestimated the power of the Serbian army and in three offensives 
failed to conquer Serbia. At the end of 1914 the two enemies, 
exhausted from having suffered heavy losses (more than 220,000 people 
on either side), stood again in their initial positions of August 1914 
with no end to the war in sight.

\\
When Turkey declared war against Russia and France on October 
29, 1914 and Great Britain against Turkey on November 
5, 1914 all of the Near East turned into a theatre of war, with 
fighting also involving German and Austro-Hungarian troops. Even 
before that, in the summer of 1914, war had broken out in the Far East 
(Japan declared war against Germany on August 23, 1914) as well 
as in the German African colonies and hence had assumed world-wide 
proportions.

\\
No major military fights took place at the Balkan front until the 
autumn of 1915, whereas the Central Powers reinforced their troops at 
the eastern front after the fierce winter battles in the Carpathian 
mountains (120,000 Austro-Hungarian soldiers capitulated at 
Przemyśl on March 23, 1915) and conquered all of Galicia as 
well as large parts of Poland and Belorussia in their offensive of May 
2, 1915 (break-through of Tarnów-Gorlice), inflicting 
heavy defeats on the Russian army.

\\
Italy, whose claims to the Italian-populated territories of the 
Austro-Hungarian monarchy were becoming increasingly insistent, 
rejected an Austro-Hungarian compromise on the cession of parts of the 
Trentino. After the Treaty of London had been concluded on May 
3, 1915, Italy withdrew from the Triple Alliance on May 4 and, 
issuing a declaration of war against Austro-Hungary on May 23, joined 
the Allies. Although the imperial navy prevented the vastly superior 
allied naval forces from launching a large-scale offensive in the 
Adriatic and from landing in Dalmatia until the summer of 1918, it 
failed to break through the barrier of the Strait of Otranto. The war 
at sea was fought with light units on both sides and with submarines 
(as in the Northern Sea) by the Central Powers. Unrestricted submarine 
warfare set in from 1917, at first inflicting heavy losses on the 
Allies´ merchant shipping, but the USA, who had by now entered 
the war, contributed eventually to the defeat of the Central Powers.

\\
On land, after Italy´s entry into the war, a south-western front 
of around 600 km was built, along which trench warfare set in 
from the Swiss border (Stilfser Joch pass) in the high Alpine regions 
to the western territory before Trieste south of the Julian Alps. The 
war in the mountains was characterised by extreme topographical 
conditions, and the eleven battles of the Isonzo between June 1915 and 
September 1917, in which the Italian troops failed to break through to 
Trieste and into the Ljubljana Basin were as fierce as the battles at 
the western front. In the 12%%sup th/%  battle of the Isonzo, from 
October 24, 1917 (break-through of Flitsch Tolmino) the 
Austro-Hungarian and German troops were able to conquer Venetia, but 
they held it only until Italian units, supported by British and French 
divisions, erected a new front along the River Piave in November.

\\
An Austro-Hungarian and a German army together launched a major attack 
against Serbia in the Balkans on October 6, 1915 and succeeded in 
conquering Serbia with the help of two Bulgarian units (entry into war 
of Bulgaria on the side of the Central Powers on October 
11, 1915). Although the allies landed troops near Salonika on 
October 5, violating the neutrality of Greece, they did not succeed in 
preventing Serbia and Montenegro being occupied until January 1916. 
The front in the Balkans remained the same in northern Albania and 
along the Bulgarian-Greek border until Romania joined the Allies on 
August 27, 1916 and its troops invaded Transylvania. In the 
following months, the Austro-Hungarian, German and Bulgarian troops 
decisively defeated the Romanian army and occupied almost all of the 
country. Greece entered the war on the side of the Allies on June 
29, 1917.

\\
The Russian Army was again very successful against the Central Powers 
at the eastern front in the summer of 1916 (Brusilov offensive from 
June 4-August 29, 1916), however the tremendous losses and the 
economic emergency in the hinterland gave rise to the outbreak of the 
Revolution on March 12, 1917 ("February Revolution"). A 
bourgeois government came into power, which enabled Russia to continue 
to fight on the side of the Allies until the Bolshevik Revolution of 
October (old style) in November 1917; on March 9, 1918 the new 
Russian government made peace with the Central Powers in 
Brest-Litovsk.

\\
The years 1916 and 1917 saw a dramatic increase in supply problems in 
the Habsburg monarchy due to the ongoing war. Production in the 
armaments industry grew steadily, while first shortages of raw 
materials occurred and textile production increasingly lacked quality. 
From 1916 food supply was subject to strict control (food ration cards 
for bread and flour were issued from April 1915, for milk, fat and 
potatoes from 1916). The War Cereal Distribution Board was set up to 
provide central control over the distribution of cereals from February 
1915. The problem of distributing agricultural products from the 
Hungarian part of the Empire was never satisfactorily solved during 
the war, and an alarmingly large number of civilians were suffering 
from malnutrition and diseases by the end of 1917.

\\
The interior political situation was also aggravated in 1916. The 
assassination of Prime Minister Count Karl Stuergkh by Friedrich Adler 
on October 21, 1916 demonstrated the extent of resistance against 
the authoritarian government. Nationalist tensions grew and resulted 
in mass desertions, in particular in the Czech regiments at the 
eastern front, as well as in mass strikes for economic reasons in 
January 1918. After the death of Emperor Franz Joseph I on 
November 21, 1916 it soon became clear that once this symbolic 
figure had disappeared the ties between the people and the dynasty 
loosened, especially because his successor, Emperor Karl I, was 
unable to solve the domestic political and economic problems and, 
despite many efforts to achieve peace ( Sixtus Affair) to put an end 
to the war.

\\
When the USA entered the war on April 6, 1917 (the declaration of 
war against Austria-Hungary did not follow until December 
7, 1917) the Allies´ superiority was enhanced even further, 
which, however, did not become fully effective until the spring of 
1918. US entry into the war also considerably influenced the 
Allies´ war objectives. The Habsburg monarchy was strongly 
affected by US President W. Wilson´s Fourteen Points for a just 
post-war order of the European states: They comprised readjustment of 
Italy´s frontiers on an ethnic basis, the prospect of autonomy 
for the peoples of Austria-Hungary and retreat from the occupied 
Balkan states. In a preliminary stage, the Czechoslovak National 
Council in exile in Paris was recognised by the Allies as the 
government of a friendly nation on June 29, 1918.

\\
The hopes the Central Powers had pinned on the peace concluded in the 
east failed to materialise. Food supply from the Ukraine turned out to 
be much less than expected and was not sufficient for the needs of the 
troops and the people in the hinterland.

\\
Both the offensive on the River Piave, started by the imperial army on 
June 15, 1918, and the last offensive by the German forces on the 
western front (March 21, 1918) failed. The Bulgarians in the 
Balkans were forced to surrender on September 26, 1918, the 
Turkish forces in the Near East were about to break apart. Since 
military and economic collapse seemed inevitable, Emperor Karl decided 
to send a peace note to the Allies on September 14, 1918. 
However, this was rejected and the monarchy soon began to fall apart. 
A "South Slav National Council" was already set up in Zagreb 
on October 6, 1918, the Provisional National Assembly for 
"German Austria" was constituted in Vienna on October 
21, 1918, the Czechoslovak state was proclaimed in Prague on 
October 28, 1918 and the union of the South Slav territories with 
Serbia and Montenegro was announced on the following day; Emperor 
Karl´s manifesto of October 16, 1918, in which he granted 
autonomy to the peoples of the Austrian Empire, remained ineffective.

\\
The offensive on the River Piave launched by the Allies on October 
24, 1918 caused the imperial army to break apart, not least 
because, by that time, greater numbers of Hungarians had started to 
leave the front. Although the armistice signed at Villa Giusti (near 
Padua) on November 3, 1918 was not to enter into force until 
November 4, the imperial army's high command ordered immediate 
cessation of hostilities. Hence the Italian troops could still take 
356,000 soldiers of the imperial army prisoner of war in the days up 
to November 11, 1918. Italian units advanced into northern Tirol 
until November 20, 1918, while Bavarian troops still tried to 
prevent the formation of a new south front against Germany, which was 
possible due to the Allies' right to move freely inside 
Austria-Hungary as demanded in the armistice; on the western front 
Germany had to agree to a cease-fire on November 11, 1918.

\\
Emperor Karl I resigned as commander-in-chief of the army on 
November 4, 1918 (succeeded by H. von Koevess), renounced 
the right to participate in affairs of government on November 11 and 
dismissed the last imperial government from office. The "Republic of 
German Austria" was proclaimed in front of the parliament building in 
Vienna on November 12, 1918 ( First Republic).

\\
World War I, which for Austria-Hungary lasted 1563 days, cost the 
imperial army more than one million persons dead and missing (around 
400,000 of whom died in Russian captivity, around 50,000 in Serbian 
captivity and more than 30,000 in Italian captivity), 1,943,000 
injured and 1.2 million prisoners of war, most of whom did not 
return for several years. War expenses are estimated to have amounted 
to around 90 billion Kronen, the public debt had risen from 13 to 
72 billion Kronen between July 1914 and November 1918, the rate 
of inflation reached 1400 % from 1914-1924. Large parts of the 
population suffered from increasing poverty accompanied by deep-rooted 
social and economic problems ( First Republic).

!Literature
Oesterreich-Ungarns letzter Krieg, ed. by the Austrian 
Federal Ministry for the Armed Forces and by the War Archives, 
7 vols. and 7 additional vols., 1930-1938; H. Herzfeld, Der 
1. Weltkrieg, 1966; H. H. Sokol, Oesterreich-Ungarns 
Seekrieg 1914-18, 1967; L. Jedlicka, Ende und Anfang 1918/19, 1969; I. 
Geiss (ed.), Juli 1914, 1980; J. Joll, The origins of the First World 
War, 1984; P. J. Haythornthwaite, The World War One Source Book, 
1992; M. Rauchensteiner, Der Tod des Doppeladlers. Oesterreich-Ungarn 
und der 1. Weltkrieg, 1993; W. Michalka (ed.), Der 
1. Weltkrieg, 1994; A. Livesey, The Viking Atlas of the First 
World War, 1994.


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