There were many different reasons for the war...
http://www.cusd.chico.k12.ca.us/~bsilva/projects/great_war/causes.htm
2007-10-15 07:19:53
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answer #1
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answered by ♥♥The Queen Has Spoken♥♥ 7
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It was what came to be called the Austrian Ultimatum.
The Austrian empire was losing ground, the Serbs want an access to the sea through the Empire and helped all the people in the empire agitating for independence. France had emerged from the isolation Bismark had done his best to keep her in and was allying with Russia and Britain, becoming again a dangerous adversary, despite her much smaller population. Austria and Germany had allied to counter that threat coming from both sides.
The murder of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the throne f Austia-Hungary on June 28, 1914 presented the Austrians with a perfect opportunity to punish Serbia.
The Austrians had a strong case - the heir to the throne had been murdered by terrorists who had already murdered a King of Serbia. They had been helped by Serbian officials such as Colonel Apis of Serbian Military Intelligence. Such was popular anger that there were anti Serbian riots in Bosnia.
Germany was prepared to help
The Russian government was facing serious strikes in Russian factories and mines and another revolution seemed to be imminent
The UK would not intervene in a purely Balkan matter and was deeply involved in a possible civil war in Ireland
There had been wars in the Balkans in 1912 and 1913 and these had not spread
It was now or never. To the Austrians the very future of the Empire hung in the balance. War might just save it.
An ultimatum was designed that if it was accepted then Serbian independence would be reduced, if rejected it would mean war
The Serbs accepted all but two terms which would have allowed Austrian officials into Serbia to search for suspects and punish them without any Serbian contribution. The ultimatum was delivered on the 23rd with a 48 hour time limit.
The Serbs replied on the 25th and on the 28th the Austrians declared war.
And then everything fell like dominoes... The Russians, allied to the Serbs, declared they would intervene, the Germans said they would help the Austrians, signed an alliance with the Ottoman Empire against Russia and declared war to the Russians, and the French caught by their alliance with Russia were dragged in the mess and said they would not stay neutral. Germany invaded Luxembourg, ordered Belgium to surrender and declared war to France. Great Britain declared they would protect Belgium's neutrality and when Germany invaded Belgium declared war, dragging automatically the rest of the Commonwealth (Canada, Australia, India, New Zealand, South Africa). Then Austria declared war to Russia and Serbia, France declared war to Austria, then Great Britain declared war to Austria. And then Japan declared war to Germany.
Yep. Right like that. Can you believe such a mess?
2007-10-15 15:48:30
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answer #2
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answered by Cabal 7
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It had a lot to do with it. Traditionally, Britain and Germany had been very close - the ruling families were intermarried. But under King Edward, Britain became very friendly with the traditional enemy, France. This left Germany in something of a panic.
But there was no single, simple cause for the war. The geo politics of Europe were a mess, the tension between the great powers a ticking time bomb!
2007-10-15 14:21:29
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answer #3
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answered by Avondrow 7
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It was one of the main reasons.
Kaiser Wilhelm II was the cousin of King George V and he was jealous of the British Empire. He thought that Germany should also have one and started the build a navy to match the Royal Navy. When the war came by an act that didn't directly involve them it was no surprise because of the network of treaties by opposing groups of nations.
2007-10-16 01:57:51
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answer #4
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answered by brainstorm 7
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The assassination of archduke franz ferdinand of Austro-Hungary in sarajevo by a serbian seperatist. He was shot in his open top car JFK style during a state visit.
2007-10-15 14:34:20
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answer #5
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answered by Mrs Proper Gander 3.0 2
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the assassination of kaiser willem in sarajevo was the catalyst
2007-10-15 14:24:55
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answer #6
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answered by paul c 2
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i guess its all about land and power.
2007-10-15 14:17:15
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answer #7
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answered by yam 1
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