Two bullets fired in a Sarajevo back-street on the morning of the 28th June in 1914 set in motion a series of events that have shaped the world we live in today: World War One, World War Two, the Cold War and their conclusions all trace their causes to the gunshots that shook that summer day. But why was this so important? Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his pregnant wife were the victims, the heirs to the Austro-Hungarian throne. Tensions had been building up in the years before hand, but were their deaths really that important as an individual event?…
* The assassination of Austrian Archduke Ferdinand by a Serbian revolutionary on June 28, 1914, set off a chain reaction that soon engulfed Europe…
3: Discuss what the world has learned and how it impacted the world after the war and how it still impacts the world today.…
|SARAJEVO |THE HEIR TO THE AUSTRO-HUNGARIAN EMPIRE AND HIS WIFE ARE ASSASSINATED BY GAVRILO PRINCIP, A SERBIAN |…
- Serbian Gavrilo Princip shot Austro-Hungarian Duke Ferdinand and his wife, Sophie, on the road back from City Hall; goal was to crush Austria-Hungary’s nationalism…
The Austro-Hungarian Empire was huge multi-national empire. Some of the mayor nationalities represented, other then the Austrians and Hungarians, were Czechs and Pols. The empire was a dual-Monarchy, because of the Austrians defeat under the Austro-Prussian war. The Austrian empire was weak and in need of a new government. The Hungarians grasped their opportunity to demand more power and a dual-Monarchy, which made Franz Joseph I both the emperor of Austria and the king of Hungary. Some of the other large groups of people (i.e. the Czechs and poles) in the empire felt it unfair that the Hungarians should get power and the right to rule over their part of the empire when they themselves had no influence. Therefor one could say that it is due to great ethnic diversity and dissatisfaction within these ethnic groups that the Austro-Hungarian Empire was weak and unstable.…
One of the world’s most devastating and history-changing wars was caused by the assassination of Austria-Hungary’s Archduke Franz Ferdinand. He was next in line for the throne to govern over the Austria-Hungary empire in the beginning of the 20th century, and he was rising at a very dangerous and tense time. In the early 1900s, Austria-Hungary was in a stressful conflict with the country of Serbia. The Serbians wanted the land of Bosnia, in which the Austria-Hungarian empire had annexed into their country, and Serbia wanted to unite all of the Serb ethnic groups to form a country known as “Greater Serbia,” (Bodden 19). They wanted to send a message to Austria-Hungary, and they wanted to show that they meant business. So, the Serbian government…
2. How did the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand lead so many nations into war?…
All I remember was the young fellow with the gun came into my store and ordered a chicken sandwich, paid, ate, and then left without saying another word. Next thing I know, I heard gunshots from outside my shop and I turned to investigate. I then saw the boy with a gun pointed at the archduke and his wife. Both were dead.” Ahmed Buric, the sandwich shop owner proved that Gavrilo had murdered the archduke and his family. Gavrilo killed the archduke, but why would he do such a thing? Did he have a vendetta against the archduke? Or was he just a paid…
During 1914, the entire Europe was a powder keg filled not with gunpowder, but pride. Finally, it blew up with the assassination of the Austrian archduke Franz Ferdinand in the 28th of June. While Franz Ferdinand was on his way to examine Serbia, he was assassinated by the Serbian nationalist (Sowards). In response to this action, Austrian angrily announced an ultimatum to Serbia, which strictly demanded Serbia to end all anti-Austrian agitation and punish any Serbian official whoever involved in the murder plot. However, the refusal of the demand gives many extreme nations like Germany an opportunity to show and test their army. Meanwhile, nations like Germany has a very strong nationalism thinking in their mind, which helped them to build up the second largest navy through out the entire Europe and to be more aggressive on declaring war on other nations. The assassination of Franz Ferdinand was a great chance for Germany to test their army, therefore Germany encouraged Austria to declare war on Serbia and claimed that she would provide help if Austria did that. As a result, this led to the beginning of World War I that at the end led to great damaged on the economy and the government of the entire European nations. Therefore, among all the reasons that led to World War I, nationalism, usually have a positive effect, turn into an evil idea that brought over 5 millions men died in the war. (U.S. Department of Justice)…
A hundred years ago next week, in the small Balkan city of Sarajevo, Serbian nationalists murdered the heir to the throne of Austria-Hungary and his wife. People were shocked but not particularly worried. Sadly, there had been many political assassinations in previous years—the king of Italy, two Spanish prime ministers, the Russian czar, President William McKinley. None had led to a major crisis. Yet just as a pebble can start a landslide, this killing set off a series of events that, in five weeks, led Europe into a general war. The U.S. under President Woodrow Wilson intended to stay out of the conflict, which, in the eyes of many Americans, had nothing to do with them. But in 1917, German submarine attacks on U.S. shipping and attempts…
The assassination of the Archduke played an important role in starting the war. In 1914, the groups of people under Austria-Hungary control wanted to be free. Gavrilo Princip wanted Bosnia, a country under Austria-Hungary rule, to join Serbia. Princip shot and killed the Archduke to free Bosnia. As a result of the assassination, Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia since a…
It M.A.I.N. It starts with the assignation of Archduke Ferdinand. Then Austria Hungry declared war on Serbia. From there it led to a chain of alliances. Many countries had Nationalism they thought they were the best nation and no one could beat them. The next step was imperialism countries with those greater powers they took over more land to make them more power. Finally, there was Militarism witch was the ability to maintain a stable…
It was tied to militarism and clashed with the interest of the imperial powers in Europe, although created new competitive arenas. Wars, imperial rivalries, political rhetoric, newspapers, and popular culture such as ‘invasion literature’ written by penny press novelists fueled the fiery spirit of a people. For example, the Habsburg Empire was a tottering agglomeration of 11 different ethnicities with large Slavic populations and the Balkans, whose nationalist aspirations ran counter to Imperial cohesion. Throughout the course of the 1800s the diverse people of its Empire dreamed of their own country and vied to one day attain it. Indeed such Pan-Slavism created the trigger cause at the conflict. The multi-cultural and ethnic empire of Austro-Hungary was submerged with internal discontent via nationalistic fervor. On June 28th, 1914, Archduke Franz Ferdinand met at Sarajevo, of modern Bosnia and Herzegovina, to give a speech to his diverse people on why they could not be granted independence from the Empire. The assassination of the heir to the throne Archduke Franz Ferdinand, his wife, and unborn baby in Sarajevo by Gavrilo Princip, a member of the Bosnian-Serbian nationalist terrorist organization, the Black Hand, was interpreted as an accused product of official Serbian coercion and is the primary cause of war. Such instigated the July crisis, a month of diplomatic and governmental miscalculations…
On the way there the car stalled, this provided an opportunity for another assassin to shoot and kill the Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria, the Heir to the Austrian Empire and his wife Sophie.…