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…