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  • What name is given to the battles of 1914 on the Western Front?
    • War of Movement
  • At what 1914 battle did the Germans defeat the Russians?
    • Tannenberg (26-29 August)
  • At what 1914 battle was the German ‘Schlieffen’ attack halted?
    • The Marne (5-10 September)
  • What was ‘Race to the Sea’?
    • Both sides then tried to outflank the other, both digging trenches to prevent themselves being outflanked
  • In 1915, Britain and France continued believing they could break through; what two massive defeats proved they couldn’t?
    • Second Battle of Ypres and the Battle of Loos
  • Where did the British Empire try to open a second front in 1915?
    • Gallipoli
  • What were the ANZACs?
    • Australian and New Zealand Army Corps
  • Where did the British and German fleets clash in 1916?
    • Jutland
  • Name the three major battles of ‘attrition’.
    • Verdun (February–December 1916), the Somme (July–November 1916), Passchendaele (August–November 1917)
  • What was the point of Germany’s unrestricted submarine campaign?
    • To break British maritime supply-lines
  • America was brought into the war by Germany’s U-boat campaign and…?
    • The Zimmerman telegram offering Mexico land in the US to join the war on Germany’s side
  • What was the Kaiserschlacht?
    • Germany’s huge Spring Offensive of 1918
  • What was the ‘new’ tactic of the Kaiserschlacht?
    • ‘Blitzkreig’
  • Name some problems of the Schlieffen Plan.
    • It was a ‘pitch’ not a plan, written in a rush, never tested in a war-game, designed only for a war with France (it advised a defensive war if Germany faced a war on two fronts), which catastrophically misjudged the enemy and was “a military myth requiring everything to go impossibly right to have a real chance of succeeding”.
  • Name three actions in Belgium which held up the Schlieffen attack.
    • Liege (5–16 August), Namur (20-24 August) and Antwerp (28 September to 9 October)
  • What was Schrecklichkeit?
    • The German Army ‘frightfulness’ war crimes against Belgian civilians
  • At what battle did the BEF hold up the German advance, and why did they have to retreat?
    • Mons (23 August); the BEF was forced to retreat when the French force to their right did so, exposing them to being outflanked.
  • List some of the problems facing the German advance in 1914.
    • Exhaustion; Supply problems; lack of communication and squabbling between the three armies; German reconnaissance was dreadful.
  • How did Moltke and/or von Kluck deviate from the Schlieffen Plan, and why was this a problem?
    • The Geran First Army turned south, which opened up a gap with the Second German Army
  • List FOUR reasons the Schlieffen Plan was significant for Germany in 1914.
    • It led them into war; its failure lost them the war; it discredited Germany; its failure plunged the war into stalemate
  • What school of historiography revered the Schlieffen Plan and blamed Moltke for is failure?
    • The Schlieffen School
  • Which historian in 1956 debunked the Schlieffen Plan?
    • Gerhard Ritter
  • Which military historian in 2002 suggested the importance of a Schlieffen Plan was a ‘myth’ designed to exonerate the German generals?
    • Terence Zuber
  • List FIVE causes of the stalemate on the Western Front after 1914 [SWADS].
    • Strategies for open warfare failed
      Weapons’ technologies had made the open battlefield deadly
      Armies struggled to co-ordinate infantry and artillery
      Difficulties of command and control of the huge armies
      Supply problems
  • List the EIGHT levels of Army Organisation.
    • Section: perhaps 10 men, led by a corporal or sergeant
      Platoon: two or three sections + Lieutenant
      Company: two or more platoons + Major or Captain
      Battalion: at least three companies + Lieutenant Colonel
      Brigade: three battalions + Brigadier
      Division: three brigades + Major-General
      Corps: two or three divisions+ Lieutenant-General
      Army: two or more Corps + General
  • List the TEN stages of a typical attack.
    • Artillery bombardment
      Artillery: a ‘creeping bombardment’
      Signal to attack
      Sometimes mines
      Troops go OTT
      Race across No Man's Land
      Defenders open machine gun fire
      (If you win the race) jand-to-hand fighting in the trench
      Signal to retire
      Defenders may counter-attack
  • List FIVE developments which improved the Armies’ attacking ability 1915-1917.
    • Machine guns, tanks, Poison gas, Aircraft, Mines, Artillery, Motorized transport, Communications, Medical, Army organisation, Training, Infiltration ('leap frog') tactics
  • Give FOUR reasons for the Gallopoli Campaign of 1915 [SCROT].
    • Stalemate on the Western Front
      Churchill pressed for a ‘second front’
      Russia was losing badly
      Ottoman empire was ‘the weak man of Europe’
      Threaten Austria Hungary
  • Can you say what happened on these key dates in the 1915 Gallipoli campaign - March / April / July / December?
    • March: Anglo-French naval attack on the Straits
      April: MEF landings at Gaba Tepe (ANZACs) and Cape Helles (Hamilton)
      July: landing at Sulva Bay
      December: evacuation
  • List some of the reasons the Gallipoli attack failed.
    • The Straits were mined; the ‘minesweepers’ were just trawlers; the Turkish artillery was hidden; the British underestimated the Turks, who used German tactics from the western front; Gallipoli was not regarded as a priority; supply problems; dreadful conditions enervated the troops; in October Bulgaria joined the war
  • Which German Chief of Staff is credited with inventing the concept of ‘attrition’?
    • Falkenhayn
  • Give SIX reasons the Germans attacked Verdun [ADJUST]:
    • Attrition; Verdun was a key Defence hub; Joffre had been reducing its defences; it was Useful strategically for railway connections; it was a Salient; an attack would Tie up Allied forces from mounting the Somme attack.
  • List some of the reasons the Germans failed at Verdun:
    • they did not capture the eastern heights; they abandoned the plan of attrition; Pétain defended brilliantly; the French defended ‘at any price’ for reasons of prestige; Falkenhayn was indecisive and secretive.
  • What did the ‘Verdun School’ of French commanders believe?
    • That attack could win the war
  • What new weapon was introduced at Verdun?
    • Flame-throwers … but you could also have motorised transport or control of the skies
  • What roads name illustrates the terrible loss of life at Verdun?
    • The Voie Sacrée
  • What have the following historians contributed to the debate on the battle of Verdun – Alistair Horne (1962) / John Mosier (2013) / Paul Jankowski (2014) / JE and HW Kaufmann (2016) / Michael Bourlet (2023)?
    • Horne: it was about the sacrifice of the soldiers / Mosier: it was not a single battle / Jankowski: it was about prestige / Kaufmanns: it was about forts / Bourlet: it was a battle of movement, but transitional in the move to modern hyperbattles.
  • What did Haig hope for the Somme on 1 July 1916?
    • that it would be a breakthrough
  • Name TWO ways the preliminary bombardment failed.
    • It did not penetrate the German bunkers / it did not shred the barbed wire
  • What were some divisions ordered to WALK across No Mans Land?
    • It was the fist battle of Britain’s volunteers, and the generals feared their inexperienced soldiers would become disorganised in a rush attack
  • Name THREE ways Haig argued that the battle was a success.
    • It relieved Verdun; it stopped any transfer of German troops to help their allies; it wore down the German army
  • What is Materialschlact?
    • A battle of materials an technologies, rather than men
  • Name the FIVE battles of1917:
    • Arras (9 April to 16 May 1917)
      Aisne (16 Aoril to May)
      Messines (7-4 June 1917)
      Passchendaele (July to November 1917)
      Cambrai (20 November to 3 December 1917)
  • What was the result of the defeat of the Nivelle Offensive?
    • The French army mutinied and refused to go OTT
  • Suggest TWO reasons the British fought the battle of Passchendaele:
    • To divert attention from the French Armies; Because Russia had been defeated and German soldiers were expected from the eastern front
  • What TWO warfare improvement is the battle of Cambrai famous for?
    • Tanks; Combined Arms
  • What did the German’s declare in February 1915?
    • Unrestricted submarine warfare
  • List FOUR ways the British tried to counter the U-boats
    • Q-ships; Deth charges; mines & submarine nets; convoys
  • Name four ships sunk by the U-boats which caused outrage in America:
    • Harpalyce, Lusitania, Arabic, Sussex
  • What was the Sussex Pledge which President Wilson insisted upon in 1916?
    • Not to attack passenger ships, and to allow crews of merchant ships to abandon ship before sinking it
  • When did Germany revoke the Sussex Pledge, and why?
    • 3 January 1917 – because the British Blockade was having a serious effect
  • Suggest FIVE reasons America entered the war in April 1917:
    • Unrestricted submarine warfare; Zimmermann telegram; to defend democracy; German spies and troublemakers in America; a ‘concert of free peoples’ (ie the League of Nations); the Preparedeness Movement; the abdication of the Tsar; commercial opportunities
  • What did America contribute to the war effort? [ANSWER]
    • Army
      Navy
      Supplies
      Wheat
      Enormous Loans
      Reactions (it forced Germany to risk its ill-prepared 1918 gamble)
  • Why did Ludendorff gamble all in March 1918 [ARABS] ?
    • America had entered the war
      Russia’s defeat had made 1m more soldiers available
      Germany’s Allies were failing
      the British Blockade was causing starvation
      new Stormtroopers tactics
  • What were the five offensive ‘Operations’ of the German Kaiserschlacht in Spring 1918?
    • Michael, Georgette, Blücher–Yorck, Gneisenau and Friedensturm.
  • Why did the Spring Offensive fail [LEADS]?
    • Poor Leadership and hasty planning
      Exhaustion
      the Allied Forces did not break and flee
      Depletion of the best soldiers
      Supply failures
  • Why did the Hundred Days Campaign Succeed [OCATAG]?
    • Overall strategy (Foch was appointed Commander-in-Chief)
      Combined arms approach
      Aircraft =Control of the skies
      Tanks
      Americans
      the German troops were demoralised and starving and simply surrendered.
  • What key event happened on 3 November 1918, and why was it important in ending the war?
    • The Kiel Mutiny – it terrified both the Germans and Allies that there was about to be a Communist revolution
  • What key event happened on 9 November 1918?
    • Kaiser Wilhelm abdicated

 

 


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