A Short History of the Great War
The manuscript of this book, except the last chapter, was finished on 21 May 1919, and the revision of the last chapter was completed in October. It may be some relief to a public, distracted by the apologetic deluge which has followed on the peace, to find how little the broad and familiar outlines of the war have thereby been affected.
A. F. P.
On 28 June 1914 the Archduke Francis Ferdinand, heir-presumptive to the Hapsburg throne, was shot in the streets of Serajevo, the capital of the Austrian province of Bosnia. Redeemed by the Russo-Turkish war of 1876-7 from Ottoman rule, Bosnia had by the Congress of Berlin in 1878 been entrusted to Austrian administration; but in 1908, fearing lest a Turkey rejuvenated by the Young Turk revolution should seek to revive its claims on Bosnia, the Austrian Government annexed on its own authority a province confided to its care by a European mandate. This arbitrary act was only challenged on paper at the time; but the striking success of Serbia in the Balkan wars of 1912-13 brought out the dangers and defects of Austrian policy. For the Serbs were kin to the great majority of the Bosnian people and to millions of other South Slavs who were subject to the Austrian crown and discontented with its repressive government; and the growing prestige of Serbia bred hopes and feelings of Slav nationality on both sides of the Hapsburg frontier. The would-be and the real assassins of the Archduke, while technically Austrian subjects, were Slavs by birth, and the murder brought to a head the antagonism between a race becoming conscious of its possibilities and a government determined to repress them. The crime gave a moral advantage to the oppressor, but the guilt has yet to be apportioned, and instigation may have come from secret sources within the Hapsburg empire; for the Archduke was hated by dominant cliques on account of his alleged pro-Slav sympathies and his suspected intention of admitting his future Slav subjects to a share in political power.
A. F. Pollard
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WITH NINETEEN MAPS
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CONTENTS
CHAPTER I
THE BREACH OF THE PEACE
CHAPTER II
THE GERMAN INVASION
CHAPTER III
RUSSIA MOVES
CHAPTER IV
THE WAR ON AND BEYOND THE SEAS
CHAPTER V
ESTABLISHING THE WESTERN FRONT
CHAPTER VI
THE FIRST WINTER OF THE WAR
CHAPTER VII
THE FAILURE OF THE ALLIED OFFENSIVE
CHAPTER VIII
THE DEFEAT OF RUSSIA
CHAPTER IX
THE CLIMAX OF GERMAN SUCCESS
CHAPTER X
THE SECOND WINTER OF THE WAR
CHAPTER XI
THE SECOND GERMAN OFFENSIVE IN THE WEST
CHAPTER XII
THE ALLIED COUNTER-OFFENSIVE
CHAPTER XIII
THE BALKANS AND POLITICAL REACTIONS
CHAPTER XIV
THE TURN OF THE TIDE
CHAPTER XV
HOPE DEFERRED
CHAPTER XVI
THE BALANCE OF POWER
CHAPTER XVII
THE EVE OF THE FINAL STRUGGLE
CHAPTER XVIII
THE LAST GERMAN OFFENSIVE
CHAPTER XIX
THE VICTORY OF THE ENTENTE
CHAPTER XX
THE FOUNDATIONS OF PEACE
LIST OF MAPS