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https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_germany_during_world_war_i
During World War I, the German Empire was one of the Central Powers that lost the war. It began participation in the conflict after the declaration of war against Serbia by its ally, Austria-Hungary. German forces fought the Allies on both the eastern and westernfronts, although German territory itself remained relatively safe from widespread invasion for most of the war, except for a brief period in 1914 wh…
During World War I, the German Empire was one of the Central Powers that lost the war. It began participation in the conflict after the declaration of war against Serbia by its ally, Austria-Hungary. German forces fought the Allies on both the eastern and western fronts, although German territory itself remained relatively safe from widespread invasion for most of the war, except for a brief period in 1914 when East Prussia was invaded. A tight blockade imposed by the Royal Navy caused severe food shortages in the cities, especially in the winter of 1916–17, known as the Turnip Winter. At the end of the war, Germany's defeat and widespread popular discontent triggered the German Revolution of 1918–19 which overthrew the monarchy and established the Weimar Republic.
https://www.britannica.com/place/Germany/World-War-I
Перевести · Germany - Germany - World War I: During the first days of World War I, many Germans experienced a sense of bonding that had eluded them since the founding of the empire. Differences of class, religion, and politics seemed to disappear as Germans flocked to their city centres to show their enthusiastic support for the impending conflict.
https://alphahistory.com/weimarrepublic/world-war-i
Перевести · 1. Kaiser Wilhelm II and German nationalism and militarism played a leading role in the Europeans tensions leading to the outbreak of World War I. 2. When war erupted in August 1914, Germany’s initial strategy involved an attack on France through neutral Belgium, which drew Britain into the war. 3.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_cavalry_in_World_War_I
Allegiance: German Emperor
Country: German Empire
Active: 1914–19
Disbanded: 1919
The peacetime Imperial German Army was organised as 25 Corps (Guards, I - XXI and I - III Bavarian) each of two divisions (1st and 2nd Guards, 1st - 42nd and 1st - 6th Bavarian). Each division included a cavalry brigade (of two regiments) numbered as their parent division with the following exceptions:
• The Guards Corps had four cavalry brigades organised as the Guards Cavalr…
The peacetime Imperial German Army was organised as 25 Corps (Guards, I - XXI and I - III Bavarian) each of two divisions (1st and 2nd Guards, 1st - 42nd and 1st - 6th Bavarian). Each division included a cavalry brigade (of two regiments) numbered as their parent division with the following exceptions:
• The Guards Corps had four cavalry brigades organised as the Guards Cavalry Division, the only peacetime cavalry division in the Army
• The Leib Hussar Brigade was assigned to 36th Division and there was no 36th Cavalry Brigade
• Three corps had an extra cavalry brigade:

This gave a total of 55 brigades and 110 regiments.

A complete list of the pre-war regiments, their peacetime corps assignments and garrisons is shown here.
Willie Mueller WWI German Veteran 106 years old in 1999
YouTube › Barnes County Historical Society
WWI German Uniform 1917-1918 (This uniform is only for film making)
What if you were a WWI German Soldier for a day?
[OUTDATED] WWI: German Imperial Army Impressions 1914-1918
https://www.naval-encyclopedia.com/ww1/german/battleships
Перевести · 20.05.2020 · German naval spying in Great Britain by German agents started before WW1, concentrating on naval intelligence, the main focus or the general staff, since army intelligence was already well documented and has less edgy technological aspects. Spying activity was never near as dangerous or intensive as the British generally thought.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/WWI
Перевести · World War I or the First World War, often abbreviated as WWI or WW1, was a global war originating in Europe that lasted from 28 July 1914 to 11 November 1918.
What was the German Empire during World War 1?
What was the German Empire during World War 1?
During World War I, the German Empire was one of the Central Powers that lost the war. It began participation in the conflict after the declaration of war against Serbia by its ally, Austria-Hungary.
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Germany…
Who was the German general during World War 2?
Who was the German general during World War 2?
General Alfred von Schlieffen, chief of the German general staff from 1891 to 1906, had recognized Germany’s vulnerability in a two-front war and seen the best hope in an overwhelming attack against France through Belgium.
www.britannica.com/place/Germany/World-…
How was Germany involved in World War 2?
How was Germany involved in World War 2?
Clearly, the military, agrarian, and industrial elites who ruled Germany considered themselves involved in two wars simultaneously, one against the Triple Entente and the other against the aspirations of the German people for full political emancipation. The latter conflict dictated victory at all costs on the military front.
www.britannica.com/place/Germany/World-…
What was the German High Command in World War 1?
What was the German High Command in World War 1?
To the German High Command, the war that in early 1917 seemed as if it might drag on forever, now appeared winnable. 1. Kaiser Wilhelm II and German nationalism and militarism played a leading role in the Europeans tensions leading to the outbreak of World War I. 2.
alphahistory.com/weimarrepublic/world-wa…
germaniainternational.com/ww113.html
Перевести · German Nahkampfmesser (Trench Knife) (Item WWI 13-2; KWEP 5-14, WEHR 33-24, ANTWEP 4-8) . DESCRIPTION: The nastiest knife of the wars and in this statement I do include the equivalent pieces in the American and British models of this horrible weapon of personal murder (up close, one on one) it really takes a special persona to come up behind a sentry (a living human being) and stab him or cut ...
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_Army_order_of_battle_(1914)
Перевести · Commanders and locations of the German Army. The overall commander of the Imperial German Army was Kaiser Wilhelm II.The Chief of the General Staff was Generaloberst Helmuth von Moltke the Younger, with General Hermann von Stein as Deputy Chief.The Departmental chiefs were Oberst Tappen (Operations Branch), Oberstleutnant Hentsch (Intelligence Branch), Major Nicolai (Secret …
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The Weimar Republic was born in the ruins and ravages of World War I. Four years of total war against some of the world’s wealthiest and most powerful nation-states decimated Germany. By October 1918, Germany’s surrender was imminent, its people were starving and its government on the brink of collapse. On these ruins, the Weimar Republic was built.
Germany’s role in the outbreak of World War I is well documented. No single entity did more to instigate a European war than Germany’s haughty Kaiser, Wilhelm II, his overconfident generals and nationalist elites.
In the generation leading up to 1914, Wilhelm II and his government adopted policies, foreign and domestic, that contributed to rising tensions in Europe. German militarism, nationalism and imperialism – along with the Kaiser’s personal and diplomatic belligerence – all fuelled the mood for war.
Every sinew of German socio-politics screamed for war. German industrialists equipped the Kaiser’s army with a host of deadly new weapons: artillery, machine guns, chemical weapons and flamethrowers. German admirals had taken receipt of new battleships, cruisers and submarines.
German strategists drew up ambitious war plans that promised the conquest of France in just a few weeks. Nationalists talked of expanded German imperial control and influence in Africa, Asia and the Middle East. German newspapers thundered against the bully-boy tactics of the ‘old empires’ of Britain and France.
In another time, the national leader might have sought to defuse this belligerent mood. But the German Kaiser was unworldly, ambitious, impatient and eager for confrontation. Where other heads of state might have said little or nothing, Wilhelm talked tough about German interests and intentions.
In June 1914, Franz Ferdinand, an Austrian archduke and heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne, was gunned down by Serbian nationalists in the streets of Sarajevo.
The Austrians were outraged at the murder of their heir. Rather than suggesting a measured and careful response, the German Kaiser gave them tacit approval for an invasion of Serbia. If Russia, an ally of Serbia, attempted to intervene then the Kaiser promised to act.
One historian later called this ‘the Kaiser’s blank cheque’ for war. It should be noted that it was not only his blank cheque. Wilhelm’s position was supported by most German civilian politicians, even moderates in the Social Democratic Party (SPD).
When war did erupt in late July 1914, Germany initiated its famous Schlieffen Plan: a long-standing strategy to invade France via neutral Belgium to avoid heavy fortifications along the French border. The plan succeeded for a time before stalling then ultimately failing.
Instead of marching into France and capturing Paris within a month, as planned, Germany’s invading forces became bogged down in northern France. Defensive warfare replaced rapid advances, leading to the evolution of the Western Front – a 450-mile long network of trenches, minefields and barbed wire, running from the Swiss border to the North Sea.
In the east, German forces were hurriedly mobilised to withstand a Russian advance into East Prussia. They succeeded in pushing the Russians out of German territory, though this led to the development of another theatre of war: the Eastern Front.
The war would rage for almost four more years. By 1915, all major combatants had implemented a condition of ‘total war’, meaning that civilian economies were harnessed to supply and arm forces in the field.
Backed by the nation’s strong industrial sector, the German military held its own on both the Western and Eastern Front. Within Germany, however, the civilian population endured worsening isolation, blockades and shortages. Sandwiched between enemy combatants – the Russians in the east, the British and French in the west – and with a small coastline blockaded by Allied warships, Germany waged war with very little foreign trade.
In late 1914, the Allies took the unusual step of declaring food as “contraband”. Shipments of foodstuffs headed to German ports became subject to seizure or naval attack. The blockade halted German trade and imports, forcing the nation to rely on its domestic production of food. This had also fallen significantly due to labour being conscripted into the army or redeployed to essential wartime industries.
By mid-1916, the German people were feeling the strain of two long years of total war. The civilian government, led by the ineffectual chancellor Theobald Bethmann-Hollweg, had no real answers. Meat, potatoes and dairy products became difficult to obtain while bread was often replaced by unpleasant ersatz substitutes, made from bran or wheat husks.
As the chancellor dithered and the almost powerless Reichstag debated, the General Staff (Germany’s military high command) gradually assumed control of the government, economic policy and wartime production.
This period, known by some historians as the ‘Silent Dictatorship’, saw Generals Paul von Hindenburg and Erich Ludendorff assume control of civilian as well as military matters. This junta seized control of the press and propaganda, imposed food rationing and ordered compulsory labour for all civilian males of adult age.
In August 1916, they introduced the Hindenburg Program, which sought to double munitions production by relocating agricultural workers into factories. Ludendorff also forced through the reintroduction of unrestricted submarine warfare against Allied ships – a policy that helped trigger the United States’ entry into the war.
In July 1917, the Reichstag, hitherto supportive of the war effort, responded to the deteriorating situation by passing a resolution calling for peace. This forced the resignation of chancellor Bethmann-Hollweg. He was replaced by unimportant men who served as puppets for Hindenburg and Ludendorff.
By the winter of 1917-18, the availability of food in German cities was critically low. The British naval blockade of German ports had halted food imports while Hindenburg’s reallocation of agricultural labour had a detrimental effect on domestic production.
Germany may well have sought a peace deal in mid- to late-1917, if not for two revolutions in Russia. The collapse of the Russian tsarist government in February 1917, followed by the overthrow of its liberal successor, the Provisional Government, in October, spelt the end of Russia’s involvement in World War I.
With fighting on the Eastern Front war now winding down, this allowed Germany to concentrate its forces on the Western Front. To the German High Command, the war that in early 1917 seemed as if it might drag on forever, now appeared winnable.
1. Kaiser Wilhelm II and German nationalism and militarism played a leading role in the Europeans tensions leading to the outbreak of World War I.
2. When war erupted in August 1914, Germany’s initial strategy involved an attack on France through neutral Belgium, which drew Britain into the war.
3. By 1916, the war was effectively in a stalemate. Germany found itself surrounded by her enemies, blockaded and unable to import food and supplies.
4. During the war, the Kaiser relinquished control to his military leaders. This ‘silent dictatorship’ redeployed labour to the war effort with dire effects.
5. Two Russian Revolutions in 1917 ended fighting on the Eastern Front. This allowed Germany to refocus its efforts on the Western Front and make a final bid to win the war.
Citation information
Title: “World War I and Germany”
Authors: Jennifer Llewellyn, Steve Thompson
Publisher: Alpha History
URL: https://alphahistory.com/weimarrepublic/world-war-i/
Date published: September 5, 2019
Date accessed: Today’s date
Copyright: The content on this page may not be republished without our express permission. For more information on usage, please refer to our Terms of Use.
This Weimar Republic site contains articles, sources and perspectives on Germany between 1918 and 1933. This site is created and maintained by Alpha History. It contains 113,067 words in 198 pages. This site was last updated on January 30th 2021. For more information, visit our FAQ page or Terms of Use.

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