unit 3 project

By 7dani
  • The assasination of Archduke Franz Ferdidnand

    The assasination of Archduke Franz Ferdidnand
    Franz Ferdidnand and his wife Sophie had accepted an inuition to visit the capital of Bosnia. As they passed the central police station needed carbinouic(black land agent)hurlednan hand grenue.Archauke Franz Ferdidnand was born in 1863 in austria 1900 he had given up his children's rights to the throne in order to marry a aldy in waiting while he had power, archduke had attemtped to restore austro-russiam relation while maintaining an allience with germany.
  • WW1 is declared by Austria

    WW1 is declared by Austria
    Threatened by Serbian ambition in the tumultuous Balkans region of Europe, Austria Hungary dead set on the proper response to the killings was to prepare for a possible military invasion of Serbia. After looking for the total support of its powerful ally, Germany, Austria Hungary presented Serbia with a rigid ultimatum on July 23, 1914.
  • Battle of Mons

    Battle of Mons
    The Battle of Mons was the first major action of the British Expeditionary Force in the First World War. It was a minor action of the Battle of the Frontiers, in which the Allies clashed with Germany on the French borders. Although the British fought well and impose out of proportion casualties on the numerically superior Germans, they were eventually forced to retreat due both to the greater strength of the Germans
  • Battle of Tannenberg

    Battle of Tannenberg
    World War I battle fought at Tannenberg, East Prussia that ended in a German victory over the Russians. The crushing overcome barely a month into the conflict, but it became emblematic of the Russian Empire’s experience in World War I. Major effects, one military and political Militarily, the Battle of Tannenberg halted the Russian invasion of East Prussia, stabilizing the Eastern Front for the Central Powers
  • Battle of The Marne

    Battle of The Marne
    First Battle of the Marne | Summary, Significance, & Map
    First Battle of the Marne, (September 6–12, 1914), an offensive during World War I by the French army and the British to test Force against the advancing Germans. Marked the end of the German sweep into France and the beginning of the trench warfare that was marked World War One. Pushing the Germans back for a distance of 40 to 50 miles and saved the capital city of Paris from detain .
  • Trench warfare is invented

    Trench warfare is invented
    Warfare in which the opposing sides attack, counterattack, and defend from sets of trenches dug into the ground.Its defensive use was first institutionalized as a tactic during the American Civil War.After the early war of movement in the late summer of 1914, artillery and machine guns forced the armies on the Western Front to dig trenches to protect themselves.Over the next four years, both sides would launch attacks against the enemy’s trench lines, attacks that resulted in horrific loss.
  • Battle Of Ypres

    Battle Of Ypres
    The French lines at Ypres were broke when the Germans discharged nearly 200 tons 180,000 kg of chlorine gas into the Allied trenches.The Germans failed to capitalize on the initial shock of the war's first chemical weapon attack, however, and by the next night, their gains had been largely reversed.After the German advance through Belgium and eastern France was curtailed by a decisive associated victory in the Battle of the Marne in late September 1914.
  • Battle of Dogger Bank

    Battle of Dogger Bank
    The Battle of Dogger Bank was a naval conflict between Britain and Germany during World War I. It was fought near Dogger Bank, off the northeastern coast of England in the North Sea, on January 24,1915. It ended in a British victory. Nevertheless, it was a big enough setback for the Germans that their navy delayed further significant action against the British fleet for more than a year.
  • Battle of Gallipoli

    Battle of Gallipoli
    Gallipoli campaign | National Army Museum
    Fought during the First World War 1914-18 from 25 April 1915 to 9 January 1916, Gallipoli was the first major was practically floating operation in modern warfare. British Empire and French troops landed on the Ottoman held peninsula in the Dardanelles Straits with harmful consequences for the Allies.
  • Battle of isonzo

    Battle of isonzo
    In preparation for the offensive, Germany transported seven divisions of troops to reinforce the Austrians on the upper banks of the Isonzo. Cadorna, learning by lifted reconnaissance of the Austro German movements, pushed back his own army planned September offensive to prepare a defensive position for the scheduled attacks that month. Ugly weather, however, pushed back the plans, and by time Germany and Austria Hungary were ready to charge, they were able to catch the Italians by surprise.
  • The battle of Verdun

    The battle of Verdun
    World War I engagement in which the French repulsed a major German offensive. It was one of the longest, bloodiest, and most ferocious battles of the war French casualties amounted to about 400,000, German ones to about 350,000. Some 300,000 were killed.
  • Battle of Jutland

    Battle of Jutland
    The Battle of Jutland 31 May 1 June 1916 was the largest naval battle of the First World War. It was the only time that the British and German fleets of dreadnought battleships actually came to blows.The German High Seas Fleet were hoping to weaken the Royal Navy by start an ambush on the British Grand Fleet in the North Sea. German Admiral Reinhard Scheer planned to lure out both Admiral Sir David Beatty’s Battlecruiser Force and Admiral Sir John Jellicoe's Grand Fleet.
  • Battle of The somme

    Battle of The somme
    The Battle of the Somme, which took place from July to November 1916, began as an Allied attacking against German forces along the Western Front of World War I, near the Somme River in France. The battle turned into one of the most bitter, deadly and costly battles in all of human history, as British forces harmed more than 57,000 casualties including more than 19,000 soldiers killed on the first day of the battle alone.
  • Battle of vim ridge

    Battle of vim ridge
    Many historians and writers consider the Canadian victory at Vimy an explaining it for Canada, when the country came out from under the shadow of Britain and felt capable of greatness. Canadian troops also earned a reputation as terrifimg, effective troops because of the success. But it was a victory at a terrible cost, with more than 10,000 killed and harmed. The Canadian Corps was ordered to seize Vimy Ridge in April 1917.Situated in northern France.
  • June offensive WW1 battle

    June offensive WW1 battle
    On July 1 1917, the Russian army, commanded by General Aleksey A. Brusilov, attacked the Austro German forces along a broad front in Galicia and pushed toward Lvov. Although the Russian tried initially success, and did so.The first Russian response came more quickly a failed offensive in March at Lake Narocz, in which Russian troops were slaughtered en masse by the Germans with no serious effect at Verdun
  • end of ww1