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Hi, I'm John Green, this is Crash Course World History and today we're going to talk about
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World War I. We actually have two videos about World War I. Today we're going to talk about
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how World War I happened. Next week we're going to talk about why. World War I is a
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really big deal. Especially to those of us who are really interested in like, industrialization
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and nation-states and modernity. So usually we don't talk that much about wars, but we're
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going to make an exception.
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Mr. Green, Mr. Green, "Exception?" Cue the Mongol-tage.
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Yeah, no me from the past. We don't roll the Mongol-tage every time we use the word exception,
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we roll it when we're talking about how the Mongols are an exception to a lot of our assumptions
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about civilizations.
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Stan, Stan- No, there are no Mongols today, we are talking about World War I.
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So I'm filming this in 2014, which means that the great war started 100 years ago and the
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World War I Centenary is just so hot right now, I can't miss out on it.
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So most historians agree that the event that started World War I was the assassination
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of Austrian archduke Franz Ferdinand on June 28, 1914, but beyond that, there's not a lot of agreement.
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Others say the war really started after Franz Ferdinand bit it. Like when Germany declared
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war or when Russia mobilized. So looking at why a war or any historical event happened
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means looking for a cause and effect relationship that implicitly assumes that if one particular
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event in a chain of events had gone differently, the historical outcome would also be different.
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This is why we have alternate history novels. Right , like what would have happened in the
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American Civil War if the South had won the Battle at Gettysburg? What would have happened
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if the Nazis had repulsed the D-day invasion? In both cases, probably eventually the same
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outcome but that's neither here nor there.
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The question we're looking at today is how. And that's a much more modest question because
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we can simply discuss a series of events but it's still a complicated one
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because when you're talking about how, you're always picking from an uncountable number
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of things that happened. You know, a butterfly flaps its wings and that leads to a series
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of events and then eventually across the world an archduke gets killed.
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So even when it comes to a relatively straightforward question like how, you'll never get to the
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bottom of all of it, but today we're going to discuss some of the how.
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So one way or another, all wars start with a breakdown in peaceful relations between
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the eventual belligerents and World War I is no exception.
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Oh, for the love of agriculture please stop it.
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Right, but World War I is a bit unusual in that we have a concrete event and a date to
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start our discussion. Sometimes we get lucky, historically, and there's an invasion that
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starts a war like in the Korean conflict or the firing on Fort Sumter in the American Civil War.
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But other times, it's much more butterfly effect-y with events that might or might not
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lead to a war, building upon each other until one side mobilizes or declares war or there's
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a fight over who shot first.
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But here we have a specific assassination of a specific archduke, Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo.
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Now it wasn't a great day for Franz to visit Bosnia since it was the anniversary of the
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Serbs defeat at Kosovo Polje in 1389 and also St. Vitus's day, which was a celebration for
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Slavic nationalists and a Bosnian Serb named Gavrilo Princip and his co-conspirators chose
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to celebrate Slavic nationalism by killing Franz Ferdinand.
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Now they didn't choose Franz Ferdinand at random. He was the heir apparent of the Austro-Hungarian Empire
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Franz Ferdinand wasn't particularly well liked, not by his uncle who was the head of the Austro-Hungarian Empire,
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certainly not by Bosnian Serb nationalists, also not really by everyone else in Europe
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except for the German Kaiser, but Franz Ferdinand was in his way kind of a moderate.
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Oh it's time for the open letter. Oh look it's a collection of my favorite assassinated
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moderates. It's hard out there for a moderate.
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An open letter to moderates:
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Dear moderates, so one of the reasons that Franz Ferdinand's uncle didn't like him that
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much is that the emperor was really hardcore, whereas Franz Ferdinand, you know, he was
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kind of a moderate.
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He was like you know, "I'm an Austro-Hungarian through and through but I see the Serbian arguement."
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Really, Franz Ferdinand was the one leader in the empire who might have come up with
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a solution to the problems of Serbian expansion and Bosnian independence. And murdering moderates
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has a way of making other moderates, you know, more extreme. In short moderates, your work
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may not be romantic, it may not appeal to the youth, but it is heroic and very dangerous.
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Best wishes, John Green.
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So even though Franz Ferdinand's uncle didn't particularly like him, as the emperor of Austria-Hungary,
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he felt a certain responsibility to, you know, do something. Otherwise the Serbia nationalists
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would feel like they could expand their territory at the expense of the empire, so despite what
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you often hear about World War I being pointless, this makes sense as a point sort of.
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Now it's a bit of schoolyard bully kind of diplomacy, but it does make a certain sense,
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if Serbia can get bigger, then all of the other places will think that they can have
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have nations too. Soon enough, you don't have an empire.
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Now there's still some debate about whether Princip and his fellow assassins acted alone
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or as part of a larger conspiracy organized by the Serbian government. But the Austrians
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certainly thought there was broader involvement which is why the whole thing ended up becoming a war.
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So Princip was a member of the scary sounding Black Hand, a group dedicated to creating
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a greater Serbia that would include Bosnia and there's some evidence that the Serbian
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chief of military intelligence was in on the assassination plot or at least knew about it.
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In fact, it's likely that the bombs and pistols the assassins used were supplied by
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a Serbian army officer, but this is still pretty controversial so much so that people
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are currently fighting about it in comments.
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So almost a month after the assassination, on July 23, Austria issued an ultimatum to
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Serbia. And Austria intentionally made the demands so harsh that the Serbs would inevitably
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have to reject them and ergo war, but that doesn't explain the month long delay.
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What happened in that month? Well Austria's foreign minister, Berchtold, was afraid that
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if they attacked Serbia, Russia would then attack Austria-Hungary, so the Austrians spent
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that month talking to their ally, Germany to make sure the Germans would have Austria's
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back. The Austro-Hungarians got assurance on July 5 or July 6 in the form of what has
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been called the "blank check", a promise from Germany that they would help Austria if Russia mobilized.
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And it was clear that the Germans expected the Austrians to move quickly in
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response to the assassination, not like wait for another twenty days. So usually I don't
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care about dates, but at this point the timing becomes pretty important. Let's go to the Thought Bubble.
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So when the Serbs received the Austrians ultimatum, Russia declared itself to be in a period preparatory
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to war, which sounds a lot like mobilization but technically it wasn't, which Russia's
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foreign minister emphasized to the Germans.
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The Tsar proved the measure on July 25, and it went into effect on July 26.
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The Serbs rejected Austria's ultimatum on July 25, but they made their rejection sound
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like a capitulation so the Germans thought that war had been averted. And they were kind
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of surprised then on July 28 when Austria suddenly declared war on Serbia even though
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the Austrian army wasn't actually ready to start fighting.
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Then on July 30, Russia exited its period preparatory to war and actually officially
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mobilized. Germany warned the Russians to stand down but two days later on August 1,
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France mobilized it's armed forces in support of Russia and that same day, Germany mobilized
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and declared war on Russia.
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So if you're keeping score at home - and good historians always do - Austria and Germany
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were the first to declare war on July 28 and August 1 respectively, but Russia with its
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pre-mobilization mobilization was actually ready to begin fighting before Serbia rejected
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Austria's ultimatum.
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Anyway, then Germany declared war on France on August 3, marched through Belgium to invade,
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hoping to quickly knock out the French and focus on Russia. Sorry France but you know
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Russia's a big deal and you, you know.
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German troops crossed Belgium's border on August 4 and the British issued an ultimatum
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to the Germans telling them to get out of Belgium or else. Germany chose "or else" and
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Britain declared war. So by August 4, 1914, all the major powers involved in World War
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I were officially at war with each other.
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Thanks Thought Bubble.
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Now I know there were a lot of other powers that would get involved later including the
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United States, and Japan, and the Ottoman Empire -- even Italy.
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But for the nations who did most of the actual fighting, Germany, Austria-Hungary, Russia,
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Serbia, France, Great Britain, the war happened both very quickly and very slowly.
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Now looking back, it all happened almost at once but if you're in the middle of it, a
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month is a long time and at any point someone, like say the archduke, Franz Ferdinand could
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have come in and said, "Wait a second."
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Well I guess not anyone because he was dead.
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But that's how an act of terrorism in a Bosnian city turned into the first major European
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war of the 20th century. A war that still resonates today. Now the Austrians and the
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Serbs probably both imagined that the war could stay localized to the Balkans especially
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since there had been previous conflicts in the region that hadn't blown up into a world war.
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You know, like in 1908 and 1912 and 1913. We'll get into what made 1914 different next week.
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The "why's" of course will always be very complicated, but for now please remember that
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we are always in the middle of a "how." Those living in June and July of 1914 could never
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have imagined how significant that month would be for human history and when thinking about
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them, it's worth remembering that we also can't imagine what our decisions today will
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mean in 100 years.
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Thanks for watching. I'll see you next week.
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As we say in my hometown, don't forget to be awesome.