INTA 4803 TP      WAR IN THE 20th CENTURY
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WW I:   1916 - Attrition Warfare
 
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"The Battle of Verdun exhausted our forces like a wound that never heals."

Field Marshall Paul von Hindenburg (1847-1934)
Chief of the Imperial German General Staff, 1916


"Somme. The whole history of the world cannot contain a more ghastly word."

Friedrich Steinbrecher
German Army Officer


 
Lesson Objectives

•  Understand the issues involved with the shift in prospects from a short war to a long war.

•  Attempt to undersatnd how and why each side became involved in a war of attrition.

•  Describe the outlooks for each of the Allied and Central powers as a consequences of the 1916 Western Front battles of attrition.

•  Understand the role of the US in the war to 1916.




 
Study Guides

•  Describe the character and conduct of the war on the Western front in 1916.

•  Which nation initiated the Battle of Verdun?   What was the strategic objective of the battle?

•  Which nation initiated the Battle of the Somme?   What was the strategic objective of the battle?   How did this change?

•  What technical innovation was introduced in the Battle of the Somme?   What was its impact?

•  What efforts were being made to end the war in 1916?   What were the issues that impeded these efforts?

•  What strategic dilemma did Germany face at the end of 1916?

•  What were the magnitude of the losses to all combatants through the end of 1916?




 
Assignment

Readings:


"World War I: The First Three Years"
American Military History, Chapter 17
Maurice Matloff (ed)
Washington: US Army Center of Military History, 1989
      • READ pp. 358-369, down to (but not including) "An End to N eutrality".

Battle of Verdun
Wikipedia

Battle of the Somme
Wikipedia

Battle of the Somme Annimated Map
World War One
BBC

Supplemental Resources:

Peace Without Victory
President Woodrow T. Wilson
Address to the U.S. Senate, 22 January 1917

German Reichstag Peace Resolution, 19 July 1917
firtstworldwar.com

"The Campaigns of 1916"
Ronald G. Usher
The Story of the Great War
New York: The McMillan Company, 1919
      NOTE: Overlooking its subtitle, this site provides a comprehensive contemporary summation of the Great War.




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