Upgrade to remove ads
Busy. Please wait.
Log in with Clever
or

show password
Forgot Password?

Don't have an account?  Sign up 
Sign up using Clever
or

Username is available taken
show password


Make sure to remember your password. If you forget it there is no way for StudyStack to send you a reset link. You would need to create a new account.
Your email address is only used to allow you to reset your password. See our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.


Already a StudyStack user? Log In

Reset Password
Enter the associated with your account, and we'll email you a link to reset your password.

The Road To the War To the End of the War

        Help!  

Question
Answer
A system of agreements designed by Bismarck to keep peace between Germany, Russia, and Austria-Hungary   Bismarckian Alliance System  
🗑
The alliance between Germany, Russia, and Austria-Hungary against radicalism in Europe   Three Emperors' League  
🗑
A treaty Bismarck foisted on the Russians and Austria-Hungary making both states claim neutrality if the other was attacked   Russian-German Reinsurance Treaty  
🗑
The alliance of Italy, Germany, and Austria   Triple Alliance  
🗑
An alliance formed in 1894 that opposed the Triple Alliance   Russian-French Alliance  
🗑
The young and impetuous German emperor who dismissed Bismarck in 1890   William II  
🗑
Britain's foreign policy of making no permanent alliances   Splendid Isolation  
🗑
French architect of the Entente Cordiale between France and England   Theophile Declasse  
🗑
1904 alliance between England and France   Anglo-French Entente  
🗑
A belligerent 1905 German diplomatic move that solidified France and Britain's alliance and damaged Germany's reputation   Moroccan Crisis  
🗑
A conference organized to settle the Moroccan Crisis   Algeciras Conference  
🗑
The union of France, Great Britain, and Russia   Triple Entente  
🗑
German admiral responsible for strongly building up the German navy   Alfred von Tirpitz  
🗑
The desire to establish an independent nation of Serbia   Serbian Nationalism  
🗑
Eastern European wars in 1912 and 1913 that effectively destroyed the Ottoman Empire   Balkan Wars  
🗑
Heir to the throne of Austria-Hungary, assassinated in Sarajevo in 1914   Archduke Francis Ferdinand  
🗑
Serbian nationalist group responsible for assassinating Ferdinand   The Black Hand  
🗑
A telegram stating that Germany would do anything in its power to assist Austria in the wake of Ferdinand's death   The Blank Check  
🗑
Austrian efforts to compromise Serbian nationalism during the July Crisis   Austrian ultimatum  
🗑
Russian tzar during WWI   Nicholas II  
🗑
Germany's plan for an invasion of France that called for a strong right wing.   Schlieffen Plan  
🗑
Fighting in nasty, small ditches separated by a "No-Man's Land"   Trench Warfare  
🗑
The union of Germany, Austria, and the Ottoman Empire   Central Powers  
🗑
The union of Great Britain, France, Russia, and later Italy and the United States   Allies  
🗑
The desperate French counterattack that prevented Germany from taking Paris   Battle of the Marne  
🗑
An unsuccesful German offensive against a fortress on France's northern border   Battle of Verdun  
🗑
Hideously bloody British and French offensive in 1916   Battle of the Somme  
🗑
The two theaters of WWI   Eastern and Western Fronts  
🗑
A rousing Germany victory over Russia on the Western front   Battle of Tannenberg  
🗑
German general who fought on the Eastern front and later served as a German president in the 20s.   Paul von Hindenburg  
🗑
German general who served alongside Hindenburg on the eastern front   Erich Ludendorff  
🗑
German submarines   U-Boats  
🗑
A luxury liner torpedoed by a German u-boat, an act turning many countries (including the US) against Germany   Lusitania  
🗑
Organization responsible for rationing and distributing useful materials to aid the German military   War Raw Materials Board  
🗑
Large German blimps.   (LED)Zeppelin  
🗑
A bloody and disastrous attempt by the Allies to take Istanbul   Gallipoli Campaign  
🗑
Battles occurred in this region, in addition to Europe and Asia   North Africa  
🗑
Man responsible for helping to organize Arab Revolts against the Ottoman Empire during WWI   T.E Lawrence  
🗑
A German telegram urging Mexico to go to war with the United states   Zimmerman telegram  
🗑
Russian parliament   Duma  
🗑
Russian prime minister during part of Nicholas II's reign, responsible for proposing many agrarian reforms   Pyotr Stolypin  
🗑
Close advisor to Nicholas II, hated by the peasantry   Grigori Rasputin  
🗑
Russian revolution that toppled the tsar   February Revolution  
🗑
Moderate Marxists, enemies of the Bolsheviks   Menshevik  
🗑
Moderate leader of Russia's provisional government following the overthrow of Nicholas II   Alexander Kerensky  
🗑
Democratic-trending government that ruled between the February Revolution and the Russian civil War   Provisional Government  
🗑
A grassroots group of socialist intellectuals who feuded with the provisional government   Petrograd Soviet  
🗑
Radical Russian Marxists, the main branch from which the Mensheviks split   Bolsheviks  
🗑
Leader of the Bolsheviks   Vladimir I. Lenin  
🗑
Soviet who orchestrated the Petrograd Soviet's takeover of Russia's government   Leon Trotsky  
🗑
A military order removing Russian officers from authority and placing power in the hands of elected committees of common soldiers   Army Order No. 1  
🗑
A weak attempt by Conservative forces in the army to oust Kerensky in September of 1917   Kornilov Affair  
🗑
The Bolshevik takeover of Russia's government   November Revolution  
🗑
The Communist secret police during the Russian Civil war   Cheka  
🗑
The dominant political party in Russia for much of the 20th century   Communist Party  
🗑
Conflict between the Bolsheviks (Reds), and the Whites   Russian Civil War  
🗑
Intervention of foreign powers on the side of the Whites during the Russian Civil War   Archangel Operation  
🗑
Irish uprising brutally put down by the British   Easter Uprising (1916)  
🗑
Postwar German government   Weimar Republic  
🗑
The Ottomans carried out a massacre of these people in 1915   Armenians  
🗑
Correspondence between a British High Commissioner and the Shariff of Mecca regarding the future of Ottoman territories after WWI.   McMahon-Hussein Correspondence  
🗑
A secret agreement between France and England regarding their respective spheres of influence following the fall of the Ottoman Empire   Sykes-Picot Agreement  
🗑
British declaration supporting a national home "for the Jewish people"   Balfour Declaration  
🗑
An old Ottoman province wanted as a home for Jews but populated by non-Jews   Palestine  
🗑
Prominent Zionist and Israel's first President   Chaim Weizmann  
🗑
Treaty ending the British mandate over the Transjordan   Treaty of London  
🗑
A series of goals articulated by Wilson following WWI   Fourteen Points  
🗑
Belief that nations have right to address questions of their own sovereignty   Self-Determination  
🗑
Payments made by Germany following WWI   Reparations  
🗑
The conference that hammered out the Treaty of Versailles   Paris Peace conference  
🗑
Alliance of nation-states proposed at the Paris Peace Conference   League of Nations  
🗑
British prime minister and representative at Versailles   David Lloyd George  
🗑
French representative at Versailles   Georges Clemenceau  
🗑
Italian representative at Versailles   Vittorio Orlando  
🗑
American president present at Versailles   Woodrow Wilson  
🗑
This article of the Treaty of Versailles placed much of the blame on Germany for starting the war, justifying harsh reparations   Article 231 (War Guilt Clause)  
🗑
Orders from the League of Nations   Mandates  
🗑
Liberal economist who questioned the wisdom of Versailles in "The Economic Consequences of The Peace"   John Maynard Keynes  
🗑


   

Review the information in the table. When you are ready to quiz yourself you can hide individual columns or the entire table. Then you can click on the empty cells to reveal the answer. Try to recall what will be displayed before clicking the empty cell.
 
To hide a column, click on the column name.
 
To hide the entire table, click on the "Hide All" button.
 
You may also shuffle the rows of the table by clicking on the "Shuffle" button.
 
Or sort by any of the columns using the down arrow next to any column heading.
If you know all the data on any row, you can temporarily remove it by tapping the trash can to the right of the row.

 
Embed Code - If you would like this activity on your web page, copy the script below and paste it into your web page.

  Normal Size     Small Size show me how
Created by: betsynewmark