*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11200 ***
[Illustration]
The World War and What Was Behind It
or
The Story of the Map of Europe
By
L. P. Bénézet
SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS, EVANSVILLE, INDIANA
[Illustration: The Peace Palace at the Hague]
Preface
This little volume is the result of the interest shown by pupils,
teachers, and the general public in a series of talks on the causes of
the great European war which were given by the author in the fall of
1914. The audiences were widely different in character. They included
pupils of the sixth, seventh, and eighth grades, students in high
school and normal school, teachers in the public schools, an
association of business men, and a convention of boards of education.
In every case, the same sentiment was voiced: “If there were only some
book which would give us these facts in simple language and illustrate
them by maps and charts as you have done!” After searching the market
for a book of this sort without success, the author determined to put
the subject of his talks into manuscript form. It has been his aim to
write in a style which is well within the comprehension of the children
in the upper grades and yet is not too juvenile for adult readers. The
book deals with the remarkable sequence of events in Europe which made
the great war inevitable. Facts are revealed which, so far as the
author knows, have not been published in any history to date; facts
which had the strongest possible bearing on the outbreak of the war.
The average American, whether child or adult, has little conception of
conditions in Europe. In America all races mix. The children of the
Polish Jew mingle with those of the Sicilian, and in the second
generations both peoples have become Americans. Bohemians intermarry
with Irish, Scotch with Norwegians. In Europe, on the other hand, Czech
and Teuton, Bulgar and Serb may live side by side for centuries without
mixing or losing their distinct racial characteristics. In order that
the American reader may understand the complicated problem of European
peace, a study of races and languages is given in the text, showing the
relationship of Slav, Celt, Latin, and Teuton, and the various
sub-divisions of these peoples. A knowledge of these facts is very
essential to any understanding of the situation in Europe. The author
has pointed out the fact that political boundaries are largely
king-made, and that they have seldom been drawn with regard to the
natural division of Europe by nationalities, or to the wishes of the
mass of the population.
The chapter, entitled “Europe as it Should Be,” with its accompanying
map, shows the boundaries of the various nations as they would look if
the bulk of the people of each nationality were included in a single
political division. In many places, it is, of course, impossible to
draw sharp lines. Greek shades off into Bulgar on one side and into
Skipetar and Serb on the other. Prague, the capital of the Czechs, is
one-third German in its population. There are large islands of Germans
and Magyars in the midst of the Roumanians of Transylvania. These are a
few examples out of many which could be cited. However, the general aim
of the chapter has been to divide the continent into nations, in each
of which the leading race would vastly predominate in population.
It is hoped that the study of this little work will not only throw
light upon the causes of war in general, but will also reveal its
cruelty and its needlessness. It is shown that the history of Europe
from the time of the great invasions by the Germanic tribes has been a
continuous story of government without the consent of the governed.
A preventive for wars, such as statesmen and philanthropists in many
countries have urged, is outlined in the closing chapter. It would seem
as though after this terrible demonstration of the results of armed
peace, the governments of the world would be ready to listen to some
plan which would forever forbid the possibility of another war. Just as
individuals in the majority of civilized countries discovered, a
hundred years ago, that it was no longer necessary for them to carry
weapons in order to insure their right to live and to enjoy protection,
so nations may learn at last that peace and security are preferable to
the fruits of brigandage and aggression. The colonies of America, after
years of jealousy and small differences, followed by a tremendous war,
at last learned this lesson. In the same way the states of Europe will
have to learn it. The stumbling blocks in the way are the remains of
feudal government in Europe and the ignorance and short-sightedness of
the common people in many countries. Ignorance is rapidly waning with
the advance of education, and we trust that feudalism will not long
survive its last terrible crime, the world war of 1914.
Now that the United States has become a belligerent, it is very
essential that our people understand the events that led up to our
participation in the war. So many of our citizens are of a peace-loving
nature, we are so far removed from the militarism of continental
Europe, and the whole war seems so needless and so profitless to those
who have not studied carefully its causes, that there is danger of a
want of harmony with the program of the government if all are not
taught the simple truth of the matter. There is no quicker channel
through which to reach all the people than the public schools. With
this in mind, two entire chapters and part of a third are devoted to
demonstrating why no other course was open to this country than to
accept the war which was forced upon her.
In the preparation of this little work, the author has received many
helpful suggestions from co-workers. His thanks are especially due to
Professor A. G. Terry of Northwestern University and Professor A. H.
Sanford of the Wisconsin State Normal School at La Crosse, who were
kind enough to read through and correct the manuscript before its final
revision. The author is especially indebted to the Committee on Public
Information at Washington, D. C., for furnishing to him authoritative
data on many phases of the war. Acknowledgment is also made to Row,
Peterson and Company for kind permission to use illustrations from
_History Stories of Other Lands_; also to the International Film
Service, Inc., of New York City for the use of many valuable copyright
illustrations of scenes relating to the great war.
L. P. BÉNÉZET.
_Evansville, Indiana,
January 2, 1918_
Contents
Preface
I. The Great War
II. Rome and the Barbarian Tribes
III. From Chiefs to Kings
IV. Master and Man
V. A Babel of Tongues
VI. “The Terrible Turk”
VII. The Rise of Modern Nations
VIII. The Fall of Two Kingdoms
IX. The Little Man from the Common People
X. A King-Made Map and Its Trail of Wrongs
XI. Italy a Nation at Last
XII. The Man of Blood and Iron
XIII. The Balance of Power
XIV. The “Entente Cordiale”
XV. The Sowing of the Dragon’s Teeth
XVI. Who Profits?
XVII. The Spark that Exploded the Magazine
XVIII. Why England Came In
XIX. Diplomacy and Kingly Ambition
XX. Back to the Balkans
XXI. The War under the Sea
XXII. Another Crown Topples
XXIII. The United States at War—Why?
XXIV. Europe As It Should Be
XXV. The Cost of It All
XXVI. What Germany Must Learn
Pronouncing Glossary
Index
List of Maps
I. Distribution of Peoples According to Relationship
II. Distribution of Languages
III. Southeastern Europe in 600 B.C.
IV. Southeastern Europe 975 A.D.
V. Southeastern Europe 1690
VI. The Empire of Charlemagne
VII. Europe in 1540
VIII. The Growth of Brandenburg-Prussia 1400-1806
IX. Italy in 525
X. Italy in 650
XI. Italy in 1175
XII. Europe in 1796
XIII. Europe in 1810
XIV. Europe in 1815
XV. Italy Made One Nation—1914—
XVI. Formation of the German Empire
XVII. Southeastern and Central Europe 1796
XVIII. Losses of Turkey During the Nineteenth Century
XIX. Turkey As the Balkan Allies Planned to Divide It
XX. Changes Resulting from Balkan Wars 1912-1913
XXI. The Two Routes from Germany into France
XXII. The Roumanian Campaign as the Allies Wished It
XXIII. The Roumanian Campaign as It Turned Out
XXIV. Europe as It Should Be
List of Illustrations
I. The Peace Palace at the Hague
II. Fleeing from Their Homes, Around which a Battle is Raging
III. A Drill Ground in Modern Europe
IV. The Forum of Rome as It Was 1600 Years Ago
V. The Last Combat of the Gladiators
VI. Germans Going into Battle
VII. A Hun Warrior
VIII. Gaius Julius Caesar
IX. A Frankish Chief
X. Movable Huts of Early Germans
XI. Goths on the March
XII. Franks Crossing the Rhine
XIII. Men of Normandy Landing in England
XIV. Alexander Defeating the Persians
XV. A Knight in Armor
XVI. A Norman Castle in England
XVII. A Vassal Doing Homage to His Lord
XVIII. William the Conqueror
XIX. A Typical Bulgarian Family
XX. Mohammed II Before Constantinople
XXI. A Scene in Salonika
XXII. Louis XIV
XXIII. John Churchill, Duke of Marlborough
XXIV. The Great Elector of Brandenburg
XXV. Frederick the Great
XXVI. Catharine II
XXVII. Courtier of Time of Louis XIV
XXVIII. The Taking of the Bastille
XXIX. The Palace of Versailles
XXX. The Reign of Terror
XXXI. The First Singing of “The Marseillaise”
XXXII. Charles the Fifth
XXXIII. The Emperor Napoleon in 1814
XXXIV. The Retreat from Moscow
XXXV. Napoleon at Waterloo
XXXVI. The Congress of Vienna
XXXVII. Prince Metternich
XXXVIII. The First Meeting of Garibaldi and Victor Emmanuel
XXXIX. Bismarck
XL. An Attack on a Convoy in the Franco-Prussian War
XLI. The Proclamation at Versailles of William I as Emperor of Germany
XLII. Peter the Great
XLIII. Entrance to the Mosque of St. Sophia
XLIV. The Congress of Berlin
XLV. An Arab Sheik and His Staff
XLVI. A Scene in Constantinople
XLVII. Durazzo
XLVIII. A Modern Dreadnaught
XLIX. Submarine
L. A Fort Ruined by the Big German Guns
LI. Russian Peasants Fleeing Before the German Army
LII. A Bomb-proof Trench in the Western War Front
LIII. Venizelos
LIV. The Deutschland in Chesapeake Bay
LV. Crowd in Petrograd During the Revolution
LVI. Revolutionary Soldiers in the Duma
LVII. Kerensky Reviewing Russian Troops
LVIII. Flight from a Torpedoed Liner
LIX. President Wilson Reading the War Message
LX. American Grain Set on Fire by German Agents
LXI. Polish Children
LXII. The Price of War
LXIII. Rendered Homeless by War
LXIV. Charles XII of Sweden
The Story of the Map of Europe
Chapter I.
The Great War
The call from Europe.—Friend against friend.—Why?—Death and
devastation.—No private quarrel.—Ordered by government.—What
makes government?—The influence of the past.—Four causes of war.
Among the bricklayers at work on a building which was being
erected in a great American city during the summer of 1914 were
two men who had not yet become citizens of the United States.
Born abroad, they still owed allegiance, one to the Emperor of
Austria, the other to the Czar of Russia.
Meeting in a new country, and using a new language which gave them a
chance to understand each other, they had become well acquainted. They
were members of the same labor union, and had worked side by side on
several different jobs. In the course of time, a firm friendship had
sprung up between them. Suddenly, on the same day, each was notified to
call at the office of the agent of his government in the city. Next
morning the Russian came to his boss to explain that he must quit work,
that he had been called home to fight for the “Little Father” of the
Russians. He found his chum, the Austrian, there ahead of him, telling
that he had to go, for the Russians had declared war on Austria and the
good Kaiser,[1] Franz Josef, had need of all his young men.
[1] In the German language, the title Kaiser means Emperor.
The two chums stared at each other in sorrow and dismay. The
pitiless arm of the god of war had reached across the broad
Atlantic, plucking them back from peace and security. With
weapons put into their hands they would be ordered to kill each
other on sight.
A last hand-clasp, a sorrowful “Good luck to you,” and they
parted.
Why was this necessary? What was this irresistible force, strong
enough to separate the two friends and drag them back five
thousand miles for the purpose of killing each other? To answer
these two questions is the purpose of this little volume.
Beginning with the summer of 1914, Europe and parts of Asia and
Africa were torn and racked with the most tremendous war that the
world has ever seen. Millions of men were killed. Other millions
were maimed, blinded, or disfigured for life. Still other
millions were herded into prison camps or forced to work like
convict laborers. Millions of homes were filled with grief.
Millions of women were forced to do hard work which before the
war had been considered beyond their power. Millions of children
were left fatherless. What had been the richest and most
productive farming land in Europe was made a barren waste.
Thousands of villages and towns were utterly destroyed and their
inhabitants were forced to flee, the aged, the sick, and the
infants alike.
In many cases, as victorious armies swept through Poland and
Serbia, the wretched inhabitants fled before them, literally
starving, because all food had been seized for the use of
fighting men. Dreadful diseases, which cannot exist where people
have the chance to bathe and keep themselves clean, once more
appeared, sweeping away hundreds of thousands of victims. The
strongest, healthiest, bravest men of a dozen different nations
were shot down by the millions or left to drag out a miserable
existence, sick or crippled for life. Silent were the wheels in
many factories which once turned out the comforts and luxuries of
civilization. There were no men to make toys for the children, or
to work for mankind’s happiness. The only mills and factories
which were running full time were those that turned out the tools
of destruction and shot and shell for the guns. Nations poured
out one hundred fifty million dollars a day for the purpose of
killing off the best men in Europe. Had the world gone mad? What
was the reason for it all?
[Illustration: Fleeing from their Homes, around which a Battle is Raging]
In 1913 Germans traveled in Russia and Englishmen traveled in
Germany freely and safely. Germans were glad to trade with
intercourse Russians, and happy to have Englishmen spend their
money in Germany. France and Austria exchanged goods and their
inhabitants traveled within each other’s boundaries. A Frenchman
might go anywhere through Germany and be welcomed. There was
nothing to make the average German hate the average Englishman or
Belgian. The citizen of Austria and the citizen of Russia could
meet and find plenty of ground for friendship.
We cannot explain this war, then, on the grounds of race hatred.
One can imagine that two men living side by side and seeing each
other every day might have trouble and grow to hate each other,
but in this great war soldiers were shooting down other soldiers
whom they had never seen before, with whom they had never
exchanged a word, and it would not profit them if they killed a
whole army of their opponents. In many cases, the soldiers did
not see the men whom they were killing. An officer with a
telescope watched where the shells from the cannon were falling
and telephoned to the captain in charge to change the aim a
trifle for his next shots. The men put in the projectile, closed
and fired the gun. Once in a while, a shell from the invisible
enemy, two, three, or four miles away, fell among them, killing
and wounding. When a regiment of Austrians were ordered to charge
the Russian trenches, they shot and bayoneted the Russians
because they were told to do so by their officers, and the
Russian soldiers shot the Austrians because their captains so
ordered them. The officers on each side were only obeying orders
received from their generals. The generals were only obeying
orders from the government.
In the end, then, we come back to the governments, and we wonder
what has caused these nations to fly at each other’s throats. The
question arises as to what makes up a government or why a
government has the right to rule its people.
In the United States, the government officials are simply the
servants of the people. Practically every man in our country,
unless he is a citizen of some foreign nation, has a right to
vote, and in many of the states women, too, have a voice in the
government. We, the people of the United States, can choose our
own lawmakers, can instruct them how to vote and, in some states,
can vote out of existence any law that they the people have made
which we do not like. In all states, we can show our disapproval
of what our law-makers have done by voting against them at the
next election. Such is the government of a republic, a
“government of the people, by the people, and for the people,” as
Abraham Lincoln called it. In the leading British colonies, the
people rule. Australian citizens voted against forcing men to
serve in the army. The result was very close and the vote of the
women helped to decide it. Canada, on the contrary, voted to
compel her men to go. How is it in Europe? Have the people of
Germany or Austria the right to vote on war? Were they consulted
before their governments called them to arms and sent them to
fight each other? It is plain that in order to understand what
this war is about, we must look into the story of how the
different governments of Europe came to be and learn why their
peoples obey them so unquestioningly.
We must remember that government by the people is a very new
thing. One hundred and thirty years ago, even in the United
States only about one-fourth of the men had the right to vote.
These were citizens of property and wealth. They did not think a
poor man was worth considering. In England, a country which
allows its people more voice in the government than almost any
other nation in Europe, it is only within the last thirty years
that all men could vote. There are some European countries, like
Turkey, where the people have practically no power at all and
others, like Austria, where they have very little voice in how
they shall be governed.
For over a thousand years, the men of Europe have obeyed without
thinking when their lords and kings have ordered them to pick up
their weapons and go to war. In many instances they have known
nothing of the causes of the conflict or of what they were
fighting for. A famous English writer has written a poem which
illustrates how little the average citizen has ever known
concerning the cause of war, and shows the difference between the
way in which war was looked upon by the men of old and the way in
which one should regard it. The poem runs as follows:
The Battle of Blenheim
It was a summer evening,
Old Kaspar’s work was done,
And he before his cottage door
Was sitting in the sun,
And by him sported on the green
His little grandchild Wilhelmine.
She saw her brother Peterkin
Roll something large and round,
Which he beside the rivulet
In playing there had found,
He came to ask what he had found
That was so large and smooth and round.
Old Kaspar took it from the boy,
Who stood expectant by;
And then the old man shook his head,
And, with a natural sigh—
“’Tis some poor fellow’s skull,” said he,
“Who fell in the great victory.
“I find them in the garden,
For there’s many hereabout;
And often when I go to plow,
The plowshare turns them out!
For many a thousand men,” said he,
“Were slain in the great victory.”
“Now tell us what ’twas all about,”
Young Peterkin he cries;
And little Wilhelmine looks up
With wonder-waiting eyes—
“Now tell us all about the war,
And what they fought each other for.”
“It was the English,” Kaspar cried,
“Who put the French to rout;
But what they fought each other for
I could not well make out;
But everybody said,” quoth he,
“That ’twas a famous victory.
“My father lived at Blenheim then,
Yon little stream hard by;
They burnt his dwelling to the ground,
And he was forced to fly;
So with his wife and child he fled,
Nor had he where to rest his head.
“They say it was a shocking sight
After the field was won—
For many thousand bodies here
Lay rotting in the sun;
But things like that, you know, must be
After a famous victory.
“Great praise the Duke of Marlborough won,
And our good Prince Eugene.”
“Why, ’twas a very wicked thing!”
Said little Wilhelmine.
“Nay, nay, my little girl,” quoth he,
“It was a famous victory.
“And everybody praised the duke
Who this great fight did win.”
“But what good came of it at last?”
Quoth little Peterkin.
“Why, that I cannot tell,” said he;
“But ’twas a famous victory.”
—_Robert Southey_.
Old Kaspar, who has been used to such things all his life, cannot
feel the wickedness and horror Of the battle. The children, on
the other hand, have a different idea of war. They are not
satisfied until they know what it was all about and what good
came of it, and they feel that “it was a very wicked thing.” If
the men in the armies had stopped to ask the reason why they were
killing each other and had refused to fight until they knew the
truth, the history of the world would have been very different.
One reason why we still have wars is that men refuse to think for
themselves, because it is so much easier to let their dead
ancestors think for them and to keep up customs which should have
been changed ages ago. People in Europe have lived in the midst
of wars or preparation for wars all their lives. There never has
been a time when Europe was not either a battlefield or a great
drill-ground for armies.
There was a time, long ago, when any man might kill another in
Europe and not be punished for his deed. It was not thought wrong
to take human life. Today it is not considered wrong to kill,
provided a man is ordered to do so by his general or his king.
When two kings go to war, each claiming his quarrel to be a just
one, wholesale murder is done, and each side is made by its
government to think itself very virtuous and wholly justified in
its killing. It should be the great aim of everyone today to help
to bring about lasting peace among all the nations.
[Illustration: A Drill Ground in Modern Europe.]
In order to know how to do this, we must study the causes of the
wars of the past. We shall find, as we do so, that almost all
wars can be traced to one of four causes: (1) the instinct among
barbarous tribes to fight with and plunder their neighbors; (2)
the ambition of kings to enlarge their kingdoms; (3) the desire
of the traders of one nation to increase their commerce at the
expense of some other nation; (4) a people’s wish to be free from
the control of some other country and to become a nation by
itself. Of the four reasons, only the last furnishes a just cause
for war, and this cause has been brought about only when kings
have sent their armies out, and forced into their kingdoms other
peoples who wished to govern themselves.
Questions for Review
Why must foreigners in the United States return to their
native lands when summoned by their governments?
How is it that war helps to breed diseases?
Is race hatred a cause of war or a result of it?
Whom do we mean by the government in the United States?
Who controls the government in Russia?
Who in England?
Who in Germany?
Who in France?
In Southey’s poem, how does the children’s idea of the battle
differ from that of their grandfather? Why?
Are people less likely to protest against war if their
forefathers have fought many wars?
What have been the four main causes of war?
Chapter II.
Rome and the Barbarian Tribes
New governments in Europe.—Earliest times.—How civilization
began.—The rise of Rome.—Roman civilization.—Roman cruelty.—The
German tribes.—The Slavic tribes.—The Celtic tribes.—The Huns and
Moors.—The great Germanic invasions of the Roman world.
To search for the causes of the great war which began in Europe
in 1914, we must go far back into history. It should be
remembered that many of the governments of today have not lived
as long as that of our own country. This is, perhaps, a new
thought to some of us, who rather think that, as America is a new
country, it is the baby among the great nations. But, one hundred
and thirty years ago, when the United States was being formed,
there was no nation called Italy; the peninsula which we now know
by that name was cut up among nine or ten little governments.
There was no nation known as Germany; the land which is in the
present German empire was then divided among some thirty or
thirty-five different rulers. There was no Republic of France;
instead, France had a king whose will was law, and the French
people were cruelly oppressed. There was no kingdom of Belgium,
no kingdom of Serbia, of Bulgaria, of Roumania. The kingdom of
Norway was part of Denmark. The Republic of France, as we now
know it, dates back only to 1871; the Empire of Germany and the
United Kingdom of Italy to about the same time. The kingdoms of
Roumania, Serbia, and Bulgaria have been independent of Turkey
only since 1878. The kingdom of Albania did not exist before
1913. Most of the present nations of modern Europe, then, are
very new. The troubles which led to the great war, however,
originated in the dim twilight of history.
In the earliest days, there were no separate countries or
kingdoms. Men gathered together in little bands, each of which
had its leader. This leader was generally chosen because of his
bodily strength and courage. He was the best fighter of the
tribe. The people did not have any lasting homes. They moved
around from place to place, wherever they could find the best
hunting and fishing. When two tribes wanted the same hunting
grounds, they fought, and the weaker party had to give way.
Selfishness was supreme. If a man wanted anything which belonged
to his weaker neighbor, he simply beat this neighbor over the
head with his club, and took it. The stronger tribe attacked the
weaker, without any thought of whether or not its quarrel was
just.
Gradually, in the southern and warmer parts of Europe, the tribes
began to be more civilized. Towns sprang up. Ships were built.
Trade came to be one of the occupations. The fighting men needed
weapons and armor; so there grew up artisans who were skilled in
working metals. In Egypt and Syria there were people who had
reached quite a high degree of civilization, and gradually the
Europeans learned from them better ways of living. First the
Greeks, then the Etruscans (Ē-trŭs′cans), a people who lived in
Italy just north of where Rome now is, and finally the southern
Italians learned that it was possible to live in cities, without
hunting and plundering. Grazing (the tending of flocks of
animals) came to be the occupation of many. The owners of sheep
or cattle drove their flocks from place to place, as grass and
water failed them where they were. There was no separate
ownership of land.
At last came the rise of the city of Rome, which, starting out as
the stronghold of a little gang of robbers, spread its rule
gradually over all the surrounding country. By this time, the
barbarians of northern Europe had gotten past the use of clubs as
weapons. They, too, had learned to make tools and arms of bronze,
and those living near civilized countries had obtained swords of
iron. The club, however, still remained as the sign of authority.
The large bludgeon of the chief was carried before the tribe as a
sign of his power over them. You have all seen pictures of a king
sitting on his throne and holding a wand or stick in his right
hand. It is interesting to think that this scepter, which the
present king of England carries on state occasions to remind his
people of his power, is a relic of the old, old days when his
grandfather, many times removed, broke the head of his rival for
leadership in the tribe and set up his mighty club for his
awestruck people to worship.
The city of Rome (at first a republic, afterwards an empire)
spread its rule over all of Italy, over all the shores of the
Mediterranean Sea, and finally over all the countries of Europe
south and west of the rivers Danube and Rhine. One of the
emperors planted a colony north of the Danube near its mouth, and
the descendants of these colonists are living in that same
country today. They have not forgotten their origin, for they
still call themselves Romans (Roumani [Ro͞o-mä′ni]), and talk a
language greatly resembling the Latin, which was the tongue
spoken by the Romans of old. With the exception of this country,
which is now Roumania, the part of Europe north and east of the
Danube and Rhine was practically free from the Romans. In this
territory, roving bands wandered around, driving their cattle
with them and clearing the woods of game.
[Illustration: The Forum (public square) of Rome as it was 1600 years
ago.]
In some ways, the Romans were a highly civilized people. They had
schools where their children were taught to read and write, to
speak Greek, and to work problems in geometry. They had
magnificent public buildings, fine temples and palaces. They
built excellent paved roads all over the southern part of Europe,
and had wonderful systems of aqueducts which supplied their
cities with pure water from springs and lakes miles away. Their
dress was made of fine cloth. They knew how to make paper, glass,
and steel.
On the other hand, they were a cruel and bloodthirsty people.
Their favorite amusement was to go to shows where gladiators
fought, either with each other or with wild beasts. These
gladiators were generally men from tribes which had fought
against Rome. They had been captured and brought to that city,
where they were trained to use certain weapons. Then on holidays,
with all the people of Rome packed into big amphitheaters, these
unfortunate captives were forced to fight with each other until
one man of each pair was killed. It occasionally happened that
one gladiator might be wounded, and lie helpless on the sand, The
spectators would then shout to the victorious fighter to take his
knife and finish what he had begun. In this way what would seem
to us like cold-blooded murder was committed hundreds of times
each year, while the fairest ladies and young girls of Rome sat
and watched with eager interest. Thus, although the Romans had
all the outward appearance of being civilized, they were savages
at heart, and had no sympathy for any people who were not of
their own race.
[Illustration: The Last Combat of the Gladiators]
In the early days, the Romans prided themselves on their honor.
They scorned a lie and looked down on anyone who would cheat or
deceive. They lived hardy lives and would not allow themselves
luxuries. They rather despised the Greeks, because the latter
surrounded themselves with comforts in life. The early Romans
were fighters by nature. They had a certain god named Janus (our
month January is named after him) and his temple was open only
when they were engaged in war. It is a matter of history that
during the twelve hundred years from the first building of Rome
to the end of the Roman Empire, the temple of Janus was closed on
but three occasions and then only for a short time.
About five or six hundred years after the founding of Rome came
several disastrous wars which killed off a great majority of her
sturdy fighters. Rome was the victor in all of these wars, but
she won them at tremendous cost to herself. With the killing off
of her best and bravest men, a great deal of the old time honesty
was lost. Very soon, we begin to hear of Roman governors who,
when put in charge of conquered states, used their offices only
to plunder the helpless inhabitants and to return to Rome after
their terms were finished, laden with ill-gotten gains. Roman
morals, which formerly were very strict, began to grow more lax,
and in general the Roman civilization showed signs of decay.
To the north and east of the Roman Empire dwelt a people who were
to become the leaders of the new nations of Europe. These were
the free German tribes, which occupied the part of Europe
bounded, roughly, by the rivers Danube and Rhine, the Baltic Sea,
and the Carpathian Mountains. In many ways they were much less
civilized than the Romans. They were clad in skins and furs
instead of cloth. They lived in rough huts and tents or in caves
dug in the sides of a hill. They, too, like the Romans, held
human life cheap, and bloodshed and murder were common among
them. As a rule, the men scorned to work, leaving whatever labor
there was, largely to the women, while they busied themselves in
fighting and hunting, or, during their idle times, in gambling.
Nevertheless, these people, about the time that the Roman honesty
began to disappear, had virtues more like those of the early
Romans. They were frank and honorable. The men were faithful
husbands and kind fathers, and their family life was very happy.
They were barbarous and rough, but those of them who were taken
to Rome and learned the Roman civilization made finer, nobler men
than Rome was producing about the time of which we speak.
[Illustration: Germans Going Into Battle]
To the east of these German tribes were the Slavs, a people no
better civilized, but not so warlike in their nature. As the
Germans, in later years, moved on to the west, the Slavs, in
turn, moved westward and occupied much of the land which had been
left vacant by the Germans.
[Illustration: A Hun Warrior]
The inhabitants of western Europe, that is, France, Spain, and
the British Isles, were largely Celts. In fact, all Europe could
be said to be divided up among four great peoples: There were the
Latins in Italy, the Celts in western Europe, the Germans in
central Europe, and the Slavs to the east. All of these four
families were distantly related, as can be proved by the
languages which they spoke. The Greeks, while not belonging to
any one of the four, were also distant cousins of both Germans
and Latins. Probably all five peoples are descended from one big
family of tribes.
In addition to these, there were, from time to time invasions of
Europe by other nations which did not have any connection by
blood with Celts, Latins, Greeks, Germans, or Slavs. For
instance, the ferocious Huns, a people of the yellow race, rushed
into Europe about 400 A.D., but were beaten in a big battle by
the Romans and Germans and finally went back to Asia. Three
hundred years later, a great horde of Moors and Arabs from Africa
crossed over into Europe by way of the Straits of Gibraltar, and
at one time threatened to sweep before them all the Christian
nations. For several hundred years after this, they held the
southern part of Spain, but were finally driven out.
Let us now come back to the story of what happened in Europe
after the Romans had conquered all the country south and west of
the Danube and Rhine. The wild tribes of the Germans were
restlessly roaming through the central part of Europe. They were
not at peace with each other. In fact, constant war was going on.
Julius Caesar, the great Roman general, who conquered what is now
France and added it to the Roman world, tells us that one great
tribe of Germans, the Suevi (Swē′vī), made it their boast that
they would let no other tribe live anywhere near them. About a
hundred years B.C., two great German tribes. the Cimbri and the
Teutones, broke across the Rhine and poured into the Roman lands
in countless numbers. For seven years they roamed about until at
last they were conquered in two bloody battles by a Roman
general, who was Caesar’s uncle by marriage. After this time, the
Romans tried to conquer the country of the Germans and they might
have been successful but for a young German chief named Arminius.
He had lived in Rome as a young man and had learned the Romans’
method of war; so when an army came against his tribe, he taught
the Germans how to defend themselves. As a result, the Roman army
was trapped in a big forest and slaughtered, almost to a man.
[Illustration: Gaius Julius Caesar. From a bust in the British Museum]
This defeat ended any thought that the Romans may have had of
conquering all Germany. For the next one hundred and fifty years,
Germans and Romans lived apart, each afraid of the other. Then
came a time when the Germans again became the attacking party.
Other fiercer and wilder peoples, like the Huns, were assailing
them in the east and pushing them forward. They finally broke
over the Rhine-Danube boundary and poured across the Roman Empire
in wave after wave. Some of these tribes were the Vandals,
Burgundians, Goths, Franks, and Lombards. The Roman Empire went
to pieces under their savage attacks.
Questions for Review
Why is it that after nations become civilized, people need
less land to live on?
Are barbarous tribes more likely to engage in war than
civilized peoples?
Explain why clubs were the earliest weapons and why the more
civilized tribes were better armed than the barbarians.
Can a people be said to be civilized when they enjoy
bloodshed and are not moved by the sufferings of others?
What was it that lowered the morals of the Roman republic?
In what way were the Germans better men than the later
Romans?
What was the religion of the Moors and the Arabs?
Why did the German tribes invade the Roman empire?
Chapter III.
From Chiefs to Kings
The early chief a fighter.—The club the sign of power.—Free men
led by a chief of their own choosing.—The first
slaves.—Barbarians conquer civilized nations.—A ruling class
among conquered people.—All men no longer free and equal.—The
value of arms and armor.—The robber chiefs.—How kings first
came.—Treaties between tribes follow constant wars.—Tribes unite
for protection against enemies.—A king is chosen for the time
being.—Some kings refuse to resign their office when the danger
is past.—New generations grow up which never knew a kingless
state.—The word “king” becomes sacred.
The chiefs of the invading tribes knew no law except the rule of
the sword. If they saw anything which they wanted, they took it.
Rich cities were plundered at will. They did not admit any man’s
ownership of anything. In the old days when the tribes were
roaming around, there was no private ownership of land.
Everything belonged to the tribe in common. Each man had a vote
in the council of the tribe.
Among these invaders, as with all barbarous tribes, there was no
such thing as an absolute rule. A chief was obeyed because the
greater part of his people considered him the best leader in war.
Often, no doubt, when a chief had lost a battle and the majority
of the tribe had lost confidence in him, he resigned and let them
choose a new chief. (For the same reason we frequently hear today
that the prime minister, or leader of the government, of some
European country has resigned.) In spite of the fact, then, that
the chief was stronger than any other man in the tribe, if the
majority of his warriors had combined against him to put another
man in his place he could not have withstood them. Government, in
its beginning, was based upon the consent of the governed. All
men in the primitive tribe were equal in rank, except as one was
a better fighter than another, and the chief held the leadership
in war only because the members of his tribe allowed him to keep
it.
[Illustration: A Frankish Chief.]
It must be remembered that in these early days, the people had no
fixed place of abode. Their only homes were rude huts which they
could put up or tear down at very short notice; and so when they
heard of more fertile lands or a warmer climate across the
mountains to the south they used to pull up stakes and migrate in
a body, never to return. It was always the more savage and
uncivilized peoples who were most likely to migrate. The lands
which they wished to seize they generally found already settled
by other tribes, more civilized and hence more peaceful, occupied
in trade and agriculture, having gradually turned to these
pursuits from their former habits of hunting and fighting.
Sometimes these more civilized and peace-loving people were able,
by their better weapons and superior knowledge of the art of
fortifying, to beat back the invasion of the immigrating
barbarians. Oftener, though, the rougher, ruder tribes were the
victors, and settled down among the people they had conquered, to
rule them, doing no work themselves, but forcing the conquered
ones to feed and clothe them.
[Illustration: Movable Huts of Early Germans]
History is full of instances of such conquests, and they were
taking place, no doubt, ages before the times from which our
earliest records date. The best examples, however, are to be
found in the invasions of the Roman Empire by the Germanic tribes
to which we have referred above. The country between the Rhine
River and the Pyrenees Mountains, which had been called Gaul when
the Gauls lived there, became France when the Franks conquered
the Gauls and stayed to live among them. In like manner, two
German tribes became the master races in Spain. The Burgundians
came down from the shores of the Baltic Sea and gave their name
to their new home in the fertile valley of the Saône (Sōn); the
Vandals came out of Germany to roam through Spain, finally
founding a kingdom in Africa; while the Lombards crossed the Alps
to become the masters of the Valley of the Po, whither the Gauls
had gone before them, seven hundred years earlier.
[Illustration: Goths on the March]
[Illustration: Franks Crossing the Rhine]
The island now known as Great Britain, which was inhabited two
thousand years ago by the Britons and Gaels, Celtic peoples, was
overrun and conquered in part about 450 A.D. by the Saxons and
Angles, Germanic tribes, after whom part of the island was called
Angleland. (The men from the south of England are of the same
blood as the Saxons in the German army, against whom they had to
fight in the great war.) Then came Danes, who partially conquered
the Angles and Saxons, and after them, in 1066 A.D., the country
was again conquered by the Normans, descendants of some Norsemen,
who, one hundred and fifty years before, had come down from
Norway and conquered a large territory in the northwestern part
of France.
[Illustration: Men of Normandy Landing in England.]
In some cases, the conquered tribes moved on to other lands,
leaving their former homes to their conquerors. In this way the
Britons and Gaels gave up the greater part of their land to the
Angles and Saxons and withdrew to the hills and mountains of
Wales, Cornwall, and northern Scotland. In other cases, the
conquered people and their conquerors inhabited the same lands
side by side, as the Normans settled down in England among the
Anglo-Saxons.
In the early days of savagery, one tribe would frequently make a
raid upon another neighboring tribe and bring home with it some
captives who became slaves, working without pay for their
conquerors and possessing no more rights than beasts of burden.
(This custom exists today in the interior of Africa, and was
responsible for the infamous African slave trade. Black captives
were sold to white traders through the greed of their captors,
who forgot that their own relatives and friends might be carried
off and sold across the seas by some other tribe of blacks.)
When these slaves were kept as the servants of their conquerors,
their number was very small as compared with that of their
masters. When, on the other hand, a tribe settled among a people
whom they had conquered, they often found themselves fewer in
numbers, and kept their leadership only by their greater strength
and fighting ability.
Here there had arisen a new situation: all men were no longer
equal, led by a chief of their own choosing, but instead, the
greater part of them now had no voice in the government. They had
become subjects, working to earn their own living and also, as
has been said, to support in idleness their conquerors.
This ability of the few to rule the many and force them to
support their masters was increased as certain peoples learned
better than others how to make strong armor and effective
weapons. Nearly five hundred years before the time of Christ, at
the battle of Marathon (Măr′ȧ thŏn), the Greeks discovered
that one Greek, clad in metal armor and armed with a long spear,
was worth ten Persians wearing leather and carrying a bow and
arrows or a short sword. One hundred and sixty years later, a
small army of well-equipped Macedonian Greeks, led by that
wonderful general, Alexander the Great, defeated nearly forty
times its number of Persians in a great battle in Asia and
conquered a vast empire.
[Illustration: Alexander Defeating the Persians]
In later times, as better and better armor was made, the question
of wealth entered in. The chief who had money enough to buy the
best arms for his men could defeat his poorer neighbor and force
him to pay money as to a ruler. Finally, in the so-called “Middle
Ages,” before the invention of gunpowder, one knight, armed from
crown to sole in steel, was worth in battle as much as one
hundred poorly-armed farmers or “peasants” as they are called in
Europe.
In the “Dark Ages,”[2] after all these barbarians that we have named
had swarmed over Europe, and before the governments of modern times
were fully grown, there were hundreds of robber chiefs, who, scattered
throughout a country, were in the habit of collecting tribute at the
point of the sword from the peaceful peasants who lived near. This
tribute they collected in some cases, regularly, a fixed amount each
month or year, just as if they had a right to collect it, like a
government tax collector. It might be money or food or fodder, or fuel.
The robber chiefs were well armed themselves and were able to give good
weapons and armor to their men, who lived either in the chief’s castle
or in small houses built very near it. They likewise plundered any
travelers who came by, unless their numbers and weapons made them look
too dangerous to be attacked. But the regular tribute forced from the
peaceful farmers was the chief source of their income. The robber chief
and his men lived a life of idleness when they were not out upon some
raid for plunder, and the honest, industrious peasants worked hard
enough to support both their own families and those of the robbers.
[2] The “Dark Ages” came before the “Middle Ages.” They were called
“dark” because the barbarians had extinguished nearly all civilization
and learning.
[Illustration: A Knight in Armor]
These robber chiefs had no right but might. They were outlaws,
and lived either in a country which had no government and laws,
or in one whose government was too weak to protect its people.
They were no worse, however, than the so-called feudal barons who
came after them, who oppressed the people even more, because they
had on their side whatever law and government existed in those
days.
Now let us stop to consider how first there came to be kings. In
the early days of the human race and also in later days among
barbarous peoples, the land was very sparsely settled. The reason
lay in the chief occupations of the men. A small tribe might
inhabit a great stretch of territory through which they wandered
to keep within reach of plenty of game. As time went on, however,
the population increased, and, as agriculture took the place of
hunting, and homes became more lasting, tribes found themselves
living in smaller and smaller tracts of land, and hence nearer to
their neighbors. In some cases, constant fighting went on, just
as Caesar tells us that two thousand years ago, the Swiss and the
Germans fought almost daily battles back and forth across the
Rhine. In other cases, the tribes found it better for all
concerned to make treaties of peace with their neighbors, and if
they did not exchange visits and mix on friendly terms, at least
they did not attack each other.
Finally, one day there would come to several tribes which had
treaties with each other a common danger, such as an invasion by
some horde of another race or nation. Common interest would drive
them together for mutual protection, and the chief of some one of
them would be chosen to lead their joint army. In this way, we
find the fifteen tribes of the Belgians uniting against the Roman
army led by Julius Caesar, and electing as king over them the
chief of one of the tribes “on account of his justice and
wisdom.” Five years later, in the year 52 B.C., we find
practically all the inhabitants of what is now France united into
a nation under the leadership of Vercingetorix (Vẽr sin jet′ō
riks) in one last effort to free themselves from Rome. Five
hundred years later, the Romans themselves were driven to join
forces with two of the Germanic tribes to check the swift
invasion of the terrible Huns.
In some cases, these alliances were only for a short time and the
kingships were merely temporary. In other cases, the wars that
drove the tribes to unite under one great chief or king lasted
for years or even centuries, so that new generations grew up who
had never lived under any other government than that of a king.
Thus when the wars were ended, the tribes continued to be ruled
by the one man, although the reason for the kingship had ceased
to be. In the days of the Roman republic, from 500 to 100 B.C.,
when grave danger arose, the senate, or council of elders,
appointed one man who was called the dictator, and this dictator
ruled like an absolute monarch until the danger was past. Then,
like the famous Cincinnatus, he gave up the position and retired
to private life. The first lasting kingships, then, began, as it
were, by the refusal of some dictator to resign when the need for
his rule was ended.
By this time, the custom of choosing the son of a chief or king
to take his father’s place was fairly well settled, and it did
not take long to have it understood as a regular thing that at a
king’s death he should be followed by his oldest son. Often there
were quarrels and even civil wars caused by ambitious younger
sons, who did not submit to their elder brothers without a
struggle, but as people grew to be more civilized and
peace-loving, they found it better to have the oldest son looked
upon as the rightful heir to the kingship.
As kingdoms grew larger, and more and more people came to be
busied in agriculture, trade, and even, on a small scale, in
manufacture, the warriors grew fewer in proportion, and people
began to forget that the king was originally only a war leader,
and that the office was created through military need. They came
to regard the rule of the king as a matter of course and stopped
thinking of themselves as having any right to say how they should
be governed. Kings were quick to foster this feeling. For the
purpose of making their own positions sure, they were in the
habit of impressing it upon their people that the kingship was a
divine institution. They proclaimed that the office of king was
made by the gods, or in Christian nations, by God, and that it
was the divine will that the people of the nations should be
ruled by kings. The great Roman orator, Cicero (Sĭs′erō), in a
speech delivered in the year 66 B.C., referring to people who
lived in kingdoms, says that the name of king “seems to them a
great and sacred thing.” This same feeling has lasted through all
the ages down to the present time, and the majority of the people
in European kingdoms, even among the educated classes, still look
upon a king as a superior being, and are made happy and proud if
they ever have a chance to do him a service of any sort.
Questions for Review
Why was it that in barbarian tribes there was no private
ownership of land?
What is meant by saying that government was based upon the
consent of the governed?
Was there anything besides love of plunder that induced the
German tribes to move southward?
Explain the beginnings of slavery.
Explain the value of armor in early times.
What is meant by the “Dark Ages”?
What is meant by saying that the fighting men were parasites?
When the first kings were chosen was it intended that they
should be rulers for life?
Is it easy for a man in power to retain this power?
Why is it that most Europeans bow low before a king?
Chapter IV.
Master and Man
The land is the king’s.—He lends it to barons.—Barons lend it to
knights and smaller barons.—Smaller barons collect rent for it
from the peasants.—A father’s lands are lent to his son.—Barons
pay for the land by furnishing men for the king’s wars.—No
account is taken of the rights of the peasant.—The peasant, the
only producer, is despised by the fighting men.—If a baron
rebels, his men must rebel also.—Dukes against kings.—What killed
the feudal system.—Feudal wrongs alive today.
When one great tribe or nation invaded and conquered a country,
as the Ostrogoths came into Italy in the year 489 A.D., or as the
Normans entered England in 1066, their king at once took it for
granted that he owned all the conquered land. In some cases, he
might divide the kingdom up among his chiefs, giving a county to
each of forty or fifty leaders. These great leaders (dukes or
barons, as they were called in the Norman-French language, or
earls, as the English named them) would in turn each divide up
his county among several less important chiefs, whom we may call
lesser or little barons. Each little baron might have several
knights and squires, who lived in or near his castle and had
received from him tracts of land corresponding in size, perhaps,
to the American township and who, therefore, fought under his
banner in war.
[Illustration: A Norman Castle in England]
Each baron had under him a strong body of fighting men,
“men-at-arms,” as they were called, or “retainers,” who in return
for their “keep,” that is, their food and lodging, and a chance
to share the plunder gained in war, swore to be faithful to him,
became his men, and gave him the service called homage. (This
word comes from _hōmō_, the Latin for “man.”) The lesser baron,
in turn, swore homage to, and was the “man” of the great baron or
earl. Whenever the earl called on these lesser chiefs to gather
their fighting men and report to him, they had to obey, serving
him as unquestioningly as their squires and retainers obeyed
them. The earl or duke swore homage to the king, from whom he had
received his land.
This, then, was the feudal system (so named from the word
_feudum_, which, in Latin, meant a piece of land the use of which
was given to a man in return for his services in war), a system
which reversed the natural laws of society, and stood it on its
apex, like a cone balanced on its point. For instead of saying
that the land was the property of the people of the tribe or
nation, it started by taking for granted that the land all
belonged to the king. The idea was that the king did not give the
land, outright, to his dukes and earls, but that he gave them, in
return for their faithful support and service in war, the _use_
of the land during their lifetime, or so long as they remained
true to him. In _Macbeth_, we read how, for his treason, the
lands of the thane (earl) of Cawdor were taken from him by the
Scottish king and given to the thane of Glamis. The lands thus
lent were called fiefs. Upon the death of the tenant, they went
back to the king or duke who had given them in the first place,
and he at once gave them to some other one of his followers upon
the same terms. It often happened that upon the death of an earl
or baron his son was granted the lands which his father had held,
Finally, in many counties, it grew into a custom, and the oldest
son took possession of his father’s fief, but not without first
going to the king and swearing homage and fidelity to him.
Two things must be kept in mind if we are to understand the
system fully. In the first place, in the division of the lands
among the barons of the conquering nation, no account was taken
of the peasants. As they were of the defeated people, their
rights to the land were not once considered. In many countries,
the victors thought of them as part and parcel of the conquered
territory. They “went with” the land and were considered by the
lord of the county as merely his servants. When one lord turned
over a farm to another, the farmers were part of the bargain. If
any of them tried to run away, they were brought back and
whipped. They tilled the land and raised live stock, giving a
certain share of their yearly crop and a certain number of
beeves, hogs, sheep, etc., to the lord, as rent for the land,
much as the free farmers in other countries paid tribute to the
robber chieftains. Thus the one class of people who really earned
their right to live, by producing wealth, were oppressed and
robbed by all the others. Note this point, for there are wrongs
existing today that are due to the fact that the feudal system is
not wholly stamped out in some countries.
[Illustration: A Vassal doing Homage to his Lord]
In the second place, it must be noted that the king was not the
direct master of all the people. Only the great lords had sworn
homage to him. He was lord of the dukes, earls, and barons. The
less important barons swore homage to the great barons, and the
knights, squires, retainers, and yeomen swore homage to the
lesser barons. If a lesser baron had subdivided his fief among
certain knights and squires, the peasants owed allegiance, not to
him, but to the squire to whom they had been assigned. Thus, if a
“man” rebelled against his lord, all of his knights, retainers,
etc., must rebel also. If, for instance, a great duke refused to
obey his king and broke his oath of allegiance, all his little
barons and knights must turn disloyal too, or rather, must remain
loyal, for their oaths had been taken to support the duke, and
not the king. History is full of such cases. In many instances,
dukes became so powerful that they were able to make war on even
terms with kings. The great Dukes of Burgundy for a time kept the
kings of France in awe of their power; the Duke of Northumberland
in 1403 raised an army that almost overthrew King Henry Fourth of
England; the Duke of York, in 1461, drove Henry Sixth from the
throne of England and became king in his place.
[Illustration: William the Conqueror]
A strange case arose when, in 1066, William, who as duke of
Normandy had sworn homage to the king of France, became, through
conquest, king of England. His sons, great-grandsons, and
great-great-grandsons continued for one hundred and fifty years
to be obliged to swear allegiance to the French kings in order to
keep the duchy of Normandy. It was as if the Governor of Texas
had led an army into Mexico, conquered it, and become Emperor of
that country, without resigning his governorship or giving up his
American citizenship.
Two things which tended to break down the feudal system and bring
more power to the common people were, first, the invention of
gunpowder, and, second, the rise of towns. A man with a musket
could bring down a knight in armor as easily as he could the most
poorly armored peasant. Kings, in fighting to control their great
lords, gave more freedom to citizens of towns in return for their
help. The king’s armies came to be recruited largely from
townspeople, who were made correspondingly free from the feudal
lords.
The rule of the feudal system, that each man owed a certain
amount of military service to his ruler has lasted to the present
day and is responsible for much of the misery that now exists.
Kings went to war with each other simply to increase their
territories. The more land a king had under his control, the more
people who owed him taxes, and the greater number he could get
into his army, the greater became his ambition to spread his
kingdom still farther.
Questions for Review
How was it that the king of a tribe could claim to own all
the land in the country which he had invaded?
Did the kings, lords, and fighting men contribute anything to
the welfare of the working classes?
Would the peasants have been better off if all the fighting
men, lords, dukes, kings, etc., had suddenly been killed?
Can you see why in some countries in Europe a man who earns
his living is looked down upon by the nobles?
What is meant by saying that the feudal system turns society
upside down?
Why did the farmers continue to feed the fighting men?
Explain how the use of gunpowder in warfare helped to break
up the feudal system.
How did the rise of cities also help to do away with the
feudal system?
Chapter V.
A Babel of Tongues
The great family of languages.—Few languages in Europe not
belonging to the family.—The dying Celtic languages.—The three
branches of the Germanic family.—The influence of the Latin
tongue on the south of Europe.—The many Slavic peoples.—The map
as divided by kings without regard to peoples and languages.—The
strange mixture in Austria-Hungary.—The southeast of Europe.—The
Greeks and Dacians.—The Roman colonists.—The Slavs.—The
Volgars.—The Skipetars.—A hopeless mixture.
In Chapter II it was pointed out that almost all the peoples of
Europe were related, in one big family of tribes. It is likely
that the forefathers of the Celts, the Latins, the Germans, the
Greeks, and the Slavs belonged to one big tribe which had its
home back in the highlands of Central Asia. As a general rule,
the relationship of peoples to each other can be told by the
languages which they speak. If two tribes are related because
their forefathers once belonged to the same tribe, it is almost
certain that they will show this relationship in their languages.
The language of England a thousand years ago was very much like
the language of the Germans, for the English were originally
German tribes. Even today, it is easy to see that English is a
Germanic language. Take the English words house, father, mother,
brother, water, here, is, etc. The German words which mean the
same are _haus, vater, mutter, bruder, wasser, hier, ist_. It is
very plain that the two languages must have come from the same
source.
There are professors in European colleges who have spent their
whole lives studying this relationship of languages. These men
have proved not only that almost all the languages of Europe are
related, but that the language of the Persians, and that of some
of the old tribes in Hindustan also belong to one great family of
tongues. Let us take the word for mother. In one of the ancient
languages of Hindustan it was _matr_; in the Greek, it was
_mātār_; in the Latin _mater_ (mätār); in the Bohemian
_matka_; in the German _mu̠tter_; in the Spanish mädre; in the
Norwegian _mōder_, etc. This great family of languages is called
“the Indo-European group,” because the tribes which spoke them,
originally inhabitants of Asia, have scattered all over India and
Europe. The only peoples in Europe whose languages do not belong
to it are the Finns and Laplanders of the north, the Basques
(Bȧsks) of the Pyrenees Mountains, the Hungarians, the Gypsies,
and the Turks.
The descendants of the old Celtic peoples have not kept up the
Celtic languages to any great extent. The reason for this is that
first the Romans and then the Germanic tribes conquered most of
the lands where the Celts lived. In this way, Spain, Portugal,
France, and Belgium now talk languages that have grown from the
Latin, the language of Rome. The Celts in the British Isles now
all talk English, because the English, who were a Germanic
people, conquered them and forced them to use their language.
Patriotic Irishmen and Welshmen (who are descendants of the
Celtic tribes) are trying to keep alive the Irish and Welsh
languages, but all of the young people in the British Isles learn
English, and they are generally content to talk only one
language. The other Celtic languages which have existed within
the last one hundred years are the Gaelic of the north of
Scotland, the Breton of western France, and the Cornish of the
southwestern corner of England.
The Germanic languages (sometimes called Teutonic) are found in
three parts of Europe today. The Scandinavian languages, Danish,
Norwegian, and Swedish, belong to this family. Western Austria
and Germany form, with Holland and Western Belgium, a second
group of German-speaking nations. (The people of eastern Belgium
are Celts and talk a kind of French.) The third part of Europe
which uses a Germanic language is England.
In an earlier chapter we learned how the Celts in France, Spain,
and Portugal gave up their own languages and used the Latin.
Latin languages today are found also in the southern and western
parts of Switzerland, all over Italy, and in Roumania.
We learned also about the Slavs who lived to the eastward of the
Germanic tribes. When the Germans moved west, these Slavs
followed them and occupied the lands which had just been left
vacant. In this way, we find Slavic peoples talking Slavic
(sometimes called Slavonic) languages in the parts of Europe to
the east and south of the Germans. More than half of the
inhabitants of Austria-Hungary are Slavs, although the Austrians
proper are a Germanic people, and the Hungarians do not belong to
the Indo-European family at all. The Serbians and Montenegrins
are Slavs. The Poles and Russians are Slavs. The Bulgarians speak
a Slavic language and have some Slavic blood in them, although,
as will be pointed out later, originally they did not belong to
the Slavic family.
[Illustration: Map: Distribution Of Peoples According to Relationship]
The Greeks and Albanians belong to the great Indo-European family
of tribes, but their languages are not closely related to any of
the four great branches.
[Illustration: Distribution Of Languages]
The two maps on pages 65 and 66 are very much alike and yet in
some respects very different. The first shows how Europe is
largely inhabited by peoples of the great Indo-European family.
Those who are descended from the Celts are marked Celtic even
though today they have given up their Celtic language, as have
the Cornish in England and the inhabitants of Spain, France,
eastern Belgium, and the greater part of Ireland. The Bulgarians
are marked as not belonging to the great family, although they
speak a Slavic language.
In the second map, the distribution of languages is shown. You
will notice that the Celtic languages are found only in small
parts of the British Isles, and in the westernmost point of
France. The Bulgarians are here marked Slavic because their
language belongs to that branch. One of the most curious things
about the two maps is the presence of little spots like islands,
particularly made up of German-speaking peoples. There are
several of these little islands in Russia. They have been there
for nearly two hundred years. A traveler crossing the southern
part of Russia is astonished to find districts as large as an
American county where not a word of Russian is spoken. The people
are all of Germanic blood, although they live under the
government of Russia. In the same way, there is a large German
island in the midst of the Roumanians in Transylvania and another
between the Slovaks and Poles at the foot of the Carpathian
Mountains. There is a large Hungarian island in Transylvania
also, entirely surrounded by Germans and Roumanians. The table on
the opposite page shows the main branches of the Indo-European
family that are found in Europe.
The Indo-European Family of Languages
(_a_) Hindu branch
(_b_) Persian branch
(_c_) Celtic branch
Gāe′lic (northern Scotland) Welsh Cornish (dead)
Erse (Irish) Brē′ton (western France)
(_d_) Latin branch
Portuguese Spanish French Romansh (southeastern Switzerland)
Italian Roumanian
(_e_) Germanic branch
Norwegian Danish Swedish Dutch Flemish (Belgium)
Low German High German English
(_f_) Slavonic branch
Russian Polish Lettish Lithuanian Old Prussian (dead) Czech
(Bohemian [pronounced Chĕck]) Slō vak′ (northern Hungary)
Serbian Bulgarian Slove′nian (southwestern Austria)
Crōa′tian (southern Austria)
Ruthē′nian (northeastern Austria-Hungary, and southwestern
Russia)
} } Baltic states of Russia }
(_g_) Greek
(_h_) Albā′nian
The main source of the present trouble in Europe is that kings
and their ministers and generals, like their ancestors, the
feudal lords, never considered the wishes of the people when they
changed the boundaries of kingdoms. Austria-Hungary is a good
example. The Austrians and Hungarians were two very different
peoples. They had nothing in common and did not wish to be joined
under one ruler, but a king of Hungary, dying, left no son to
succeed him, and his only daughter was married to the archduke of
Austria. This archduke of Austria (a descendant of the counts of
Hapsburg) was also emperor of Germany and king of Bohemia,
although the Bohemian people had not chosen him as their ruler.
The Hungarians, before their union with Austria, had conquered
certain Slavic tribes and part of the Roumanians. Later Austria
annexed part of Poland. In this way, the empire became a jumble
of languages and nationalities. When its congress is called
together, the official announcement is read in eleven different
languages. Forty-one different dialects are talked in an area not
as large as that of the state of Texas.
We must remember that besides the literary or written languages
of each country there are several spoken dialects. A man from
Devonshire, England, meeting a man from Yorkshire in the north of
the same country, has difficulty in understanding many words in
his speech. The language of the south of Scotland also is
English, although it is very different from the English that we
in America are taught. A Frenchman from the Pyrenees Mountains
was taught in school to speak and read the French language as we
find it in books. Yet besides this, he knows a dialect that is
talked by the country people around him, that can not be
understood by the peasants from the north of France near the
Flemish border. The man who lives in the east of France can
understand the dialect of the Italians from the west of Italy
much better than he can that of the Frenchman from the Atlantic
coast.
In America, with people moving around from place to place by
means of stage coach, steamboat, and railroad, there has been no
great chance to develop dialects, although we can instantly tell
the New Englander, the southerner, or the westerner by his
speech. It should be remembered that in Europe, for centuries,
the people were kept on their own farms or in their own towns.
The result of this was that each little village or city has its
own peculiar language. It is said that persons who have studied
such language matters carefully, after conversing with a man from
Europe, can tell within thirty miles where his home used to be in
the old country. There are no sharply marked boundaries of
languages. The dialects of France shade off into those of Spain
on the one hand and into those of the Flemish and the Italian on
the other.
[Illustration: Southeastern Europe, 600 B.C.]
The British Isles furnish us with four or five different
nationalities. The people of the north of Ireland are really
lowland Scotch of Germanic descent, while the other three-fourths
of Ireland is inhabited by Celts. To make the difference all the
greater, the Celts are almost universally Catholics, while the
Scotch-Irish are Protestants. The people of the north of Scotland
are Gaels, a Celtic race having no connection in language or
blood with the people of the southern half of that country. The
Welsh are a Celtic people, having no relationship with the
English, who are a Germanic people. The Welsh and the Cornish of
Cornwall and the people of highland Scotland are the descendants
of the ancient Britons and Gaels who inhabited the island when
Julius Caesar and the Romans first landed there. Then five
hundred years afterwards, as has already been told, came great
swarms of Germans (Angles, Saxons, and Jutes), who drove the
Britons to the west and north, and settled the country now known
as England. After these, you will recall, came a number of Danes,
another Germanic people, who settled the east coast of England.
Two hundred years later, the Normans came from France. These
Normans had been living in France for a century or two, but had
come originally from Norway. Normans, Danes, Angles, and Saxons
all mixed to make the modern English. Together, they fought the
Scotch, the Welsh and the Irish, and having conquered them,
oppressed them harshly for many centuries.
[Illustration: Southeastern Europe, 975 A.D.]
But it is in the southeastern corner of Europe that one finds the
worst jumble of nationalities. Six hundred years before Christ,
the Greeks and their rougher cousins, the Thracians, Macedonians,
and Dacians inhabited this district. When one of the Roman
Emperors conquered the Dacians about 100 A.D., he planted a large
Roman colony north of the Danube River. Then came the West Goths,
who swept into this country, but soon left it for the west of
Europe. Next came the Slavic tribes who are the ancestors of the
modern Serbs. Following these, came a large tribe which did not
belong to the Indo-European family, but was distantly related to
the Finns and the Turks. These people were called the Volgars,
for they came from the country around the River Volga. Before
long, we find them called the Bulgars. (The letters B and V are
often interchanged in the languages of south-eastern Europe. The
people of western Europe used to call the country of the Serbs
Servia, but the Serbs objected, saying that the word _servio_, in
Latin, means “to be a slave,” and that as they were not slaves,
they wanted their country to be called by its true name, Serbia.
The Greeks, on the other hand, pronounce the letter B as though
it were V.)
A strange thing happened to the Volgars or Bulgars. They
completely gave up their Asiatic language and adopted a new one,
which became in time the purest of the Slavic tongues. They
intermarried with the Slavs around them and adopted Slavic names.
They founded a flourishing nation which lay between the kingdom
of Serbia and the Greek Empire of Constantinople.
North of the Bulgars lay the country of the Roumani (ro͞o
mä′nï). These people claimed to be descended from the Roman
Emperor’s colonists, as was previously told, but the reason their
language is so much like the Italian is that a large number of
people from the north of Italy moved into the country nearly a
thousand years after the first Roman colonists settled there.
From 900 to 1300 A.D., south-eastern Europe was inhabited by
Serbians, Bulgarians, Roumanians, and Greeks.
[Illustration: A Typical Bulgarian Family]
A fifth people perhaps ought to be counted here, the Albanians.
(See map) This tribe is descended from the Illyrians, who
inhabited the eastern coast of the Adriatic Sea even before the
time of the Roman Empire. Their language, like the Greek, is a
branch of the Indo-European family which is neither Latin,
Celtic, Germanic, nor Slavic. They are distant cousins of the
Italians and are also slightly related to the Greeks. They are a
wild, fierce, uncivilized people, and have never known the
meaning of law and order. Robbery and warfare are common. Each
village is always fighting with the people of the neighboring
towns. The Albanians, or Skipetars (skïp′ĕtars) as they call
themselves, were Christians until they were conquered by the
Turks about 1460. Since that time, the great majority of them
have been staunch believers in the Mohammedan religion.
Questions for Review
Where did the great Indo-European family of languages have
its beginning?
Why is it that the Celtic languages are dying out?
What killed the Celtic languages in Spain and France?
What are the three parts of Europe where Germanic languages
are spoken?
In what parts of Europe are languages spoken which are
descended from the Latin?
Explain the presence in Austria-Hungary of eleven different
peoples?
Are the Bulgarians really a Slavic people?
Chapter VI.
“The Terrible Turk”
The Greek Empire at Constantinople.—The invading Mohammedans.—The
Ottoman Turks.—The fall of Constantinople.—The enslaving of the
Bulgars, Serbs, Greeks, Albanians, and Roumanians.—One little
part of Serbia unconquered.—The further conquests of the
Turks.—The attack on Vienna.—John Sobieski to the rescue.—The
waning of the Turkish empire.—The Spanish Jews.—The jumble of
languages and peoples in southeastern Europe.
In the last chapter, we referred briefly to the Greek empire at
Constantinople. This city was originally called Byzantium, and
was a flourishing Greek commercial center six hundred years
before Christ. Eleven hundred years after this, a Roman emperor
named Constantine decided that he liked Byzantium better than
Rome. Accordingly, he moved the capital of the empire to the
Greek city, and renamed it Constantinopolis (the word _polis_
means “city” in Greek). Before long, we find the Roman empire
divided into two parts, the capital of one at Rome, of the other
at Constantinople. This eastern government was continued by the
Greeks nearly one thousand years after the government of the
western empire had been seized by the invading Germanic tribes.
[Illustration: The Turkish Sultan before Constantinople]
For years, this Greek empire at Constantinople had been obliged
to fight hard against the Mohammedans who came swarming across
the fertile plains of Mesopotamia (mĕs′ō pō tā′ mĭ ā) and
Asia Minor. (Mesopotamia is the district lying between the Tigris
(tī′grĭs) and Euphrates (ūfrā′tēz) Rivers. Its name in Greek
means “between the rivers.”) The fiercest of the Mohammedan
tribes, the warlike Ottoman Turks, were the last to arrive. For
several years, they thundered at the gates of Constantinople,
while the Greek Empire grew feebler and feebler.
At last in 1453, their great cannon made a breach in the walls,
and the Turks poured through. The Greek Empire was a thing of the
past, and all of southeastern Europe lay at the mercy of the
invading Moslems (another name for “Mohammedans”). The Turks did
not drive out the Greeks, Bulgarians, Serbians, and Albanians,
but settled down among them as the ruling, military class. They
strove to force these peoples to give up Christianity and turn
Mohammedans, but were successful only in the case of the
Skipetars of Albania. The Albanians, Serbians, Bulgarians,
Greeks, and Roumanians remained where they had been, but were
oppressed by the newcomers.
For more than two hundred years after the capture of
Constantinople, the Turks pushed their conquests farther and
farther into Europe. The entire coast of the Black Sea fell into
their hands. All of Greece, all of Bulgaria, and all of Roumania
became part of their empire. Of the kingdom of Serbia, one small
province remained unconquered. Up in the mountains near the coast
of the Adriatic gathered the people of one county of the Serbian
kingdom. As the Turks attacked them, they retreated higher and
higher up the mountain sides and rolled huge stones down upon the
invaders. Finally, the Turk became disgusted, and concluded that
“the game was not worth the candle.” Thus the little nation of
Montenegro was formed, composed of Serbians who never submitted
to the Ottoman rule. (The inhabitants of this small country call
it Tzernagorah (tzẽr nä gō′ra); the Italians call it
Montenegro. Both of these names mean “Dark Mountain.”)
Not satisfied with these conquests, the Turks pushed on, gaining
control of the greater part of the kingdom of Hungary. About
1682, they were pounding at the forts around Vienna. The heroic
king of Poland, John Sobieski (sō bĭ ĕs′kĭ), came to the
rescue of the Austrian emperor with an army of Poles and Germans
and completely defeated the Turks. He saved Vienna, and ended any
further advance of the Turkish rule into Europe. (The map on page
82 shows the high water mark of the Turkish conquests.)
It must be remembered that the original inhabitants of the
conquered lands were still living where they always had lived.
The Turks were very few in number compared with the millions of
people who inhabited their empire and paid them tribute. Many
wars were caused by this conquest, but it was two hundred and
thirty years before the Christian peoples won back their
territory.
[Illustration: Southeastern Europe 1690 A.D.]
By the year 1685, the Hungarians had begun to win back part of
their kingdom. By 1698, almost all of Hungary and Transylvania
was free from Turkish rule. It will be recalled that a certain
Count of Hapsburg had become Emperor of Germany, and when we say
Germany, we include Austria, which had become the home of the
Hapsburgs. It was shortly after this that the Hapsburg family
came to be lords of Hungary also, through the marriage of one of
their emperors with the only daughter of the king of that
country. (See page 69.)
In this way, when the province of Bukowina and the territory
known as the Banat, just north of the Danube and west of what is
now Roumania, were reconquered from the Turks, it was the joint
kingdom to which they were attached. (Bukowina has never been a
part of Hungary. It is still a crown land, or county subject to
the emperor of Austria personally.)
During the 15th century, the southeastern part of Europe came to
be inhabited by a still different people. Not long after
Ferdinand and Isabella, the king and queen of Spain, had
conquered the Moorish kingdom of Granada (see Chapter II) that
used to stretch across the southern half of Spain, the Spaniards
decided to drive out of their country all “unbelievers,” that is,
all who were not Christians of the Catholic faith. (This happened
in 1492, the same year that they sent Columbus to America.) The
Moors retreated into Africa, which was their former home, but the
millions of Spanish Jews had no homeland to which to return. In
the midst of their distress, the Sultan of Turkey, knowing them
to be prosperous and well-behaved citizens, invited them to enter
his land. They did so by hundreds of thousands.
The descendants of these people are to be found today throughout
the Balkan peninsula, though mainly in the large cities. They are
so numerous in Constantinople that four newspapers are published
there in the Spanish language, but printed in Hebrew characters.
The city of Salonika, a prosperous seaport of 140,000 people,
which used to belong to Turkey but now is part of Greece, has
over 50,000 of these Jews. They readily learn other tongues, and
many of them can talk in four or five languages besides their
native Spanish, which they still use in the family circle.
Constantinople (called Stamboul by the Turks) is a polyglot city,
that is, a place of many languages. Greeks, Turks, Armenians,
Jews, Italians are all found mingled together.
[Illustration: A Scene in Salonicka]
The main source of trouble in the Balkan peninsula is that the
races and nationalities are so jumbled together that it is almost
impossible to say which land should belong to which nation. Take
the case of Macedonia (the district just northwest of the Aegean
Sea). It is inhabited largely by Bulgarians, and yet there are so
many Greeks and Serbs mixed in with the former that at the close
of the last Balkan war in 1913, Greece and Serbia both claimed it
as belonging to them because of the “prevailing nationality of
its inhabitants!” In other words, the Serbians claimed that the
inhabitants of Macedonia were largely Serbs, the Greeks were
positive that its people were largely Greeks, while Bulgaria is
very resentful today because the land was not given to her, on
the ground that almost all its inhabitants are Bulgarians!
Religious and racial hatreds have had a great deal to do with
making the Balkan peninsula a hotbed of political trouble. Right
in the center of Bulgaria, for example, speaking the same
language, dressing exactly alike, doing business with each other
on an equal footing, are to be found the native Bulgarian and the
descendant of the Turkish conquerors; yet one goes to the Greek
Orthodox Church to worship and the other to the Mohammedan
Mosque. With memories of hundreds of years of wrong and
oppression behind them, Bulgarians and Turks hate and despise
each other with a fierce intensity. Let us now leave the Balkan
states, with their seething pot of racial and religious hatred,
and turn to other causes of European wars.
Questions for Review
What became of the Greeks when the Turks captured
Constantinople?
Why could one county of Serbia resist the Turks?
How long after the fall of Constantinople were the Turks
threatening Vienna?
Explain how Constantinople has people of so many different
nationalities.
Why have the Turk and Bulgarian never been friendly?
Chapter VII.
The Rise of Modern Nations
How the peasants looked upon war.—War the opportunity of the
fighting men.—The decreasing power of barons.—The growth of royal
power.—How four little kingdoms became Spain.—Other kingdoms of
Europe.—The rise of Russia.—The Holy Roman Empire.—The
electors.—The rise of Brandenburg.—The elector of Brandenburg
becomes King of Prussia.—Frederick the Great.—The seizure of
Silesia and the consequent wars.
You have already been shown how in the early days of the feudal
system, the lords, with their squires, knights, and fighting men
made up a class of the population whose only trade was war, and
how the poor peasants were compelled to raise crops and live
stock enough to feed both themselves and the fighting men. These
peasants had no love for war, as war resulted only in their
losing their possessions in case their country was invaded by the
enemy. The fighting men, on the other hand, had nothing to do
unless war was going on, and as those who were not killed
returned from a war with rich plunder in case they were
victorious, they were always looking for a chance to start
trouble with some neighboring country.
In those days, kings cared little what their nobles did, so long
as the nobles furnished them with fighting men in times of war.
As a result, one county in a certain kingdom would often be at
war with a neighboring county. The fighting man either was killed
in battle or he came out of it with increased glory and plunder,
but the peasants and the common people had nothing to gain by war
and everything to lose. As we have seen, force ruled the world,
and the common people had no voice in their government. The
workers were looked down upon by the members of the fighting
class, who never did a stroke of work themselves and considered
honest toil as degrading. In fact, as one writer has said, the
only respectable trade in Europe in those days was what we today
would call highway robbery.
France and England in the 15th Century
Gradually in most of the European countries the king was able to
put down the power of his nobles and make himself master over the
whole nation. In this way a strong central power grew up in
France. After the death of Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, in
1477, no noble dared to question the leadership of the king of
France. The same thing was true in England after the battle of
Bosworth in 1485, which resulted in the death of King Richard III
and the setting of the Tudor family on the throne.
Spain and Other Kingdoms
Spain had been divided into four little kingdoms: Leon, Castile,
Aragon, and Granada, the latter ruled by the Moors. The nation
marriage of Ferdinand of Aragon to Isabella of Castile and Leon
joined the three Christian kingdoms into one, and after 1492,
when the Moors were defeated and Granada annexed to the realm of
Ferdinand and Isabella, Spain became one kingdom. About this
time, also, there had grown up a strong kingdom of Hungary, a
kingdom of Portugal, a kingdom of Poland, and one of Denmark.
Norway was ruled by the Danes, but Sweden was a separate kingdom.
In Russia, Czar Ivan the Terrible (1533-84) had built up a strong
power which was still further strengthened by Czar Peter the
Great (1690-1725).
The Holy Roman Empire
The rest of the continent of Europe, with the exception of the
Turkish Empire, formed what was called the Holy Roman Empire, a
rule which had been founded by Charlemagne (A.D. 800), the great
Frankish monarch, who had been crowned in Rome by the pope as
ruler of the western world. (The name “Holy Roman Empire” was not
used by Charlemagne. We first hear of it under Otto I, the Saxon
emperor, who was crowned in 962.)
[Illustration: The Empire of Charlemagne]
This Holy Roman Empire included all of what is now Germany
(except the eastern third of Prussia), all of what is now
Bohemia, Austria (but not Hungary), and all of Italy except the
part south of Naples. There were times when part of France and
all of the low countries (now Belgium and Holland) also belonged
to the Empire. (The mountaineers of Switzerland won their
independence from the Empire in the fourteenth century, and
formed a little republic.) See map “Europe in 1540.”
[Illustration: Europe in 1540]
In the Holy Roman Empire, the son of the emperor did not
necessarily succeed his father as ruler. There were seven
(afterwards nine) “electors” who, at the death of the ruling
monarch, met to elect his successor. Three of these electors were
archbishops, one was king of Bohemia, and the others were counts
of large counties in Germany like Hanover and Brandenburg. It
frequently happened that the candidate chosen was a member of the
family of the dead emperor, and there were three or four families
which had many rulers chosen from among their number. The most
famous of these families was that of the Counts of Hapsburg, from
whom the present emperor of Austria is descended.
[Illustration: Louis XIV]
This Holy Roman Empire was not a strong government, as the
kingdoms of England and France grew to be. The kings of Bohemia,
Saxony, and Bavaria all were subjects of the emperor, as were
many powerful counts. These men were jealous of the emperor’s
power, and he did not dare govern them as strictly as the king of
France ruled his nobles.
France in the 18th Century
[Illustration: John Churchill, Duke of Marlborough]
During the 18th century, there were many wars in Europe caused by
the ambition of various kings to make their domains larger and to
increase their own incomes. King Louis XIV of France had built up
a very powerful kingdom. Brave soldiers and skillful generals
spread his rule over a great part of what is Belgium and
Luxemburg, and annexed to the French kingdom the part of Germany
between the Rhine River and the Vosges (Vōzh) Mountains.
Finally, the English joined with the troops of the Holy Roman
Empire to curb the further growth of the French kingdom, and at
the battle of Blenheim (1704), the English Duke of Marlborough,
aided by the emperor’s army, put an end to the further expansion
of the French.
[Illustration: The Great Elector of Brandenburg]
Prussia
The 18th century also saw the rise of a new kingdom in Europe.
You will recall that there was a county in Germany named
Brandenburg, whose count was one of the seven electors who chose
the emperor. The capital of this county was Berlin. It so
happened that a number of Counts of Brandenburg, of the family of
Hohenzollern, had been men of ambition and ability. The little
county had grown by adding small territories around it. One of
these counts, called “the Great Elector,” had added to
Brandenburg the greater part of the neighboring county of
Pomerania. His son did not have the ability of his father, but
was a very proud and vain man. He happened to visit King William
III of England, and was very much offended because during the
interview, the king occupied a comfortable arm chair, while the
elector, being simply a count, was given a chair to sit in which
was straight-backed and had no arms. Brooding over this insult,
as it seemed to him, he went home and decided that he too should
be called a king. The question was, what should his title be. He
could not call himself “King of Brandenburg,” for Brandenburg was
part of the Empire, and the emperor would not allow it. It had
happened some one hundred years before, that, through his
marriage with the daughter of the Duke of Prussia, a Count of
Brandenburg had come into possession of the district known as
East Prussia, at the extreme southeastern corner of the Baltic
Sea. Between this and the territory of Brandenburg lay the
district known as West Prussia, which was part of the Kingdom of
Poland. However, Prussia lay outside the boundaries of the
Empire, and the emperor had nothing to say about what went on
there. Therefore, the elector sent notice to all the kings and
princes of Europe that after this he was to be known as the “King
of Prussia.” It was a situation somewhat like the one we have
already referred to, when the kings of England were independent
monarchs and yet subjects of the kings of France because they
were also dukes of Normandy.
[Illustration: Frederick The Great]
The son of this elector who first called himself king had more
energy and more character than his father. He ruled his country
with a rod of iron, and built up a strong, well-drilled army. He
was especially fond of tall soldiers, and had agents out all over
Europe, kidnapping men who were over six feet tall to serve in
his famous regiment of Guards. He further increased the size of
the Prussian kingdom.
His son was the famous Frederick the Great, one of the most
remarkable fighters that the world has ever seen. This prince had
been brought up under strict discipline by his father. The old
king had been insistent that his son should be no weakling. It is
told that one day, finding Frederick playing upon a flute, he
seized the instrument and snapped it in twain over his son’s
shoulder. The young Frederick, under this harsh training, became
a fit leader of a military nation. When his father died and left
him a well-filled treasury and a wonderfully drilled army, he was
fired with the ambition to spread his kingdom wider. Germany, as
has been said, was made up of a great many little counties, each
ruled by its petty prince or duke, all owing homage, in a general
way, to the ruler of Austria, who still was supposed to be the
head of the Holy Roman Empire.
[Illustration: The Growth of Brandenburg-Prussia, 1400-1806]
This empire was not a real nation, but a collection of many
different nationalities which had little sympathy with each
other. The ruler of Austria was also king of Bohemia and of
Hungary, but neither country was happy at being governed by a
German ruler. Then, too, the Croatians, Serbs, Slovenes, and
Slovaks were unhappy at being ruled, first by the Hungarians and
then by the emperor, as they were Slavic peoples who wished their
independence. It so happened that about the time that Frederick
became king of Prussia in place of his father, the head of the
House of Austria died, leaving his only child, a daughter, Maria
Theresa, to rule the big empire. Frederick decided that he could
easily defeat the disorganized armies of Austria, so he announced
to the world that the rich province of Silesia was henceforth to
be his and that he proposed to take it by force of arms.
Naturally, this brought on a fierce war with Austria, but in the
end, Frederick’s well-trained troops, his store of money, and
above all, his expert military ability made the Prussians
victorious, and at the close of the fighting, almost all of
Silesia remained a part of the kingdom of Prussia. The Austrians,
however, were not satisfied, and two more wars were fought before
they finally gave up trying to recover the stolen state.
Frederick remained stronger than ever as a result of his
victories.
Questions for Review
Why were the fighting men of the Middle Ages a source of loss
to a nation in general?
How was it that Spain became one nation?
What did Peter the Great do for Russia?
Why did the Emperor have less power than many kings?
What was the ambition of Louis XIV of France?
What effect had the training of his father upon the character
of Frederick the Great?
Had Frederick the Great any right to Silesia?
Chapter VIII.
The Fall of the Two Kingdoms
The Poles, a divided nation.—The three partitions.—Wars and
revolts as a result.—The disappearance of Lithuania.—The growing
power of the king of France.—An extravagant and corrupt
court.—Peasants cruelly taxed and oppressed.—Bankruptcy at
last.—The meeting of the three estates.—The third estate defies
the king.—The fall of the Bastille.—The flight and capture of the
king.—The king beheaded.—Other kings alarmed.—Valmy saves the
revolution.—The reign of terror.
In the flat country to the northeast of Austria-Hungary and east
of Prussia lay the kingdom of Poland, the largest country in
Europe with the exception of Russia. The Poles, as has been said
before, were a Slavic people, distant cousins of the Russians and
Bohemians. They had a strong nobility or upper class, but these
nobles were jealous of each other, and as a result, the country
was torn apart by many warring factions. The condition of the
working class was very miserable. The nobles did not allow them
any privileges. They were serfs, that is to say, practically
slaves, who had to give up to their masters the greater part of
the crops that they raised. In the council of the Polish nobles,
no law could be passed if a single nobleman opposed it. As a
result of this jealousy between factions, the Poles could not be
induced to obey any one leader, and thus, divided, were easy to
conquer.
Frederick the Great, regretting the fact that he was separated
from his land in East Prussia by the county of West Prussia,
which was part of Poland, proposed to his old enemy, Maria
Theresa of Austria, and to the Empress Catharine II of Russia
that they each take a slice of Poland. This was accordingly done,
in the year 1772. Poor Poland was unable to resist the three
great powers around her, and the other kings of Europe, who had
been greedily annexing land wherever they could get it, stood by
without a protest. Some twenty years later, Prussia and Russia
each again annexed a large part of the remainder of Poland, and
two years after this, the three powers divided up among them all
that was left of the unhappy kingdom. The Poles fought violently
against this last partition, but they were not united and were
greatly outnumbered by the troops of the three powers.
This great crime against a nation was the result of the military
system; and this in turn was the result of the feudal system,
which made the king, as commander-in-chief of the army, the
supreme ruler of his country. The men in the Prussian and
Austrian armies had no desire to fight and conquer the poor
Poles. Victory meant nothing to them. They gained no advantage
from it. To the kings who divided up the countries it simply
meant an enlargement of their kingdoms, more people to pay taxes
to them, and more men to draw on for their armies.
[Illustration: Catharine II]
Instead of crushing out the love of the Poles for their country,
this wrongful tearing apart has made their national spirit all
the stronger. There have been revolts and bloody wars, caused by
Polish uprisings, time and time again, and the Poles will never
be satisfied until their unhappy country is once more united.
To the northeast of the Poles live the Lithuanians, whose country
had been annexed to the Polish kingdom when their duke, who had
married the daughter of the king of Poland, followed his
father-in-law on the Polish throne. Lithuania fell to Russia’s
share in the division, so that its people only changed masters.
They are a distinct nation, however, possessing a language and
literature of their own, and having no desire to be ruled by
either Poles or Russians. If they were to receive justice, they
would form a country by themselves, lying between Poland and
Russia proper.
The Downfall of the French Monarchy
[Illustration: Courtier of time of Louis XIV]
In the meantime, a great change had come about in France. There,
for hundreds of years, the power of the king had been growing
greater, until by the eighteenth century, there was no one in the
country who could oppose him. He had great fortresses and prisons
where he sent those who had offended him, shutting them up
without a trial and not even letting their families know where
they had been taken. The peasants and working classes had been
ground down under taxes which grew heavier and heavier. The king
spent millions of dollars on his palaces, on his armies, on his
courts. Money was stolen by court officials. Paris was the gayest
capital in the world, the home of fashion, art, and frivolity and
the poor peasants paid the bills.
[Illustration: The Taking of The Bastille]
For years, there had been mutterings. The people were ripe for a
revolt, but they had no weapons, and there was no one to lead
them. At last, came a time when there was no money in the royal
treasury. After all the waste and corruption, nothing was left to
pay the army and keep up the expenses of the government. One
minister of finance after another tried to devise some scheme
whereby the country might meet its debts, but without success.
The costly wars and wasteful extravagances of the past hundred
years were at last to bring a reckoning. In desperation, the king
summoned a meeting of representative men from all over the
kingdom. There were three classes represented, the nobles, the
clergy, and what was called “the third estate,” which meant
merchants, shopkeepers, and the poor gentlemen. A great statesman
appeared, a man named Mirabeau. Under his leadership, the third
estate defied the king, and the temper of the people was such
that the king dared not force them to do his will. In the midst
of these exciting times, a mob attacked the great Paris prison,
the Bastille. They took it by storm, and tore it to the ground.
This happened on the fourteenth of July, 1789, a day which the
French still celebrate as the birthday of their nation’s liberty.
All over France the common people rose in revolt. The soldiers in
the army would no longer obey their officers. The king was
closely watched, and when he attempted to flee to Germany was
brought back and thrown into prison. Many of the nobles, in
terror, fled from the country. Thus began what is known as the
French Revolution.
[Illustration: The Palace of Versailles]
As soon as the king was thrown into prison and the people of
France took charge of their government, a panic arose throughout
the courts of Europe. Other kings, alarmed over the fate of the
king of France, began to fear for themselves. They, too, had
taxed and oppressed their subjects. They felt that this revolt of
the French people must be put down, and the king of France set
back upon his throne, otherwise the same kind of revolt might
take place in their countries as well. Accordingly, the king of
Prussia, the king of England, and the emperor of Austria all made
war on the new French Republic. They proposed to overwhelm the
French by force of arms and compel them to put back their king
upon his throne.
Of course, if the soldiers in the armies of these kings had known
what the object of this war was, they would have had very little
sympathy with it, but for years they had been trained to obey
their officers, who in turn obeyed their generals, who in turn
obeyed the orders of the kings. The common soldiers were like
sheep, in that they did not think for themselves, but followed
their leaders. They were not allowed to know the truth concerning
this attack on France. They did not know the French language, and
had no way of finding out the real situation, for there were no
public schools in these countries, and very few people knew how
to read the newspapers. The newspapers, moreover, were controlled
by the governments, and were allowed to print only what favored
the cause of the kings.
The French, however, knew the meaning of the war. A young French
poet from Strasbourg on the Rhine wrote a wonderful war song
which was first sung in Paris by the men of Marseilles, and thus
has come to be called “La Marseillaise.” It is the cry of a
crushed and oppressed people against foreign tyrants who would
again enslave them. It fired the French army with a wonderful
enthusiasm, and untrained as they were, they beat back the
invaders at the hard-fought field of Valmy and saved the French
Republic.
[Illustration: The Reign of Terror]
The period known as “the reign of terror” now began in earnest. A
faction of the extreme republican party got control of the
government, and kept it by terrorizing the more peaceable
citizens. The brutal wrongs which nobles had put upon the lower
classes for so many hundred years were brutally avenged. The king
was executed, as were most of the nobles who had not fled from
the country. For three or four years, the gutters of the
principal French cities ran blood. Then the better sense of the
nation came to the front and the people settled down. A fairly
good government was organized, and the executions ceased. Still
the kings of Europe would not recognize the new republic. There
was war against France for the next twenty years on the part of
England, and generally two or three other countries as well.
[Illustration: The First Singing of ‘The Marseillaise’]
Questions for Review
Why was Poland an easy prey for her neighbors?
Why did not Spain, France, or England interfere to prevent
the partition of Poland?
How did Lithuania come to be joined to Poland?
What things could the king of France do which would not be
tolerated in the United States today?
Why did the people of France submit to the rule of the king?
Why did the king call together the three “estates”?
Why do the French celebrate the 14th of July?
Why did the other kings take up the cause of the king of
France?
What was the cause of the reign of terror?
Chapter IX.
The Little Man from the Common People
The young Corsican.—The war in Italy.—Italy a battlefield for
centuries.—The victories of Bonaparte.—The first consul.—The
empire.—The French sweep over Europe.—Kings and emperors beaten
and deposed.—The fatal Russian campaign.—The first
abdication.—The return from Elba.—The battle of Waterloo.—The
feudal lords once more triumphant.
And now there came to the front one of the most remarkable
characters in all history. This was Napoleon Bonaparte, a little
man from the island of Corsica, of Italian parentage, but a
French citizen, for the island had been forcibly The annexed to
France shortly before his birth. As a young lieutenant in the
army, he had seen the storming of the Bastille. Later on, being
in charge of the cannon which defended the House of Parliament,
he had saved one of the numerous governments set up during this
period. A Paris mob was trying to storm this building, as they
had the castle of the king. As a reward, he had been put in
charge of the French army in Italy, which was engaged in fighting
the Austrians.
In order to understand the situation it is necessity at this
point to devote some attention to the past history of the Italian
peninsula.
Italy had not been a united country since the days of the Roman
Empire. The southern part of the peninsula had formed, with
Sicily, a small nation called the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies.
The northern part had belonged to the Ostrogoths, the Lombards,
the Franks, and the Holy Roman Empire in turn. The Italian people
wanted to become one nation, but they were divided up among many
little princes, each with his separate dominions. The cities of
Genoa and Venice had each formed a republic, which was strong on
the sea only, for both cities had large navies and had acquired
practically all their wealth by their trade with Constantinople,
Egypt, and the far East. In 1796 the Hapsburg family held the
control of northern Italy except the lands around the city of
Venice and the county of Piedmont. The latter formed a separate
kingdom with the island of Sardinia, much as Sicily was joined
with the southern end of the peninsula.
Italy had been the battlefield where Goths, Franks, Huns,
Lombards, Germans, Austrians, French, and Spaniards had fought
their battles for the control of the civilized world. (See the
following maps.) At one time, the Austrian House of Hapsburg
controlled the greater part of the peninsula. This was especially
true when Charles V was elected emperor of the Holy Roman Empire.
As a Hapsburg, he was ruler of Austria. As a descendant of
Charles the Bold, Duke of Burgundy, he was Lord of the Low
Countries (what is now Holland and Belgium). He was also king of
Spain, being the oldest living grandson of Ferdinand and
Isabella. When he became ruler of the two Sicilies, and defeated
the French king for the control of northern Italy, there were
only four powers in Europe which were not under his sway: Russia,
Turkey, Poland, and England. (See map.)
[Illustration: Italy in 525 A.D.]
[Illustration: Italy in 650 A.D.]
[Illustration: Italy in 1175 A.D.]
[Illustration: Charles the Fifth]
Three hundred years after this, the Austrians were again invading
Italy, and at the time when Bonaparte entered it (1796), they had
overrun and controlled the entire valley of the Po. The cause of
the war was still the deposing of the French monarch. The
Austrian armies were fighting to force the people of France to
take back the rule of the hated kings. The armies of France, on
the other hand, represented the rights of the people to choose
their own form of government.
Of course the French, intoxicated by the success of the
Revolution, were eager to spread the republican form of
government all over Europe. There was a real possibility that
they might do so, and the kings were fighting in defense of their
thrones. (The map shows the conquests of the new republic up to
this time.)
[Illustration: Europe in 1796]
Such was the situation when young Bonaparte, twenty-six years of
age, went down into Italy to take command of the French army. The
generals, many of them as old as his father, began offering him
advice, but he impatiently waved them aside and announced that he
was going to wage war on a plan hitherto unheard of. He made good
his boast, and after a short campaign in which he inspired his
ragged, hungry army to perform wonders in fighting, he had driven
the Austrians out of northern Italy, broken up the Republic of
Venice, and forced the emperor to make peace with France. After a
brilliant but unsuccessful campaign in Egypt and Syria, Bonaparte
returned to France, where, as the popular military hero, he had
little difficulty in overthrowing the five Directors of the
French government and having himself elected “First Consul” or
president of France.
A new combination of nations now united against the republic, but
Bonaparte cut to pieces a great Austrian army, and a second time
compelled his enemies to make peace. He now proposed that the
French people elect him “emperor of the French” for life, and by
an overwhelming vote they did so. The empire was very different
from the other empires and kingships of Europe, since it was
created by the vote of the people. The other monarchs held their
thrones by reason of their descent from the chiefs of the
plundering tribes which invaded Europe during the Dark Ages. By
this time, the kings had forgotten that they owed their power to
the swords of their fighting men, and there had grown up a
doctrine called “The Divine Right of Kings.” In other words, the
kings claimed that God in his wisdom had seen fit to make them
rulers over these lands, and that they were responsible to God
alone. In this way they tried to make it appear that any one who
attempted to drive a king from his throne was opposed to the will
of Heaven.
The victorious French, exulting in their newly-won freedom from
the tyranny of kings and nobles, were full of warlike pride in
the wonderful victories gained by their armies under the
brilliant leadership of Napoleon. (He dropped his last name,
Bonaparte, when he was elected emperor.) They swept over the
greater part of Europe and helped to spread the idea that the
people had rights that all kings were bound to respect, and that
it was not necessary to be ruled by descendants of the old robber
chiefs.
For sixteen years Napoleon did not meet defeat. He beat the
Austrians and Russians singly; he beat them combined. In two
fierce battles, he crushed the wonderful Prussian army, which had
been trained in the military school of Frederick the Great. He
drove out the king of Spain, the king of the Two Sicilies, the
kings of several of the small German kingdoms. He made one of his
brothers king of Spain, another king of Holland, a third king of
Westphalia (part of western Germany). He set his brother-in-law
on the throne of Naples. He had his small son crowned king of
Rome. He took away from Prussia all of her territory except
Brandenburg, Silesia, Pomerania. and East and West Prussia. He
reorganized the old Polish kingdom and kings called it the Grand
Duchy of Warsaw. He forced Austria to give up all claim to
northern Italy. He annexed to France the land which is now
Belgium and Holland, and parts of western Germany and Italy. (See
map entitled “Europe in 1810.”)
[Illustration: Messen Europe in 1810]
All over Europe, those of the people who had education enough to
understand what was going on, were astonished to see the old
feudal kings and princes driven from their thrones and their
places taken by men sprung from the common people. The father of
the Bonapartes had been a poor lawyer. Murat, Napoleon’s
brother-in-law, king of South Italy, was the son of an innkeeper.
Bernadotte, one of Napoleon’s generals, whom the Swedes chose as
their king, was likewise descended from the lower classes. In
nations where the working classes had never dreamed of opposing
the rulers there sprang up a new hope.
[Illustration: The Emperor Napoleon in 1814]
Bonaparte at last made a fatal mistake. With an army of half a
million men, he invaded Russia, and established his headquarters
in Moscow. The Russian people, however, set fire themselves to
their beautiful city, and the French had to retreat a thousand
miles through snow and ice, while bands of Russian Cossacks
swooped down on them from the rear and took a hundred thousand
prisoners. Encouraged by this terrible blow dealt the French, the
allied kings of Europe again united in one last effort to drive
the little Corsican from the throne of France.
For two years Napoleon held them at bay, making up for his lack
of soldiers by his marvelous military skill, and by the
enthusiasm which he never failed to arouse in his troops. In
1814, however, surrounded by the troops of Austria, Prussia,
Russia, and England, he had to confess himself beaten. Even
Bernadotte, his former general, led the Swedish troops against
him. The allied kings brought back in triumph to Paris the
brother of the king who had been executed there twenty-two years
before, and set him on the throne of France. Napoleon was
banished to the little island of Elba to the west of Italy, and
the monarchs flattered themselves that their troubles were ended.
[Illustration: The Retreat from Moscow]
In the spring of the following year, however, Napoleon escaped
from his island prison and landed on the southern coast of
France. The king ordered his soldiers to capture their former
emperor. But the magic of his presence was too much for them, and
the men who had been sent to put him into chains shed tears of
joy at the sight of him, and threw themselves at his feet. One
week later, the king of France had fled a second time from his
country, and the man chosen by the people was once more at the
head of the government.
All the kingdoms of Europe declared war against France, and four
large armies were headed toward her borders. Napoleon did not
wait for them to come. Gathering a big force, he marched rapidly
north into the low countries, where he met and defeated an army
of Prussians. Another army of English was advancing from
Brussels. On the field of Waterloo, the French were defeated in
one of the great battles of the world’s history. The defeated
Prussians had made a wide circuit and returned to the field to
the aid of their English allies, while the general whom Napoleon
had sent to follow the Germans arrived too late to prevent the
emperor from being crushed. A second time, Napoleon had to give
up his crown, and a second time King Louis XVIII was brought back
into Paris and put upon the French throne by the bayonets of
foreign troops. The people had been crushed, apparently, and the
old feudal lords were once more in control.
[Illustration: Napoleon at Waterloo]
Questions for Review
Had Italy ever been a nation?
What German tribe ruled Italy in 525? (See map.)
What tribe ruled Italy in 650? (See map.)
What part of Italy once belonged to the Holy Roman Empire?
(See map.)
What induced the French to elect Bonaparte as First Consul
and afterward Emperor?
What led Napoleon to make war on the other rulers?
What was Napoleon’s great mistake?
Why did the people welcome him upon his return from Elba?
What was the effect of the battle of Waterloo?
Chapter X.
A King-Made Map and its Trail of Wrongs
A meeting of kings and diplomats.—Austrians and English vs.
Prussians and Russians.—Talleyrand the subtle.—Carving a new
map.—The people are ignored.—Sowing the seeds of trouble.—Unhappy
Poland.—Divided Italy.—Revolts of the people.—The outbreaks of
1848.
And now the kings and princes, with their ministers of state and
diplomats, met at Vienna to decide what should be the map of
Europe. In past years, there had been a great deal of suspicion
and jealousy among these monarchs. Hardly five years had gone by
without finding two of them flying at each other’s throats in
some unjust war or other. Only their great fear of uprisings
similar to the French Revolution had driven them to act together
in crushing the French Republic, and the empire voted by the
people, which had followed it. This famous “Congress of Vienna,”
which took place 1815, is a fair example of the way in which
European lands have been cut up and parceled out to various
monarchs without any regard for the wishes of the people.
[Illustration: The Congress of Vienna]
Russia and Prussia, proud of the part that their mighty armies
had had in crushing Napoleon, were arrogantly intending to divide
the map of Europe as suited them, and it was only by a great deal
of diplomacy that they were beaten. (The game of diplomacy is
frequently a polite name for some very cunning deception,
involving lying and cheating, in which kings and their ministers
take part.) The Austrians were afraid of the Russian-Prussian
combination, and they induced England to side with them. England
did not love Austria, but feared the other two powers. The
English minister, Lord Castlereagh, finally persuaded the
Austrians, Prussians, and Russians, to allow the French diplomat,
Talleyrand, to take part in their final meetings. Now Talleyrand
was probably the most slippery and tricky diplomat of all Europe.
He had grown to power during the troublous days of the latter
part of the French Revolution, and had guessed which party would
remain in power so skillfully that he always appeared as the
strong friend of the winning side. Although he had served
Napoleon during the first years of the empire, he was shrewd
enough to remain true to King Louis XVIII during the latter’s
second exile. The Prussian-Russian combination was finally
obliged to give in, somewhat, to the demands of Austria, England,
and France. Compare this map with the one given in the preceding
chapter, and you will see most of the important changes.
Prussia, which had been cut down to about half its former size by
Napoleon, got back some of its Polish territory, and was given a
great deal of land in western Germany along the River Rhine. Part
of the kingdom of Saxony was forcibly annexed to Prussia also. It
is needless to say that its inhabitants were bitterly unhappy
over this arrangement. Austria kept part of her Polish territory,
and gave the rest of it to Russia.
The southern part of the Netherlands, which is today called
Belgium, had belonged to the Hapsburg family, the emperors of
Austria. As was previously said, it was conquered by the French
and remained part of France until the fall of Napoleon. It was
now joined with Holland to make the kingdom of the Netherlands.
Its people were Walloons and Flemish, almost entirely Catholic in
their religion, and they very much disliked to be joined with the
Protestant Dutch of Holland.
[Illustration: Messen Europe in 1815]
The state of Finland, which had not been strong enough to defend
itself against its two powerful neighbors, Sweden and Russia, had
been fought over by these two powers for more than a century. It
was finally transferred to Russia, and in order to appease
Sweden, Norway, which had been ruled by the Danes, was torn away
from Denmark and made part of the kingdom of Sweden. The
Norwegians desired to remain an independent country, and they
loved the Swedes even less than they loved the Danes. Therefore,
this union was another source of trouble. The greater part of the
kingdom of Poland and all of Lithuania were joined to Russia.
Russia got back all of the territory she had taken in 1795, and
in addition large parts of the former shares of Prussia and
Austria. In order to pay back Austria for the loss of part of
Poland, she was given all of northern Italy except the counties
of Piedmont and Savoy near France.
The German states (and these included both Austria and Prussia)
were formed into a loose alliance called the German
Confederation. England’s share of the plunder consisted largely
of distant colonies, such as South Africa, Ceylon, Trinidad, etc.
France shrank back to the boundaries which she had had at the
beginning of the revolution. The kings of France, of the Two
Sicilies, and of Spain (all of them members of the Bourbon
family) who had been driven out by Napoleon, were set back upon
their thrones.
This arrangement left Italy all split up into nine or ten
different parts, although its people desired to be one nation. It
left Austria a government over twelve different nationalities,
each one of which was dissatisfied. It joined Belgium to Holland
in a combination displeasing to both. It gave Norway and Finland
as subject states to Sweden and Russia respectively. It left the
Albanians, Serbians, Roumanians, Bulgarians, and Greeks all
subject to the hated Turks. It set upon three thrones, once
vacant, kings who were hated by their subjects. It divided the
Poles up among four different governments—for, strange as it may
seem, the powers could not decide who should own the city of
Cracow and the territory around it, and they ended by making this
district a little republic, under the joint protection of
Austria, Prussia, and Russia. In fact, the Swiss, serene in their
lofty mountains, were almost the only small people of Europe who
were left untroubled. The Congress of 1815 had laid the
foundation for future revolutions and wars without number.
At first, the Poles were fairly well treated by the Russians, but
after two or three unsuccessful attempts at a revolution, Poland,
which, as one of the states of the Russian Empire, was still
called a kingdom, was deprived of all its rights, and its people
were forced to give up the use of their language in their
schools, their courts, and even their churches. In the same
fashion, the Poles in Prussia were “not even allowed to think in
Polish,” as one Polish patriot bitterly put it. All through the
first half of the 19th century, there were uprisings and
struggles among these people. As a result of one of them, in
1846, the little Republic of Cracow was abolished, and its
territory forcibly annexed to Austria.
The Italian people formed secret societies which had for their
object the uniting of Italy, and the freeing of its people from
foreign rulers. All through Germany there were mutterings of
discontent. The people wanted more freedom from their lords.
Greece broke out into insurrection against the Turks, and fifteen
years after the Congress of 1815 won its right to independence.
Not long afterwards, the southern half of the Netherlands broke
itself loose from the northern half, and declared to the world
that it should henceforth be a new kingdom, under the name of
Belgium. About the same time, the people of France rose up
against the Bourbon kings, and threw them out “for good.” A
distant cousin of the king was elected, not “king of France” but
“citizen king of the French,” and the people were allowed to
elect men to represent them in a parliament or Congress at Paris.
In Spain, one revolution followed another. For a short time,
Spain was a republic, but the people were not well enough
educated to govern themselves, and the kingdom was restored.
[Illustration: Prince Metternich]
The statesman who had more to do with the division of territory
in 1815 than any other was Prince Metternich of Austria. He stood
for the “divine right of kings,” and did not believe in allowing
the common people any liberty whatsoever. In 1848, an uprising
occurred in Austria, and crowds in Vienna, crying, “down with
Metternich,” forced the aged diplomat to flee. During the same
year, there were outbreaks in Germany. The people everywhere were
revolting against the feudal rights of their kings and princes,
and gaining greater liberty for themselves. In 1848, France,
also, grew tired of her “citizen king,” and that country a second
time became a republic. The French made the mistake, however, of
electing as their president, Louis Napoleon Bonaparte, nephew of
the great Napoleon, and in time he did exactly what his uncle had
done,—persuaded the French people to elect him emperor.
Questions for Review
What were the motives of each of the nations represented at
the Congress of Vienna?
Why were the Russians and Prussians the leaders of the
meeting at first?
Why did the English and Austrians assist each other?
What had Napoleon done for Poland? (See last chapter.)
What kings deposed by Napoleon were set back on their
thrones?
What were the greatest wrongs done by the Congress?
How did the Poles protest against the settlement made by the
Congress?
What did the Belgians do about it?
What did the French finally do to the Bourbon kings?
Chapter XI.
Italy a Nation at Last
The Crimean War curbs Russia.—Cavour plans a United Italy.—War
against Austria.—Garibaldi, the patriot.—The Kingdom of Sardinia
becomes part of the new Kingdom of Italy.—Venice and Rome are
added.—Some Italians still outside the kingdom.
Meanwhile, Italy, under the leadership of two patriots named
Mazzini and Garibaldi, was in a turmoil. The Austrians and the
Italian princes who were subject to them were constantly crushing
some attempted revolution.
One thing which helped the cause of the people was that the great
powers were all jealous of each other. For example, Russia
attacked Turkey in 1853, but France and England were afraid that
if Russia conquered the Turks and took Constantinople, she would
become too powerful for them. Therefore, both countries rushed
troops to aid Turkey, and in the end, Russia was defeated,
although thousands of soldiers were killed on both sides before
the struggle was over.
You will remember that the counties of Piedmont and Savoy in
western Italy, together with the island of Sardinia, made up a
little kingdom known as the “Kingdom of Sardinia.” This country
had for its prime minister, a statesman named Count Cavour, who,
like all Italians, strongly hoped for the day when all the people
living on the Italian peninsula should be one nation. At the time
of the Crimean War (as the war between Russia on the one side and
Turkey, France, and England on the other was called) he caused
his country also to declare war on Russia, and sent a tiny army
to fight alongside of the English and French. A few years later,
he secretly made a bargain with Napoleon III. (This was what
President Bonaparte of France called himself after he had been
elected emperor.) The French agreed to make war with his country
against the Austrians. If they won, the Sardinians were to
receive all north Italy, and in return for France’s help were to
give France the county of Savoy and the seaport of Nice.
When Cavour and the French were all ready to strike, it was not
hard to find an excuse for a war. Austria declared war on
Sardinia, and, as had been arranged, France rushed to the aid of
the Italians. Austria was speedily beaten, but no sooner was the
war finished than the French emperor repented of his bargain. He
was afraid that it would make trouble for him with his Catholic
subjects if the Italians were allowed to take all the northern
half of the peninsula, including the pope’s lands, into their
kingdom. Accordingly, the Sardinians received only Lombardy in
return for Savoy and Nice, which they gave to France, and the
Austrians kept the county of Venetia. A fire once kindled,
however, is hard to put out. No sooner did the people of the
other states of northern Italy see the success of Sardinia, than,
one after another, they revolted against their Austrian princes
and voted to join the new kingdom of Italy. In this way, Parma,
Modena, Tuscany, and part of the “States of the Church” were
added. All of this happened in the year 1859.
These “States of the Church” came to be formed in the following
way: The father of the great king of the Franks, Charlemagne, who
had been crowned western emperor by the pope in the year 800, had
rescued northern Italy from the rule of the Lombards. He had made
the pope lord of a stretch of territory extending across Italy
from the Adriatic Sea to the Mediterranean. The inhabitants of
this country had no ruler but the pope. They paid their taxes to
him, and acknowledged him as their feudal lord. It was part of
this territory which revolted and joined the new kingdom of
Italy.
You will remember the name of Garibaldi, the Italian patriot, who
with Mazzini had been stirring up trouble for the Austrians. They
finally pursued him so closely that he had to leave Italy. He
came to America and set up a fruit store in New York City, where
there were quite a number of his countrymen. By 1854, he had made
a great deal of money in the fruit business, but had not
forgotten his beloved country, and was anxious to be rich only in
order that he might free Italy from the Austrians. He sold out
his business in New York, and taking all his money, sailed for
Italy. When the war of 1859 broke out, he volunteered, and fought
throughout the campaign.
But the compromising terms of peace galled him, and he was not
satisfied with a country only half free. In the region around
Genoa, he enrolled a thousand men to go on what looked like a
desperate enterprise. Garibaldi had talked with Cavour, and
between them, they had schemed to overthrow the kingdom of the
Two Sicilies and join this land to the northern country. Of
course, Cavour pretended not to know anything about Garibaldi,
for the king of Naples and Sicily was supposed to be a friend of
the king of Sardinia. Nevertheless, he secretly gave Garibaldi
all the help that he dared, and urged men to enroll with him.
[Illustration: The First Meeting of Garibaldi and Victor Emmanuel]
With his thousand “red-shirts,” as they were called, Garibaldi
landed on the island of Sicily, at Marsala. The inhabitants rose
to welcome him, and everywhere they drove out the officers who
had been appointed by their king to rule them. In a short time,
all Sicily had risen in rebellion against the king. (You will
remember that this family of kings had been driven out by
Napoleon and restored by the Congress of Vienna in 1815. They
were Bourbons, the same family that furnished the kings of Spain
and the last kings of France. They stood for “the divine right of
kings,” and had no sympathy with the common people.) Crossing
over to the mainland, Garibaldi, with his little army now swollen
to ten times its former size, swept everything before him as he
marched toward Naples. Everywhere, the people rose against their
former masters, and welcomed the liberator. The king fled in
haste from Naples, never to return. A vote was taken all over the
southern half of Italy and Sicily, to decide whether the people
wanted to join their brothers of the north to make a new kingdom
of Italy. It was so voted almost unanimously. Victor Emmanuel,
king of Sardinia, thus became the first king of United Italy. He
made Florence his capital at first, as the country around Rome
still belonged to the pope. The pope had few soldiers, but was
protected by a guard of French troops. However, ten years later,
in 1870, when war broke out between France and Prussia, the
French troops left Rome, and the troops of Italy marched quietly
in and took possession of the city. Rome, for so many years the
capital, not only of Italy but of the whole Mediterranean world,
became once more the chief city of the peninsula. The pope was
granted a liberal pension by the Italian government in order to
make up to him for the loss of the money from his former lands.
The dream of Italians for the last 600 years had finally come to
pass. Italy was again one country, ruled by the popular Victor
Emmanuel, with a constitution which gave the people the right to
elect representatives to a parliament or congress. One of the
worst blunders of the Congress of Vienna had been set right by
the patriotism of the people of Italy.
It should be noted, however, that there are still Italians who
are not part of this kingdom. The county of Venetia, at the
extreme northeast of Italy, was added to the kingdom in 1866 as
the result of a war which will be told about more fully in the
next chapter, but the territory around the city of Trent, called
by the Italians Trentino, and the county of Istria at the head of
the Adriatic Sea, containing the important seaports of Trieste,
Fiume, and Pola, are inhabited almost entirely by people of
Italian blood. Certain islands along the coast of Dalmatia also
are full of Italians. To rescue these people from the rule of
Austria has been the earnest wish of all Italian patriots, and
was the chief reason why Italy did not join Germany and Austria
in the great war of 1914.
[Illustration: Messen Italy Made One Nation, 1914]
Questions for Review
Why did England and France side with Turkey against Russia?
What bargain did Cavour make with Napoleon III?
How did the rest of Italy come to join Sardinia?
Explain the origin of the “States of the Church.”
Why did Sicily and Naples revolt against their king?
What Italians are not yet citizens of the kingdom of Italy?
Chapter XII.
The Man of Blood and Iron
The people demand their rights—Bismarck, the chief prop of the
Prussian monarchy—The question of the leadership of the German
states—The wonderful Prussian army—The war on Denmark—Preparing
to crush Austria—The battle of Sadowa—Easy terms to the defeated
nation—Preparing to defeat France—A good example of a war caused
by diplomats—Prussia’s easy victory—The new German empire—Harsh
terms of peace—The triumph of feudal government.
All of this time, the kings of Europe had been engaged in
contests with their own people. The overthrow of the French king
at the time of the revolution taught the people of the other
countries of Europe that they too could obtain their liberties.
You have already been told how the people of Austria drove out
Prince Metternich, who was the leader of the party which refused
any rights to the working classes.
That same year, 1848, had seen the last king driven out of
France, had witnessed revolts in all parts of Italy, and had
found many German princes in trouble with their subjects, who
were demanding a share in the government, the right of free
speech, free newspapers, and trial by jury. The empires of
Austria and Russia had joined with the kingdom of Prussia in a
combination which was known as the “Holy Alliance.” This was
meant to stop the further spread of republican ideas and to curb
the growing power of the common people.
[Illustration: Bismarck]
Not long after this, there came to the front in Prussia a
remarkable man, who for the next forty years was perhaps the most
prominent statesman in Europe. His full name was Otto Eduard
Leopold von Bismarck-Schönausen, but we generally know him under
the name of Bismarck. He was a Prussian nobleman, a believer in
the divine right of kings, the man who more than anybody else is
responsible for the establishing of the present empire of
Germany. He once made a speech in the Prussian Diet or council in
which he said that “blood and iron,” not speeches and treaties,
would unite Germany into a nation. His one object was a united
Germany, which should be the strongest nation in Europe. He
wanted Germany to be ruled by Prussia, Prussia to be ruled by its
king, and the king of Prussia to be controlled by Bismarck. It is
marvellous to see how near he came to carrying through his whole
plan.
After the Congress of Vienna in 1815, Prussia remained among the
powers of Europe, but was not as great as Austria, Russia,
England, or France. The German states, some 35 in number, had
united in a loose alliance called the German Confederation. (This
union was somewhat similar to the United States of America
between 1776 and 1789.) Austria was the largest of these states,
and was naturally looked upon as the leader of the whole group.
Prussia was the second largest, while next after Prussia, and
much smaller, came the kingdoms of Bavaria, Saxony, Hanover, and
Wurtemburg. Bismarck, as prime minister of Prussia, built up a
wonderfully strong army. He did this by means of a military
system which at first made him very unpopular with the people.
Every man in the nation, rich or poor, was obliged to serve a
certain number of years in the army and be ready at a moment’s
notice to join a certain regiment if there came a call to war.
Having organized this army, and equipped it with every modern
weapon, Bismarck was anxious to use it to accomplish his purpose.
There were two counties named Schleswig (shlĕs′vig) and Holstein
(hōl′stīn) which belonged to the king of Denmark and yet
contained a great many German people. The inhabitants of
Schleswig were perhaps half Danes, while those of Holstein were
more than two-thirds Germans. These Germans had protested against
certain actions of the Danish government, and were threatening to
revolt. Taking advantage of this trouble, Prussia and Austria, as
the leading states of the German Federation, declared war on
little Denmark. The Danes fought valiantly, but were overwhelmed
by the armies of their enemies. Schleswig and Holstein were torn
away from Denmark and put under the joint protection of Austria
and Prussia.
This sort of arrangement could not last. Sooner or later, there
was bound to be a quarrel over the division of the plunder. Now
Bismarck had a chance to show his crafty diplomacy. He made up
his mind to crush Austria and put Prussia in her place as the
leader of the German states. He first negotiated with Napoleon
III, Emperor of the French, and made sure that this monarch would
not interfere. Next he remembered that the provinces of Venetia,
Trentino, and Istria still belonged to Austria, as the Italians
had failed to gain them in the war of 1859. Accordingly, Bismarck
induced Italy to declare war on Austria by promising her Venetia
and the other provinces in return for her aid. Saxony, Bavaria,
and Hanover were friendly to Austria, but Bismarck did not fear
them. He knew that his army, under the leadership of its
celebrated general, von Moltke, was more than a match for the
Austrians, Bavarians, etc., combined.
When Bismarck was ready, Prussia and Italy struck. The Austrians
were successful at first against the Italians, but at Sadowa in
Bohemia, their armies were beaten in a tremendous battle by the
Prussians. Austria was put down from her place as the leader of
the German Confederation, and Prussia took the leadership.
Hanover, whose king had sided with the Austrians, was annexed to
Prussia. The king of Prussia and several of his generals were
anxious to rob Austria of some of her territory, as had been the
custom in the past whenever one nation defeated another in war.
Bismarck, however, restrained them. In his program of making
Prussia the leading military state in Europe, he saw that his
next opponent would be France, and he did not propose, on
attacking France, to find his army assailed in the rear by the
revengeful Austrians. Accordingly, Bismarck compelled the king to
let Austria off without any loss of territory except Venetia,
which was given to the Italians. Austria was even allowed to
retain Trentino and Istria, and was not required to pay a large
indemnity to Prussia. (A custom which had come down from the
middle ages, when cities which were captured had been obliged to
pay great sums of money, in order to get rid of the conquering
armies, was the payment of a war indemnity by the defeated
nation. This was a sum of money as large as the conquerors
thought they could safely force their victims to pay.) The
Austrians, although they were angry over the manner in which
Bismarck had provoked the war, nevertheless appreciated the fact
that he was generous in not forcing harsh terms upon them, as he
could have done had he wanted to.
The eyes of all Europe now turned toward the coming struggle
between Prussia and France. It was plain that it was impossible
for two men like Bismarck and Emperor Napoleon to continue in
power very long without coming to blows. It was Bismarck’s
ambition, as was previously said, to make Prussia the leading
military nation of Europe, and he knew that this meant a struggle
with Napoleon. You will remember also that he planned a united
Germany, led by Prussia, and he felt that the French war would
bring this about. On the other hand, the French emperor was
extremely jealous of the easy victory that Prussia and Italy had
won over Austria. He had been proud of the French army, and
wanted it to remain the greatest fighting force in Europe. He was
just as anxious for an excuse to attack Prussia as Bismarck was
for a pretext to attack him.
It should be kept in mind that all this time there was no
ill-feeling between the French people and the Germans. In fact,
the Germans of the Rhine country were very friendly to France,
and during Napoleon’s time had been given more liberties and had
been governed better than under the rule of their former feudal
lords. All the hostility and jealousy was between the military
chiefs. Even Bismarck did not dislike the French. He had no
feeling toward them at all. It was part of his program that their
military power should be crushed and his program must be carried
through. Europe, to his mind, was too small to contain more than
one master military power.
The four years between 1866 and 1870 were used by Bismarck to
gain friends for Prussia among other countries of Europe, and to
make enemies for France. The kingdoms of south Germany (Bavaria,
Baden, and Wurtemburg), which had sided with Austria during the
late war, were friendly to France and hostile to Prussia.
Napoleon III, however, made a proposal in writing to Bismarck
that France should be given a slice of this south German
territory in return for some other land which France was to allow
Prussia to seize. Bismarck pretended to consider this proposal,
but was careful to keep the original copy, in the French
ambassador’s own handwriting. (Each nation sends a man to
represent her at the capital of each other nation. These men are
called ambassadors. They are given power to sign agreements for
their governments.) By showing this to the rulers of the little
south German kingdoms, he was able to turn them against Napoleon
and to make secret treaties with these states by which they bound
themselves to fight on the side of Prussia in case a war broke
out with France. In similar fashion, Bismarck made the Belgians
angry against the French by letting it be known that Napoleon was
trying to annex their country also.
Meanwhile, aided by General von Moltke and Count von Roon (rōn),
Bismarck had built up a wonderful military power. Every man in
Prussia had been trained a certain number of years in the army
and was ready at a moment’s notice to join his regiment. The
whole campaign against France had been planned months in advance.
In France on the other hand, the illness and irritability of
Napoleon III had resulted in poor organization. Men who did not
wish to serve their time in the army were allowed to pay money to
the government instead. Yet their names were carried on the
rolls. In this way, the French army had not half the strength in
actual numbers that it had on paper. What is more, certain
government officials had taken advantage of the emperor’s
weakness and lack of system and had put into their own pockets
money that should have been spent in buying guns and ammunition.
When at last Bismarck was all ready for the war, it was not hard
to find an excuse. Old Queen Isabella of Spain had been driven
from her throne, and the Spanish army under General Prim offered
the crown to Prince Leopold of Hohenzollern, a cousin of the king
of Prussia. This alarmed Napoleon, who imagined that if Prussia
attacked him on the east, this Prussian prince, as king of Spain,
would lead the Spanish army over the Pyrenees against him on the
south. France made so vigorous a protest that the prince asked
the Spaniards not to think of him any longer. This was not enough
for Napoleon, who now proceeded to make a fatal mistake. The
incident was closed, but he persisted in reopening it. He sent
his ambassador to see King William of Prussia to ask the latter
to assure France that never again should Prince Leopold be
considered for the position of king of Spain. The king answered
that he could not guarantee this, for he was merely the head of
the Hohenzollern family. Prince Leopold, whose lands lay outside
of Prussia, was not even one of his subjects. The interview
between the king and the French ambassador had been a friendly
one. The ambassador had been very courteous to the king, and the
king had been very polite to the ambassador. They had parted on
good terms.
[Illustration: An Attack on a Convoy in the Franco-Prussian War.]
In the meanwhile, Bismarck had been hoping that an excuse for war
would come from this incident. He was at dinner with General von
Moltke and Count von Roon when a long telegram came from the
king, telling of his interview with the French ambassador. In the
story of his life written by himself, Bismarck tells how, as he
read the telegram both Roon and Moltke groaned in disappointment.
He says that Moltke seemed to have grown older in a minute. Both
had earnestly hoped that war would come. Bismarck took the
dispatch, sat down at a table, and began striking out the message
polite words and the phrases that showed that the meeting had
been a friendly one. He cut down the original telegram of two
hundred words to one of twenty. When he had finished, the message
sounded as if the French ambassador had bullied and threatened
the king of Prussia, while the latter had snubbed and insulted
the Frenchman. Bismarck read the altered telegram to Roon and
Moltke. Instantly, they brightened up and felt better. “How is
that?” he asked. “That will do it,” they answered. “War is
assured.”
The telegram was given to the newspapers, and within twenty-four
hours, the people of Paris and Berlin were shouting for war.
Napoleon III hesitated, but he finally gave in to his generals
and his wife who urged him to “avenge the insult to the French
nation.”
[Illustration: The Proclamation at Versailles of William I as Emperor of
Germany]
We give this story of the starting of the Franco-Prussian war of
1870 just to show the tricks of European diplomats. What Bismarck
did was no worse than what the Frenchman, Talleyrand, would have
done, or the Austrian, Metternich, or several of the Turkish or
Russian diplomats. It simply proves how helpless the people of
European countries are, when the military class which rules them
has decided, for its own power and glory, on war with some other
nation.
The war was short. The forces of France were miserably
unprepared. The first great defeat of the French army resulted in
the capture of the emperor by the Prussians and the overthrowing
of the government in Paris, where a third republic was started.
One of the French generals turned traitor, thinking that if he
surrendered his army and cut short the war the Prussians would
force the French to take Napoleon III back as emperor. Paris was
besieged for a long time. The people lived on mule meat and even
on rats and mice rather than surrender to the Germans, but at
last they were starved out, and peace was made.
[Illustration: Formation of the German Empire]
In the meantime, another of Bismarck’s plans had been successful.
In January, 1871, while the siege of Paris was yet going on, he
induced the kingdoms of Bavaria and Wurtemburg, together with
Baden, Hesse-Darmstadt, and all the other little German states to
join Prussia in forming a new empire of Germany. The king of
Prussia was to be “German Emperor,” and the people of Germany
were to elect representatives to the Reichstag or Imperial
Congress. Although at the outset, the war was between the kingdom
of Prussia and the empire of France, the treaty of peace was
signed by the republic of France and the empire of Germany.
Bismarck was very harsh in his terms of peace. France was
condemned to pay an indemnity of 5,000,000,000 francs (nearly one
billion dollars) and certain parts of France were to be occupied
by the German troops until this money was fully paid. Two
counties of France, Alsace and Lorraine, were to be annexed to
Germany. Alsace was inhabited largely by people of German
descent, but there were many French mingled with them, and the
whole province had belonged to France so long that its people
felt themselves to be wholly French. Lorraine contained very few
Germans, and was taken, contrary to Bismarck’s best judgment,
because it contained the important city of Metz, which was
strongly fortified. Here the military chiefs overruled Bismarck.
The desire among the French for revenge on Germany for taking
this French-speaking province has proved that Bismarck was right.
It was a blunder of the worst kind.
The policy of “blood and iron” had been successful. From a second
rate power, Prussia had risen, under Bismarck’s leadership, to
become the strongest military force in Europe. Schleswig had been
torn from Danish, Holstein from Austrian control. Hanover had
been forcibly annexed, and Alsace and Lorraine wrested from
France. The greater part of the inhabitants of these countries
were bitterly unhappy at being placed under the Prussian military
rule. Moreover, it must be remembered that a great deal of this
growth in power had been at the expense of the liberty of the
common people. The revolution of 1848 had demanded free speech,
free newspapers, the right to vote, and the right to elect men to
a congress or parliament, and while some of these rights had been
granted, still the whole country was under the control of the war
department. The emperor, as commander-in-chief of the army, could
suppress any newspaper and dismiss the congress whenever he might
think this proper. The Reichstag was, as it has been called, a
big debating society, whose members had the right to talk, but
were not allowed to pass any laws that were contrary to the
wishes of the military leaders.
Questions for Review
What was the reason for the revolts of 1848 all over Europe?
What was the object of the “Holy Alliance”?
What was Bismarck’s purpose in building up a strong army?
How did Bismarck defeat Austria?
What is a war indemnity?
Explain how Bismarck made enemies for Napoleon III.
Why were the French alarmed when Spain offered its crown to
Prince Leopold of Hohenzollern?
What means did Bismarck use to bring on war with France?
Was Prussia’s victory a good thing for her people?
Chapter XIII.
The Balance of Power
The recovery of France.—The jealousy of the powers.—The policy of
uniting against the strongest.—The dream of Russia.—A war of
liberation.—The powers interfere in favor of the Turk.—The
Congress of Berlin.—Bismarck’s Triple Alliance.—France and Russia
are driven together.—The race for war preparation.—The growth of
big navies.
Under the third republic,[3] France recovered very rapidly from the
terrible blow dealt her by Germany. Her people worked hard and saved
their money. In less than two years, they had paid off the last cent of
the one billion dollar indemnity, and the German troops were obliged to
go home. France had adopted the same military system that Germany had,
and required all of her young men to serve two years in the army and be
ready at a moment’s notice to rush to arms. She began also to build up
a strong navy, and to spread her colonies in Africa and other parts of
the world. This rapid recovery of France surprised and disturbed
Bismarck, who thought that never again, after the war of 1870, would
she become a strong power. He had tried to renew the old “Holy
Alliance” between Germany, Russia, and Austria with the idea of
preventing the spread of republics. These were the three nations which
gave their people very few rights, and which stood for the “divine
right of kings” and for the crushing of all republics. Bismarck called
this new combination the “Drei-kaiser-bund” or three-emperor-bond. He
himself says that the proposed alliance fell to pieces because of the
lies and treachery of Prince Gortchakoff, the Russian Minister of
Foreign Affairs.
[3] The first republic began in 1792, when King Louis XVI was
beheaded, the second in 1848 when Louis Philippe, the “citizen king,”
was driven out.
An incident which happened in 1875 helped to estrange Germany
from Russia. As was previously said, Bismarck was astonished and
alarmed when he saw how quickly France was getting over the
effects of the war. In 1875, some trouble came up again between
France and Germany, and Bismarck a second time planned to make
war on the republic and—complete the task that he had left
unfinished in 1871. He wanted to reduce France to the rank of a
second class power, on a par with Spain and Denmark. This time,
however, England and Russia growled ominously. They notified
Bismarck that they would not stand by and see France crushed—not
from any love of France, but because they were jealous of Prussia
and afraid that the Germans might become too powerful in Europe.
Accordingly, Bismarck had to give up his idea of war. Prussia was
strong, but she could not fight England, Russia, and France
combined. However, he remembered that England and Russia had
spoiled his plans and waited for a chance to get revenge.
[Illustration: Peter the Great]
The great object of all European diplomats was to maintain what
they called “the balance of power.” By this they meant that no
one country was to be allowed to grow so strong that she could
defy the rest of Europe. Whenever one nation grew too powerful,
the others combined to pull her down.
In the meantime, trouble was again brewing among the Balkan
nations, which were still subject to the Turks. Revolts had
broken out among the Serbians, and the people of Bosnia and
Bulgaria. As has already been told, these nations are Slavic,
cousins of the Russians, and they have always looked upon Russia
as their big brother and protector. Any keen-eared, intelligent
Russian can understand the language of the Serbs, it is so much
like his own tongue. (Bel-grad, Petro-grad; the word “grad” means
“city” in both languages.)
Not only was Russia hostile toward the Turks because they were
oppressing the little Slav states, but she had reasons of her own for
wanting to see Turkey overthrown. Ever since the reign of Peter the
Great, Russia had had her eye upon Constantinople. Peter had conquered
the district east of the Gulf of Finland, and had founded St.
Petersburg[4] there, just to give Russia a port which was free of ice.
In the same way, other czars who followed him had fought their way
southward to the Black Sea, seeking for a chance to trade with the
Mediterranean world. But the Black Sea was like a bottle, and the Turks
at Constantinople were able to stop the Russian trade at any time they
might wish to do so. Russia is an agricultural country, and must ship
her grain to countries that are more densely inhabited, to exchange it
for their manufactures.
[4] Now called Petrograd.
[Illustration: Entrance to the Mosque of St Sophia]
Therefore, it has been the dream of every Russian czar that one
day Russia might own Constantinople. Again, this city, in ancient
days, was the home of the Greek church, as Rome was the capital
of the western Catholic church. The Russians are all Greek
Catholics, and every Russian looks forward to the day when the
great church of St. Sophia, which is now a Mohammedan mosque,
shall once more be the home of Christian worship. With this plan
in mind, Russian diplomats were only too happy to stir up trouble
for the Turks among the Slavic peoples of the Balkan states, as
Serbia, Bulgaria, Roumania, and Montenegro are called. Glance at
the two following maps of southeastern Europe, and see how Turkey
had been reduced in size during the two hundred years which
followed the Turkish defeat at the gates of Vienna by John
Sobieski and the Austrians. The state of Bessarabia had changed
hands two or three times, remaining finally in the hands of
Russia.
The revolts of the Balkan peoples in 1875 and 1876 were hailed
with joy among the Russians, and the government at St. Petersburg
lost no time in rushing to the aid of the Balkan states and
declaring war on Turkey. After a short but stubbornly contested
conflict, Russia and the little countries were victors. A treaty
of peace was signed at San Stephano, by which Roumania, Serbia,
and Bulgaria were to be recognized by Turkey as independent
states. The boundaries of Bulgaria were to reach to the Aegean
Sea, including most of Macedonia, thus cutting off Turkey from
her county of Albania, except by water. Bear this in mind, for it
will help you to understand Russia’s later feeling when Bulgaria
in 1915 joined the ranks of her enemies.
[Illustration: Southeastern and Central Europe, 1706]
[Illustration: Losses of Turkey during the Nineteenth Century]
[Illustration: The Congress of Berlin. Prince Gortchakoff (seated).
Disraeli (with cane). Count Andrassy. Bismarck.]
The matter was all settled, and Turkey had accepted these terms,
when once more the diplomats of Europe began to meddle. It will
be remembered that Russia three years before had prevented a
second war against France planned by Bismarck. It was very easy
for him to persuade Austria and England that if Russia were
allowed to cripple Turkey and set up three new kingdoms which
would be under her control, she would speedily become the
strongest nation in Europe. The “balance of power” would be
disturbed. England and Austria sided with Germany, and a meeting
of statesmen and diplomats was called at Berlin in 1878 to decide
once more what should be the map of Europe. Representatives were
present from all the leading European countries. Even Turkey had
two men at the meeting, but the three men who really controlled
were Bismarck, Count Andrassy of Austria, and Lord Beaconsfield
(Benjamin Disraeli) of England. Russia was robbed of a great part
of the fruits of her victory. Bulgaria was left partially under
the control of Turkey, in that she had to pay Turkey a large sum
of money each year for the privilege of being left alone. Her
territory was made much smaller than had been agreed to by the
treaty of San Stephano. In fact less than one-third of the
Bulgarians were living within the boundaries finally agreed upon
by the congress. A great part of the Serbians were still left
under Turkish rule, as were the Greeks of Thessaly and Epirus.
The two counties of Bosnia and Herzegovina were still to belong
to Turkey, but as the Turks did not seem to be strong enough to
keep order there, Austria was to take control of them and run
their government, although their taxes were still to be paid to
Turkey. Austria solemnly agreed never to take them from Turkey.
Russia, naturally, was very unhappy over this arrangement, and so
were the inhabitants of the Balkan kingdoms, for they had hoped
that now they were at last to be freed from the oppression of
their ancient enemies, the Turks. Thus the Congress of Berlin,
like that of Vienna in 1815 laid the foundation for future wars
and revolutions.
Bismarck now set out to strengthen Germany by making alliances
with other European states. He first made up with his old enemy,
Austria. Thanks to the liberal treatment that he had given this
country after her disastrous war of 1866, he was able to get the
Austrians to join Germany in an alliance which states that if two
countries of Europe should ever attack one of the two allies, the
other would rush to her help.
The Italians were friendly to Germany, for they remembered that
they had gotten Venetia from Austria through the help of the
Prussians, but they had always looked upon the Austrians as their
worst enemies. It was a wonderful thing, then, when Bismarck
finally induced Italy to join with Austria and Germany in a
“Dreibund” or “Triple Alliance.”
The Italian people had been very friendly to the French, and this
going over to their enemies would never have been possible but
for an act of France which greatly angered Italy. For many years,
France had been in control of Algeria on the north coast of
Africa. This country had once been a nest of pirates, and the
French had gone there originally to clean them out. Next to
Algeria on the east is the county of Tunis, which, as you will
see by the map, is very close to Sicily and Italy. The Italians
had been looking longingly at this district for some time,
intending to organize an expedition and forcibly annex it to
their kingdom. They waited too long, however, and one fine day in
1881 they found the prize gone,—France had seized this county for
herself. It was Italy’s anger over this act of France more than
anything else that enabled Bismarck to get her into an alliance
with Germany and her ancient enemy, Austria.
France now saw herself hemmed in on the east by a chain of
enemies. It looked as though Bismarck might declare war upon the
republic at any time, and be perfectly safe from interference,
with Austria and Italy to protect him. Russia, smarting under the
treatment which she had been given by the Congress of Berlin, was
full of resentment against Germany. Both the French and the
Russians felt themselves threatened by Bismarck’s Dreibund, and
so, in self-defense each country made advance toward the other.
The result was the “Dual Alliance” between France and Russia,
which bound either country to come to the aid of the other in
case of an attack by two powers at once.
In this way, the balance of power, disturbed by Bismarck’s
“Dreibund,” was again restored. Many people thought the forming
of the two alliances a fine thing, “for,” said they, “each party
is now too strong to be attacked by the other. Therefore, we
shall never again have war among the great powers.”
England was not tied up with either alliance. On account of her
position on an island, and because of her strong navy, she did
not feel obliged to keep a large standing army such as the great
powers on the continent maintained.
These nations were kept in constant fear of war. As soon as
France equipped her army with machine guns, Germany and Austria
had to do the same. As soon as the Germans invented a new
magazine rifle, the Russians and French had to invent similar
arms for their soldiers. If Germany passed a law compelling all
men up to the age of forty-five to report for two weeks’ military
training once every year, France and Russia had to do the same.
If Italy built some powerful warships, France and Russia had to
build still more powerful ones. This led to still larger ships
built by Germany and Italy. If France built a fleet of one
hundred torpedo boats, the Triple Alliance had to “go her one
better” by building one hundred and fifty. If Germany equipped
her army with war balloons, Russia and France had to do the same.
If France invented a new kind of heavy artillery, Germany and
Austria built a still bigger gun.
This mad race for war equipment was bad enough when it had to do only
with the five nations in the two alliances about which you have been
told. However, the death of the old emperor of Germany in 1888 brought
to the throne his grandson, the present Kaiser,[5] and he formed a plan
for making Germany the leading nation on the sea as Bismarck had made
her on the land. He saw France and England seizing distant colonies and
dividing up Africa between them. He at once announced that Germany,
too, must have colonies to which to export her manufactures and from
which to bring back tropical products. This meant a strong navy to
protect these colonies, and the race with England was on. As soon as
Germany built some new battleships, England built still others, larger
and with heavier guns. The next year, Germany would build still larger
ships, and the next England would come back with still heavier guns. As
fast as England built ships, Germany built them. Now, each battleship
costs from five to fifteen million dollars, and it does not take long
before a race of this kind sends the taxes too high for people to
stand. There was unrest throughout Europe and murmurs of discontent
were heard among the working classes.
[5] The present Kaiser’s father reigned only ninety-nine days, as he
was a very sick man at the time of the old emperor’s death.
Questions for Review
How did France pay off her war indemnity so promptly?
Why did Bismarck’s three-emperor-alliance fail?
What is meant by “the balance of power”?
What was the condition of the Serbs, Bulgarians, etc. before
1878?
Why did Russia covet Constantinople?
Why did the powers prevent the treaty of San Stephano from
being carried out?
What wrongs were done by the Congress of Berlin?
Why did Bismarck form the Triple Alliance?
How was he able to induce Italy to join her old enemy,
Austria?
What was the effect of the formation of the Triple Alliance
on France and Russia?
What result had the formation of the two alliances on the
gun-industry?
How was England brought into the race for war equipment?
Chapter XIV.
The “Entente Cordiale”
Ancient enemies.—England and France in Africa.—A collision at
Fashoda.—Germany offers to help France.—Delcassé the
peacemaker.—A French-English agreement.—Friendship takes the
place of hostility.—England’s relations with Italy, Russia, and
Germany.—Germans cultivate the friendship and trade of
Turkey.—The Morocco-Algeciras incident.—The question of Bosnia
and Herzegovina.—England joins France and Russia to form the
“Triple Entente.”—The Agadir incident.
England and France had never been friendly. There had been wars
between them, off and on, for five hundred years. The only time
that they had fought on the same side was in the campaign against
Russia in 1855, but even then there was no real sympathy between
them.
In the year 1882, events happened in Egypt which gave England an
excuse for interfering with the government of that country. Egypt
was a part of the Turkish empire, but so long as it paid a
certain amount of money to Constantinople, the Turks did not care
very much how it was governed. But now a wild chief of the desert
had announced himself as the prophet Mohammed come to earth
again, and a great many of the desert tribesmen had joined him.
They cut to pieces one or two English armies in Egypt, and killed
General Gordon, a famous English soldier. It was 1898 before the
English were able to defeat this horde. Lord Kitchener finally
beat them and extended the English power to the city of Khartoom
on the Nile.
[Illustration: An Arab Sheik and His Staff]
In the meantime, the English millionaire, Cecil Rhodes, had
formed a plan for a railroad which should run the entire length
of Africa from the Cape of Good Hope to Cairo. It was England’s
ambition to control all the territory through which this road
should run. But the French, too, were spreading out over Africa.
Their expeditions through the Sahara Desert had joined their
colonies of Algeria and Tunis to those on the west coast of
Africa and others along the Gulf of Guinea. In this same year,
1898, while Lord Kitchener was still fighting the Arabs, a French
expedition under Major Marchand struggled across the Sahara and
reached the Nile at Fashoda, several miles above Khartoom.
Marchand planted the French flag and announced that he took
possession of this territory for the republic of France.
The English were very indignant when they heard of what Marchand
had done. If France held Fashoda, their “Cape to Cairo” railroad
was cut right in the middle, and they could advance their
territory no farther up the valley of the Nile. They notified
France that this was English land. Marchand retorted that no
Englishman had ever set foot there, and that the French flag
would never be hauled down after it had once been planted on the
Nile. Excitement ran high. The French people had no love for
England, and they encouraged Marchand to remain where he was. The
English newspapers demanded that he be withdrawn. Germany, which
had already begun its campaign to wrest from England the leading
place on the ocean, was delighted at the prospect of a war
between France and the British. The German diplomats patted
France on the back, and practically assured her of German help in
case it came to a war with England.
Germany now felt that she had nothing more to fear from France.
The French population was not increasing, while Germany was
steadily growing in numbers. It was England whom Germany saw
across her path toward control of the sea.
There was a man in France, however, who had no thought of making
up with Germany. The memory of the war of 1870 and of the lost
provinces of Alsace and Lorraine was very strong with him. This
was Théophile Delcassé, a little man with a large head and a
great brain. He refused to be tempted by the offers of German
help, thinking that England, with its free government, was a much
better friend for the republic than the military empire of
Germany could be.
Just when the trouble was at its height, the English ambassador
came to see Mr. Delcassé, who at that time was in charge of the
French foreign office. He had in his pocket an ultimatum, that is
to say, a final notice to France that she must give in or England
would declare war on her. As he walked into Delcassé’s presence,
he began fumbling with the top button of his coat. “Don’t touch
that button,” said Delcassé quickly. “Drop your hand. You have
something in your pocket which must not be taken out. It is a
threat, and if I see it, France will fight. Sit down. Let us talk
this matter over coolly. Matters will adjust themselves all right
in the end.” And they did. Delcassé was finally able to quiet the
French people, to recall Marchand from Fashoda and to persuade
France to refuse the offer of German friendship. England was
given a free hand in Egypt, without any interference from the
French. Naturally the English were very grateful to Delcassé for
having refused to profit by German help and declare war. In
return for the French agreement to stay out of Egypt, the English
promised to help France get control of Morocco.
Very soon after this, Queen Victoria of England died, and her
son, Edward VII, became king. He had spent a great deal of time
in France, and was very fond of the French and was popular with
them. He saw the growing power of Germany, and knew that England
could not afford to be without a friend in Europe. He did his
best to bring about a feeling of friendship between the English
and the French, and was very successful in doing so. He made
frequent visits to France, where he was received with great
cordiality. In return the English entertained the president of
France in London in a princely fashion. French warships paid
friendly visits to English waters, and the sailors mingled with
each other and did their best to understand each other’s
language. All France, and England as well, welcomed the beginning
of the “Entente Cordiale,” or friendly understanding between the
two nations.
England also went out of her way to cultivate a friendly
understanding with Italy. With the other nations of Europe
England had no great friendship. Between England and Russia,
there had been a hostile feeling for a long time, for the British
felt that the Russians would like nothing better than to stretch
their empire from Siberia, down to include British India, or at
least Afghanistan and Baluchistan, where the British were in
control.
The emperor of Germany, on the other hand, was planning for the
future growth of the trade of his country. Since his coming to
the throne, Germany had made wonderful progress in the direction
of manufactures. She had become one of the leading nations of the
world. One of her chief questions was, where to market these
goods. In 1896 the emperor paid a visit to Syria and Turkey. He
was received with great enthusiasm by the Turks, who were glad to
have one strong friend among the powers of Europe. Soon
afterwards the Germans began to get more and more of the trade of
the Ottoman Empire. A German company was given permission by the
Turks to build a railroad across Turkey to the Persian Gulf
through Bagdad. German railways ran through Austria-Hungary,
which was Germany’s ally, to Constantinople and Salonika, the two
greatest ports of Turkey in Europe. This short overland route to
Persia was looked upon with suspicion and distrust by the
English, whose ships up to this time had carried on almost all of
Europe’s commerce with India and the neighboring countries.
[Illustration: A Scene In Constantinople]
Germany was reaching out for colonies. She secured land on the
west coast of Africa and, on the east as well. A tract of land in
the corner of the Gulf of Guinea also fell to her share. Islands
in the Pacific Ocean were seized. Her foreign trade was growing
by leaps and bounds, and she threatened to take away from England
a great deal of the latter’s commerce.
The German emperor announced that he must always be consulted
whenever any changes of territory took place, no matter in what
part of the earth. Therefore in 1905 when France, with the help
of Great Britain and Spain, told the sultan of Morocco that he
had to behave himself, the German emperor in person made a visit
to Morocco and assured the sultan that he didn’t have to pay any
attention to France.
There was a great deal of excitement over this incident, and a
meeting was held at Algeciras, Spain, where representatives of
all the great powers came together. In the end, France and
England were upheld, for even Italy, Germany’s ally, voted
against the Germans. On the other hand, Delcassé, the Frenchman
who settled the Fashoda trouble, was compelled to resign his
position as minister of foreign affairs because the Germans
objected to him, and the French felt that Germany had humiliated
them.
In 1908, the “young Turk” party in Constantinople (the party
which stood for progress and for more popular government) drove
the old sultan off his throne, and announced that there should be
a Turkish parliament, or congress, to which all parts of the
empire should send representatives.
You will remember that two counties of the Turkish empire, Bosnia
and Herzegovina, had been turned over to Austria to rule by the
Congress of Berlin in 1878. Austria at the time solemnly promised
that she would never try to annex these provinces. In 1908,
however, she forgot all about her promise. When Bosnia and
Herzegovina wanted to elect men to represent them in the new
Turkish parliament, Austria calmly told them that after this they
should consider themselves part of the Austrian Empire, that they
belonged to Turkey no longer.
The two provinces were inhabited largely by Serbs, and all Serbia
had looked forward to the day when they should once more be
joined to herself. These states, like Montenegro, had been part
of the ancient kingdom of Serbia. As long as they were in dispute
between Austria and Turkey, Serbia had hopes of regaining them,
but when Austria thus forcibly annexed them, it seemed to the
Serbs that they were lost forever.
Serbia appealed to Russia, for as was said, all the Slavic states
look upon Russia as their big brother. The Russians were highly
indignant at this breaking of her promises by Austria, and the
czar talked of war. His generals and war ministers, however,
dissuaded him. “Oh, no, your majesty,” said they, “we are in no
shape to fight Austria and Germany. Our army was badly
disorganized in the Japanese war three years ago, and we shall
not be ready for another fight for some time to come.” Russia
protested, but the German emperor notified her that he stood by
Austria, and asked Russia if she was ready to fight. Russia and
France were not ready, and so they were obliged to back down, but
did so with a bitter feeling toward the “central empires,” as
Germany and Austria are called.
It has already been shown that England for a long time had been
suspicious of Russia, fearing that the northern power was aiming
at control of India. Of late this hostile feeling had been dying
out, especially as the friendship between France and Great
Britain grew stronger. It was impossible for Russia, France’s
partner in the Dual Alliance, to remain unfriendly to England,
France’s ally in the “Entente Cordiale.” Both England and Russia
felt that the growth of Germany and the ambition of her war
chiefs threatened them more than they had ever threatened each
other.
In 1907 Russia and England reached an understanding by which they
marked off two great parts of Persia for trading purposes, each
agreeing to stay in her own portion, and not disturb the traders
of the other country in theirs. After this Russia, England, and
France were usually found acting together in European diplomacy,
under the name of the “Triple Entente.” The “balance of power”
had been leaning toward Germany and her allies, but the English
navy, added to the scales on the other side, more than balanced
the advantage in land forces of the Triple Alliance.
Three years later, Morocco again gave trouble, and France, with
England’s backing and Spain’s friendship, sent her troops among
the Moors to enforce law and order. Any one could see that with
Tunis and Algeria already in French hands, it was only a question
of a little while before Morocco would be theirs also.
This time Germany rushed her warship _Panther_ to the Moorish
port of Agadir. This was a threat against France, and the French
appealed to England to know whether they could look to her for
support. Russia was now in much better shape for war than she had
been three years before, and notified France that she was ready
to give her support. Therefore, when Mr. Lloyd-George, the little
Welshman who was really the leader of the British government,
stood up before a big crowd of English bankers and told the world
that “to the last ship, the last man, the last penny,” England
would support France, it was plain that somebody would have to
back down or else start a tremendous European war.
It was now Germany’s turn to give way. Strong as she was, she did
not propose to fight France, Russia, and England combined. So,
although the French gave Germany a few square miles of land in
central Africa in return for the Kaiser’s agreement to let France
have her way in Morocco, the result was a backdown for Germany,
and it left scars which would not heal.
During all this period from 1898 to 1914 there were incidents
happening, any one of which might have started the world war.
Fashoda, Algeciras, Bosnia, Agadir—each time it seemed as if only
a miracle could avert the conflict. Europe was like a powder
magazine. No man knew when the spark might fall that would bring
on the explosion.
Questions for Review
What were the plans of the English regarding Africa?
How did Major Marchand threaten the peace of Europe?
Why was Germany ready to help France?
Why did Delcassé desire to keep peace with England?
Why was England suspicious of Russia?
Why did Germany cultivate the friendship of the Turks?
Why did not the annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina by
Austria start a general European war?
Why did England and Russia become friendly?
Why did not the Agadir incident bring about a war?
Chapter XV.
The Sowing of the Dragon’s Teeth
The growth of German trade.—Balkan hatreds.—The wonderful
alliance against Turkey.—The sympathies of the big nations.—Their
interference and its results.—A new kingdom.—The second war.—The
work of diplomacy.—The wrongs and grievances of Bulgaria.
Germany’s position in Europe was not favorable to her trade. Her
ships, in order to carry on commerce with the peoples of the
Mediterranean, had to go a great deal farther than those of
France or England. As a result, the Germans had been looking
toward Constantinople and southwestern Asia as the part of the
world with which their commerce ought to grow. It was Germany’s
plan to control the Balkan countries and thus have a solid strip
of territory, including Germany, Austria, the Balkan states, and
Turkey through which her trade might pass to Asia Minor, Persia,
and India.
The feelings of the Balkan peoples for each other has already
been explained. The Bulgarians hated the Serbians, with whom they
had fought a bloody war in 1885. The Serbians despised the
Bulgarians. The Albanians had no love for either nation, while
the Greeks looked down on all the others. Montenegro and Serbia
were friends, naturally, since they were inhabited by the same
kind of people and had once been parts of the original kingdom of
Serbia.
[Illustration: Turkey As the Four Balkan Allies intended to divide it.
(1912-13)]
Bulgaria in 1909 announced to the world that she would pay no
more tribute to Turkey, and after this was to be counted one of
the independent nations of Europe. The Bulgarians had grown so
strong and the Turks so weak, that Turkey did not dare go to war,
so permitted the matter to go unnoticed. The only thing on which
all the Balkan nations and Greece could agree was their bitter
hatred of the Turks, who had oppressed and wronged them cruelly
for the last three hundred and fifty years.
Russia, always plotting to overthrow Turkey, at last accomplished
a wonderful bit of diplomacy. She encouraged Bulgaria, Serbia,
Montenegro, and Greece to forget their old time dislike of each
other, for the time being, and declare war jointly on Turkey. In
order that there should not be any quarreling over the spoils
when the war was over, the four little nations agreed, in a
secret treaty, that when they got through with Turkey, they would
divide up the carcass as shown in the opposite map. The head,
including Constantinople, was to be left for Russia, of course.
Bulgaria was to take the back and the great part of the body,
Greece was to annex the drumsticks and the second joint. The rest
of the body was to go to Serbia with the exception of the very
tail, including the city of Scutari, which was to be given to
Montenegro. Serbia was at last to have a seacoast and a chance to
trade with other nations than Austria. The Serbs had a grudge
against the Austrians, for the latter, taking advantage of the
fact that all Serbian trade with Europe had to go through their
country, had charged them exorbitant prices for manufactured
goods and paid them very little for their own products in return.
Bulgaria was to have Kavala (kȧ va′lȧ) as a seaport on the
Aegean and all the coast of that sea as far as the Gallipoli
(găl ĭ′po li) peninsula. Greece was to have the important city
of Salonika (sȧlōni′kȧ), southern Macedonia, and southern
Albania.
With this secret agreement between them, the four little states
went to war with Turkey. In accordance with the new friendship
sprung up between Germany and the Ottomans, German officers and
generals were sent to Constantinople to drill the Turkish troops.
Cannon and machine guns were sent them from German factories, and
their rifles were fed with German bullets. The four little
countries, accordingly, turned to France and Russia for
assistance. Their troops were armed with French cannon and
machine guns, and their military advisers were French and
Russians. While the big nations managed to keep out of the war
themselves, all were strongly interested in one side or the
other.
The result was a complete surprise to Austria and Germany. To
their consternation and disgust, the four little nations made
short work of the Turkish troops. In eight months, Turkey was
thoroughly beaten, and the allies were ready to put through their
program of dividing up the spoils.
And now, once more, the great powers meddled, and by their
interference laid the foundation for future wars and misery.
Austria and Germany saw their path to Constantinople and the east
cut right in two. Their railroads, instead of passing through a
series of countries under German control, now were to be cut
asunder by an arm of Slavic states under Russian protection,
which would certainly stop German progress toward Asia.
With the map as it had been before the war of 1912, there was one
little strip of territory, called the Sanjak of Novibazar,
between Serbia and Montenegro, which connected Turkey with
Austria. To be sure, this country was inhabited almost entirely
by Serbians, but so long as it was under the military control of
Austria and Turkey, German railway trains bound for the east
could traverse it. Now Serbia and Montenegro proposed to divide
this country up between themselves. Serbia, by gaining her
seaport on the Adriatic, could send her trade upon the water to
find new markets in Italy, Spain, and France.
[Illustration: Durazzo]
The Italians had always wanted to control the Adriatic Sea. They
longed for the time when the cities of Trieste and Pola should be
turned over to them by Austria. The cities of Durazzo (dū
rȧt′zō) and Avlona on the Albanian coast were inhabited by many
Italians, and Italy had always cherished the hope that they might
belong to her. Therefore, the Italians did not take kindly to the
Serbian program of seizing this coast. At any rate, as soon as
the four little countries announced their intention of dividing
up Turkey in Europe among themselves, Austria, Germany, and Italy
raised a great clamor.
Another meeting of representatives of the great powers was held,
and once more the Germans were able to carry their point. Instead
of allowing the four little countries to divide up the conquered
land between them, the powers made a fifth small country, the
kingdom of Albania, and brought down from Germany a little prince
to rule over these wild mountaineers. Notice that the Albanians
were not consulted. The great powers simply took a map, drew a
certain line on it and said, “This shall be the kingdom of
Albania, and its king shall be Prince William of Wied.” Again we
have a king-made map with the usual trail of grievances.
This arrangement robbed Montenegro of Scutari, robbed Serbia of
its seaport on the Adriatic, and robbed Greece of the country
west of Janina (yȧ nï′nȧ). France and Russia did not like this
program, but they did not feel like fighting the Triple Alliance
to prevent its being put into effect.
[Illustration: Changes as a Result of the Two Balkan Wars 1912-13]
The three little countries, separated from a great part of their
new territory, now turned to Bulgaria, and, practically, said to
her, “Since we have been robbed of Albania, we will have to
divide up all over again. You must give us part of your plunder
in order to ‘make it square.’” Now was the time for the ancient
ill-feeling between the Bulgarians and their neighbors to show
itself. In reply to this invitation, Bulgaria said, in so many
words, “Not a bit of it. Our armies bore the brunt of the fight.
It was really we who conquered Turkey. Your little armies had a
very insignificant part in the war. If you want any more land, we
dare you to come and take it.” And the Bulgarians made a
treacherous night attack on their recent allies, which brought a
declaration of war from the three little nations.
This quarrel, of course, was exactly what Germany and Austria
wanted. It accomplished their purpose of breaking up this Balkan
alliance under the protection of Russia. So with Austria and
Germany egging on Bulgaria, and Russia and France doing their
best to induce Bulgaria to be reasonable and surrender some land
to Greece and Serbia, the second Balkan war began in 1913 almost
before the last cannon discharged in the first war had cooled.
Again, Europe was astonished, for the victorious Bulgarians, who
had been mainly responsible for the defeat of the Turks, went
down to defeat before the Serbians and Greeks on the bloody field
of Bregalnitza (brĕg′ȧl nĭt zȧ). To add to Bulgaria’s
troubles, the Turks, taking advantage of the discord among their
late opponents, suddenly attacked the Bulgarians in the rear and
stole back the city of Adrianople, which had cost the Bulgarians
so much trouble to capture. In the meantime, Roumania, which up
to this point had had no part in any of the fighting, saw all of
her neighbors growing larger at the expense of Turkey. The
Roumanian statesmen, asking what was to be their share of the
spoils, and moved simply by a greedy desire to enlarge their
kingdom, declared war on Bulgaria also.
Poor Bulgaria, fighting five nations at once, had to buy peace at
the best price she could make. She bought off Roumania by giving
to her a strip of land in the country called the Dobrudja (dō
brood′jȧ) between the Danube River and the Black Sea. She had to
agree to a new boundary line with Turkey by which the Turks kept
Adrianople. She had to give Kavala and the surrounding country to
Greece and the territory around Monastir (mō nȧ stïr′) to
Serbia, although these districts were inhabited largely by her
own people.
Bulgaria had in vain appealed to her ancient friend and
protector, Russia. The Russians were disgusted to think that the
Bulgarians had refused to listen to them when they urged them to
grant some small pieces of land to Greece and Serbia at the close
of the first war. They felt that the Bulgarians had been
headstrong and richly deserved what they got. Therefore, Russia
refused to interfere now and save Bulgaria from humiliation. In
the end, Austrian diplomacy had accomplished a great deal of
mischief. The Balkan alliance under the protection of Russia was
badly broken up. The old hostility between Serbia and Bulgaria,
which had been buried for the time being during the first Balkan
war, now broke out with greater force than ever. Bulgaria sulked,
feeling revengeful against all of her neighbors, but especially
angry at Russia, who had always been her friend before.
Questions for Review
Why did the Germans desire a road to the east?
What was the one thing on which the Balkan nations were
united?
What was Russia’s purpose in helping to form the Balkan
Alliance?
Why did the great powers interfere to prevent the four little
countries from carrying out their secret agreement?
What was the cause of the second Balkan war?
Which powers were glad and which were sorry to see it begin?
Why was Bulgaria angry with all her neighbors?
[Illustration: A Modern Dreadnaught]
Chapter XVI.
Who Profits?
The race for power on the sea.—The “naval holiday” declined.—The
declining birth-rate.—The growth of the Socialists.—The
militarists of Germany.—How wars cure labor troubles.—The forces
behind the war game.—Profits and press agents.
Let us turn back to the great powers of Europe. We spoke of their
mad race, each nation trying to build more ships and bigger ships
than its neighbors and to outstrip them in cannon and other
munitions of war. The German navy had been growing by leaps and
bounds. From being the sixth largest navy in the world, within
ten years it had grown to second place. But, fast as the Germans
built ships, the English built them more rapidly still. England
built a monstrous battleship called the Dreadnaught, which was
twice as heavy as any other battleship afloat. Germany promptly
replied by planning four ships of the dreadnaught class, and
England came back with some still larger vessels which are known
as super-dreadnaughts.
At last, the English first lord of the navy, Mr. Winston
Churchill, proposed to Germany that each country take a “naval
holiday.” In other words, he practically said to Germany, “If you
people will stop building warships for a year, we will also. Then
at the end of the year, we shall be no worse off or better off
than we were at the beginning.”
[Illustration: Submarine]
Germany laughed at this proposal. To her, it showed that England
could not stand the strain very much longer. “Besides,” said the
Germans, “it is all very well for England to be satisfied with
her present navy, which is half again as large as ours. If our
navy were the strongest in the world, we too would be glad to
have all nations stop building warships,” and they laid down the
keels of four new super-dreadnaughts.
But other things disturbed the peace of mind of the German
militarists. For a long time, the population of France had not
been increasing, while Germany almost doubled her numbers from
1860 to 1900. Now, to their dismay, the German birth-rate began
to grow less and they saw the population of Russia growing larger
by 20% every ten years. Again, they learned that Russia was about
to build a series of railroads near the German frontier which
would enable them to rush an army to attack Germany at very short
notice. The Germans already had such railroads in their own
country, but they did not propose to let their neighbors have
this advantage also.
Again, France had recently passed a law forcing every young man
to put three years in military service instead of two. This would
increase France’s standing army by 50 per cent. The German
people, who up to this time had been very docile and very
obedient to the military rule, were showing signs of discontent.
The Socialists, a party who represented the working people
largely, and who were strongly opposed to war, had been growing
very fast. In the last election, they had gained many
representatives in the German congress, and had cast over
4,000,000 votes. The only thing that kept them from having a
majority in the Reichstag (the German congress) was the fact that
in some districts, the voters of the other parties combined
against them. In this way, the military class still held control
of the German government, but it was afraid that it would not be
for long.
With nearly half the able-bodied men in the country spending
their time drilling and doing guard duty, the other half of the
population had to earn money enough to support their own families
and also the families of the men in the army. As one writer has
put it, “Every workingman in Europe carried a soldier on his back
who reached down and took the bread out of his platter.”
The program of Bismarck was still in the minds of the military
leaders of Germany. The military class must rule Prussia, Prussia
must rule Germany, and Germany must be the greatest power in
Europe. To their minds, war between Germany and her allies and
the rest of Europe must come. Being warriors by trade and having
nothing else to do, they saw that, if the great war were
postponed much longer, the chances of Germany’s winning it would
grow less and less. France and Russia were growing stronger and
Germany was unable to catch up to England’s navy. It should be
remembered that this class made up a small part only of the
German nation. Their influence was all out of proportion to their
numbers. They controlled the government, and the government
controlled the schools and the newspapers. The people believed
what they were told. They were simply parts of the war machine.
Bismarck’s policy had been to crush his enemies one by one. He
never entered a war until he was sure that Prussia was bound to
win it. In like fashion, the German military chiefs of 1914 hoped
to conquer France and Russia before England was ready. It was the
old story as told by Shakespeare. “Our legions are brim full, our
cause is ripe. The enemy increaseth every day. We, at the height,
are ready to decline.”
Russia, too, was having her troubles. After the czar had promised
the nation a constitution and had agreed to allow a duma or
parliament to be called together, the military class, who were
trying to keep the common people under control and in ignorance
as much as possible had been able to prevent the duma from
obtaining any power. It had much less freedom than the German
Reichstag. It was permitted to meet and to talk, but not to pass
laws. If any member spoke his mind freely, he was sent to Siberia
for life. There were murmurs and threats. There were labor
troubles and strikes. The people of Russia, especially those
living in cities, were learning how little freedom they had,
compared with citizens of other countries, and the time seemed
ripe for a revolution.
It has always been the policy of kings to take the minds of their
people off their own wrongs by giving them some foreign war to
think about. Although the Russian government did all that it
could to prevent the war without completely betraying Serbia,
still the war probably put off the Russian Revolution for two
years.
It must be kept in mind that in Germany and especially in Prussia
there was a class of people who had no trade but war. These were
the so-called Junkers (Yo͝onkers), direct descendants of the old
feudal barons. They were owners of rich tracts of land which had
been handed down to them by their fore-fathers. The rent paid to
them by the people who lived on their farms supported them richly
in idleness. Just as their ancestors in the old days had lived
only by fighting and plundering, so these people still had the
idea that anything that they could take by force was theirs.
Bismarck was a Junker of Junkers. He had nothing but contempt for
the common people and their law-making bodies. In the early days
when he was Prime Minister of the Prussian kingdom, the Congress
had refused to vote to raise certain moneys through taxes that
Bismarck advised, because he wanted to spend all of it in
preparations for war. In spite of the vote of the representatives
of the people, Bismarck went right on collecting the money and
spending it as he wished. Later on, after the Prussian army had
won its rapid victories, first over the Danes, then over the
Austrians, and lastly over the French, the Prussian people,
swollen with pride at what their armies had accomplished, forgave
Bismarck for riding rough-shod over their liberties. But Bismarck
was able to do what he did because he had the backing of the king
and the great land-owning Junker class.
In 1870 this was the only class in Prussia that had any power. By
1914, however, a change had come about. The wonderful development
of Germany’s trade and manufacturing had brought wealth and power
to the merchant class and these had to be considered when plans
for war were being formed.
Naturally, the outbreak of war disturbs trade very much, especially
trade with foreign countries. A great deal of the German commerce,
carried on with Great Britain, the United States, South America, and
far distant colonies, had to travel over the ocean. German merchants
would never support a war cheerfully if they thought that their trade
would be interrupted for any length of time. So the Junkers, when they
made up their minds to wage war for the conquest of France and Russia,
persuaded the merchants that after these countries had been conquered
they would be forced to give a big sum of money to Germany which would
more than pay her back for the full cost of the war. Then the Russians
would be compelled, as a result of the war, to promise to trade only
with German merchants and manufacturers, and thus everybody in Germany
would be much richer.[6]
[6] When England came in, the merchants of Germany were very
down-hearted, for they saw all their over-seas trade cut off at a
blow. But the Junkers called together the leading merchants and bribed
them with promises. In the year 1918 one of the prominent
manufacturers of Germany made a statement which got out and was
published in the countries of the Entente. After telling how the blame
for the war was to be laid at the door of the land-owning, military
class, he confessed that he personally had been bribed to support the
war by the promise of thirty thousand acres of Australian land, which
was to be given to him after Germany had conquered the world. This, of
course, was pure piracy; the motto of Prussia for some time had been
that piracy pays.
There was one class of manufacturers who did not lose trade, but
gained it through a war. This was composed of the makers of guns
and munitions. They were clamorously back of the Junkers in their
demands for war. These people profited by preparation for war.
They kept inventing newer and stronger guns so that the weapons
which they had sold the governments one year would be out-of-date
the next, ready to be thrown on the scrap heap. In this way, the
factories were kept working over-time and their profits were
enormous. This money, of course, came out of the taxes of the
common people.
Their surplus profits the munition makers invested sometimes in
newspapers. It was proved in the German Reichstag in 1913 that
the great gun-makers of Prussia had a force of hired newspaper
writers to keep up threats of war. They paid certain papers in
Paris to print articles to make the French people think that the
Germans were about to attack them. These same gun-makers in
Berlin tried to persuade the German people that the French were
on the point of attacking them.
All of this played into the hands of the Junkers by making people
all over Europe feel that war could not be avoided. Thus when the
Junkers were ready to strike and the great war broke out, people
would say, “At last it has come, the war that we knew was
inevitable.”
Questions for Review
Why did Germany decline to take a “naval holiday”?
What is meant by “strategic railroads”?
Why were the military leaders alarmed at the growth of the
Socialist Party?
What was the fate of popular government in Russia?
How did the Junkers owe their power to the feudal system?
How were the German merchants won over to war?
What part had the gun-makers in bringing on war?
Chapter XVII.
The Spark that Exploded the Magazine
The year 1914.—England’s troubles.—Plots for a “Greater
Serbia.”—The hated archduke.—The shot whose echoes shook the
whole world.—Austria’s extreme demands.—Russia threatens.—Frantic
attempts to prevent war.—Mobilizing on both sides.—Germany’s
tiger-like spring.—The forts of the Vosges Mountains.—The other
path to Paris.—The neutrality of Belgium.—Belgium defends
herself.
The year 1914 found England involved in serious difficulties. Her
parliament had voted to give home rule to Ireland. There was to
be an Irish parliament, which would govern Ireland as the Irish
wanted it governed. Ulster, a province in the northeast of
Ireland, however, was very unhappy over this arrangement. Its
people were largely of English and Scotch descent, and they were
Protestants, while the other inhabitants of Ireland were Celts
and Catholics. The people of this province were so bitter against
home rule that they actually imported rifles and drilled
regiments, saying that they would start a civil war if England
compelled them to be governed by an Irish parliament.
There were labor troubles and strikes, also, in England, and
threatened revolutions in India, where the English government was
none too popular. Altogether, the German war lords felt sure that
England had so many troubles of her own that she would never dare
to enter a general European war.
Meanwhile, the Serbians, unhappy over the loss of Bosnia and
Herzegovina to Austria, were busily stirring up the people of
these provinces to revolt. The military leaders who really ruled
Austria, were in favor of crushing these attempted uprisings with
an iron hand.
One of the leaders of this party, a man who was greatly hated by
the Bosnians, was the Archduke Franz Ferdinand, nephew of the
emperor and heir to the throne. He finally announced that he was
going in person to Sarajevo (sä rä yĕ′vō) in Bosnia to look
into the situation himself. The people of the city warned him not
to come, saying that his life would be in danger, as he was so
hated. Being a headstrong man of violent temper, he refused to
listen to this advice, but insisted on going. His devoted wife,
after doing her best to dissuade him, finally refused to let him
go without her.
When it was known that he was really coming, the Bosnian
revolutionists laid their plans. They found out just where his
carriage was to pass, and at almost every street corner, they had
some assassin with bomb or pistol. One bomb was thrown at him,
but it exploded too soon, and he escaped. Bursting with
indignation, he was threatening the mayor for his lax policing,
when a second assassin, a nineteen year old boy, stepped up with
a pistol and shot to death the archduke and his wife.
Many people have referred to this incident as the cause of the
great European war. As you have been shown, however, this was
simply the spark that exploded the magazine. With the whole
situation as highly charged as it was, any other little spark
would have been enough to set the war a-going.
The Austrian government sent word to Serbia that the crime had
been traced to Serbian plotters, some of them in the employ of
the government. It demanded that Serbia apologize; also that she
hunt out and punish the plotters at once. And because Austria did
not trust the Serbians to hold an honest investigation, she
demanded that her officers should sit in the Serbian courts as
judges.
Imagine a Japanese killed in San Francisco, and think what the
United States would say if the Tokio government insisted that a
Japanese judge be sent to California to try the case because
Japan could not trust America to give her justice! The Serbians,
of course, were in no position to fight a great power like
Austria-Hungary, and yet, weakened as they were, they could not
submit to such a demand as this. They agreed to all the Austrian
demands except the one concerning the Austrian judges in Serbian
courts. They appealed to the other powers to see that justice was
done them.
Russia growled ominously at Austria, whereupon Germany sent a
sharp warning to Russia that this was none of her affair, and
that Austria and Serbia must be left to fight it out. In the
meantime, Serbia offered to lay the matter before the court of
arbitration at the Hague. (In 1899, at the invitation of the czar
of Russia, representatives of all the great powers of Europe met
at the Hague to found a lasting court which should decide
disputes between nations fairly, and try to do away with wars, to
as great an extent as possible. The court has several times been
successful in averting trouble.)
Great Britain proposed that the dispute between Austria and
Serbia should be judged by a court composed of representatives of
France, England, Italy, and Germany. Austria’s reply to the
proposals of England and Serbia was a notice to the latter
country that she had just forty-eight hours in which to give in
completely to the Austrian demands. In the mean-time, Mr.
Sazanoff, the Russian minister of foreign affairs, was vainly
pleading with England to declare what she would do in case the
Triple Alliance started a war with France and Russia.
Kings and ministers telegraphed frantically, trying to prevent
the threatened conflict. The story was sent out by Germany that
Russia was gathering her troops, mobilizing them, as it is
called. As Russia has so much more territory to draw from than
any other country, and as her railroads are not many and are
poorly served, it was figured that it would be six weeks before
the Russian army would be ready to fight anybody. Germany, on the
other hand, with her wonderful system of government-owned
railroads, and the machine-like organization of her army, could
launch her forces across the frontier at two days’ notice. As
soon as the Germans began to hear that the Russians were
mobilizing their troops against Austria, Germany set in motion
the rapid machinery for gathering her own army. She sent a sharp
message to Russia, warning the latter that she must instantly
stop mobilizing or Germany would declare war. Next the Germans
asked France what she intended to do in case Germany and Austria
declared war on Russia. France replied that she would act in
accordance with what seemed to be her best interests. This answer
did not seem very reassuring, and without any declaration of war,
the German army rushed for the French frontier.
Now ever since the war of 1870, France had been building a line
of great forts across the narrow stretch of ground where her
territory approached that of Germany. Belfort, Toul, Epinal,
Verdun, Longwy, they ranged through the mountains northeast of
France as guardians of their country against another German
attack. To rush an army into France over this rough country and
between these great fortresses was impossible. Modern armies
carry great guns with them which cannot climb steep grades.
Therefore, if Germany wanted to strike a quick, smashing blow at
France and get her armies back six weeks later to meet the
slow-moving Russians, it was plain that she must seek some other
approach than that through the Vosges Mountains.
[Illustration: A Fort Ruined by the Big German Guns]
From Aix-La-Chapelle near the Rhine in Germany, through the
northern and western part of Belgium, there stretches a flat
plain, with level roads, easy to cross. (See map.) Now, years
before, Belgium had been promised by France, Prussia, and England
that no one of them would disturb its neutrality. In other words
it was pledged that in case of a war, no armed force of any of
these three nations should enter Belgian territory, nor should
Belgium be involved in any trouble arising among them. In case
any one of the nations named or in fact any other hostile force,
invaded Belgium, the signers of the treaty were bound to rush to
Belgium’s aid. Belgium, in return, had agreed to resist with her
small army any troops which might invade her country.
In spite of the fact that their nation had signed this treaty,
the Germans started their rush toward France, not through the
line of forts in the mountains, but across the gently rolling
plain to the north. They first asked permission of the Belgians
to pass through their country. On being refused, they entered
Belgian territory just east of Liége (lï ĕzh′). The Belgians
telegraphed their protest to Berlin. The Germans replied that
they were sorry but it was necessary for them to invade Belgium
in order to attack France. They agreed to do no damage and to pay
the Belgians for any supplies or food which their army might
seize. The Belgians replied that by their treaty with France,
England, and Germany they were bound on their honor to resist
just such an invasion as this. They asked the Germans how Germany
would regard them if they were to permit a French army to cross
Belgian territory to take Germany by surprise. The Germans again
said that they were sorry, but that if Belgium refused permission
to their army to cross, the army would go through without
permission. It was a dreadful decision that Belgium had to make,
but she did not hesitate. She sent orders to her armies to resist
by all means the passage of the German troops. The great war had
begun.
[Illustration: Map showing the Two Routes from Germany to Paris.]
As we look over the evidence the German war lords must bear the
blame, almost alone.
The Austrians had been eager to attack Serbia, even in 1913,
thinking that this little country had grown too powerful, as a
result of her victories in the two Balkan wars. But Austria had
counted on “bluffing” Russia to keep out, as she had been bluffed
in 1908, and when she saw that this time the Russians meant
business, she became frightened and sent word that she might be
willing to settle the question without fighting. But the Germans
were bent on war, and as they saw their ally wavering, they sent
their warning that Russian mobilization would be considered a
ground for war.
Now this was ridiculous. In 1908, when the trouble over Bosnia
was at its height, both Austria and Russia had their armies
mobilized and ready for war for weeks and months. Still no war
came out of it. It looked as if Germany was hard put to it to
find an excuse for launching her plan to conquer Europe.
Questions for Review
Why did Ulster object to home rule?
What were the hopes of the Serbians regarding Bosnia?
Why did Russia interfere between Austria and Serbia?
Why did Russia mobilize her troops?
Why was the road through Belgium chosen?
Chapter XVIII.
Why England Came In
The question of Italy and England.—Italy’s position.—The war with
Turkey.—Italy declines to join her allies.—England is aware of
the German plans.—The treaty with Belgium.—The “defensive”
war.—The “scrap of paper.”—Germany’s rage at England’s
declaration of war.—England does the unexpected.
France, Belgium, Russia, and Serbia were combined against Austria
and Germany. Little Montenegro also rushed to the help of her
neighbor and kinsman, Serbia. The question was, what would Italy
and England do. Italy, like Russia and Germany, had been having
trouble in holding down her people. A revolution had been
threatened which would overthrow the king and set up a republic.
The Socialist Party, representing the working class, had been
growing very strong, and one of their greatest principles was
that all war is wrong. They felt that the Triple Alliance made by
the Italian statesmen had never bound the Italian people.
Throughout the entire peninsula, the Austrians were hated.
You will remember that France had aroused the Italians’ anger in
1881 by seizing Tunis. Italy had hoped to snap up this province
for herself, for the Italian peninsula was crowded with people,
and as the population increased, it was thought necessary that
colonies be established to which the people could migrate to have
more room. Finally in 1911, in order to divert the minds of the
people from revolutionary thoughts, the government organized an
expedition to swoop down on Tripoli, which, like Egypt, was
supposed to belong to Turkey.
This meant war with the government at Constantinople, and Germany
and Austria were very angry at Italy, their ally, for attacking
Turkey, with which the Austrians and Germans were trying to
establish a firm friendship. However, “self-preservation is the
first law of nature,” and the Italian king and nobles valued
their leadership in the nation much more than they dreaded the
dislike of Germany and Austria.
The Germans had counted on Italy to join in the attack on Russia
and France, but the Italian statesmen knew the feelings of their
people too well to attempt this. Of late years, there had been
growing up a friendship between the people of Italy and those of
France, and the Italian generals knew that it would be a
difficult task to induce their men to fire upon their kinsmen
from across the Alps. Therefore, when Austria and Germany
demanded their support in the war, they replied by pointing out
that the terms of the Triple Alliance bound Italy to go to their
help only _if they were attacked_. “In this case,” said the
Italians, “you are the attacking party. The treaty does not bind
us to support you in any war conquest. What is more, we were not
consulted before Austria sent to Serbia her impossible demands.
Expect no help from us.”
Now the great question arose as to England. The English statesmen
were not blind to the German plan. They saw that Germany intended
to crush France first, capturing Paris and dealing the French
army such an overwhelming blow that it would take it a long time
to recover. Then the German armies were to be rushed back over
their marvelous system of government-owned railroads to meet the
on-coming German tide of Russians.
The Germans knew that they were well provided with ammunition and
all war supplies. They knew that they had invented some wonderful
guns which were large enough to batter down the strongest forts
in the world. They did not have very much respect for the ability
of the Russian generals. They had watched them bungle badly in
the Japanese war, ten years before. If once France were brought
to her knees, they did not fear Russia. Then after France and
Russia had been beaten, there would be plenty of time, later on,
to settle with Great Britain.
The English statesmen, as we have said, were aware of this plan.
They saw that if they were to fight Germany, this was the ideal
time. However, Great Britain, having a government which is more
in the hands of the people than even that of republican France,
did not have the system of forcing her young men to do military
service. Her little army in England was made up entirely of men
who enlisted in it because they wished to, and because they
received fair pay. If England were to enter a great war with
Germany, there must be some very good reason for her doing so.
Otherwise, her people, who really did not hate the Germans, would
never enlist to fight against them. The question was, would
anything happen to make the English people feel that they were
justified in entering the war on the side of France and Russia.
You will remember that England, France, and Prussia had promised
each other to protect Belgium from war. Even in the war of 1870,
France and Prussia had carefully avoided bringing their troops
upon Belgian soil. Now, however, with the German army invading
Belgium, the English statesmen had to decide their course. As
heads of one of the nations to guarantee Belgium’s freedom, they
called on Germany to explain this unprovoked invasion. The
Germans made no answer. They were busily attacking the city of
Liége. Great Britain gave Germany twenty-four hours in which to
withdraw her troops. At the end of this time, with Germany paying
no attention still, England solemnly declared war and took her
stand alongside of Russia and France.
The Germans were furious. They had no bitter feeling against the
French. They realized that France was obliged, by the terms of
her alliance, to stand by Russia, but they had confidently
counted on keeping England out of the war. In fact, the German
ambassador to England had assured the German emperor that England
had so many troubles, with her uprising in Ireland and threatened
rebellions in India and South Africa that she would never dare
fight at this time.
The English people, on the other hand, were now thoroughly
aroused. If there is one thing that an Englishman prides himself
on, it is keeping his word. The word of the English had been
given, through their government, to Belgium that this little
country, if it should resist invasion, would be protected, and
this word they thought must be kept at all hazards. It made no
difference that, aside from her great navy, England was utterly
unprepared for the war. Like the decision which Belgium had had
to make the day before, this was a crucial step for the British
to take, but to their everlasting honor they did not hesitate. In
the case of Germany’s declaration of war the German laws say that
no war can be declared by the Kaiser alone unless it is a
defensive war. Therefore, as one American writer has pointed out,
this is the only kind of war that the Kaiser ever declares. The
German military group, having control of the newspapers, put in a
lot of stories made up for the occasion about French soldiers
having crossed the border and shot down Germans on August 2nd.
They told how French aviators had dropped bombs on certain German
cities. As a matter of fact, the French soldiers, by orders of
their government, were drawn back from the frontier a distance of
six miles in order to avoid any appearance of attacking the
Germans. The City Council of Nuremburg, one of the cities that
was said to have been bombed by the French, later gave out a
formal statement saying that no bombs had fallen on their city
and no French aviators had been seen near it. But the German
government gave out this “news” and promptly declared a
“defensive” war, and the German people had to believe what they
were told.
Very different was the case in England. Here was a free people,
with free schools and free newspapers. Just as every German had
been taught in the schools of his country that Germany was
surrounded by a ring of jealous enemies and would one day have to
fight them all, so the people of England had been taught in their
schools that war between civilized peoples is a hateful thing and
must finally disappear from the earth.
The English labor leaders who themselves protested against the
war at first, in hopes that the German Socialists would do the
same, were doomed to be grievously disappointed, for in Germany
the protests against war were still more feeble. The newspapers,
with few exceptions, as was previously pointed out, were under
the control of the military leaders and the manufacturers of war
materials. These papers persuaded the German people that England,
through her jealousy of Germany’s great growth in trade, had
egged on Russia, France, and Serbia to attack Germany and
Austria, and then had declared war herself on a flimsy pretext.
At first the entire German nation believed this. Until Prince
Lichnowsky, the former German ambassador to Great Britain,
published a story in which he told how the German government had
forced the war in spite of all that England could do to prevent
it, the Germans thought, as their war chiefs told them, that the
war was forced upon Germany by her jealous enemies.
Thus the military leaders of Germany, descendants of the old
feudal nobles, were able to make the whole German nation hate the
English people.
When the English ambassador to Berlin went to see the chancellor
(as the prime-minister of the German Empire is called) and told
him that unless German troops were immediately withdrawn from
Belgium, England would declare war, for the Belgian government
had a treaty signed by England promising them protection, the
German chancellor exclaimed. “What! Would you plunge into this
terrible war for the sake of a scrap of paper!” The chancellor
was excited. As you have been told before, the Germans were sure
that England, being unprepared for the war, would never dare to
go into it. This threatened to upset all their well-laid plans
for the conquest of France and then Russia. For the moment the
chancellor forgot his diplomacy. He blurted out the truth. He
showed the world that honor had no place in the minds of the
German war lords. To the English a treaty with Belgium was a
sacred pledge; to the Germans it was something which could be
torn up at a moment’s notice if it stood in the way of their
interests.
There was a violent outburst against England in all of the
newspapers of Germany. A German poet wrote a dreadful poem called
“The Hymn of Hate,” in which he told how while they had no love
for the Frenchman or the Russian, they had no hate for them
either. One nation alone they hated—England! “Gott strafe
England” (may God punish England) became the war cry of the
Germans.
Everything had gone according to their pre-arranged plans until
England decided that her promise given to Belgium stood first,
even before the terrible loss and suffering of a great war. That
any nation should put her honor before her comfort and profit,
had never occurred to the war leaders of Germany.
Questions for Review
Why did Italy make war on Turkey in 1911?
Why did not Italy join in the attack on France?
What was Germany’s plan?
How is the English army different from others?
What reason had England for declaring war?
Had the German’s expected England to attack them? Give
reasons for your answer.
Why did the phrase “scrap of paper” make such a deep
impression on the world?
Why did the war lords hate the British so deeply?
Chapter XIX.
Diplomacy and Kingly Ambition
Turkey throws in her lot with the central empires.—The demands of
Italy.—She joins the Triple Entente.—The retreat of the
Russians.—The Balkans again.—Bulgaria’s bargaining.—German
princes on Balkan thrones.—The central empires bid the highest
for Bulgarian support.—The attitude of Greece.—Roumania’s hopes.
To return to the great war. The diplomats of both sides made all
haste to put pressure upon the governments of the countries which
were not engaged in the struggle, in order to win them over.
Germany and Austria worked hard with Italy, with Turkey, and with
Bulgaria. The Turks were the first to plunge in. The party headed
by Enver Bey (the young minister of war) saw that a victory for
Russia and her allies meant the final expulsion of the Turks from
Europe. Only in the victory of Germany and Austria did this
faction see any hope for Turkey. It was the latter part of
October (1914) when Turkish warships, without any provocation,
sailed into some Russian ports on the Black Sea and blazed away
with their big guns.
Some of the older Turkish statesmen were terrified, and did their
best to get the government at Constantinople to disclaim all
responsibility for this act of their naval commanders. The “Young
Turks,” however, were all for war on the side of Germany. What is
more, Russia, always anxious for an excuse to seize
Constantinople, would not allow the Turks to apologize for their
act and keep out of trouble. She declared war on Turkey, and was
quickly followed by France and England.
Both sides now set to work on Italy. It was plain that all the
sympathies of the Italian people were with France and England.
The six grandsons of Garibaldi formed an Italian regiment and
volunteered for fighting on the French lines. Two of them were
killed, and at their funerals in Rome, nearly all the inhabitants
of the city turned out and showed plainly that they too would
like to be fighting on the side of France.
You will remember that Italy wanted very much to gain the
provinces of Trentino and Istria, with the cities of Trent,
Trieste (trï ĕs′te), Pola (pō′lä), and Fiume (fē ū′me), all
inhabited by Italian people. The possession of these counties and
cities by Austria had been the greatest source of trouble between
the two nations. Italy now came out boldly, and demanded, as the
price of her keeping out of the war, that Austria give to her
this land inhabited by Italians. Germany urged Austria to do
this, and sent as her special ambassador, to keep Italy from
joining her enemies, Prince von Bulow, whose wife was an Italian
lady, and who was very popular with the Italian statesmen.
For months, von Bulow argued and pleaded, first trying to induce
Italy to accept a small part of the disputed territory and then,
when he found this impossible, doing his best to induce Austria
to give it all. Austria was stubborn. She did not take kindly to
the plan of giving away her cities. She offered to cede some
territory if Italy should wait until the end of the war.
This did not satisfy Italy. She was by no means certain that
Austria and Germany were going to win the war and was even less
sure that Austria would be willing, in case of her victory, to
give up a foot of territory. It seemed to the Italian statesmen
that it was “now or never” if Italy wished to get within her
kingdom all of her own people. In the month of May 1915 Italy
threw herself into the struggle by declaring war on Austria and
entering an alliance with Russia, France, and England.
[Illustration: Russian peasants fleeing before the German army]
Meanwhile, the Russians were having difficulties. They had
millions and millions of men, but not enough rifles to equip them
all. They had plenty of food but very little ammunition for their
cannon. Austria and Germany, on the other hand, had been
manufacturing shot and shells in enormous quantities, and from
the month of May, when the Russians had crossed the Carpathian
Mountains and were threatening to pour down on Buda-Pest and
Vienna, they drove them steadily back until the first of October,
forcing them to retreat nearly three hundred miles.
In the meantime, the Balkans again became the seat of trouble.
You will recall that Bulgaria, who had grown proud because of her
victory over Turkey in the war of 1912, was too grasping when it
came to a division of the conquered territory. Thus she brought
on a second war, in the course of which Greece and Serbia
defeated her, while Roumania took a slice of her territory and
the Turks recaptured the city of Adrianople. The czar of Russia
had done his best to prevent this second Balkan war, even sending
a personal telegram to Czar Ferdinand of Bulgaria and to King
Peter of Serbia, begging them for the sake of the Slavic race,
not to let their quarrels come to blows. Bulgaria, confident of
her ability to defeat Greece and Serbia, had disregarded the
Russians’ pleadings, and as a result Russia did not interfere to
save her when her neighbors were robbing her of part of the land
which she had taken from Turkey.
It will be recalled that Macedonia was the country which Bulgaria had
felt most sorry to lose, as its inhabitants were largely Bulgarian in
their blood, although many Greeks and Serbs were among them. Therefore,
just as Italy strove by war and diplomacy to add Trentino to her
nation, so Bulgaria now saw her chance to gain Macedonia from Serbia.
Accordingly, she asked the four great powers what they would give her
in case she entered the war on their side, and attacked Turkey by way
of Constantinople, while the French and English were hammering at the
forts along the Dardanelles.[7]
[7] England and France needed wheat, which Russia had in great
quantities at her ports on the Black Sea. On the other hand France and
England, by supplying Russia with rifles and ammunition, could strike
a hard blow at Germany.
The four powers, after much persuasion and brow-beating, finally
induced Serbia to agree to give up part of Serbian Macedonia to
Bulgaria. They further promised Bulgaria to give her the city of
Adrianople and the territory around it which Turkey had
reconquered. But Bulgaria was not easily satisfied. She wanted
more than Serbia was willing to give; she wanted, too, the port
of Kavala, which Greece had taken from her. This the allies could
not promise.
In the meantime, Bulgaria was bargaining with Austria, Germany,
and Turkey. France, England, and Russia were ready to pay back
Serbia for the loss of Macedonia, by promising her Bosnia and
Herzegovina in case they won the war from Austria. In like
fashion, Austria and Germany promised Bulgaria some Turkish
territory and also the southern part of the present kingdom of
Serbia, in case she entered the war on their side.
Now the king of Bulgaria, or the czar, as he prefers to call
himself, is a German. (As these little countries won their
independence from Turkey, they almost always called in foreign
princes to be their kings. In this way it had come about that the
king of Greece was a prince of Denmark, the king of Roumania was
a German of the Hohenzollern family, while the czar of Bulgaria
was a German of the Coburg family, the same family which has
furnished England and Belgium with their kings.)
The Bulgarians themselves are members of the Greek Catholic
Church, and they have a very high regard for the czar of Russia,
as the head of that church. Czar Ferdinand had no such feeling,
however. He wanted to be the most powerful ruler in the Balkan
states, and it made no difference to him which side helped him to
gain his object.
[Illustration: A Bomb-Proof Trench in the Western War Front]
About this time, the Russians had been forced to retreat to a
line running south from Riga, on the Baltic Sea, to the northern
boundary of Roumania. The French and English had been pounding at
the Dardanelles for some months, but the stubborn resistance of
the Turks seemed likely to hold them out of Constantinople for a
long time to come. The checked Italians had not been able to make
much headway against the Austrians through the mountainous Alpine
country where the fighting was taking place. In the west, the
Germans were holding firmly against the attacks of the British
and French. The czar of Bulgaria and his ministers, thinking that
the German-Austrian-Turkish alliance could win with their help,
flung their nation into its third war within four years. This
happened in Octoher, 1915.
Now at the close of the second Balkan war, when Serbia and Greece
defeated Bulgaria, they made an alliance, by which each agreed to
come to the help of the other in case either was attacked by
Bulgaria. Roumania, too, was friendly to Greece and Serbia,
rather than to treaty Bulgaria, for the Roumanians knew that
Bulgaria was very anxious to get back the territory of which
Roumania had robbed her, in the second Balkan war. In this way,
the Quadruple Entente (Russia, Italy, France, and England) hoped
that the entry of Bulgaria into the war, on the side of Germany
and Turkey, would bring Greece and Roumania in on the other side.
The Greek people were ready to rush to Serbia’s aid and so was
the Greek prime minister. The queen of Greece, however, is a
sister of the German emperor, and through her influence with her
husband she was able to defeat the plans of Venizelos (vĕn ĭ
zĕl′ŏs), the prime minister, who was notified by the king that
Greece would not enter the war. Venizelos accordingly resigned,
but not until he had given permission to the French and English
to land troops at Salonika, for the purpose of rushing to the
help of Serbia. (Greece also was afraid that German and Austrian
armies might lay waste her territory, as they had Serbia’s,
before England and France could come to the rescue.)
Meanwhile poor Serbia was in a desperate state. The two Balkan
wars had drained her of some of her best soldiers. Twice the
Austrians had invaded her kingdom in this war, and twice they had
been driven out. Then came a dreadful epidemic of typhus fever
which was the result of unhealthful conditions caused by the war.
Now the little kingdom, attacked by the Germans and Austrians on
two sides and by the Bulgarians on a third, was literally
fighting with her back to the wall. She had counted on Greece to
stand by her promise to help in case of an attack from Bulgaria,
but we have seen how the German queen of Greece had been able to
prevent this. Serbia hoped that Roumania, too, would come to her
help. However, as you have been told, the king of Roumania is a
German of the Hohenzollern family, a cousin of the emperor, and
in spite of the sympathy of his people for Italy, France, and
Serbia, he was able to keep them from joining in the defense of
the Serbs.
Now Roumania ought to include a great part of Bessarabia (bes ȧ
rȧ′bi ȧ), which is the nearest county of Russia, and also the
greater part of Transylvania and Bukowina (boo kō vï′nȧ),
which are the provinces of Austria-Hungary that lie nearest; for
a great part of the inhabitants of these three counties are
Roumanians by blood and language. They would like to be parts of
the kingdom of Roumania, and Roumania would like to possess them.
The Quadruple Entente would promise Roumania parts of
Transylvania and Bukowina in case she joined the war on their
side, while the Triple Alliance was ready to promise her
Bessarabia. Roumania, as was said before, was originally settled
by colonists sent out from Rome, and in the eleventh century a
large number of people from the north of Italy settled there. On
this account, Roumania looks upon Italy as her mother country,
and it was thought that Italy’s attack upon Austria would
influence her to support the Entente.
Each country wanted to be a friend of the winning side, in order
to share in the spoils. In this way, whenever it looked as if the
Quadruple Entente did not need her help Roumania was eager to
offer it, at a price which seemed to the allies too high. When,
however, the tide turned the other way, she lost her enthusiasm
for the cause of her friends, fearing what the central empires
might do to her.
Questions for Review
What was the motive of Turkey in joining the war?
Why were the Russians not sorry to have Turkey declare war on
them?
What were the feelings of the Italian people?
What were the Italian diplomats anxious to gain?
What were the demands of Czar Ferdinand of Bulgaria upon the
Entente powers?
Why did Bulgaria join the central empires?
Why did Greece keep out of the conflict?
What were Roumania’s hopes?
Chapter XX.
Back to the Balkans
The troubles of Crete.—The bigotry of the “Young
Turks.”—Venizelos in Greece.—The pro-German king.—The new
government at Salonika.—The downfall of Constantine.—The
ambitions of Roumania.—Pro-Germans in Russia.—Roumania declares
war.—Russian treachery and German trickery.—The defeat of
Roumania.
Greece
You will remember the name of Eleutherios Venizelos, the prime
minister of Greece, who tried to get that country to stand by her
bargain from Crete with Serbia (pages 239-240). Now Venizelos had
originally come from Crete, a large island inhabited by Greeks,
but controlled by Turkey for many years (see map). In 1897 the
Turks had massacred a number of Greek Christians on the island,
and this act had so enraged the inhabitants of Greece that they
forced their king to declare war on Turkey.
Poor little Greece was quickly defeated, but the war called the
attention of the Great Powers of Europe to the cruelties of the
Turks, and they never again allowed Crete to be wholly governed
by them. For over a year Great Britain, France, Russia, and Italy
had their warships in Cretan ports and the government of Crete
was under their protection.
Finally they called in, to rule over the island, a Greek prince,
Constantine, the son of the king. Eight years later he had become
very unpopular through meddling with Cretan politics—on the wrong
side—and had to leave.
The It was at this time that Venizelos came to the front. The
Cretan government was really independent, like a little kingdom
without a king, and he was its true ruler. Now all the Greeks had
looked forward to the time when they might be united in one great
kingdom. The shores of Asia Minor and the cities along the Aegean
Sea and the Dardanelles were largely inhabited by Greeks. Crete
and the islands of the Aegean had once been part of Greece and
they never would be content until they were again joined to it.
The Cretan government was ready to vote that the island be
annexed to Greece, when in 1908 there came the revolution of the
“Young Turks” which drove the old Sultan from his throne (page
186).
The Young Turks at the outset of their crusade against the
government were tolerant to all the other races and religions in
their country. At first the Armenians, the Jews, the Albanians,
the Greeks, and the Bulgarians in the Turkish Empire were very
happy over the result of the revolution. It looked as if a new
day were dawning for Turkey, when it would be possible for these
various races and different religions to live side by side in
peace.
No sooner were the young Turks in control of the government,
however, than they began to change. “Turkey for the Turks, and
for the Turks only” became their motto. With this in mind they
massacred Bulgarians and Greeks in Macedonia (page 85) and
Armenians in Asia Minor. The thought of the loss of Crete roused
their anger and they began scheming to get it back under Turkish
rule.
In 1910 Venizelos, seeing the danger of his beloved island, left
for Greece, hoping there to stir up the people to oppose the
Turks and annex Crete. His wonderful eloquence and his
single-hearted love for his country soon made him as prominent on
the mainland as he had been in his island home. Before long he
was chosen as prime minister of Greece.
He found the country in a very sad condition. The military
officers were poorly trained. What was worse, they did not know
this, but imagined that their army was the best in the world. The
politicians had plundered the people and there was graft and poor
management throughout the government.
Venizelos made a wonderful change. He sent to the French republic
for some of their best generals. These men thoroughly made over
the Greek army and taught the Greek officers the real science of
war.
[Illustration: Venizelos (left) with Greek ambassador to England]
Venizelos soon showed the politicians that he could not be
frightened, controlled, or bribed. He discharged some incompetent
officials and forced the others to attend to business. In fact he
reorganized the whole government service in a way to make every
department do better work. Few countries in Europe were as well
managed as was Greece with Venizelos as its prime minister.
Every Greek hates the Turks and looks forward to the time when no
man of Greek descent shall be subject to their cruel rule. You
have been told how the Russians have looked forward to the day
when Saint Sophia, the great mosque of the Turks, shall once more
become a Christian cathedral. In the same way the Greeks have
passionately desired to see Constantinople, which was for over a
thousand years the capital of their empire, freed from the
control of the Turk. Little by little, from the time when the
Greeks first won their independence from Turkey in 1829, the
boundary of their kingdom has been pushed northward, freeing more
and more of their people from the rule of the Ottomans.
Venizelos, aiming to include in the kingdom of Greece as many as
possible of the people of Greek blood, was scheming night and day
for the overthrow of the Turkish power in Europe. You have been
told how the Russian diplomats astonished the world by inducing
Bulgaria to unite with the Greeks and the Serbs, two nations for
whom she had no love, in an alliance against the Turks. Many
people felt that this combination would never have been possible
without the far-seeing wisdom of of Venizelos. In fact, some
historians give him the credit of first planning the alliance.
His greatest trouble was with his own countrymen. The Greeks, as
you have been told, have always claimed Macedonia as part of
their country, whereas, in truth, there are more Bulgarians than
Greeks among its inhabitants. Venizelos, having agreed before the
attack on Turkey that the greater part of Macedonia should be
given to Bulgaria, had hard work after the victory in convincing
his countrymen that this was fair. In fact, the claims of the
three allies to this district proved the one weak spot in the
combination. The occupation of this country by Greeks and Serbs
in the course of the first war against Turkey, while the
Bulgarians were defeating the main Turkish army just northwest of
Constantinople, brought on the second war. Bulgaria was not
willing to give up Macedonia to the Greeks and Serbs, and her
troops made a treacherous attack on her former allies (June,
1913) which brought on the declarations of war referred to.
At the close of the second war, when Bulgaria, attacked by five
nations at once, had to make peace as best she could, the Greeks
took advantage of her by insisting on taking, not only Salonika
but also Kavala, which by all rights should have gone to the
Bulgars. Venizelos was willing to be generous to Bulgaria, but
the Greeks had had their heads turned by the extraordinary
successes of their armies over the Turks and Bulgarians and as a
result insisted upon being greedy when it came to a division of
the conquered lands.
Let us return now to events in Greece after the world war had
begun: In March, 1915, when the great fleets of France and
England made their violent attack on the forts of the
Dardanelles, intending to break through and bombard
Constantinople, Venizelos was eager to have Greece join the
conflict against the Turks. He felt sure that Turkey, in the end,
would lose the war and that her territory in Europe would be
divided up among the conquering nations. He wanted to get for
Greece the shores of the Dardanelles and the coast of Asia Minor,
where a great majority of the inhabitants were people of Greek
blood. The king of Greece, Constantine, as has been explained, is
a brother-in-law of the German Kaiser and has always been
friendly to Germany. He and Venizelos had been good friends while
both were working for the upbuilding of Greece, but a little
incident happened shortly after the Balkan wars which led to a
coolness between them.
King Constantine, while on a visit to Berlin, stood up at a
banquet and told the Kaiser and the German generals that the fine
work of the Greek soldiers in the two wars just fought had been
due to help which he had received from German military men. This
statement angered the French very much, for you will remember
that it was French generals who had trained the Greek army
officers. Venizelos, very shortly after this, made a trip to
Paris and there publicly stated that all credit for the fine
condition of the Greek army was due to the Frenchmen who had
trained its officers before the war of 1912. This was a direct
“slap in the face” of the king but it was the truth and everyone
in Greece knew it. From this time on it was evident to everybody
that Venizelos was friendly to the French and English, while the
King was pro-German.
Accordingly, in March, 1915, when Venizelos urged the Greek
government to join the war on Turkey, the king refused to give
the order. Venizelos, who was prime minister, straightway
resigned, broke up the parliament, and ordered a general
election. This put the case squarely up to the people of Greece
and they answered by electing to the Greek parliament one hundred
eighty men friendly to Venizelos and the Triple Entente as
against one hundred forty who were opposed to entering the war.
Venizelos, once more prime minister as a result of this election,
ordered the Greek army to be mobilized. At this time the fear was
that Bulgaria, in revenge for 1913, would join the war on the
side of the Germans and Turks and attack Greece in the rear. In
order to keep peace with Bulgaria Venizelos was willing to give
to her the port of Kavala, which Greece had cheated her out of at
the close of the second Balkan war. He felt that his country
would gain so much by annexing Greek territory now under the rule
of the Turks that she could afford to give up this seaport, whose
population was largely Bulgarian. Constantine opposed this,
however, and the majority of the Greeks, not being as far-sighted
as their prime minister, backed the king. When the attack by the
Central Powers on Serbia took place, as has been told, Venizelos
a second time tried to get the Greek government to join the war
on the side of France and England. He said plainly to the king
that the treaty between Greece and Serbia was not a “scrap of
paper” as the German Chancellor had called the treaty with
Belgium, but a solemn promise entered into by both sides with a
full understanding of what it meant. The king, on the other hand,
insisted that the treaty had to do with Bulgaria alone and that
it was not intended to drag Greece into a general European war.
As a result, he dismissed Venizelos a second time, in spite of
the fact that twice, by their votes, the Greeks had shown that
they approved of his policy.
Now Greece is a limited monarchy. By the terms of the
constitution the king must obey the will of the people as shown
by the votes of a majority of the members of parliament. In spite
of the vote of parliament the king refused to stand by the
Serbian treaty. From this time on he was violating the law of his
country and ruling as a czar instead of a monarch with very
little power, as the Greek constitution had made him.
Things went from bad to worse. In the meantime the French and
English had landed at Salonika in order to rush to the aid of the
hard-pressed Serbs. You have already been told how Venizelos
arranged this. Their aid, however, had come too late. Before they
could reach the gallant little Serbian army it had been crushed
between the Austrians and Germans on one side and the Bulgarians
on the other, and its survivors had fled across the mountains to
the coast of Albania. The French and English detachments were not
strong enough to stand against the victorious armies of Germany,
Austria, and Bulgaria. They began to retreat through southern
Serbia. King Constantine notified the Allied governments that if
these troops retreated upon Greek soil he would send his army to
surround them and hold them as prisoners for the rest of the war.
France and England replied by notifying him that if he did this
they would blockade the ports of Greece and prevent any ships
from entering her harbors. This act on the part of France and
England, while it seemed necessary, nevertheless angered the
proud Greeks and strengthened the pro-German party in Athens. The
king took advantage of this feeling to appoint a number of
pro-Germans to important positions in the government. Constantine
allowed German submarines to use certain ports in Greece as bases
of supply from which they got their oil and provisions. The Greek
army was still mobilized, and the small force of French and
English, which had retreated to Salonika, were afraid that at any
moment they might receive a stab in the back by order of the
Greek king.
In May, 1916, the Germans and Bulgarians crossed the Greek
frontier and demanded the surrender of several Greek forts. When
the commander of one of them proposed to fight, the German
general told him to call up his government at Athens over the
long distance telephone. He did so and was ordered to give up the
fort peaceably to the invaders. We have already seen what the
answer of the Belgians had been on a like occasion. To be sure,
the French and English were already occupying Greek soil, but
they had come there under permission of the prime minister of
Greece to do a thing which Greece herself had solemnly promised
that she would do, namely, to defend Serbia from the Bulgars.
This surrender of Greek territory to the hated Bulgarians was too
much for Venizelos. He gave out a statement to the Greek people
in which he declared that the king had disobeyed the constitution
and was ruling as a tyrant; that he was betraying his country to
the Germans and Bulgars and that all loyal Greeks should refuse
to obey him. At Salonika, under the protection of the British and
French, together with the admiral of the Greek navy and one of
the chief generals in the army, Venizelos set up a new
government—a republic of Greece.
Shortly after this the commander of a Greek army corps in eastern
Macedonia, acting under orders from King Constantine, surrendered
his men to the Germans, along with all their artillery, stores,
and the equipment which had been furnished to them by the French
to defend themselves against the Germans! In the meantime, the
Bulgarians had seized Kavala.
The control of the Adriatic Sea had been a matter of jealousy
between the Italians and Austrians even during the years when
they were partners in the Triple Alliance. Even before Italy
entered the war on the side of France and England, her
government, fearing the Austrians, had sent Italian troops to
seize Avlona. The Prince of Albania, finding that he was not
wanted, had deserted that country, and there had been no
government at all there since the outbreak of the great war.
However, the presence of this Italian garrison prevented the
forces of the central powers from advancing southward along the
Adriatic coast.
Gradually, France and England increased their forces at Salonika.
The gallant defender of Verdun, General Sarrail, was sent to
command the joint army. During the summer of 1916, Italians came
there to join the French and British. A hundred thousand hardy
young veterans, survivors of the Serbian army, picked up by
allied war ships on the coast of Albania, were refitted and
carried by ship around Greece to Salonika. Here they joined
General Sarrail’s army, rested and refreshed, and frantic for
revenge on the Germans and Bulgars. Several thousands of the
Greek troops, following the leadership of Venizelos, deserted the
king and joined the allies.
Meanwhile, in Athens one prime minister after another tried to
steer the ship of state. The people of Greece were in a turmoil.
The great majority of them were warm friends of France and
England—all of them hated the Turks. The pro-German acts of the
king, however, provoked the French and English to such an extent
that they frequently had to interfere in Athens. The Greek people
resented this interference and on one or two occasions fights
broke out when allied sailors marched through the streets of the
capital. Matters reached a climax in June, 1917. The governments
of France, England, and Italy felt that they could stand the
treacherous conduct of King Constantine no longer. They knew that
he was assisting Germany in every possible way. They knew that
their camp was full of spies who were reporting all their
movements to the Bulgarians. They felt that at the first chance
he would order his army to attack Sarrail in the rear. They
finally sent an ultimatum to him ordering him to give up the
throne to his second son. The oldest son, the crown prince,
having been educated in Germany and sharing King Constantine’s
pro-German sentiments, was barred from succeeding his father.
This seemed a high-handed thing to do but there was no other way
out of a difficult situation. Constantine had allowed his
sympathies with his wife’s brother to prevent his country from
carrying out her solemn treaty; had ruled like an absolute
monarch; had plotted with all his power for the overthrow of
Russia, France, and England, the three countries which had won
Greece its independence in the first place and which still
desired its people to have the right to rule themselves.
The guns of the allied fleet were pointed at Athens. More than half of
the Greek people favored Venizelos and the Entente as against the king
and Germany. A second[8] time within four months a European monarch who
was out of sympathy with his subjects was forced to resign his crown.
[8] The first was the Czar of Russia, as is told in a later chapter.
With Constantine out of the way, there was nothing to prevent the
return to Athens of Venizelos. With great enthusiasm the people
hailed his coming, as, once more prime minister, he summoned the
members of parliament lawfully elected in 1915, and took control
of the government.
In July, 1917, the Greek government announced to the world that,
henceforth, Greece would be found in the war on the side of
France, Great Britain, and the other nations of the Entente.
Roumania
You will recall that when Bulgaria attacked Serbia the Serbs
hoped for help from Roumania. For they knew that Bulgaria had a
grudge against Roumania also, because of the Bulgarian territory
which she had been compelled to give up to her neighbor on the
north at the close of the second Balkan war. They expected this
fear of Bulgarian revenge to bring the Roumanians to the rescue.
You have read how Roumania wished for certain lands in Russia as
well as in Hungary that are inhabited by her own people. For a
long time the government at Bukharest hesitated, fearing to
plunge into the war before the time was ripe, and dreading the
danger of choosing the wrong side.
The key to the situation was Russia. If Roumania were to go to
war she would have to count strongly on the help of her great
neighbor to the north.
Meanwhile, strange things were happening in Russia. You will remember
that there are two million Germans living in that part of the Russian
domain which borders the Baltic Sea. (The states of Livonia and
Courland were ruled in the olden times by the “Teutonic knights.”)
These Germans are much better educated, on the whole, than the
Russians; they are descendants of old feudal warriors and as such are
men of force and influence in the Russian government. It was a common
thing to find German names, like Witte, Von Plehve, Rennenkampf, and
Stoessel among the list of high officials and generals in Russia. In
this way there were a great many people prominent in the Russian
government, who secretly hoped that Germany would win the war and were
actively plotting with this in view. “There is a secret wire from the
czar’s palace to Berlin,” said one of the most patriotic Russian
generals, explaining why he refused to give out his plans in advance.
Graft and bad management, as well as treachery, were all through the
nation. Train-loads of ammunition intended for the Russian army were
left piled up on the wharves at the northern ports. Guns sent by
England were lost in the Ural mountains. Food that was badly needed by
the men at the front was hoarded by government officials in order to
raise prices for their friends who were growing rich through
“cornering” food supplies.[9]
[9] When a group of men buy a sufficient amount of any one article so
as to keep it from being sold in great quantities and make it appear
that there is not enough to go around, they are said to “corner” the
market. Three or four men in America at various times have been able
to corner the wheat market or the corn market or the market for
cotton.
The czar of Russia truly desired his country to win the war. On
the other hand his wife was a cousin of the Kaiser, a German
princess whose brothers were fighting in the German army, and she
had little love for her adopted country. The poor little
Czarevitch, eleven years old, remarked, early in the war, “When
the Russians are beaten, papa weeps; when the Germans are beaten,
mamma weeps.” In spite of her German sympathies the Czarina had
great influence with her husband, and the scheming officials who
were secretly plotting the downfall of Russia were able to use
this influence in many ways.
In 1916, a new prime minister was appointed in Russia—a man named
Sturmer, of German blood and German sympathies. The Russians,
after their long retreat in 1915 had gradually gotten back their
strength, and had piled up ammunition and gathered guns for a new
attack. This began early in June, 1916, when General Brusiloff
attacked the Austro-Hungarians in Galicia and Bukowina and drove
them back for miles and miles, capturing hundreds of thousands of
prisoners. You will remember that the Bohemians, although
subjects of Austria- Hungary, are Slavs and have no love for the
Austrians of German blood who rule them. Two divisions made up of
Bohemian troops helped General Brusiloff greatly by deserting in
a body and afterwards re-enlisting in the Russian army.
In northern France, the British and French had at last gained
more guns and bigger guns than the Germans had, and by sheer
weight of metal were pushing the latter out of the trenches which
they had held for over two years. It seemed to Roumania that the
turning point of the war had come. With the Russians winning big
victories over Austria, and the French and English pushing back
the Germans in the west, it certainly looked as though the end
were in sight.
Now the king of Roumania, as you have been told is a Hohenzollern, a
distant cousin of the Kaiser of Germany, but, just the opposite from
the case in Greece and Russia, his wife was an English princess, and
she was able to help the party that was friendly to France and Great
Britain. The man who had and worked early and late to get his
countrymen to join the Entente was Take Jonescu, the wisest of the
Roumanian statesmen, the man who predicted at the close of the second
Balkan war that the peace of Europe would again be broken within
fourteen months.[10]
[10] As an actual fact, there was only twelve and a half months
between wars.
[Illustration: What The Allies Wished]
By the summer of 1916, the Roumanians had at last decided that if
they wanted to get a slice of Bessarabia from Russia and the
province of Transylvania from Hungary, they must jump into the
war on the side of the Entente. It is claimed by some that they
had planned to wait until the following winter in order to get
their army into the best of condition and training, but that the
treacherous prime minister of Russia, Sturmer, when he found that
they were determined to make war on Germany and Austria,
persuaded them to plunge in at once, knowing that they were
unprepared and that their inexperienced troops would be no match
for the veterans of the central powers. At any rate, about the
first of September Roumania declared war on Austria and joined
the Entente.
The French and English had wished the Roumanians to declare war
first on Bulgaria and, attacking that country from the north
while General Sarrail attacked it from the south, crush it before
help could arrive from Germany, much in the fashion in which poor
Serbia had been caught between Austria and Bulgaria a year
previously. The Roumanians, however, were eager to “liberate”
their brothers in Transylvania, and so, urged on by bad advice
from Russia, they rushed across the mountains to the northwest
instead of taking the easier road which led them south to the
conquest of Bulgaria. (See maps.)
[Illustration: Messen How Roumania was crushed]
Germania, Turkey, and Bulgaria at once declared war on Roumania.
The battle-field in France, owing to continued rains and wet
weather, had become one great sea of slimy mud, through which it
was impossible to drag the cannon. General Brusiloff in Galicia
had pushed back the Austrians for many miles but a lack of
ammunition and the arrival of strong German re-inforcements had
prevented his re-capturing Lemberg. The Russian generals on the
north, under the influence of the pro-German prime minister, were
doing nothing. The Italians and Austrians had come to a deadlock.
The country where they were fighting was so mountainous that
neither side could advance. North from Salonika came the slow
advance of General Sarrail. His great problem was to get
sufficient shells for his guns and food for his men. All the
time, too, he had to keep a watchful eye on King Constantine,
lest the latter launch the Greek army in a treacherous attack on
his rear. For the time being, then, the central powers were free
to give their whole attention to Roumania.
Profiting by the mud along the western front and trusting to the
Russians to do nothing, they drew off several hundred thousand
men from France and Poland and hurled them all together upon the
Roumanians. At the same time, another force composed of Turks,
Bulgarians, and some Germans marched north through the Dobrudja
to attack Roumania from the south. Thus, the very trick that the
French wished Roumania to work upon Bulgaria was now worked upon
her by the central powers. France and England were helpless. They
sent one of the best of the French generals to teach the
Roumanians the latest science of war, but men and guns they could
not send. Look at the map and see how Roumania was shut off from
all help except what came from Russia. Here Sturmer was doing his
part to help Germany. Ammunition and troops which were intended
to rescue Roumania, never reached her. The Germans had spies in
the Roumanian army and before each battle, knew exactly where the
Roumanian troops would be and what they were going to do.
The German gun factories had sold to Roumania her cannon. On each
gun was a delicate sight with a spirit level—a little glass tube
supposed to be filled with a liquid which would not freeze. Slyly
the Germans had filled these tubes with water, intending, in case
Roumania entered the war on their side, to warn them about the
“mistake.” When the guns were hauled up into the mountains and
freezing weather came, these sights burst, making the guns almost
useless. Overwhelmed from both the northwest and the south, the
Roumanian army, fighting gallantly, was beaten back mile after
mile. Great stores of grain were either destroyed or captured by
the Germans. The western part of Roumania where the great oil
wells are, fell into the hands of the invaders, as did Bukharest,
the capital.
Sturmer had done his work well. Germany, instead of being almost
beaten, now took on fresh courage. Thanks to Roumanian wheat,
Roumanian oil, and above all, the glory of the victories, the
central powers were now in better shape to fight than if Roumania
had kept out of the war. The German comic papers were full of
pictures which declared that as England and France had always
wanted to see a defeated Hohenzollern they might now take a long
look at King Ferdinand of Roumania.
Questions for Review
What was the great disappointment connected with the rise to
power of the “young Turks”?
What would you say was the secret of the success of Venizelos
in Greece?
What mistake did the Greeks make at the close of the war of
1913?
What was the real cause of the strife between Venizelos and
King Constantine?
Would King Constantine have been justified in holding as
prisoners the French and British troops who were driven back
upon Greek soil?
What right had Venizelos to set up a republic?
Was it right for the Entente to force the resignation of King
Constantine?
What made Roumania decide to join the Entente?
How was the Roumanian campaign a great help to the Central
Powers?
Chapter XXI.
The War Under the Sea
Britannia rules the waves.—Enter the submarine.—The blockade of
Germany.—The sinking of the _Lusitania_ and other ships.—The
trade in munitions of war.—The voyages of the
_Deutschland_.—Germany ready for peace (on her own terms).—The
reply of the allies.—Germany’s amazing announcement.—The United
States breaks off friendly relations.
You will remember how hard the Germans had worked, building
warships, with the hope that one day their navy might be the
strongest in the world. At the outbreak of the great war in 1914
they were still far behind England in naval power. On the other
hand, it was necessary for the English to keep their navy
scattered all over the world. English battleships were guarding
trade routes to Australia, to China, to the islands of the
Pacific. The Suez Canal, the Straits of Gibraltar, the Island of
Malta—all were in English hands, and ships and guns were needed
to defend them.
The German navy, on the other hand, with the exception of a few
cruisers in the Pacific Ocean and two warships in the
Mediterranean, was gathered in the Baltic Sea, the southeastern
part of the North Sea, and the great Kiel Canal which connected
these two bodies of water. It was quite possible that this fleet,
by making a quick dash for the ports of England, might find there
only a portion of the English ships and be able to overwhelm them
before the rest of the English navy should assemble from the far
parts of the earth.
Winston Churchill, whose name you have read before, had the
foresight to assemble enough English vessels in home waters in
the latter part of the month of July, 1914, to give England the
upper hand over the fleet of Germany. As a result, finding the
British too strong, the Germans did not venture out into the high
seas to give battle. A few skirmishes were fought between
cruisers, then some speedy German warships made a dash across the
North Sea to the coast of England, shelled some small towns,
killed several men, women, and children and returned, getting
back to the Kiel Canal before the English vessels arrived in any
number.
A second raid was attempted a few weeks later but by this time
the British were on the watch. Two of the best German cruisers
were sunk and the others barely escaped the fire of the avengers.
About the first of June, 1916, a goodly portion of the German
fleet sailed out, hoping to catch the British unawares. They were
successful in sinking several large ships, but when the main
British fleet arrived they began in turn to suffer great losses,
and were obliged to retire. With the exception of these two
fights and two other battles fought off the coast of South
America (in the first of which a small English fleet was
destroyed by the Germans, and in the second a larger British
fleet took revenge), there have been no battles between the sea
forces.
The big navy of England ruled the ocean. German merchant vessels
were either captured or forced to remain in ports of neutral
nations. German commerce was swept from the seas, while ships
carrying supplies to France and the British Isles sailed
unmolested—for a time. Only in the Baltic Sea was Germany
mistress. Commerce from Sweden, Norway, and Denmark was kept up
as usual. Across the borders of Holland and Switzerland came
great streams of imports. Merchants in these little countries
bought, in the markets of the world, apparently for themselves,
but really for Germany.
However, not for long did British commerce sail unmolested. A new
and terrible menace was to appear. This was the submarine boat,
the invention of Mr. John Holland, an American, but improved and
enlarged by the Germans. In one of the early months of the war
three British warships, the _Hogue_, the _Cressy_, and the
_Aboukir_, were cruising about, guarding the waters of the North
Sea. There was the explosion of a torpedo, and the _Hogue_ began
to sink. One of her sister ships rushed in to pick up the crew as
they struggled in the water. A second torpedo struck and a second
ship was sinking. Nothing daunted by the fate of the other two,
the last survivor steamed to the scene of the disaster—the German
submarine once more shot its deadly weapon, and three gallant
ships with a thousand men had gone down.
This startled the world. It was plain that battleships and
cruisers were not enough. While England controlled the surface of
the sea, there was no way to prevent the coming and going of the
German submarine beneath the waters. All naval warfare was
changed in a moment; new methods and new weapons had to be
employed.
At the outset of the war the English and French fleets had set up
a strict blockade of Germany. There were certain substances which
were called “contraband of war” and which, according to the law
of nations, might be seized by one country if they were the
property of her enemy. On the list of contraband were all kinds
of ammunition and guns, as well as materials for making these.
England and France, however, added to the list which all nations
before the war had admitted to be contraband substances like
cotton, which was very necessary in the manufacture of gun-cotton
and other high explosives, gasoline—fuel for the thousands of
automobiles needed to transport army supplies, and rubber for
their tires. Soon other substances were added to the list.
An attempt was made to starve Germany into making peace. The
central empires, in ordinary years, raise only about
three-fourths of the food that they eat. With the great supply of
Russian wheat shut off and vessels from North America and South
America not allowed to pass the British blockade, Germany’s
imports had to come by way of Holland, Switzerland, and the
Scandinavian countries. When Holland in 1915 began to buy about
four times as much wheat as she had eaten in 1913, it did not
take a detective to discover that she was secretly selling to
Germany the great bulk of what she was buying apparently for
herself. In a like manner Switzerland and the Scandinavian
countries suddenly developed a much greater appetite than before
the war! The British blockade grew stricter. It was agreed to
allow these countries to import just enough food for their own
purposes. The British trusted that they would rather eat the food
themselves than sell it to Germany even at very high prices. The
Germans soon began to feel the pinch of hunger. They had
slaughtered many of their cows for beef and as a result grew
short of milk and butter.
To strike back at England, Germany announced that she would use
her submarines to sink ships carrying food to the British Isles.
This happened in February, 1915. There was a storm of protest
from the world in general, but Germany agreed that her submarine
commanders should warn each ship of its danger and allow the
captain time to get the passengers and crew into boats before the
deadly torpedo was shot. Still the crew, exposed to the danger of
the ocean in open boats, and often cast loose miles from shore,
were in serious danger.
The laws of nations, as observed by civilized countries in wars
up to this time, have said that a blockade, in order to be
recognized by all nations, had to be successful in doing the work
for which it was intended. If England really was able to stop
every boat sailing for German shores, then all nations would have
to admit that Germany was blockaded; but if the Germans were able
to sink only one ship out of every hundred that sailed into
English ports, Germany could hardly be said to be carrying on a
real blockade of England. In spite of protests from neutral
nations who were peaceably trying to trade with all the countries
at war, this sinking of merchantmen by submarines went on.
In May, 1915, the great steamship _Lusitania_ was due to sail
from New York for England. A few days before her departure
notices signed by the German ambassador were put into New York
papers, warning people that Germany would not be responsible for
what happened to them if they took passage on this boat. Very few
people paid any attention to these warnings. With over a thousand
persons on board the _Lusitania_ sailed, on schedule time.
Suddenly the civilized world was horrified to hear that a German
submarine, without giving the slightest warning, had sent two
torpedoes crashing through the hull of the great steamer, sending
her to the bottom in short order. A few had time to get into the
boats, but over eight hundred men, women, and children were
drowned, of whom over one hundred were American citizens. Strange
as it may seem, this action caused a thrill of joy throughout
Germany. Some of the Germans were horrified, as were people in
neutral countries, but on the whole the action of the German navy
was approved by the voice of the German people. With a curiously
warped sense of right and wrong the Germans proclaimed that the
English and Americans were brutal in allowing women and children
to go on this boat when they had been warned that the boat was
going to be sunk! They spoke of this much in the manner in which
one would speak of the cruelty of a man who would drive innocent
children and women to march in front of armies in order to
protect the troops from the fire of their enemies.
A storm of indignation against Germany burst out all over the
United States. Many were for immediate war. Calmer plans,
however, prevailed, and the upshot of the matter was that a stern
note was sent to Berlin notifying the Kaiser that the United
States could not permit vessels carrying Americans to be
torpedoed without warning on the open seas. The German papers
proceeded to make jokes about this matter. They pictured every
French and English boat as refusing to sail until at least two
Americans had been persuaded to go as passengers, so that the
boat might be under the protection of the United States.
However, in spite of Germany’s solemn promise that nothing of the
sort would happen again, similar incidents kept occurring,
although on a smaller scale. The American steamers _Falaba_ and
_Gulflight_ were torpedoed without warning, in each case with the
loss of one or two lives. Finally, the steamer _Sussex_, crossing
the English Channel, was hit by a torpedo which killed many of
the passengers. As several Americans lost their lives, once more
the United States warned Germany that this must not be repeated.
Germany acknowledged that her submarine commander had gone
further than his orders allowed him and promised that the act
should not be repeated—provided that the United States should
force England to abandon what Germany called her illegal
blockade. The United States in reply made it plain that while the
English blockade was unpleasant to American citizens, still it
was very different from the brutal murder of women and children
on the high seas. England, when convinced that an American ship
was carrying supplies which would be sold in the end to Germany,
merely took this vessel into an English port, where a court
decided what the cargo was worth and ordered the British
government to pay that sum to the (American) owners.
This was resented by the American shippers, but it was not
anything to go to war over. The United States gave warning that
she would hold Germany responsible for any damage to American
ships or loss of American lives.
All of this time the Germans were accusing the United States of
favoring the nations of the Entente because they were selling
munitions of war to them and none to Germany. They said that it
was grossly unfair for neutral nations to sell to one side when,
owing to the blockade, they could not sell to the other also.
When a protest was made by Austria, the United States pointed out
that a similar case had come up in 1899. At that time the empire
of Great Britain was at war with two little Dutch Republics in
South Africa. The Dutch, completely blockaded, could not buy
munitions in the open market. Nevertheless, this fact did not
prevent both Austria and Germany from selling guns and ammunition
to Great Britain. (It must be made plain that the United States
_government_ was not selling munitions of war to any of the
warring nations. What Germany wanted and Austria asked was that
our government should prevent our private companies, as, for
example our steel mills, from shipping any goods which would
eventually aid in killing Germans. The United States made it
plain that our people had no feeling in the matter—that they were
in business, and would sell to whomsoever came to buy; that it
was not our fault that the British navy, being larger than the
German, prevented Germany from trading with us.)
In the meanwhile explosions kept occurring in the many munition
factories in the United States that were turning out shells and
guns for the Allies. Several hundred Americans were killed in
these explosions, and property to the value of millions of
dollars was destroyed. It was proved that the Austrian ambassador
and several of the German diplomats had been hiring men to commit
these crimes. They were protected from our courts by the fact
that they were representatives of foreign nations, but the
President insisted that their governments recall them.
The Germans made a great point about the brutality of the English
blockade. They told stories about the starving babies of Germany,
who were being denied milk because of the cruelty of the English.
As a matter of fact, what Germany really lacked was rubber,
cotton, gasoline, and above all, nickel and cobalt, two metals
which were needed in the manufacture of guns and shells.
Finally, in the summer of 1916, came a world surprise. A large
German submarine, the _Deutschland_, made the voyage across the
Atlantic Ocean and bobbed up unexpectedly in the harbor of
Baltimore. In spite of all the trouble that the United States had
had with Germany over the sinking of ships by submarines, the
crew of this vessel was warmly received, and the cargo of dyes
which she brought was eagerly purchased. The Germans, in return,
loaded their ship with the metals and other products of which
Germany was so short. As one American newspaper said, the
_Deutschland_ took back a cargo of nickel and rubber to the
starving babies of Germany. Once more the _Deutschland_ came,
this time to New London, and again her crew was welcomed with
every sign of hospitality.
[Illustration: The Deutschland in Chesapeake Bay]
In December, 1916, at the close of the victorious German campaign
against Roumania, the central powers, weary of war and beginning
to feel the pinch of starvation and the drain on their young men,
made it known that as they had won the war they were now ready to
treat for peace. This message carried with it a threat to all
countries not at war that if they did not help to force the
Entente to accept the Kaiser’s peace terms, Germany could not be
held responsible for anything that might happen to them in the
future.
President Wilson, always apprehensive that something might draw
the United States into the conflict, grasped eagerly at this
opportunity, and in a public message he asked both sides to state
to the world on what terms they would stop the war.
The Germans and their allies did not make a clear and definite
proposal. On the other hand, the nations of the Entente, in no
uncertain terms, declared that no peace would be made unless the
central powers restored what they had wrongfully seized, paid the
victims of their unprovoked attack for the damage they had done,
and guaranteed that no such act should ever be committed in the
future. They also declared that the Poles, Danes, Czechs,
Slovaks, Italians, Alsatians, and Serbs should be freed from the
tyrannous governments which now enslaved them. In plain language
this meant that the central powers must give back part of
Schleswig to Denmark, allow the kingdom of Poland to be restored
as it once had been; permit the Bohemians and Slovaks to form an
independent nation in the midst of Austria-Hungary; allow the
people of Alsace and Lorraine the right of returning to France;
annex the Italians in Austria-Hungary to Italy, and permit the
Serbs in Bosnia and Herzegovina to join their cousins to the
southeast in one great Serbian nation.
When these terms were published the German government exclaimed
that while they had been willing to make peace and perhaps even
give back the conquered portions of Belgium and northern France
in return for the captured German colonies in Africa and the
Pacific Ocean, with the payment of indemnities to Germany, now it
was plain that the nations of the Entente intended to wipe out
utterly the German nation and dismember the empire of
Austria-Hungary; and that since Germany had offered her enemies
an honorable peace and they had refused, the only thing left for
the central powers to do was to fight to the bitter end and _use
any means whatsoever to force their enemies to make peace_.
In other words, here were the two conflicting claims: Germany
said, “We have won the war. Don’t you recognize the fact that you
have been beaten? Give us back our colonies, organize a kingdom
of Poland, out of the part of Russian Poland which we have
conquered, as a separate kingdom under our protection, but don’t
expect us to join to this any part of Austrian or Prussian
Poland. (Prussian and Austrian Poland are _ours_. You wouldn’t
expect _us_ to give up any part of _them_, would you?) Allow us
to keep the port of Antwerp and maintain our control over the
Balkan peninsula. We will restore to you northern France, most of
Belgium, and even part of Serbia. See what a generous offer we
are making!”
The Allied nations replied, in effect: “You now have gotten
three-fourths of what you aimed at when you began the war. If we
make peace now, allowing you to keep the greater part of what you
have conquered, you will be magnanimous and give back a small
portion of it if we in turn surrender all your lost colonies.
Hardly! We demand, on the other hand, that you recompense, as far
as you can, the miserable victims of your savage attack for the
death and destruction that you have caused; that you put things
back as you found them as nearly as possible; that you make it
plain to us that never again will we have to be on guard against
the possibility of a ruthless invasion by your army; that you
give to the peoples whom you and your allies have forcibly
annexed or retained under your rule a chance to choose their own
form of government.”
Then said the Germans to the world, “You see! They want to wipe
us out of existence and cut the empire of our allies into small
bits. Nothing is left but to fight for our existence, and, as we
are fighting for our existence, all rules hitherto observed in
civilized warfare are now called off!”
In the latter part of January, 1917, the German government
announced that, inasmuch as they had tried to bring about an
honorable peace (which would have left them still in possession
of three-fourths the plunder they had gained in the war) and this
peace offer had been rejected by the Entente, all responsibility
for anything which might happen hereafter in the war would have
to be borne by France, England, etc., and not by Germany. It was
stated that Germany was fighting for her existence, and that when
one’s life is at stake all methods of fighting are permissible.
Germany proposed, therefore, to send out her submarines and sink
_without warning_ all merchant ships sailing toward English or
French ports.
In a special note to the United States, the German government
said that once a week, at a certain time, the United States would
be permitted to send a passenger vessel to England, provided that
this boat were duly inspected and proved to have no munitions of
war or supplies for England on board. It must be painted all over
with red, white, and blue stripes and must be marked in other
ways so that the German submarine commanders would know it. (It
must be remembered that Germany insisted that she was fighting
for the freedom of the seas!)
Now, at all times, it has been recognized that the open seas are
free to all nations for travel and commerce. This proposal, to
sink without warning all ships on the ocean, was a bit of
effrontery that few had imagined even the German government was
capable of.
President Wilson had been exceedingly patient with Germany. In
fact, a great majority of the newspaper and magazine writers in
the country had criticized him for being too patient. The great
majority of the people of the United States were for peace,
ardently. The government at Washington knew this. Nevertheless,
this last announcement by Germany that she proposed to kill any
American citizens who dared to travel on the sea in the
neighborhood of England and France seemed more than a
self-respecting nation could endure. The Secretary of State sent
notice to Count Von Bernstorff, the German ambassador, to leave
this country. Friendly relations between the imperial government
of Germany and the United States of America were at an end.
Questions for Review
How did the submarine boat change methods of warfare?
What is contraband of war?
Was it right to prevent the importation of food into Germany?
Why would a nation which manufactured a great deal of war
material object to the sale of such material to fighting
nations by nations at peace?
Show how this rule, if carried out, would have a tendency to
make all nations devote too much work to the preparation of
war supplies.
Show the difference between the British blockade and the
sinking of ships by German submarines.
Would the blowing up of American factories by paid agents of
the German government have been a good enough reason for the
United States to have declared war?
How did the voyages of the _Deutschland_ prove that the
United States wanted to be fair to both sides in the war?
What reasons had Austria and Germany for wishing peace in
December 1916?
Why did President Wilson ask the warring nations to state
their aims in the war?
How did Germany try to justify the sinking of ships without
warning?
Chapter XXII.
Another Crown Topples
The unnatural alliance of the Czar and the free peoples.—The
first Duma and the revolt of 1905.—The Zemptsvos and the people
against the pro-German officials.—The death of Rasputin and other
signs of unrest.—The revolution of March 1917.—The Czar becomes
Mr. Romanoff.—Four different governments within eight
months.—Civil war and a German effort for peace.
It will be recalled that the great war was caused in the first
place by the unprovoked attack of Austria on Serbia and the
unwillingness of Russia to stand by and see her little neighbor
crushed, and that England came in to make good her word, pledged
to Belgium, to defend that small country from all hostile
attacks. Thus the nations of the Entente posed before the world
as the defenders of small nations and as champions of the rights
of peoples to live under the form of government which they might
choose. You will remember that when the central powers said that
they were ready to talk peace terms the nations of the Entente
replied that there could be no peace as long as the Danes, Poles,
and Alsatians were forcibly held by Germany in her empire and as
long as Austria denied the Ruthenians, Roumanians, Czechs,
Slovaks, Serbs, and Italians in their empire the right either to
rule themselves or to join the nations united to them by ties of
blood and language. France and Great Britain especially were fond
of saying that it was a war of the free peoples against those
enslaved by military rule—a conflict between self-governed
nations and those which were oppressing their foreign subjects.
Replying to this the central powers would always point to Russia.
Russia, said they, oppressed the Poles and Lithuanians, the
Letts, the Esthonians, the Finns. She, as well as
Austria-Hungary, has hundreds of thousands of Roumanians within
her territories. Her people had even less political freedom than
the inhabitants of Austria and Germany.
The nations of the Entente did not reply to these charges of the
Germans. There was no reply to make; it was the truth. In fact
there is no doubt that French and British statesmen were afraid
of a Russian victory. They did not want the war to be won by the
one nation in their group which had a despotic form of
government. On the other hand the high officials in Russia were
not any too happy at the thought of their alliance with the free
peoples of western Europe. Germany was much more their ideal of a
country governed in the proper manner than was France. As you
have been told, many of the nobles of the Russian court were of
German blood and secretly desired the victory of their
fatherland, while many Russians of the party who wanted to keep
all power out of the hands of the common people were afraid of
seeing Germany crushed, for fear their own people would rise up
and demand more liberty.
You will recall that there had been unrest in Russia at the time
of the outbreak of the war; that strikes and labor troubles were
threatened, so that many people thought the Czar had not been at
all sorry to see the war break out, in order to turn the minds of
his people away from their own wrongs.
At the close of the disastrous war with the Japanese in 1905, the
cry from the Russian people for a Congress, or some form of
elective government, had been so strong that the Czar had to give
in. So he called the first Duma. This body of men, as has been
explained, could talk and could complain, but could pass no laws.
The first Duma had had so many grievances and had talked so
bitterly against the government, that it had been forced to break
up, and Cossack troops were called in to put down riots among the
people at St. Petersburg, which they did with great ferocity. All
this time there had been growing, among the Russian people, a
feeling that they were being robbed and betrayed by the grand
dukes and high nobles. They distrusted the court. They felt that
the Czar was well-meaning, but weak, and that he was a mere
puppet in the hands of his German wife, his cousins the grand
dukes, and above all a notorious monk, called Rasputin. This
strange man, a son of the common people, had risen to great power
in the court. He had persuaded the Empress that he alone could
keep health and strength in the frail body of the crown prince,
the Czarevitch, and to keep up this delusion he had bribed one of
the ladies in waiting to pour a mild poison into the boy’s food
whenever Rasputin was away from the court for more than a few
days. The poor little prince, of course, was made sick;
whereupon, the Empress would hurriedly send for Rasputin, upon
whose arrival the Czarevitch “miraculously” got well. In this
manner this low-born fakir obtained such a hold over the Czar and
Czarina that he was able to appoint governors of states, put
bishops out of their places, and even change prime ministers.
There is no doubt that the Germans bribed him to use his
influence in their behalf. It is a sad illustration of the
ignorance of the Russian people as a whole, that such a man could
have gotten so great a power on such flimsy pretenses.
The real salvation of the Russians came through the Zemptsvos.
These were little assemblies, one in each county in Russia,
elected by the people to decide all local matters, like the
building of roads, helping feed the poor, etc. They had been
started by Czar Alexander II, in 1862. Although the court was
rotten with graft and plotting, the Zemptsvos remained true to
the people. They finally all united in a big confederation, and
when the world war broke out, this body, really the only
patriotic part of the Russian government, kept the grand dukes
and the pro-Germans from betraying the nation into the hands of
the enemy.
It was a strange situation. The Russian people through the
representatives that they elected to these little county
assemblies were patriotically carrying out the war, while the
grand dukes and the court nobles, who had gotten Russia into this
trouble, were, for the most part, hampering the soldiers, either
through grafting off the supplies and speculating in food, or
traitorously plotting to betray their country to the Germans.
With plenty of food in Russia, with millions of bushels of grain
stored away by men who were holding it in order to get still
higher prices, there was not enough for the people of Petrograd
to eat.
As you were told in a previous chapter, the German, Sturmer, was
made prime minister, probably with the approval of the monk,
Rasputin. Roumania, depending on promises of Russian help, was
crushed between the armies of the Germans on the one side and the
Turks and Bulgars on the other, while trainload after trainload
of the guns and munitions which would have enabled her armies to
stand firm was sidetracked and delayed on Russian railroads.
“Your Majesty, we are betrayed,” said the French general who had
been sent by the western allies to direct the army of the king of
Roumania, when his pleas for ammunition were ignored and promise
after promise made him by the Russian prime minister was broken.
Of all the countries in Europe, with the possible exception of
Turkey, Russia had been the most ignorant. The great mass of the
people had had no schooling and were unable to read and write. It
was easier for the grand dukes and nobles to keep down the
peasants and to remain undisturbed in the ownership of their
great estates if the people knew nothing more than to labor and
suffer in silence. There was a class of Russians, however, the
most patriotic and the best educated men in the state, who were
working quietly, but actively, to make conditions better. Then
too, the Nihilists, anarchists who had been working (often by
throwing bombs) for the overthrow of the Czar, had spread their
teachings throughout the country. Students of the universities,
writers, musicians, and artists, had preached the doctrines of
the rights of man. While outwardly the government appeared as
strong as ever, really it was like a tree whose trunk has rotted
through and through, and which needs only one vigorous push to
send it crashing to the ground.
It is generally in large cities that protests against the
government are begun. For one thing, it is harder, in a great mob
of people, to pick out the ones who are responsible for starting
the trouble. Then again it is natural for people to make their
protests in capital cities where the government cannot fail to
hear them. A third reason lies in the fact that in large cities
there are always a great number of persons who are poor and who
are the first ones to feel the pinch of starvation, when hard
times arise or when speculators seize upon food with the idea of
causing the prices to rise. Starvation makes these people
desperate—they do not care whether they live or not—and, as a
result, they dare to oppose themselves to the police and the
soldiers.
There had been murmurs of discontent in Petrograd for a long
time. This was felt not only among the common people, but also
among the more patriotic of the upper classes. In the course of
the winter of 1916-17, the monk, Rasputin, as a result of a plot,
was invited to the home of a grand duke, a cousin of the Czar.
There a young prince, determined to free Russia of this pest,
shot him to death and his body was thrown upon the ice of the
frozen Neva.
About this time the lack of food in Petrograd, the result largely
of speculation and “cornering the market,” had become so serious
that the government thought it wise to call in several regiments
of Cossacks to reinforce the police.
These Cossacks are wild tribesmen of the plains who enjoy a
freedom not shared by any other class in Russia. They are
warriors by trade and their sole duty consists in offering
themselves, fully equipped, whenever the government has need of
their services in war. They were of a different race, originally,
than the Russians themselves, although by inter-marrying they now
have some Slavic blood in their veins. Their appearance upon the
streets of Petrograd was almost always a threat to the people.
Enjoying freedom themselves and liking nothing better than the
practice of their trade—fighting—they had had little or no
sympathy with the wrongs of the populace, and so were the
strongest supporters of the despotic rule of the Czar. At times
when the Czar did not dare to trust his regular soldiers to
enforce order in Petrograd or Moscow, for fear the men would
refuse to fire upon their own relatives in the mob, the Cossacks
could always be counted upon to ride their horses fearlessly
through the people, sabering to right and left those who refused
to disperse.
[Illustration: Crowd in Petrograd during the Revolution]
The second week of March, 1917, found crowds in Petrograd
protesting against the high prices of food and forming in long
lines to demand grain of the government. As day succeeded day,
the crowds grew larger and bolder in their murmurings. Cossacks
were sent into the city, but for some strange reason they did not
cause fear as they had in times past. Their manner was different.
Instead of drawing their sabers, they good naturedly joked with
the people as they rode among them to disperse the mobs, and were
actually cheered at times by the populace. The crowds grew larger
and more boisterous. Regiment after regiment of troops was called
in. The police fired upon the people when the latter refused to
go home. Then a strange thing happened. A Cossack, his eyes
flashing fire, rode at full tilt up the street toward a policeman
who was firing on the mob, and shot him dead on the spot. A shout
went up from the people: “The Cossacks are with us!” New
regiments of troops were brought in. The men who composed them
knew that they were going to be ordered to fire upon their own
kind of people—their own kin perhaps, whose only crime was that
they were hungry and had dared to say so. One regiment turned
upon its officers, refusing to obey them, and made them
prisoners. Another and another joined the revolting forces. It
was like the scenes in Paris on the 14th of July, 1789. The
people had gathered to protest, and, hardly knowing what they
did, they had turned their protests into a revolution. Regiments
loyal to the Czar were hastily summoned to fire upon their
revolting comrades. They hesitated. Leaders of the mob rushed
over to them, pleading with them not to fire. A few scattering
volleys were followed by a lull, and, then with a shout of joy,
the troops last remaining loyal threw down their arms and rushed
across to embrace the revolutionists. At a great meeting of the
mob a group of soldiers and working men was picked out to call
upon the Duma and ask this body to form a temporary government.
Another group was appointed to wait upon Nicholas II and tell him
that henceforth he was not the Czar of all the Russias, but plain
Nicholas Romanoff. Messengers were sent to the fighting fronts to
inform the generals that they were no longer to take orders from
the Czar, but from the representatives of the free people of
Russia. With remarkable calmness, the nation accepted the new
situation. Within two days a new government had been formed,
composed of some of the best men in the great empire. The Czar
signed a paper giving up the throne in behalf of himself and his
young son and nominating his brother Michael to take his place.
Michael, however, was too wise. He notified the people that he
would accept the crown only if they should vote to give it to
him; and this the people would not do.
[Illustration: Revolutionary soldiers holding a conference in the Duma]
The government, as formed at first, with its ministers of
different departments like the American cabinet, was composed of
citizens of the middle classes—lawyers, professors of the
universities, land-owners, merchants were represented—and at the
head of the ministry was a prince. This arrangement did not
satisfy the rabble. The radical socialists, most of whom owned no
property and wanted all wealth divided up among all the people,
were not much happier to be ruled by the moderately well-to-do
than they were to submit to the rule of the nobles. The council
of workingmen and soldiers, meeting in the great hall which had
formerly housed the Duma, began to take upon themselves the
powers of government. Someone proclaimed that now the Russian
people should have peace, and when Prof. Milioukoff, foreign
minister for the new government, assured France and England that
Russia would stick by them to the last, a howling crowd of
workingmen threatened to mob him. “No annexations and no
indemnities,” was the cry of the socialists. “Let us go back to
conditions as they were before the war. Let each nation bear the
burden of its own losses and let us have peace.” After a stormy
session, the new government agreed to include in its numbers
several representatives of the soldiers and workingmen. Prof.
Milioukoff resigned and Alexander Kerensky, a radical young
lawyer, became the real leader of the Russian government.
[Illustration: Kerensky (standing in automobile) reviewing Russian
troops]
Germany and Austria, meanwhile, had eagerly seized the advantage
offered by Russia’s internal troubles. Their troops were ordered
to make friends with the Russians in the trenches opposite. They
played eagerly upon the new Russian feeling of the brotherhood of
man and freedom and equality, to do away with fighting on the
east, thus being able to transfer to the western front some of
their best regiments. As a result the French and English, after
driving the Germans back for many miles in northern France were
at last brought to a standstill. The burden of carrying the whole
war seemed about to fall more heavily than ever upon the armies
in the west. Talk of a separate peace between Russia and the
central powers grew stronger and stronger. The Russian troops
felt that they had been fighting the battles of the Czar and the
grand dukes and they saw no reason why they should go on shooting
their brother workingmen in Germany.
At this point Kerensky, who had been made minister of war, set
out to visit the armies in the field. Arriving at the battle
grounds of eastern Galicia he made rousing speeches to the
soldiers and actually led them in person toward the German
trenches. The result was a vigorous attack all along the line
under Generals Brusiloff and Korniloff which swept the Germans
and Austrians back for many miles, and threatened for a time to
recapture Lemberg. German spies, however, and agents of the peace
party were busy among the Russian soldiers. They soon persuaded a
certain division to stop fighting and retreat. The movement to
the rear, begun by these troops, carried others with it, and for
a time it seemed as though the whole Russian army was going to
pieces. Ammunition was not supplied to the soldiers. The
situation was serious and called for a strong hand. Kerensky was
made prime minister and the members of the government and the
council of workingmen and soldiers voted him almost the powers of
a Czar. He was authorized to give orders that any deserters or
traitors be shot, if need be, without trial. Under his rule the
Russian army began to re-form, and the situation improved.
In November, 1917, a faction of the extreme Socialists called the
Bolsheviki (Bŏl-shĕ-vï′kï) won over the garrisons of
Petrograd and Moscow, seized control of the government, forcing
Kerensky to flee, and threatened to make peace with Germany.
These people are, for the most part, the poor citizens of large
cities. They have few followers outside of the city population,
for the average Russian in the country is a land owner, and he
does not take kindly to the idea of losing his property or
dividing it with some landless beggar from Petrograd.
The revolt of the Bolsheviki, then, simply added to the confusion
in the realm of Russia. That unhappy country was torn apart by
the fights of the different factions. Finland demanded its
independence, and German spies and agents encouraged the
Ruthenians living in a great province called the Ukraine, to do
the same. The Cossacks withdrew to the country to the north of
the Crimean peninsula, and the only Russian armies that kept on
fighting were those in Turkey. These forces had been gathered
largely from the states between the Black and Caspian Seas.
Having suffered persecution in the old days, they had hated the
Turks for ages and needed no orders from Petrograd to induce them
to take revenge.
Finally the Bolshevik government agreed to a peace with the
central powers which gave Germany and Austria everything that
they wanted. The Russian armies were disbanded and the Germans
and Austrians were free to turn their fighting men back to the
western front. In the meantime, the Ruthenian republic, now
called the Ukraine, was allowed by the Bolsheviki to make a
separate peace with Germany and Austria. The troops of the
Germans and Austrians began joyously to pillage both Russia and
the Ukraine, hunting for the food that was so scarce in the
central empires. However, for a whole year hardly anybody in
Russia had been willing to do a stroke of work. The fields had
gone untilled while the peasants, drunk with their new freedom,
and without a care for the morrow, lived off the grain that had
been saved up during the past years. As a result, whatever grain
the enemy found proved spoiled and mouldy, hardly fit to feed to
hogs. As the Germans went about, taking anything that they wished
and as food grew scarce, the unrest in Russia grew greater.
The Bolshevik government had not set up a democracy—a government
where all the people had equal rights: they had set up a tyranny
of the lower classes. The small land owners, the tradesmen, the
middle classes were not allowed any voice in the government. When
the first National Assembly or Congress was elected and called
together, the Bolsheviki finding that they did not control a
majority of its members, disbanded it by force.
Little by little people began to oppose this rule. They objected
to being robbed of their rights by the rabble just as much as by
the Czar.
When the Russian armies were disbanded, there were some troops
that refused to throw down their arms. Among them were the
regiments of Czecho-Slovaks. These men had been forced, against
their will, to serve in the Austrian army. They were from the
northern part of the Austrian empire, Bohemia and Moravia. They
were Slavs, related to the Russians, speaking a language very
much like Russian, hating the Germans of Austria and anxious to
free their country from the empire of the Hapsburgs. When General
Brusiloff made his big attack in June, 1916, these men had
deserted the Austrian army and re-enlisted as Russians. They
could not get back to Austria for the Austrians would shoot them
as deserters. Of course, the Austrian and the German generals
would make no peace with them. Therefore, this army, 200,000
strong, kept their own officers and their order and their arms
and refused to have anything to do with the cowardly peace made
by the Bolsheviki. Several thousand of them made their way across
Siberia, across the Pacific Ocean, across America, across the
Atlantic to France and Italy, where they are fighting by the
thousands in the armies of the Entente. The main body of them,
however, are still in Russia (August 1, 1918), holding the great
Siberian railway, fully ready to renew the war against the
central powers at any time when the patriotic Russians will rise
and help them. The problem of how to get aid to the Czechs
without angering the Russian people is a big one for the allied
statesmen.
The trouble with the Russians is that they are not educated; the
result of this is that they readily believe the lies of spies and
tricksters, that would never deceive an educated man.
Questions for Review
Was the Russian government as harsh as that of Germany?
Why was Russia a source of weakness to the Entente?
Why was Rasputin killed?
Why did the Czars prefer the Cossacks?
What classes fought after the Czar’s downfall?
How did the central powers take advantage of Russia’s
troubles?
How did the peace with the Bolsheviki help Germany?
Explain where the Czecho-Slovak army came from.
Chapter XXIII.
The United States at War—Why?
Germany throws to the winds all rules of civilized war.—Dr.
Zimmermann’s famous note.—Congress declares war.—Other nations
follow our example.—The plight of Holland, Denmark, and
Norway.—German arguments for submarine warfare shown to be
groundless.—German agents blow up American factories.—German
threats against the United States.—Germany and the Monroe
Doctrine.—A government whose deeds its people cannot
question.—Why American troops were sent to Europe.—Why the war
lords wanted peace in January, 1918.
In the meantime, two months had elapsed from the time when the
German ambassador, Count Von Bernstorff, had been sent home by
the United States. The Germans, true to their word, had begun
their campaign of attacking and sinking without warning ships of
all kinds in the waters surrounding Great Britain and France.
Even the hospital ships, marked plainly with the red cross, and
boats carrying food to the starving people of Belgium, were
torpedoed without mercy. The curious state of public feeling in
Germany is well illustrated by an incident which happened at this
time. It so happened that an English hospital ship, crossing the
channel, was laden with about as many German wounded as British.
These men had been left helpless on the field of battle after the
Germans had retreated, and had been picked up and cared for by
the British, along with their own troops. A German submarine with
its deadly torpedo sent this vessel to the bottom. The wounded
men, German and British alike, sank without the slightest chance
for their lives. A burst of indignation came from all over
Germany against the “unspeakable brutality” of the British who
dared to expose German wounded men to the danger of travel on the
open sea! The British were warned that if this happened again the
Germans would make reprisals upon British prisoners in their
hands.
[Illustration: Flight from a Torpedoed Ocean Liner]
Week followed week and still there was no declaration of war
between the United States and Germany. But in the latter part of
February, the United States government made public a note which
its secret agents had stopped from being delivered to the German
ambassador in Mexico. It was signed by Dr. Zimmermann, German
minister of foreign affairs, and it requested the ambassador as
soon as it was certain that there would be an outbreak of war
with the United States as a result of the sinking of ships
without warning, to propose to Mexico that she ally herself with
Germany. “Together we will make war on the United States,” said
Dr. Zimmermann, “and together we will make peace. Mexico will
receive as her reward her lost provinces of Arizona, Texas, and
New Mexico.” “Ask the Mexican government,” said Dr. Zimmermann,
“to propose to the Japanese that Japan break away from her
alliance with England and join Mexico and Germany in an attack
upon the United States.”
The publication of this note made a tremendous change in feeling
in the United States. Up to this time a great portion of the
people had felt that perhaps we were hasty in breaking off
relations with Germany, and in their earnest desire for peace had
been willing to put up with injury and even insults on the part
of the Germans, excusing them on the grounds of their military
necessity. The publication of Dr. Zimmermann’s note, however,
showed the people of the United States the true temper of the
government at Berlin. It showed them that the German war lords
had no respect for anything but brute force, that the language of
cannon was the only language which they could understand, and
that any further patience on the part of this country would be
looked upon as weakness and treated with scorn and contempt.
On the sixth of April, 1917, Congress, called into session by the
President, by an overwhelming vote declared that a state of war
existed between the United States of America and the Imperial
Government of Germany.
At this point it may be well to sum up the causes that brought
the United States into the great war. These causes may be given
under two heads: (1) the war waged upon us by submarines; and (2)
the German plots and threats against our country at a time when
we were at peace with them. The latter, as given in pages to
follow, comprise: (a) The Kaiser’s threat, (b) Admiral Von
Tirpitz’s threat, (c) the blowing up of American factories and
death of American workingmen, (d) the attempt to get us into war
with Japan and Mexico, and (e) the spending of the German
government’s money in an attempt to make our congressmen vote as
Germany wished.
[Illustration: President Wilson reading his War Message to Congress]
The Submarine War
Up to the time when the United States declared war, two hundred
and twenty-six Americans, men, women, and infants, had met their
death through the sinking of ships, torpedoed without warning,
under orders of the German government. These people were
peaceable travelers, going about their business on the high seas
in passenger steamers owned by private companies. According to
the law observed by all nations up to this time there was no more
reason for them to fear danger from the Germans than if they had
been traveling on trains in South America or Spain, or any other
country not at war. The attack upon these ships, to say nothing
about the brutal and inhuman method of sinking them without
warning, was an act of war on the part of Germany against any
country whose citizens happened to be traveling on these ocean
steamers. That the action of the United States in calling the
submarine attacks an act of war was only justice is proved by the
fact that several other nations, who had nothing to gain by going
to war and had earnestly desired to remain neutral, took the same
stand. Brazil, Cuba, and several other South and Central American
republics found that they could not maintain their honor without
declaring war on Germany. German ambassadors and ministers have
been dismissed from practically every capital in Spanish America.
In Europe, also, neutral nations like Holland, Denmark, and
Norway saw their ships sunk and their citizens drowned. In spite
of their wrongs, however, the first two did not dare to declare
war on Germany, as the Germans would be able to throw a strong
army across the border and overrun each of these two little
countries before the allies could come to their help. With the
fate of Belgium and Serbia before them, the Danes and the Dutch
swallowed their pride and sat helplessly by while Germany killed
their sailors and defenseless passengers. After the failure of
the Entente to protect Serbia and Roumania, no one could blame
Denmark and Holland.
Norway, too, was exposed to danger of a raid by the German fleet.
Commanding the Skager Rack and Cattegat as they did, with the
Kiel Canal connecting them, the Germans could bombard the cities
on the Norwegian coast or even land an army to invade the
country. The three little countries together do not have an army
any larger than that of Roumania, and it would have been out of
the question for them to declare war on Germany without seeing
their whole territory overrun and laid waste.
Nevertheless public opinion in Norway was so strong against
Germany that the Norwegian government, on November first, 1917
sent a vigorous protest to Berlin, closing with these words:
“The Norwegian government will not again state its views, as it
has already done so on several occasions, as to the violation of
the principles of the freedom of the high seas incurred by the
proclamation of large tracts of the ocean as a war zone and by
the sinking of neutral merchant ships not carrying contraband.
“It has made a profound impression on the Norwegian people that
not only have German submarines continued to sink peaceful
neutral merchant ships, paying no attention to the fate of their
crews, but that even German warships adopted the same tactics.
The Norwegian government decided to send this note in order to
bring to the attention of the German government the impression
these acts have made upon the Norwegian people.”
The two arguments that the Germans used in trying to justify
themselves for their inhuman methods with the submarine are: (1)
that on these ships which were sunk were supplies for the French
and British armies, the arrival of which would aid them in
killing Germans, and (2) that the English, by their blockade of
Germany, were doing something which was contrary to the laws of
nations and starving German women and children, and, therefore,
since England was breaking some rules of the war game, Germany
had the right to go ahead and break others.
The trade of the United States in selling war supplies to France
and England was a sore spot with Germany. They claimed that the
United States was unfair in selling to the Entente and not to
them. Of course, this was foolish, as has been pointed out, for
the United States was just as ready to sell to Germany as to the
Allies, as was shown by the two voyages of the _Deutschland_. If
our government had forbidden our people to sell war supplies at
all, and if other neutral countries had done the same thing, then
the result would be that all wars would be won by the country
which made the biggest preparation for war in times of peace. A
law passed by neutral countries forbidding their merchants from
selling munitions would leave a non-military nation, which had
not been getting ready for war, absolutely at the mercy of a
neighbor who for years had been storing up shells and guns for
the purpose of unrighteous conquest. So clear was this right to
sell munitions that Germany did not dare protest, but ordered
Austria to do so instead. In reply, our government was able to
point out cases where Austrian firms had sold guns, etc., to
Great Britain during the Boer War as you have already been told,
and Austria had no answer to give.
What is more, at all of the meetings of the diplomats of
different nations at the Hague, called for the purpose of trying
to prevent future wars, if possible, or at least to make them
more humane and less brutal to the women and children and others
who were not actually fighting, Germany had always upheld the
right of neutral nations to sell arms. Moreover, her
representatives had fought strongly against any proposals to
settle disputes by arbitration and peaceful agreements. At a time
when many European nations signed treaties with the United States
agreeing to allow one year to elapse between a dispute which
might lead to war and the actual declaring of war itself, Germany
positively refused to consider such an agreement.
As for the English blockade, England was doing no more to Germany
than Germany or any other country would have done to England if
the English navy had not been so strong. In our own Civil War the
North kept up a like blockade of the South and no nation
protested against it, for it was recognized as an entirely legal
act. In the Franco-Prussian war of 1871, the Germans were
blockading the city of Paris and the country around it. The
Frenchmen tried to send their women and children outside the
lines to be fed. The Germans drove them back at the point of the
bayonet, and told them that they might “fry in their own fat.”
According to the laws of war they were perfectly justified in
what they did. Then, too, the English blockade, which stopped
ships which were found to be loaded with supplies for Germany and
took them peaceably to an English port, where it was decided how
much the owners should be paid for the cargoes, was a very
different matter from the brutal drowning of helpless men, women,
and children by the German submarines. In one case, owners of the
goods were caused a great deal of annoyance and in some instances
did not get their money promptly. On the other side, there was
murder of the most fiendish kind, an act of war against neutral
states.
Plots and Threats Against the United States
[Illustration: American Grain Set on Fire by German Agents]
Let us turn now to the second cause for grievance that the United
States had against Germany. At a time when American citizens who
sympathized with Germany were subscribing millions of dollars for
the relief of the German wounded, it is strongly suspected that
this was the very money, which, collected by the German
government’s own agents, was being spent in plots involving the
destroying of the property of some American citizens and the
death of others. The German ambassador and his helpers were
hiring men to blow up American factories, to destroy railroad
bridges, and to kill Americans who were making war supplies for
the armies of Europe. Factory after factory was blown up with
considerable loss of life. Bombs, with clock work attachment to
explode them at a certain time, were found on ships sailing for
Europe. Money was poured out in great quantities to influence
members of the United States Congress to vote against the
shipment of war supplies to France and England. Revolts paid for
by German money were organized in Mexico and the Islands of the
West Indies. For a long time there had been a series of stories
and newspaper and magazine articles trying to prove to the
American people that Japan was planning to make war on us. The
same sort of stories appeared in Japan, persuading the Japanese
that they were in danger of being attacked by the United States.
It now appears that the great part of these stories were started
by the Germans, who hoped to get us into a war with Japan and
profit by the ill will which must follow between the two
countries.
At first, Americans were inclined to think that all of these
things could be traced to German-Americans, whose zeal for their
Fatherland caused them to go too far. But it has been proved
beyond a doubt that all of these acts, which were really acts of
war against the United States, were ordered by the government at
Berlin and paid for by German money, or by American money which
had been contributed for the benefit of the German Red Cross
service.
In addition to these facts there were threats against the United
States which could not be ignored. The Kaiser had told our
ambassador at Berlin, Mr. Gerard, that “America had better beware
after this war” for he “would stand no nonsense from her.”
Admiral Von Tirpitz, the German Secretary of the Navy, also told
Mr. Gerard that Germany needed the coast of Belgium as a place
from which to start her “future war on England and America.”
American statesmen were seriously concerned at threats of this
kind, for they knew that the government in power at Berlin could
absolutely command its people, and by forbidding certain kinds of
news and substituting other things in the German newspapers could
make the German people think anything which the war lords wished
them to think. Thus there was great danger that, having won the
war from the Entente or having stood them off successfully until
the fight was declared a draw, Germany would next attack the
United States with the idea of collecting from this comparatively
defenseless and very rich country the huge indemnity which she
had planned to assess upon France and Russia. With this money and
with the breaking down of the Monroe Doctrine, Germany could set
up a great empire in South America which would make her almost as
powerful as she would have been had her first plans for crushing
France and Russia been successful.
You will recall, from your study of United States history, that
President Monroe had warned European governments to keep their
hands off South America, for the United States would act as big
brother to any of the little republics there who might be
attacked by a European foe. Germany in recent years has resented
this very vigorously. There were nearly half a million Germans in
the southern part of Brazil. Uruguay and the Argentine Republic
also had large German settlements. If the Monroe Doctrine were
out of the way, Germany hoped that she would be able to get a
footing in these countries in which she had colonists and
gradually to gain control of the entire country. In the fall of
1917 there was uncovered a plot among the German residents of
certain states in the southern part of Brazil to make this
territory a part of the German Colonial Empire. This discovery,
along with the sinking of Brazilian ships by submarines, drove
Brazil into war with Germany.
To sum up: The United States entered the war: first, because
German submarines were killing her peaceful citizens and stopping
her lawful trade; second, because paid agents of the German
government were destroying American property in the United
States, killing American citizens, and creating discord in our
political life; they were pretending to be friendly and yet were
trying to enlist Japan and Mexico in war against us; third, for
the reason that because of Germany’s threats and her well-known
policy in South America there was grave danger that it would be
our turn next if the central powers should come out of the
European war uncrushed.
The American government has made it plain that we are not moved
by any desire for gain for ourselves. We have nothing to win
through the war except the assurance that our nation will be
safe. If Germany had a government which the people controlled,
then the United States could trust promises of that government.
But, as President Wilson has pointed out, no one can trust the
present government of Germany, for it is responsible to no one
for what it does. It has torn up sacred promises, which its
Chancellor called “scraps of paper”; it has broken its word; it
has ordered “acts of frightfulness” in the lands which it has
conquered and on the high seas, with the idea of brutally forcing
its will upon enemies and neutral countries alike. It has
deceived its own people, persuading them that they were attacked
by France and Russia, while all the time it was plotting to rule
the world through force of arms.
President Wilson has said that the object of the United States in
this war is “to make the world safe for democracy.” This means
that a free people, who have no desire to interfere with any of
their neighbors or to make conquests by force of arms, shall be
allowed to live their lives without preparation for war and
without fear that they may be attacked by a nation with military
rulers.
We have seen how France, attacked in 1870 and threatened by
Germany in 1875, 1905, of war and 1911 was obliged to match gun
for gun and ship for ship with her warlike neighbor to the east.
The dread of an attack by the military party of Germany hung over
France like a shadow throughout forty-three years of a peace
which was only a little better than war, because of the vast
amount of money that had to be spent and the attention that had
to be given to preparation for the war that all felt would one
day come.
When once the German people have a controlling voice in the
government, then, and not till then, can other governments
believe the word of the statesmen at Berlin. But at present the
citizens of Germany have little real power. For, while they can
elect members of the Reichstag, the Reichstag can pass no laws,
for above this body is the national council, whose members are
appointed by the Kaiser and the other kings and grand dukes. The
power of declaring war and making peace lies practically in the
hands of the Kaiser alone, and at any moment he can set aside any
of Germany’s laws, under the plea that “military necessity” calls
for certain things to be done. In this way, he has thrown into
prison those who dared to speak against the war, and has either
suppressed newspapers or ordered them to print only what he
wished printed; thus the German people have let him do their
thinking for them.
They are a docile people. One of the first words that a German
baby is taught to say is “Kaiser,” and all of the schools, which
are run by the government, have taught nothing but respect for
the present form of government, and almost a worship of the
Kaiser himself. What it is hoped that this war will bring about
is the freeing of the German people from their blind obedience to
the military power, which for its own glory and pride has hurled
them by the millions to death.
The United States has adopted plans in this war which are very
different from any hitherto used. With the exception of some
troops raised for a few months during the dark days of the War of
the Rebellion, all of our armies have been recruited from men who
enlisted of their own free will. In this great conflict in which
we are now engaged, the government has drawn its soldiers by lot
from a list of all the young men in the country between the ages
of twenty-one and thirty-one. Thus, rich and poor alike are
fighting in our ranks.
For the first time in our history our troops have been sent to
fight on another continent. Many persons have felt that we should
keep our young men at home and wait for Germany to cross the
Atlantic in order to attack us. Our statesmen, on the other hand,
saw that the peace of the world was at stake. If Germany,
Austria, and Turkey, the three countries whose people have no
voice in the question of peace or war, come out of this conflict
victorious, or even undefeated, the world will see again the mad
race for armaments which resulted in the war of 1914. If, on the
other hand, the people of these nations realize that it is true
today, as in the olden times, that those people who take up the
sword shall perish by the sword, they will overthrow their
leaders and agree to disarm and live at peace in future with
their neighbors.
The military parties in Austria and Germany wanted war. The only
way by which these people can be convinced is by brute force.
When they realize that they have not gained by war, but have
lost, not only a great deal of their wealth, through the terrific
cost of the war, but the friendship and respect of the whole
world, when they realize that the nations allied against them
will push the war relentlessly until these military chiefs
confess that they never want to hear the word “war” again, then,
and only then, will they be ready to throw down their arms and
agree to join a league of the nations whose object shall be to
prevent any future wars.
As long as Germany was victorious and her people thought that
they were going to come out of the conflict with added territory
and big money indemnities, war was popular. But with the flower
of their young men slain, and the prospect of conquest and
plunder growing smaller and smaller with each passing month, the
Germans, too, are beginning to hate the thought of war.
The American army can give the finishing touch to the German
downfall along the western front, and the sooner the Germans
realize that they cannot win from the rapidly growing number of
their enemies, the sooner will come the the end of this greatest
tragedy in the civilized world.
The war lords knew that if the war lasted long enough they must
be defeated and they were striving hard all through the years
1916 and 1917 to make peace while they had possession of enough
of the enemy’s lands so that they could show their own people
some gain in territory to pay them back for their terrible
sufferings. The German war debt was so great that the war lords
dreaded to face their own people after the latter realized that
they had been deceived as well as defeated. The government had
told them (1) that England, France, and Russia forced this war
upon Germany, (2) that the German armies would win the war in
short order, and (3) that a huge sum of money would be collected
from France, Belgium, and Russia to pay the expenses of the war.
The war lords dreaded to think of the time when their people,
knowing that they themselves will have to bear the fearful burden
of war debt, learned also that the whole tragedy was forced upon
the world by the pride and ambition of their own leaders. By
Christmas 1917, the Kaiser was once more hinting that Germany was
ready to talk peace. He was wise, for if peace could have been
made then it would have left Germany absolute mistress of all of
middle Europe. Austria, Bulgaria, and Turkey were more under the
control of the Kaiser and his war lords than were parts of his
own empire like Bavaria and Saxony. In Belgium, Serbia, Poland,
Lithuania, Roumania, and northern France the central powers had
over forty millions of people who were compelled to work for them
like slaves. The plunder collected from these countries ran into
billions of dollars. The road to the east, cut asunder by the
results of the second Balkan war (see map), had been forced open
by the rush of the victorious German armies through Serbia and
Roumania. A peace at this time would have been a German victory.
With the drain on the man power of the central powers, with
dissatisfaction growing among their people, with the steady
increase in the armies of the United States, time was fighting on
the side of the allies.
Questions for Review
Does the Zimmermann note show that the German government
understood conditions in Mexico and the United States?
Why did the Zimmermann note have so strong an effect upon
American public opinion?
What were the steps by which the United States was forced
into war?
Why did not Holland and Denmark declare war on Germany also?
What was the main difference between the English blockade of
Germany and the German submarine war on England?
Was the German government responsible for the acts of its
agents in this country?
What is the Monroe Doctrine?
Why could not the Imperial Government of Germany be trusted?
How was this war different for the United States from any
previous conflict?
What was the greatest obstacle to peace?
Chapter XXIV.
Europe as it Should Be
Natural boundaries of nations in Europe.—Peoples outside of the
nations with whom they belong.—The mixture of peoples in
Austria-Hungary, and Russia.—The British Isles.—The Balkan
states.—Recent changes in the map.—The wrongs done by mighty
nations upon their weak neighbors bring no happiness.
We have several times shown you, in the course of this little
history, maps drawn by kings and marked off by diplomacy and
through bloodshed. Let us now examine a map of Europe divided
according to the race and language of its various peoples. It
often happens that the boundaries set by nature, like seas, high
mountains, and broad rivers, divide one people from another. It
is natural that the people of Italy, for instance, hemmed in by
the Alps to the north and by the water on all other sides, should
grow to be like each other and come to talk a common language.
In the same way, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Greece, Spain, France,
Great Britain, and Switzerland have boundaries largely set by
nature. On this account, it is not surprising that the map of
“Europe as it should be” which unites people of the same blood
under the same government, agrees rather closely in some places
with the map of Europe as it is.
The boundaries of the kingdom of Spain and those of the kingdom
of Portugal fit pretty closely the countries inhabited by Spanish
and Portuguese peoples.
There are a few Italians in France, also a few Walloons and
Flemish. Otherwise France is largely a unit. Some of the French
people are found in Switzerland and others in that part of the
German Empire which was taken away from France after the
Franco-Prussian war of 1870.
The Danes are not all living in Denmark. A great many of them
inhabit the two provinces of Schleswig and Holstein which were
torn away from Denmark by Prussia in 1864. The high mountains of
the Scandinavian peninsula separate the Norwegians from the
Swedes about as well as they divide the countries geographically.
The Hollanders make a nation by themselves, but part of the
northwestern corner of the German Empire is also peopled by
Dutch. The territory around Aix-La-Chapelle, although part of the
German Empire, is inhabited by Walloons, a Celtic people who
speak a sort of French. Belgium, small as it is, contains two
different types of population, the Walloons and the Flemish.
The German Empire does not include all of the Germans. A great
many of these are to be found in Austria proper, Styria
(sty̆′rĭȧ), and the northern Tyrol (ty̆′rol) (western counties
of the Austrian Empire), as well as in the eastern half of
Switzerland and the edges of Bohemia. Germans are also to be
found in parts of Hungary; and in the Baltic provinces of Russia
there are over two million of them.
All of the Italians are not in the kingdom of Italy. The Island
of Corsica, which belongs to France, is inhabited by Italians.
The province of Trentino (trĕn ti′nō) (the southern half of the
Austrian Tyrol) is inhabited almost entirely by Italians, as is
also Istria, which includes the cities of Trieste, Pola, and
Fiume. Certain islands off the coast of Dalmatia are also largely
Italian in their population.
The republic of Switzerland is inhabited by French, Italians, and
Germans. Besides the languages of these three nations, a fourth
tongue is spoken there. In the valleys of the southeastern corner
of Switzerland are found people who talk a corruption of the old
Latin, which they call Romaunsch or Romansh.
Austria-Hungary, as has already been said, is a jumble of
languages and nationalities. This empire includes nearly a
million Italians in its southwestern corner, and three million
Roumanians in Transylvania. It has as its subjects in Bosnia and
Herzegovina several million Serbians. In Slavonia (slȧ vō′nĭ
ȧ), Croatia (crō a′tia), and Dalmatia (dăl mā tia), it has
two or three million Slavs, who are closely related to the
Serbians. In the north, its government rules over several million
Czechs (chĕcks) (Bohemians and Moravians) who strongly desire to
have a country of their own. It controls also two million
Slovaks, cousins of the Czechs, who also would like their
independence. In the county of Carniola (car ni ō′lȧ), there
are one and a half million Slovenes, another Slavic people
belonging either by themselves or with their cousins, the
Croatians and Serbs.
The German Empire includes several hundred thousand Frenchmen,
who want to get back under French control, a million or two
Danes, who want once more to belong to Denmark, and several
million Poles, who desire to see their country again united.
[Illustration: Messen Europe as It Should Be]
Russia rules over a mixture of peoples almost as numerous as
those composing Austria-Hungary. The Russians themselves are not
one people. The Red Russians or Ruthenians are quite different
from the people of Little Russia, and they in turn are different
from the people of Great Russia, to the north. The Baltic
provinces are peopled, not by Russians, but by two million
Germans, an equal number of Letts and a somewhat greater number
of Lithuanians. North of Riga are to be found the Esthonians,
cousins of the Finns. North-west of Petrograd lies Finland, whose
people, with the Esthonians, do not belong to the Indo-European
family, and who would dearly love to have a separate government
of their own.
[Illustration: Polish children]
You have already been told in Chapter V that the country of the
English, if limited by race, does not include Wales, Cornwall, or
the north of Scotland, but instead takes in the north-eastern
part of Ireland and the southern half of the former Scottish
kingdom.
Turning to the Balkan states, we find our hardest task, for the
reason that peoples of different nationalities are hopelessly
mixed and jumbled. There are Turks and Greeks mixed in with the
Roumanians and Bulgarians in the Dobrudja. Parts of southern
Serbia and portions of Grecian Macedonia are inhabited by people
of Bulgarian descent. Transylvania, with the exception of the two
little mixture islands mentioned before is inhabited by
Roumanians. The southern half of the Austrian province of
Bukowina also ought to be part of Roumania, as should the greater
part of the Russian state of Bessarabia. Whereas Roumania now has
a population of 7,000,000, there are between five and six million
of her people who live outside her present boundaries.
The shores and islands of the Aegean Sea should belong to Greece.
Greek people have inhabited them for thousands of years. The
Albanians are a separate people, while Montenegro and Bosnia
should be joined to Serbia.
Turn back to previous maps of Europe in this volume and you will
see that most of the changes that have been made of late years
are bringing boundaries nearer where they should be. You will
also note that wherever there have been recent changes contrary
to this plan, they have always resulted in more bloodshed. The
partition of Poland, the annexation of Schleswig, Alsace, and
Lorraine to Germany, the division of Bulgarian Macedonia between
Serbia and Greece, and the seizure of Bosnia and Herzegovina by
Austria are good examples.
Questions for Review
What countries of Europe have fairly well-marked natural
boundaries?
Who are the Walloons?
Who are the Romansh people?
To what other people are the Esthonians related?
[Illustration: The price of the war]
Chapter XXV.
The Cost of It All
What war debts mean—The devastation of farms and
villages—Diseases which travel with war—The men picked to die
first—The survivors and their children—The effect on France of
Napoleon’s wars—What Hannibal did to Rome—What happened to the
Franks—Sweden before and after the wars of Charles XII—Europe at
the close of the Great War
In the meanwhile, all the countries in the war were rapidly
rushing toward bankruptcy. England spent $30,000,000 a day;
France, Germany, and Austria nearly as much apiece. Thus in the
course of a year, a debt of $300 was piled upon every man, woman,
and child in the British kingdom. The average family consists of
five persons, so that this means a debt of $1500 per family for
each year that the war lasted. The income of the average family
in Great Britain is less than $500 in a year, and the amount of
money that they can save out of this sum is very small. Yet the
British people are obliged to add this tremendous debt to the
already very large amount that they owe, and will have to go on
paying interest on it for hundreds of years.
In the same fashion, debts piled up for the peoples of France,
Germany, Austria, Russia and all the countries in the war. In
spite of what we have said above of the average income of English
families, Great Britain is rich when compared with Austria and
Russia. What is more, Great Britain is practically unscarred,
while on the continent great tracts of land which used to be well
cultivated farms have been laid waste with reckless abandon. East
Prussia, Poland, Lithuania, Galicia, part of Hungary, Alsace,
Serbia, Bosnia, northern France, south-western Austria-Hungary,
and all of Belgium and Roumania, a territory amounting to
one-fifth of the whole of Europe, were scarred and burned and
devastated.
It will be years and years before these countries recover from
the effects of war’s invasion. For every man killed on the field
of battle, it is estimated that two people die among the
noncombatants. Children whose fathers are at the front, frail
women trying to do the work of men, aged inhabitants of destroyed
villages die by the thousands from want of food and shelter.
In the trail of war come other evils. People do not have time to
look after their health or even to keep clean. As a result,
diseases like the plagues of olden times, which civilization
thought it had killed, come to life again and destroy whole
cities. The dreadful typhus fever killed off one-fifth of the
population of Serbia during the winter of 1914. Cholera raged
among the Austrian troops in the fall of the same year. For every
soldier who is killed on the field of battle, three others die
from disease or wounds or lack of proper care.
[Illustration: Rendered Homeless by War]
In time of war, the first men picked are the very flower of the
country, the strong, the athletic, the brave, the very sort of
men who ought to be carefully saved as the fathers of the people
to come. As these are killed or disabled, governments draw on the
older men who are still vigorous and hardy. Then finally they
call out the unfit, the sickly, the weak, the aged, and the young
boys. As a general rule, the members of this last class make up
the bulk of the men who survive the war. They, instead of the
strong and healthy, become the fathers of the next generation of
children.
In the days of the Roman republic, 220 years B.C., there stood on
the coast of North Africa a city named Carthage, which, like
Rome, owned lands far and near. Carthage would have been
satisfied to “live and let live,” but Rome would not have it so.
As a result, the two cities engaged in three terrible wars which
ended in the destruction of Carthage. But before Carthage was
finally blotted off the map, her great general, Hannibal, dealt
Rome a blow which brought her to her knees, and came very near
destroying her completely. Five Roman armies, averaging 30,000
men apiece, he trapped and slaughtered. The death of these
150,000 men was a loss from which Rome never recovered. From this
time on, her citizens were made of poorer stuff, and the old
Roman courage and Roman honor and Roman free government began to
decline.
The Germanic tribes (the Goths, Franks, Lombards, etc.) who
swarmed into the Roman Empire about the year 400 A.D., although
they were barbarians, nevertheless had many excellent qualities.
They were brave, hardy men and stood for freedom from tyrants.
However, they fought so many wars that they were gradually killed
off. Take the Franks, for example; the three grandsons of
Charlemagne, who had divided up his great empire, fought a
disastrous war with one another, which ended in a great battle
that almost wiped out the Frankish nation. This happened about
840 A.D.
Sweden was once one of the great powers of Europe. However, about
1700 A.D., she had a king named Charles XII, who tried to conquer
Russia and Poland. He was finally defeated at a little town in
the southern part of Russia nearly a thousand miles away from
home, and his great army was wiped out. After his time, Sweden
sank to the level of a second class nation. The bodies of her
best men had been strewn on battlefields reaching from the Gulf
of Bothnia to the Black Sea.
[Illustration: Charles XII of Sweden]
For eighty years after the time of Napoleon, the French nation
showed a lower birth rate and produced smaller and weaker men
than it had one hundred years previously. The reason for this is
easily found. During the twenty-three years of terrible fighting
which followed the execution of the king, France left her finest
young men dead all over the face of Europe. They died by the
thousands in Spain, in Italy, in Austria, in Germany, and above
all, amidst the snows and ice of Russia. Only within the last
twenty years have the French, through their new interest in
out-of-door sports and athletics, begun once more to build up a
hardy, vigorous race of young men. And now came this terrible war
to set France back where she was one hundred years ago.
Picture Europe at the close of this great war; the flower of her
young manhood gone; the survivors laden with debts which will
keep them in poverty for years to come; trade and agriculture at
a standstill; but worst of all, the feeling of friendship between
nations, of world brotherhood, postponed one hundred years.
Hatred of nation for nation is stronger than ever.
Questions for Review
How does a nation at war increase its debts?
Why do diseases thrive in war time?
What became of the Goths and Franks?
Why was the reign of Charles XII disastrous to Sweden?
What was the effect of Napoleon’s many wars upon the strength
of the French nation?
Is war growing more humane?
Chapter XXVI.
What Germany Must Learn
The German plot.—What the Czar’s prohibition order did.—Where
Germany miscalculated.—Where England and America failed to
understand.—An appeal to force must be answered by force.—Effect
of the Russian revolution.—“It never must happen again.”—The
league to enforce peace.—The final lesson.
Before 1914 friends of peace in all countries, but especially in
English speaking lands, had hoped that there would never again be
a real war between civilized nations.
Among the people of the United States and Great Britain it was
unbelievable that any group of responsible rulers would
deliberately plot, in the twentieth century, the enslaving of the
world through military force, as we now know that the war lords
of Prussia and Austria planned it. However, the plot was not only
made but was almost successful. They made, though, a great
mistake in the case of England. They were sure that she would not
enter the war. Her turn was to come later on, after France and
Russia had been crushed. The German leaders were also mistaken in
calculating the time that Russia would take to mobilize her
troops. In 1904, at the outbreak of the war against Japan, the
Russian soldiers had become so drunk that it was many weeks
before they could be gotten into any kind of military shape. But
at the outbreak of the great “world-war” the order of the Czar
which stopped the sale of strong drink changed all of Prussia’s
plans. Instead of taking two or three months to assemble her
army, Russia had her troops marching in a mighty force through
the German province of East Prussia three weeks after the war had
opened. The result was that the German soldiers had to be sent
back from northern France to stop the victorious march of the
Slavs. The battle of the Marne, fought in the first week of
September, 1914, decided the fate of the world. It hung in the
balance long enough to prove that a small addition to the forces
on either side might have made all the difference in the world in
the final outcome. The little British army, which was less than
one-eighth of the force of the Allied side, probably furnished
the factor that defeated the Germans. The presence in the battle
of the German troops who had been withdrawn to stop the Russians,
might have given victory to the invaders.
Germany made a mistake, also, in expecting Italy to join in the
attack on France. Any one of these three factors might have won
the war in short order for the forces of Austria and Germany.
With France crushed, as she might have been, in spite of her
heroic resistance, without the help of the tiny British army, or
with the intervention of Italy on the side of her former allies,
it would have been no difficult task for the combined forces of
Germany and Austria to pound the vast Russian armies into
confusion, collect a big indemnity from both France and Russia,
and be back home, as the Kaiser had promised, before the leaves
fell from the trees.
As has been said, the great majority of the citizens in nations
where the people rule, could not believe that in this day and age
the rulers of any civilized country would deliberately plot
robbery and piracy on so grand a scale. They had looked forward
to the time when all nations might disarm and live in peace with
their neighbors. In France alone, of all the western nations, was
there any clear idea of the Prussian plan. France, having learned
the temper of the Prussian war lords in 1870, France, burdened by
a national debt heaped high by the big indemnity collected by the
Germans in ’71, looked in apprehension to the east and leaped to
arms at the first rattling of the Prussian saber.
Germany, up to 1866 renowned chiefly for her poets, musicians,
and thinkers, had since been fed for nearly fifty years upon the
doctrine that military force is the only power in the world worth
considering. Some of the German people still cling to the high
ideals of their ancestors, but the majority had drunk deeply of
the wine of conquest and were intoxicated with the idea that
Germany’s mission in life was to conquer all the other nations of
the world and rule them for their own good by German thoroughness
and by German efficiency. It may take many years to stamp this
feeling out of the German nation. As they have worshipped force
and appealed to force as the settler of all questions, so they
will listen to reason only after they have been thoroughly
crushed by a superior force. The sufferings brought upon the
German nation by the war have had a great effect in making them
doubt whether, after all, force is a good thing. As long as the
people could be kept enthusiastic through stories of wonderful
victories over the Russians, the Serbians, and then the
Roumanians, they were contented to endure all manner of
hardships.
Someone has said that no people are happier than those living in
a despotism, if the right kind of man is the despot. So the
German people, although they were governed strictly by the
military rule, nevertheless, were contented as long as they were
prosperous and victorious in war. With the rumors and fears of
defeat, however, they began to doubt their government. There are
indications that sweeping reforms in the election of
representatives in the Reichstag and in the power of that body
itself will take place before long.
The Russian revolution was in some respects a blow to the central
powers. In the first place the fact that Russia had a despot for
a ruler while England, France, and Italy were countries where the
people elected their law makers, made it impossible that there
should be the best of understanding between the allies. Then,
again, the various peoples of Austria-Hungary, while they were
not happy under the rule of the Hapsburg family, were afraid
lest, if they became subjects of the Czar, it would be “jumping
from the frying pan into the fire.” They would rather bear the
evils of the Austrian rule than risk what the Czar and the grand
dukes might do to them. Turkey, likewise, was bound to stick to
Germany to the end, because of her fear that Russia would seize
Constantinople. When the new government of Russia, then,
announced that they did not desire to annex by force any
territory, but only wished to free the peoples who were in
bondage, it removed the fear of the Turks as far as their capital
city was concerned; it showed the Poles, Ruthenians, and Czechs
of Austria that they were in no danger of being swallowed up in
the Russian empire, but that, on the other hand, the Russians
wanted them to be free, like themselves; it showed the German
people how easily a whole nation, when united, could get rid of
its rulers, and encouraged the bold spirits who had never favored
the military rule.
The nations of the Entente, including the United States, are now
united in an effort to stamp out the curse of feudalism in
Austria and in Germany—a curse which has disappeared from all
other parts of the civilized world. They are united to crush the
military spirit of conquest which exists among the war leaders of
the Prussians. They are pledged “to make the world safe for
democracy” as President Wilson has said; to do away with the rule
of force. So long as the governments of Germany, Austria, and
Turkey place the military power at all times above the civil
power, so long will it be necessary to police the world. There
must be no repetition of the savage attack of August, 1914. There
was a time when many of us believed that some one nation, by
disbanding its army and refusing to build warships, might set an
example of disarming which all the world would finally follow. It
now is plain that there must be a “League to Enforce Peace” as
Ex-President Taft and other American statesmen have declared. The
United States, Great Britain, Russia, France, Italy, Belgium,
Portugal, Serbia, Greece, together with Spain, Holland, Norway,
Sweden, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, and other nations where the
will of the people is the law, must unite in an alliance which
will insist on arbitration as a means of settling disputes.
In 1870, Great Britain and the United States had a dispute which
might well have led to war. Instead of fighting over it, however,
they laid their trouble before a court of five men, a Swiss, an
Italian, a Brazilian, an Englishman, and an American. This court,
by a vote of four to one, decided against England, and England
accepted the decision as final, although it cost her many
millions of dollars.
The League to Enforce Peace must insist that each nation in the
world maintain only a small force of soldiers, to be used as
police for its own affairs, and there must be an international
police to settle all differences between nations and to enforce
the orders of the court of arbitration. In time (no one knows how
soon) the people of Germany and Austria will be freed from the
military rule which now has the power to hurl them into war. When
that day arrives and they learn that they have been led astray by
Treitschke and Bernhardi, who preached that war was a blessing to
a nation and that only the powerful nations had the right to
survive, they will know that “Thou shalt not kill” is just as
strong a commandment today as when it first was uttered.
Sometime, nations will learn that other nations have the right to
live, and that no country can wrong another through force of arms
without suffering for it in the end. In a blunted conscience, in
the loss of the sympathy of the rest of the world, in a lessening
of the Christ-spirit of doing good to others, the nation which
resorts to force to gratify its own selfish ends, like the
individual, pays the full penalty for its misdeeds. It, was a
great American who said, “The world is my country and mankind are
my brothers.”
Questions for Review
Why did England and the United States fail to understand
Germany?
What right would Germany have had to an indemnity?
What great change took place in Germany after 1866?
Why must the war go on till Germany is crushed?
What lesson must Germany learn?
Why have the South American republics fought so many wars?
Suggest some solution for the problem of war.
What is meant by arbitration?
What was the greatest mistake of those who planned the war?
How did the Russian Revolution help the cause of the Entente?
What is the greatest lesson taught by the war?
Pronouncing Glossary
In this glossary it will be noted that as a general rule the
English pronunciation is given for names that have become at all
familiar in history or geography. Thus the English Crā′cōw is
given instead of the Polish Krȧ′ko͝of or the German Krä′kau.
On the other hand names like Koumanova or Dobrudja must be given
as the natives of these places pronounce them, as there is no
recognized English pronunciation.
In certain cases where there are several current pronunciations,
the author has been forced to make a selection, arbitrarily. Thus
a seaport in Greece, which has changed hands recently, has no
less than five names. Its Greek name is pronounced
Thĕssȧlōnyi′ki, while other nations term it variously
Sȧlōni′kā, Sĕlȧnïk′, Sō′lōn, Sȧlōni′ki or Salō′nicȧ.
Some sounds, again, it is almost impossible for English speaking
people to reproduce. These are indicated by English syllables
which approximate them as nearly as possible.
Not every proper noun which is used in the text will be found
pronounced in the glossary. It is assumed that such names as
Austria, Bismarck, etc., can hardly be mispronounced.
Aboukir (ä′bö̈ kïr)
Aegean (ē jē′ăn)
Agadir (ȧ gȧ dïr′)
Aix-la-Chapelle (āks lä shȧpĕl′)
Albania (ăl bā′nï ȧ)
Algeciras (ăl jĕ si′rȧs) or (ȧljĕ sï′rȧs)
Alsace (ȧl sȧs′)
Andrassy (ȧn drȧs′sy̆)
Aragon (ă′rȧ gŏn)
Armada (är mä′dȧ)
Armenians (är mē′nï ȧns)
Arminius (är mĭn′ï ŭs)
Avlona (ȧv lō′ṅa)
Baden (bä′dĕn)
Balkan (bȧl kän′) or (bôl′kän)
Banat (bȧn′ȧt)
Basques (bȧsks)
Bastille (bȧ stïl′)
Bavaria (bȧ vā′rï ȧ)
Belfort (bĕl′fôr)
Bernadotte (bēr′nȧ dŏt)
Bessarabia (bĕs sȧ rā′bï ȧ) or (bĕs sȧ rä′bï ȧ)
Bismarck-Schönausen (shẽn how′zĕn)
Blenheim (blĕn′ĕm) or (blĕn′hīm)
Boer (bo͞or)
Bohemia (bōhē′mīȧ)
Bonaparte (bō′nȧ pärt)
Bosnia (bŏz′ni̇ ȧ)
Bourbon (bo͞or′bŭn)
Brandenburg (brăn′dĕn bûrg)
Breton (brē′ton) or (brĕt′ŭn)
Brusiloff (brū si′lŏff)
Bukowina (bo͝o kō vï′nȧ)
Bulgaria (bŭl gā′ri̇ ȧ)
Burgundians (bûr′gŭn’dï ȧns)
Burgundy (bûr′gŭn dy)
Byzantium (by̆ zăn′tï ̆um)
Caesar (sēz′ēr)
Carniola (cȧr nï ō′lȧ)
Carpathian (cãr pā′thï ȧn)
Carthage (cȧr′thāj)
Castile (cȧs til′)
Castlereagh (căs′l rā)
Cavour (cȧ vo͞or′)
Charlemagne (shär lĕ mān′)
Chauvinists (shō′vĭn ĭsts)
Cicero (sĭs′ē rō)
Cimbri (sĭm′brï)
Cincinnatus (sĭn sĭn nä′tŭs)
Constantine (cŏn′stăn tïn)
Cracow (crā′cō)
Crimea (crĭ mē′ȧ)
Croatia (crō ä′tï ȧ) or (crōä′shȧ)
Czech (chĕk)
Dacians (dā′shŭnz)
Dalmatia (dăl mā′shï ȧ)
Théophile Delcassé (tā′ō fïl dĕl cȧ sä′)
Deutschland (doitsh′lȧnd)
Devonshire (dĕv′ŏn shïr)
Disraeli (dĭz rā′lĭ)
Dobrudja (dō bro͝od′jȧ)
Dreibund (drī′bo͝ond)
Durazzo (dū rȧt′zö)
Emmanuel (ĕm măn′ū ĕl)
Entente Cordiale (ȧn tȧnt′côr dyȧl′)
Enver Bey (ĕn′vẽr bā′)
Epinal (ĕp′ï nȧl)
Epirus (ĕp ī′rŭs)
Erse (ērs)
Esthonians (ĕs thō′nï ănz)
Etruscans (ē trŭs′cănz)
Euphrates (ū frā′tēz)
Fashoda (fȧ shō′dȧ)
Fiume (fï ū′me)
Gaelic (gā′lĭc)
Galicia (găl ĭ′shȧ)
Gallipoli (găl ĭ′pōlï)
Garibaldi (gȧr ï bȧl′dï)
Gerard (jĕr ärd′)
Germanic (jẽr măn′ĭc)
Glamis (glăm′ĭs)
Gortchakoff (gôr′chȧ kŏf)
Goths (gŏths)
Granada (grȧ nä′dȧ)
Hannibal (hăn′nĭ bl)
Hanover (hăn′ō vẽr)
Herzegovina (hārt′sĕ gō vï′nȧ)
Hesse-Darmstadt (hĕs sĕ därm′stȧt)
Hindustan (hĭn do͞o stän′)
Hohenzollern (hō ĕn tsŏl′ẽrn)
Holstein (hōl′stīn)
Illyrians (ĭ ly̆r′ĭ ȧns)
Istria (ĭs′trï ȧ)
Janina (yȧ nï′nȧ)
Janus (jā′nŭs)
Jonescu (jō nĕs′ko͞o)
Jutes (jūts)
Kaiser (kī′zẽr)
Kaspar (kăs′pär)
Kavala (kȧ vä′ lȧ)
Kerensky (kĕ rĕn′skĭ)
Khartoom (kär to͞om′)
Korea (kō rē′ȧ)
Kȯrniloff (kor nï′lŏff)
Koumanova (ko͞o mä′nō vȧ)
Lamar (lȧ mär′)
Leon (lē′ŏn)
Liege (lï ĕzh′)
Lithuania (lĭth o͞o ā′nīȧ)
Longwy (lŏng′vy̆)
Lorraine (lôr rān′)
Macedonia (mă sē dō′nï ȧ)
Magyar (mŏd′yär)
Manchuria (măn chū′rï ȧ)
Marathon (măr′ȧ thŏn)
Marchand (mär shän′)
Maria Theresa (mä rī′ä tĕr ēs′ä)
Marlborough (märl′bō rō)
Marsala (mär sä′lȧ)
Marseillaise (mär sĕl yāz′)
Mazzini (mȧt sï′nï)
Mesopotamia (mĕs ō pō tā′mĭ ä)
Metternich (mĕt′tẽr nĭkh)
Milioukoff (mĭl yo͞o′kŏff)
Mirabeau (mĭr′ȧ bō)
Modena (mō dē′nȧ) or (mō′dā nȧ)
Mohammedan (mō hăm′mĕd ȧn)
Moltke (mōlt′kȧ)
Monastir (mō nȧ stïr′)
Montenegrin (mŏn tē nē′grĭn)
Montenegro (mŏn tē nē′grō)
Moslems (mŏz′lĕmz)
Murat (mü′rä)
Napoleon (nȧ pō′lē ŏn)
Nice (nïs)
Northumberland (nôrth ŭm′bẽr lănd)
Novibazar (nō′vĭ bȧ zär′)
Ostrogoths (ŏs′trō gŏths)
Ottoman (ŏt′tō mȧn)
Parma (pär′mȧ)
Piedmont (pēd′mŏnt)
Pola (pō′lä)
Poland (pō′lănd)
Pomerania (pŏm ĕr ā′nï ȧ)
Pyrenees (pĭr′ĕn ēēz)
Rasputin (räs po͞o′tïn)
Reichstag (rīkhs′tägh)
Riga (rï′gȧ)
Romansh (rō mȧnsh′)
Roon (rōn)
Roumani (ro͞o mä′nï)
Roumania (ro͞o mā′nï ȧ)
Ruthenian (ro͝o thē′nï ȧn)
Sadowa (sä′dō vȧ)
Salonika (sȧ′lō nï′kȧ)
Sanjak (sȧn jȧk′)
San Stephano (sȧn stĕ fä′nö)
Saône (sōn)
Sarajevo (sä rä yĕ′vō)
Sardinia (sär dĭn′i̇ ȧ)
Sarrail (sȧr rī′)
Savoy (sȧ voy′)
Saxony (săx′ōn y̆)
Sazanof (sä′zä nŏff)
Scandinavian (scăn dĭ nā′vĭ ȧn)
Schleswig (shlĕs′vĭg)
Scutari (sko͞o′tä rï)
Serbia (sẽr′bĭ ȧ)
Silesia (sĭl ē′shȧ)
Skipetars (skïp′ĕ tarz)
Slavic (slä′vĭc)
Slavonia (slȧ vō′nï ȧ)
Slavonic (slȧ vŏn′ĭc)
Slavs (slävz)
Slovak (slō väk′)
Slovenes (slō vēnz′)
Slovenian (slō vē′nï ȧn)
Sobieski (sō bĭ ĕs′kĭ)
Stoessel (stēs′sĕl)
Strasbourg (strȧs′bo͝org)
Styria (sty̆′rĭ ȧ)
Suevi (swē′vï)
Syria (sy̆r′ï ȧ)
Take (tä kā)
Talleyrand (tȧl′lā rȧn)
Teutones (tū tō′nēz)
Teutonic (tū tŏn′ĭc)
Thessaly (thĕs′sȧ ly̆)
Thracians (thrā′shŭnz)
Tigris (tī′grĭs)
Toul (to͞ol)
Transylvania (trăn sy̆l vā′nï ȧ)
Trentino (trĕn tī′nō)
Trieste (trï ĕst′) or (trï ĕs′tā)
Tripoli (trĭp′ō lĭ)
Tuscany (tŭs′cȧ ny̆)
Tyrol (ty̆′rōl)
Tzernagorah (tzēr nä′gō′rȧ)
Vandals (văn′dlz)
Venetia (vĕn ē′shȧ)
Venizelos (vĕn ĭ zĕl′ŏs)
Vercingetorix (vēr sĭn jĕt′ö rĭks)
Verdun (vār dŭn′)
Volgars (vŏl′gärz)
Von Bernstorff (fŏn bārns′torf)
Von Plehve (fŏn plā′vē)
Von Tirpitz (fŏn tïr′pĭts)
Vosges (vōzh)
Walloon (wäl lo͞on′)
Westphalia (wĕst fā′lï ȧ)
Wied (we͞ed)
Wilhelmine (wĭl′hĕl mïn)
Yorkshire (yôrk′shīr)
Index
Adriatic Sea, question of the control of. Agadir incident.
Albania, formation of the kingdom of. Albanians, language of;
habits of. Alexander the Great. Algeciras incident. Alliance,
the Holy. Alliance, the Triple.
Alliance, the Dual. Alliance, the Balkan. Alsace.
Ambassador. Angles, the, invade Britain. Arbitration of
national disputes. Arminius. Armor, value of.
Austria-Hungary, origin of; helps to divide Poland; at war with
France; at war with Sardinia and France; at war with Prussia
and Italy; refuses to arbitrate Serbian trouble.
Austrians in Italy.
Balance of Power. Balkan problem. Barons. Bastille, fall of
the. Belgium, joined to Holland to form the Netherlands;
independent; guaranteed its freedom by three powers.
Bernadotte. Bismarck-Schönausen.
Blenheim, battle of (poem). Blockade of Germany. Bohemia,
part of the Holy Roman Empire; part of the Hapsburg domains.
Bolsheviki, revolt of the. Bonaparte, Louis Napoleon.
Bonaparte, Napoleon. Bosnian problem. Bourbon family.
Brandenburg; rise of. Brazil declares war on Germany.
Britons. Bulgaria, freed by Russia; left partially under the
control of Turkey;
independent; at war; with five nations; plunges into world
war; treacherously orders an attack on Greece and Serbia.
Bulgars, origin of; in Macedonia. Bulow, Prince von.
Burgundians. Byzantium becomes Constantinople.
Caesar, Julius. Cape to Cairo Railroad. Catharine II of Russia.
Cavour, Count, prime minister of Sardinia. Celtic languages,
disappearance of. Celts. Charlemagne. Charles V. Charles XII of
Sweden. Chauvinists. Churchill, Winston. Cincinnatus.
Constantine, prince in Crete; king of Greece. Constantinople.
Contraband of war. Cracow, Republic of. Crete. Czechs.
Danes, in Schleswig. Dark Ages. Delcassé.
Denmark, loses Norway; defeated by Prussia and Austria; injured
by submarine campaign.
_Deutschland_, voyages of the. Dialects. Dictator, Roman.
Divine right of kings. Dukes vs. Kings. Duma, the Russian;
asked to form a government.
Edward VII. Elba, Napoleon’s return from. Elector, the Great.
Electors of the Holy Roman Empire. England, power of the king
of; in Egypt; troubles of, in 1914. Entente Cordiale. Entente,
the Triple.
Esthonians. Etruscans.
Fashoda incident. Ferdinand of Bulgaria; enters war on side of
Germany and Austria; attacks Serbia;
ambitions of. Feudal system. Finland annexed to Russia.
Finns; conquered by the Swedes.
Flemish. France, power of king of; execution of king of; in
Africa; wars of.
Franks. Franz Ferdinand. Frederick the Great. French
Revolution.
Gaelic language. Gaels. Garibaldi. Gauls. German Confederation.
German secret agents set fire to American property and kill
Americans; try to stir up war between the U. S. and Japan; stir
up trouble in Russia. German tribes. Germanic languages.
Germany, the Holy Roman Empire of. Germany, the modern Empire
of; encourages France to declare war on England;
makes friends with Turkey; policy toward Balkan nations;
warns Russia; attacks France through Belgium. Goths.
Government, by the people; based on the consent of the
governed;
limited to the ruling class. Governments, newness of
European. Great Britain offers to judge Serbian trouble;
declares war on Germany. Greece,
treaty of, with Serbia; Greek Empire, origin of; fall of.
Greeks; ungenerous to Bulgarians, desert to Venizelos; join
the Entente.
Hague, court of the. Hannibal’s war against Rome. Hapsburgs,
the. Hohenzollern family. Holstein. Homage.
Hungarians. Huns.
Indemnity. Indo-European family of languages. Istria.
Italy, a battle ground of nations; becomes a nation; makes war
on Turkey; declines to support Austria and Germany; declares
war on Austria.
Kavala. Kent, William, on Mexican intervention. Kerensky,
leader of the Russian government. Kings, origin of. Koumanova,
battle of.
Labor troubles, in England; in Russia.
Language, relationship shown by. Latin tongues. Lithuania.
Lombards. Lorraine. Louis XIV of France. _Lusitania_, sinking
of the.
Macedonia. Magyars. Marathon, battle of. Marchand, Major.
Maria Theresa, Empress of Austria; helps to divide Poland.
Marlborough, Duke of. Mazzini.
Metternich. Middle Ages. Military service, owed to rulers; in
Prussia; in France.
Mirabeau. Moltke. Montenegro, origin of;
declares war on Austria. Monroe Doctrine. Moors.
Murat.
Napoleon III. Netherlands, foundation of kingdom of.
Newspapers, control of. Normans. Norway, joined to Sweden;
danger from Germany; vigorously protests submarine warfare.
Novibazar, the Sanjak of.
Ostrogoths.
Paris, siege of. Peace, German offer of;
Allies’ terms of; United States’ desire for; Russo-German
conference toward; German desire for. Peasants, attached to
the land;
support fighting classes. Peter the Great. Poland,
kingdom of; partition of; given largely to Russia;
revolutions in. Preparation for war Prussia, origin of
kingdom of; crushed by Napoleon; dominated by Bismarck.
Rasputin; assists Sturmer; is killed.
Reichstag. Reign of Terror. Republic, first French; second
French; third French.
Robber chiefs. Roman Empire, beginnings of. Romansh people.
Rome, wars of, with Carthage. Roon. Rothschild, the banking
house of. Roumani. Roumania; hopes of;
population of; declares war on Austria;
is crushed between two armies. Russia, rise of; attacks
Turkey; policy of;
relations with Bulgaria; defends Serbia;
ignorance of the people of; revolution in;
controlled by the Bolsheviki. Ruthenians.
Sarrail, sent to Salonika; watching Bulgars and Greeks. Saxons.
Saxony, annexed in part to Prussia; allied to Austria.
Salonika, Spanish Jews in. Sardinia, kingdom of. Schleswig.
Scutari. Serbia, trade with Austria; relations with Bulgaria;
trouble with Austria; attacked on three sides. Serbs, origin
of; lands of; language of. Sicilies, Kingdom of the Two.
Silesia, seizure of. Slavic tribes. Slovaks. Slovenes.
Sobieski, John, king of Poland. Socialists, in Germany; in
Italy. Spain, origin of; drives out “unbelievers,”; becomes a
republic. Submarine boats sink British warships;
sink merchant ships; sink the _Lusitania_;
cross the Atlantic; begin to sink all ships without warning;
kill Americans; sink Norwegian ships. Suevi. Sturmer chosen
prime minister of Russia. Sweden, decline of.
Talleyrand. Trentino. Tunis, seized by France. Turkey,
defended by France and England; attacks Russia. Turks;
capture Constantinople; driven back from Vienna; the young
Turks; tolerance of the young; bigotry of the young.
Ulster trouble, the. United States, indignant over the
_Lusitania_; warns Germany; defends munitions trade in reply to
Austria; receives _Deutschland_ hospitably; sends the German
Ambassador home;
declares war; desires nothing but to be safe from attack;
sends an army to Europe.
Vandals. Venice, Republic of. Venizelos, prime minister of
Greece; comes from Crete; opposes King Constantine; once more
prime minister.
Vercingetorix. Victor Emmanuel. Vienna, Congress of.
Walloons. War, four causes of; cost of; diseases caused by;
increasing horror of. Warsaw, Grand-Duchy of. Waterloo, battle
of.
William of Normandy. Wilson, President, patient with Germany;
asks both sides to name their terms;
calls Congress to declare war.
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The World War and What Was Behind It, by L. P. Bénézet
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The World War and What was Behind It; Or, The Story of the Map of Europe
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Excerpt
This little volume is the result of the interest shown by pupils,
teachers, and the general public in a series of talks on the causes of
the great European war which were given by the author in the fall of
1914. The audiences were widely different in character. They included
pupils of the sixth, seventh, and eighth grades, students in high
school and normal school, teachers in the public schools, an
association of business men, and a convention of boards of education.
In every case, the...
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— End of The World War and What was Behind It; Or, The Story of the Map of Europe —
Book Information
- Title
- The World War and What was Behind It; Or, The Story of the Map of Europe
- Author(s)
- Bénézet, Louis Paul
- Language
- English
- Type
- Text
- Release Date
- February 1, 2004
- Word Count
- 65,357 words
- Library of Congress Classification
- D
- Bookshelves
- World War I, Browsing: History - European, Browsing: History - General, Browsing: History - Warfare
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- Public domain in the USA.
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