The Central Powers' origin was the alliance of Germany and Austria-Hungary in 1879. Despite having nominally joined the Triple Alliance before, Italy did not take part in World War I on the side of the Central Powers and later joined on the side of the Allied Powers. The Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria did not join until after World War I had begun. The Central Powers faced, and were defeated by, the Allied Powers, which themselves had formed around the Triple Entente. They dissolved in 1918 after they lost the war.
Name
The name Central Powers is derived from the location of its member countries; all four were located between the Russian Empire in the east and France and the United Kingdom in the west.[3]
Collaboration
Germany had plans to create a Mitteleuropa economic association. Members would include Austria-Hungary, Germany, and others.[4]
History
Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria, heir presumptive to the Austro-Hungarian throne, and his wife, Sophie, Duchess of Hohenberg, were assassinated on 28 June 1914 by Bosnian Serb student Gavrilo Princip.[5] This provoked Austria to deliver an ultimatum to Serbia, listing ten demands made intentionally unacceptable to provide an excuse for starting hostilities.[6] Serbia ordered general mobilization on 25July, but accepted almost all of the terms, the only ones not accepted were the ones empowering Austrian representatives to suppress "subversive elements" in Serbia, and to take part in the investigation and trial of Serbians linked to the assassination.[7] After claiming that was rejection, Austria broke off diplomatic relations with Serbia. They then declared war and began shelling Belgrade. Russia ordered general mobilization in support of Serbia on 30 July.[8] When Russia mobilized, Germany saw it as provocative. Despite Russia's claim that it was responding to the events in Serbia and not Germany, Germany dismissed this and mobilized as well. Later, France, allied with Russia, also mobilized.[9] On 29 October 1914, the Ottoman Empire entered the war by launching a naval raid on Russian ports.[10][11] Bulgaria joined the Central Powers last, which it did in October 1915 by declaring war on Serbia.[12]
In early July 1914, in the aftermath of the assassination of Austro-Hungarian Archduke Franz Ferdinand and faced with the prospect of war between Austria-Hungary and Serbia, KaiserWilhelm II and the German government informed the Austro-Hungarian government that Germany would uphold its alliance with Austria-Hungary and defend it from possible Russian intervention if a war between Austria-Hungary and Serbia took place.[13] When Russia enacted a general mobilization, Germany viewed the act as provocative.[14]: 39 The Russian government promised Germany that its general mobilization did not mean preparation for war with Germany but was a reaction to the tensions between Austria-Hungary and Serbia.[14]: 39 The German government regarded the Russian promise of no war with Germany to be nonsense in light of its general mobilization, and Germany, in turn, mobilized for war.[14]: 39 On 1 August, Germany sent an ultimatum to Russia stating that since both Germany and Russia were in a state of military mobilization, an effective state of war existed between the two countries.[14]: 95 Later that day, France, an ally of Russia, declared a state of general mobilization.[14]: 95
In August 1914, Germany attacked Russia, citing Russian aggression as demonstrated by the mobilization of the Russian army, which had resulted in Germany mobilizing in response.[15]
After Germany declared war on Russia, France, with its alliance with Russia, prepared a general mobilization in expectation of war. On 3 August 1914, Germany responded to this action by declaring war on France.[16] Germany, facing a two-front war, enacted what was known as the Schlieffen Plan, which involved German armed forces moving through Belgium and swinging south into France and towards the French capital of Paris. This plan was hoped to quickly gain victory against the French and allow German forces to concentrate on the Eastern Front. Belgium was a neutral country and would not accept German forces crossing its territory. Germany disregarded Belgian neutrality and invaded the country to launch an offensive towards Paris. This caused Great Britain to declare war against the German Empire, as the action violated the Treaty of London that both nations signed in 1839 guaranteeing Belgian neutrality.[17]
Subsequently, several states declared war on Germany in late August 1914, with Italy declaring war on Germany in August 1916,[18] the United States in April 1917,[19] and Greece in July 1917.[20]
The German Empire had incorporated the province of Alsace-Lorraine, after successfully defeating France in the Franco-Prussian War. However, the province was still claimed by French revanchists,[21][22] leading to its return to France at the Treaty of Versailles.[23]
Africa
The German Empire was late to colonization, only beginning overseas expansion in the 1870s and 1880s. Colonization was opposed by much of the government, including chancellor Otto von Bismarck, but it became a colonial power after participating in the Berlin Conference. Then, private companies were founded and began settling parts of Africa, the Pacific, and China. Later these groups became German protectorates and colonies.[24]
Cameroon was a German colony existing from 1884 until its complete occupation in 1915. It was ceded to France as a League of Nations Mandate at the war's end.[25]
Austria-Hungary regarded the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand as having been orchestrated with the assistance of Serbia.[13] The country viewed the assassination as setting a dangerous precedent of encouraging the country's South Slav population to rebel and threaten to tear apart the multinational country.[14]: 39 Austria-Hungary sent a formal ultimatum to Serbia demanding a full-scale investigation of Serbian government complicity in the assassination and complete compliance by Serbia in agreeing to the terms demanded by Austria-Hungary.[13] Serbia submitted to accept most of the demands. However, Austria-Hungary viewed this as insufficient and used this lack of full compliance to justify military intervention.[13] These demands have been viewed as a diplomatic cover for an inevitable Austro-Hungarian declaration of war on Serbia.[13]
Russia had warned Austria-Hungary that the Russian government would not tolerate Austria-Hungary invading Serbia.[13] However, with Germany supporting Austria-Hungary's actions, the Austro-Hungarian government hoped that Russia would not intervene and that the conflict with Serbia would remain a regional conflict.[13]
Austria-Hungary's invasion of Serbia resulted in Russia declaring war on the country, and Germany, in turn, declared war on Russia, setting off the beginning of the clash of alliances that resulted in the World War.[35]
The Ottoman Empire joined the war on the side of the Central Powers in November 1914. The Ottoman Empire had gained strong economic connections with Germany through the Berlin-to-Baghdad railway project that was still incomplete at the time.[42] The Ottoman Empire made a formal alliance with Germany signed on 2 August 1914.[43]: 292 The alliance treaty expected that the Ottoman Empire would become involved in the conflict in a short amount of time.[43]: 292 However, for the first several months of the war, the Ottoman Empire maintained neutrality though it allowed a German naval squadron to enter and stay near the strait of Bosphorus.[44] Ottoman officials informed the German government that the country needed time to prepare for conflict.[44] Germany provided financial aid and weapons shipments to the Ottoman Empire.[43]: 292
After pressure escalated from the German government demanding that the Ottoman Empire fulfill its treaty obligations, or else Germany would expel the country from the alliance and terminate economic and military assistance, the Ottoman government entered the war with the recently acquired cruisers from Germany, along with their own navy, launching a naval raid on the Russian ports of Odessa, Sevastopol, Novorossiysk, Feodosia, and Yalta,[10][11] thus engaging in military action in accordance with its alliance obligations with Germany. Shortly after, the Triple Entente declared war on the Ottoman Empire.[43]: 293
After Bulgaria's defeat in July 1913 at the hands of Serbia, Greece and Romania, it signed a treaty of defensive alliance with the Ottoman Empire on 19 August 1914.[45] Bulgaria was the last country to join the Central Powers, which it did in October 1915 by declaring war on Serbia.[12] It invaded Serbia in conjunction with German and Austro-Hungarian forces.[46]
Bulgaria held claims on the region of Vardar Macedonia then held by Serbia following the Balkan Wars of 1912–1913 and the Treaty of Bucharest (1913).[47] As a condition of entering the war on the side of the Central Powers, Bulgaria was granted the right to reclaim that territory.[48][49]
Co-belligerents
South African Republic
In opposition to offensive operations by Union of South Africa, which had joined the war, Boer army officers of what is now known as the Maritz Rebellion "refounded" the South African Republic in September 1914. Germany assisted the rebels, with some operating in and out of the German colony of German South-West Africa. The rebels were all defeated or captured by South African government forces by 4 February 1915.[50]
In 1915, the Sultanate of Darfur renounced allegiance to the Sudanese government and aligned with the Ottomans. They were able to contact them via the Senussi. Prior to this they were a British ally. The Anglo-Egyptian Darfur Expedition preemptively invaded to prevent an attack on Sudan.[53] A small force was sent after the sultan and he was killed in action in November 1916.[54] The invasion ended with an Anglo-Egyptian victory in November 1916.[53]
Zaian Confederation
The Zaian Confederation began to fight against France in the Zaian War to prevent French expansion into Morocco.[55] The fighting lasted from 1914 and continued after the First World War ended, to 1921. The Central Powers (mainly the Germans) began to attempt to incite unrest to hopefully divert French resources from Europe.[56]
States listed in this section were not officially members of the Central Powers. Still, during the war, they cooperated with one or more Central Powers members on a level that makes their neutrality disputable.
Ethiopia
The Ethiopian Empire was officially neutral throughout World War I but widely suspected of sympathy for the Central Powers between 1915 and 1916. At the time, Ethiopia was one of only two fully independent states in Africa (the other being Liberia) and a major power in the Horn of Africa. Its ruler, Lij Iyasu, was widely suspected of harbouring pro-Islamic sentiments and being sympathetic to the Ottoman Empire.[75] The German Empire also attempted to reach out to Iyasu, dispatching several unsuccessful expeditions to the region to attempt to encourage it to collaborate in an Arab Revolt-style uprising in East Africa. One of the unsuccessful expeditions was led by Leo Frobenius, a celebrated ethnographer and personal friend of Kaiser Wilhelm II. Under Iyasu's directions, Ethiopia probably supplied weapons to the Muslim Dervish rebels during the Somaliland Campaign of 1915 to 1916, indirectly helping the Central Powers' cause.[76]
The Allies jointly pressured the aristocracy for the designated emperor's removal on the 10th of September, 1916 stating he was a threat to both the Allies and Ethiopia.[77] Fearing the rising influence of Iyasu and the Ottoman Empire, the Christian nobles of Ethiopia conspired against Iyasu. Iyasu was first excommunicated by the Ethiopian Orthodox Patriarch and eventually deposed in a coup d'état on 27 September 1916. A less pro-Ottoman regent, RasTafari Makonnen, was installed on the throne.[76]
Liechtenstein was officially neutral throughout World War I, though the general population and government was supportive of the Central Powers, particularly Austria-Hungary, of which the two countries had been in a customs union since 1852. However, from September 1914 food deliveries from Austria-Hungary began to decrease, which quickly soured the initial war support.[78] By 1916 all food deliveries from Austria-Hungary had ceased, which forced Liechtenstein to seek closer ties with Switzerland in order to ensure food deliveries continued.[78][79] From 1916, Liechtenstein was embargoed by the Entente countries due to their connections to the Central Powers, which caused mass unemployment in the country.[80] The government remained sympathetic to the Central Powers until 7 November 1918, when the November 1918 Liechtenstein putsch took place and a new government took power.[81]
Following their armistice with the Central Powers, Romania was involved in the Russian Civil War against both the Whites and the Reds. Romania fought alongside the Central Powers until it rejoined the war against them on November 10, 1918.[85]
Kelantan
Kelantanese rebels were supported by the Ottoman and German Empires during their anti-colonial uprising against the British Empire in 1915.[86]
Non-state combatants
Other movements supported the efforts of the Central Powers for their own reasons, such as the radical Irish Nationalists who launched the Easter Rising in Dublin in April 1916; they referred to their "gallant allies in Europe". However, most Irish Nationalists supported the British and allied war effort up until 1916, when the Irish political landscape was changing. In 1914, Józef Piłsudski was permitted by Germany and Austria-Hungary to form independent Polish legions. Piłsudski wanted his legions to help the Central Powers defeat Russia and then side with France and the UK and win the war with them.[87] Below is a list of these non-state combatants.
Germany was required to demilitarize the Rhineland, to reduce their army to 100,000 men, and the navy to 15,000 sailors, and to pay 132 billion gold marks (US$33 billion). Tanks, submarines, and an air force were all forbidden.
The Treaty of Sèvres caused resentment among the Turkish populace of the Ottoman Empire and resulted in the outbreak of the Turkish War of Independence, after which the Treaty of Lausanne was signed.
10 August 1920/24 August 1923
A postcard depicting the flags of the Central Powers' countries
Poster for a 1916 charity bazaar raising funds for widows and orphans of the Central Power states
^Harris, Luke (2015). Britain and the Olympic Games, 1908–1920: Perspectives on Participation and Identity. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN978-1-137-49861-8.
^MacMillan, Margaret (2014). The War That Ended Peace: How Europe Abandoned Peace for the First World War (Paperback ed.). London: Profile Books. p. 518. ISBN978-1-84765-416-8.
^ abcdefgCashman, Greg; Robinson, Leonard C (2007). An Introduction to the Causes of War: Patterns of Interstate Conflict from World War I to Iraq. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN978-0-7425-5510-5.
^McDuffie, Jerome; Piggrem, Gary Wayne; Woodworth, Steven E. (2005). U.S. History Super Review. Piscataway, NJ: Research & Education Association. p. 418. ISBN978-0-7386-0070-3.
^Leon, George B. (1990). Greece and the First World War: From Neutrality to Intervention, 1917–1918. East European Monographs. ISBN9780880331814.
^Seager, Frederic H. (1969). "The Alsace-Lorraine Question in France, 1871–1914". in Charles K. Warner, ed., From the Ancien Régime to the Popular Front, pp. 111–126.
^Gottschall, Terrell (2003). By Order of the Kaiser: Otto von Diederichs and the Rise of the Imperial German Navy, 1865–1902. Naval Institute Press. p. 117. ISBN978-1557503091.
^刘平; 江林泽 (2014). "第一次世界大战中的远东战场———青岛之战述评" [The Far Eastern Theatre in the First World War – A Review of the Battle of Tsingtao]. 军事历史研究 (in Chinese) (4): 52. ISSN1009-3451.
^ abcdAfflerbach, Holger; David Stevenson, David (2012). An Improbable War: The Outbreak of World War 1 and European Political Culture. Berghan Books.
^ abKent, Mary (1998). The Great Powers and the End of the Ottoman Empire. end ed. Frank Cass. p. 119.
^Trumpener, Ulrich (1962). "Turkey's Entry into World War I: An Assessment of Responsibilities". Journal of Modern History. 34 (4): 369–380. doi:10.1086/239180. S2CID153500703.
^Richard C. Hall, "Bulgaria in the First World War". Historian 73.2 (2011): 300–315.
^T. R. H. Davenport, "The South African Rebellion, 1914." English Historical Review 78.306 (1963): 73–94, JSTOR559800.
^"Uşi (Ouchy) Antlaşması" [Treaty of Ouchy] (in Turkish). Bildirmem.com. 31 May 2009. Archived from the original on 3 September 2010. Retrieved 24 August 2010.
^Macmunn, G.; Falls, C. (1996). Military Operations: Egypt and Palestine: From the Outbreak of War with Germany to June 1917. History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence. Vol. I (Imperial War Museum and Battery Press ed.). ISBN978-0-89839-241-8.
^ abSkinner, H. T.; Stacke, H. Fitz M. (1922). Principal Events 1914–1918. History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence (online ed.). HMSO. p. 211. OCLC17673086.
^The Regency Kingdom has been referred to as a puppet state by Norman Davies in Europe: A history (Google Print, p. 910); by Jerzy Lukowski and Hubert Zawadzki in A Concise History of Poland (Google Print, p. 218); by Piotr J. Wroblel in Chronology of Polish History and Nation and History (Google Print, p. 454); and by Raymond Leslie Buell in Poland: Key to Europe (Google Print, p. 68: "The Polish Kingdom... was merely a pawn [of Germany]").
^Maksimaitis, Mindaugas (2005). Lietuvos valstybės konstitucijų istorija (XX a. pirmoji pusė) (in Lithuanian). Vilnius: Justitia. pp. 36–44. ISBN9955-616-09-1.
^Wolczuk, Kataryna (2001). The Moulding of Ukraine: The Constitutional Politics of State Formation. Central European University Press. p. 37.
^Vilayet (2 December 2006). "ПОЛЬСКИЕ ТАТАРЫ НА СЛУЖБЕ АЗЕРБАЙДЖАНСКОЙ ГОСУДАРСТВЕННОСТИ" [Polish Tatars serving for Azerbaijani Statehood]. Baku: Zerkalo.
^Solsten, Eric; Meditz, Sandra W., eds. (1988). "The Establishment of Finnish Democracy". Finland: A Country Study. GPO for the Library of Congress. Archived from the original on 11 August 2017. Retrieved 5 February 2017 – via Country Studies US.
^Cheah, Boon Kheng (2006). To' Janggut: Legends, Histories, and Perceptions of the 1915 Rebellion in Kelantan. Singapore: Singapore University Press. ISBN978-9971-69-316-9.
^Rothschild, Joseph (1990). East Central Europe Between the Two World Wars. p. 45.
^Townshend, Charles (2006). Easter 1916: The Irish Rebellion. London: Penguin Books. ISBN978-0-14-101216-2.
^Haapala, Pertti (2009). Hoppu, Tuomas (ed.). Sisällissodan Pikkujättiläinen. Helsinki: Söderström. ISBN978-951-0-35452-0.
^Buttar, Prit (2017). Russia's Last Gasp: The Eastern Front 1916–17. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. p. 192. ISBN978-1-4728-2489-9.
^Davis, Robert T., ed. (2010). U.S. Foreign Policy and National Security: Chronology and Index for the 20th Century. Vol. 1. Santa Barbara, California: Praeger Security International. p. 49. ISBN978-0-313-38385-4.
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