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B1 Intermediate English 9:48 Educational

Europe Prior to World War I: Alliances and Enemies I PRELUDE TO WW1 - Part 1/3

The Great War · 1,888,903 views · Added 2 months ago

Learning Stats

B1

CEFR Level

5/10

Difficulty

Subtitles (124 segments)

00:00

My name is Indy Neidell, and welcome to our new channel "The Great War".

00:04

This show follows World War I, from July 28th 1914 to November 11, 1918, week by week exactly

00:12

100 years later, but in order for the initial weeks of the war to make more sense we’re doing

00:17

these prelude to war episodes to give you a little background...

00:20

All here on our new channel "The Great War"!

00:28

Do you know what happened 100 years ago last month? On June 28th, 1914,

00:32

Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated. This was the little match that ignited the

00:37

bonfire of the First World War.

00:39

Now, it took a full month after the assassination for war to be declared and on July 28, 2014,

00:46

it is exactly 100 years since the beginning of World War I, or the Great War, as it was called,

00:51

or even The War to End All Wars.

00:53

And unlike pretty much every other World War I show ever, we’re going to

00:58

ignore Franz Ferdinand for the moment, and talk about some other stuff.

01:01

The consequences of the Great War were massive, and affected pretty much every person

01:05

in every country on earth. Four great empires ceased to exist, a bunch of new nations saw the light of day,

01:12

and the explosive growth of an extraordinary number of social movements,

01:16

such as internationalism or facism, changed the world’s political landscape forever.

01:21

Just in terms of technology, the Great War moved the world ahead by leaps and bounds.

01:27

Cars and planes had existed prior to the war, but by 1918 we had tanks and diesel fuel,

01:32

bombers and fighters, and large planes ready to be converted into the first airliners.

01:37

And the tragedies were enormous. Although completely accurate records are impossible,

01:42

the war caused close to 40 million casualties – killed or wounded –

01:46

including nearly 10 million dead soldiers in a world whose population was only a quarter of what it is now.

01:52

But why the Great War? Why start it? Why go through with it?

01:55

There had certainly been enough talk about a European war during the early parts of the

Full subtitles available in the video player

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