Road to War
Life in the Trenches
New Weapons and Equipment
Eastern Front
The Home Front and End of WW1
100

These four "MAIN" issues are cited as the primary causes leading up to WW I.

What are Militarism, Alliances, Imperialism, and Nationalism?

100

This painful medical condition was caused by feet being submerged in cold, unsanitary water for long periods.

What is Trench Foot?

100

Germany used these to target merchant vessels and maintain naval blockades.

What are U-boats (Submarines)?

100

At the start of the war in 1914, this nation possessed the largest land army in the world.

What is Russia?

100

This intercepted German message proposed a military alliance with Mexico against the United States.

What is the Zimmerman Telegram?

200

The 1915 sinking of this passenger ship by a German U-boat killed over 100 Americans and turned US public opinion.

What is the Lusitania?

200

These two pests thrived in the unsanitary conditions of the trenches, with one known to feed on corpses.

What are Rats and Lice?

200

 World War I saw the first widespread use of these two types of toxic gas.

What are Mustard gas and Chlorine gas?

200

This political group seized power in Russia in October 1917 and immediately sought an end to the war.

Who are the Bolsheviks?


200

After the armistice, this conspiracy theory emerged in Germany, claiming the army had been betrayed by internal enemies.

 What is the Stab-in-the-back myth?

300

This German strategy aimed to avoid a two-front war by knocking France out in six weeks before Russia could mobilize.

What is the Schlieffen Plan?

300

This 1916 battle saw 20,000 British troops killed on its first day, making it the worst day in British military history.

What is the Battle of the Somme?

300

 Designers viewed this new vehicle as a modern, mechanized version of the "armored knight."

What is the Tank?

300

 In 1915, this monarch took personal command of the Russian military, essentially tying his fate to the war's outcome.

Who is Tsar Nicholas II?

300

This term was used for the 16,000 men in Great Britain who refused to fight due to moral or religious beliefs, many of whom were imprisoned or assigned non-combat roles

What are Conscientious Objectors?

400

This was the nickname given to the British Expeditionary Force (BEF), which the Kaiser allegedly called a "contemptible little army."

What are The Old Contemptibles?

400

General Douglas Haig earned this grim nickname due to his perceived role in the massive waste of life during the 1916 offensive.

Who is The Butcher of the Somme?

400

This 1916 engagement was the only large-scale battle between the main British and German naval fleets.

What is the Battle of Jutland?

400

The 1918 German Revolution was sparked by a naval mutiny at these two port cities.

What are Kiel and Wilhelmshaven?

400

This 1914 British law allowed the government to censor the press and imprison civilians without trial.

What is DORA (Defence of the Realm Act)?

500

Passed in 1889, this standard required the British Navy to be more powerful than the next two largest navies combined.

What is the Two Power Standard?

500

Following the Battle of the Marne, both sides engaged in this three-month period of mobile conflict, each trying to outflank the other to reach the coast.

What is the Race to the Sea?

500

This 1914 battle served as British "revenge" for their earlier naval defeat off the coast of Chile.

What is the Battle of the Falkland Islands?

500

This Russian General committed suicide after his 2nd Army was destroyed at the Battle of Tannenberg.

Who is Alexander Samsonov?

500

This "unanticipated issue" near the end of the war caused the deaths of an estimated 250,000 to 400,000 Germans and left only two out of thirteen German divisions fit for action by August 1918,

What is the Flu (Influenza) epidemic?

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