New Imperialism
Africa & Asia Under Imperialism
Causes of WWI
Fighting the War
Aftermath and Legacy
100

What was the main difference between "New Imperialism" and earlier imperialism?

 Direct control and formal empire-building vs. indirect influence and trade ports.


100

By 1914, what percentage of Africa was under European control?

 Nearly all of it, except Ethiopia and Liberia

100

What assassination sparked WWI?

 Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary.


100

What was trench warfare and where was it most commonly used?


 Static, defensive warfare in trenches—mainly on the Western Front.


100

What treaty ended World War I?

 Treaty of Versailles.

200

What was the “civilizing mission” and how was it used to justify imperialism?


 It claimed to bring civilization and Christianity to "inferior" peoples; rooted in racism.


200

What triggered the Sepoy Rebellion in India?

 Use of animal fat in cartridges, offending Hindu and Muslim soldiers.


200

What were the two major alliance systems before the war?

 Triple Entente and Triple Alliance.

200

 Name one new weapon that made WWI especially deadly.

 Poison gas, machine guns, tanks, submarines

200

Name one punishment imposed on Germany by the Treaty of Versailles.

 Territorial losses, military restrictions, war guilt clause, reparations.

300

What theory was used to argue that stronger nations had a right to conquer weaker ones?

 Social Darwinism.

300

 What were two negative impacts of British rule on Indian peasants?

 Disruption of farming, famines, economic hardship.


300

Name two long-term causes of WWI.

 Imperialism, militarism, nationalism, alliance systems.


300

What does “total war” mean?


 All resources and people involved—government control, rationing, propaganda, etc.


300

What new nations were created after the Austro-Hungarian Empire dissolved?


 Austria, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia.

400

What event marked the beginning of the "Scramble for Africa"?

 The Berlin Conference (1884–1885).

400

What were “spheres of influence” in China?

 Regions where foreign powers controlled trade and investment without direct rule.


400

What was Germany’s plan to quickly defeat France at the start of the war?

The Schlieffen Plan.

400

 What campaign was a failed Allied attempt to open a route to Russia via the Ottoman Empire?

 The Gallipoli Campaign.

400

What was Woodrow Wilson’s plan for lasting peace called?

 The Fourteen Points.

500

 Describe two ways that imperial powers expanded control over territories.


 Military force, treaties, puppet governments, coercion.

500

How did Japan become an imperial power in Asia?

 Meiji Restoration → industrialization → conquest of Taiwan, Korea, Manchuria.


500

How did imperialism lead to WWI and increase its global scale and violence?

 Colonial rivalries (e.g., Morocco), involvement of colonies, global battlefields (e.g., Africa, Middle East).


500

What was the outcome of the battles of Verdun and the Somme?


 Massive casualties with little territorial gain—stalemate.

500

How did WWI contribute to future conflicts and global change?

  •  Rise of fascism/communism, unresolved tensions, colonial unrest, U.S. global rise.

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