Causes
In Battle
Canada's Contributions
Home Front
Anything Goes
100

 Agreements between countries to support each other in case of conflict.
 

Alliances

100

The long line of trenches spreading from the North Sea to the Swiss border where much of the fighting happened.

Western Front

100

The size of the Canadian army at the start of war, when PM Borden promised to send 30,000.

3000

100

Who was the prime minister of Canada during World War I?

Robert Borden

100

The country blamed for Archduke's assassination.

Serbia

200

This ideology, which involved intense pride in one's nation, contributed to World War I by causing competition and conflict over territory and power.

Nationalism

200

The dangerous area that separates opposing trenches.

No man's land

200

This 1917 battle, where Canadian troops captured a strategic ridge in France, is considered a defining moment for Canada in World War I.
 

Vimy Ridge

200

This form of media was used by the government to encourage Canadians to support the war, often showing the enemy as dangerous and evil.
 

Propaganda

200
A term used to refer to Canadians who had emigrated from countries Canada was at war with.

Enemy aliens

300

The city that Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated in.

Sarajevo

300

This infection which sometimes resulted in the amputation of a toe, foot, or limb is representative of the horrible living conditions inside World War I trenches. 

Trench foot

300

The first major battle that Canadians fought in, in 1915, saw the use of poison gas for the first time.
 

Second Battle of Ypres

300

This crisis fractured Canada, splitting the population between English and French.

Conscription Crisis

300

On November 11, 1918 the guns fell silent after this agreement  between rivals.

Armistice

400

What was the purpose of Germany's Schlieffen Plan?

To avoid a war on two fronts, with France and Russia

400

An order for soldiers to rush out of the trenches to attack the enemy.

Over the top

400

Poor weather and weeks of bombardment turned this battlefield into a dangerous quagmire, perhaps as deadly as the enemy's bullets.

Passchendaele

400

This law gave the government extensive power to pass new laws without consulting Parliament.

War Measures Act

400

The name of the 1919 agreement that officially ended World War I.

Treaty of Versailles

500

This crisis in 1914 followed the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand and involved intense diplomatic negotiations between European powers.
 

the July Crisis

500

The name of the civilian ship sunk by German U-boats contributing to the US decision to join the war.

Lusitania

500

This Canadian commander led the troops during the Battle of Vimy Ridge and helped develop Canada’s reputation as an elite fighting force.
 

Arthur Currie

500

This law extended the vote to female relatives of soldiers. It was the first time women could vote in federal elections in Canada.

Wartime Elections Act

500

The date Canada went to war.

August 4, 1914