How Did Nationalism Cause World War I?

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Nationalism is the belief that the people from a nation should have their own political institution and that the interests of the nation should be defended and promoted at all costs. Nationalism was one of the main causes of World War I. in the early 1900s nationalism created a fierce competition between Europe’s powers. These powers were Germany, Austria-Hungary, Great Britain, Russia, Italy, and France. Nationalism gave individuals excessive confidence, in their nation, their government, and their military strength. In order to be the best nation they had to be the nest at everything both military and economically. Due to the late industrial revolution, German technology was more advanced than those of the British, French, and Russians. …show more content…

The objective of the alliance was to defeat napoleon Bonaparte and uphold the resolution following the Napoleon wars. The alliances were a formal and economic agreement between two or more nations. The alliance system was the main catalysts that contributed to the different world powers going into war. In the 19th century different nations were formed, and annulled and restricted their alliance agreements. Super powers had reshuffled into two different alliance blocks, meaning that a war between any two nations resulted in a war among all nations. The rise of Napoleon Bonaparte resulted in the formation of different alliances, in which some nations sought to support Napoleon, while other nations sought to defeat him. Alliances were unbalanced, between the two major alliance networks, and it made war inevitable. Conflict was growing as many European powers beefed up in an effort to gain more resources, land, and power. Nationalism another factor that led to WWI was rapidly growing in the European countries, in which empires sought alliances in other to gain more strength. War was inevitable, because these nations (Russian, empire, British empire, kingdom of Italy, Austro-Hungarian Empire, Ottoman Empire) all signed onto alliances that ensured all of them would be dragged into war together. Between all the factors that sparked WWI …show more content…

Women were still expected to give up work once they were married to revert to their natural roles of wife, mother, and housekeeper. However, Britain was home to the most active feminist movement in western Europe known as the Suffragettes () My perspective to the outbreak of was mixed, that was due to the fact that many other women adopted a staunch anti-war position, others threw their patriotic weight behind the allied cause. Most women felt somewhere between those two extremes, the war was viewed as an inevitability for which we now had to make sacrifices. New work opportunities were provided for us women. 2,000 women were employed in government dockyards, factories, and arsenals. Men had to leave their old jobs to fill the need of soldiers, in which workers like me filled their position. However, we were still limited in the jobs we were allowed to perform. Women were still paid less compared to men, in fact employers would split down tasks into smaller steps in which different women would be employed and would be pay less for doing it. The opportunities available also varied state by state, region by region; since location was, a factor those in urban areas as I had more opportunities, such as factories. While those in rural areas replaced farm laborers. Many asked why women took these opportunities and the simplest answer is for patriotic reasons, the desire to

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