Unit 4: World War I and Its Aftermath (1914-1920) Overview

Unit 4: World War I and Its Aftermath (1914-1920)

Unit 4: World War I and Its Aftermath (1914-1920) Banner

Unit 4: World War I and Its Aftermath (1914-1920)

World War I Image

Unit 4: World War I and Its Aftermath (1914-1920)

This unit emphasizes the events leading up to World War I.

The war transformed the world. It drastically changed the face of the Middle East, for instance. For centuries the Ottoman Empire had shaped life in the region. Before the war, the Middle East had three main centers of power: Egypt, the Ottoman Empire, and Iran. President Wilson’s call for self-determination appealed to many under the Ottoman Empire’s rule. In the aftermath of the war, Wilson sent a commission to investigate the region to determine the conditions and aspirations of the populace. The King-Crane Commission found that most of the inhabitants favored an independent state free of European control. However, these wishes were largely ignored, and the lands of the former Ottoman Empire divided into mandates through the Treaty of Sevres at the San Remo Conference in 1920. The Ottoman Empire disintegrated into several nations, many created in part without regard to ethnic realities by European powers. These Arab provinces were ruled by Britain and France, and the new nation of Turkey emerged from the former heartland of Anatolia. According to the League of Nations, mandates “were inhabited by peoples not yet able to stand by themselves under the strenuous conditions of the modern world.” Though allegedly for the benefit of the people of the Middle East, the mandate system was essentially a reimagined form of nineteenth-century imperialism. France received Syria; Britain took control of Iraq, Palestine, and Transjordan (Jordan). The United States was asked to become a mandate power, but declined. The geographical realignment of the Middle East also included the formation of two new nations: the Kingdom of Hejaz and Yemen.

Unit Focus

  • European rivalries and entangling alliances
  • chain of events that led to World War I
  • underlying causes of World War I
  • key battles of World War I
  • role of United States in World War I
  • new technology that changed the nature of warfare
  • long-term and short-term effects of the Versailles Treaty

Vocabulary

Lesson Reading

Videos and Interactives (Click on Images to View Content)

Wolrd War I

Video on World War I

World War I and Its Aftermath

World War I and Its Aftermath Interactive