First World War 1915 events briefly. Important dates and events of the First World War

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The year 1915 began with an intensification of military actions by the warring parties. Symbolizing the emergence of sinister new means of warfare, on January 19, German Zeppelins began raiding the east coast of England. Several people died in the ports of Norfolk, and several bombs fell near the royal house at Sandringham. On January 24, a short but fierce battle took place off Dogger Bank in the North Sea, during which the German cruiser Blücher was sunk and two battlecruisers were damaged. The British battlecruiser Lion was also seriously damaged.

Second Battle of Masuria

In February 1915, Germany began major offensive operations in East Prussia (Augustow and Prasnysz), which were called the Second Battle of Masuria. On February 7, 1915, the 8th (General von Below) and 10th (General Eichhorn) German armies went on the offensive from East Prussia. Their main blow fell in the area of ​​the Polish city of Augustow, where the 10th Russian Army (General Sievers) was located. Having created numerical superiority in this direction, the Germans attacked the flanks of Sievers’ army and tried to encircle it.

The second stage provides for a breakthrough of the entire North-Western Front. But due to the tenacity of the soldiers of the 10th Army, the Germans failed to completely capture it in pincers. Only the 20th Corps of General Bulgakov was surrounded. For 10 days, he valiantly repelled attacks by German units in the snowy forests near Augustus, preventing them from further advancing. Having used up all the ammunition, the remnants of the corps attacked the German positions in the hope of breaking through to their own. Having overthrown the German infantry in hand-to-hand combat, the Russian soldiers died heroically under the fire of German guns. “The attempt to break through was complete madness.

But this is holy madness, heroism, which showed the Russian warrior in his full light, which we know from the time of Skobelev, the times of the storming of Plevna, the battle in the Caucasus and the storming of Warsaw! The Russian soldier knows how to fight very well, he endures all sorts of hardships and is able to be persistent, even if certain death is inevitable!”, wrote the German war correspondent R. Brandt in those days. Thanks to this courageous resistance, the 10th Army was able to withdraw most of its forces from attack by mid-February and took up defense on the Kovno-Osovets line. The Northwestern Front held out and then managed to partially restore the lost

positions. The heroic defense of the Osovets fortress provided great assistance in stabilizing the front. Almost simultaneously, fighting broke out on another section of the East Prussian border, where the 12th Russian Army (General Plehve) was stationed. On February 20, in the area of ​​Prasnysz (Poland), it was attacked by units of the 8th German Army (General von Below). The city was defended by a detachment under the command of Colonel Barybin, who for several days heroically repelled the attacks of superior German forces. On February 24, 1915, Prasnysh fell. But its staunch defense gave the Russians time to bring up the necessary reserves, which were being prepared in accordance with the Russian plan for a winter offensive in East Prussia. On February 25, the 1st Siberian Corps of General Pleshkov approached Prasnysh and immediately attacked the Germans. In a two-day winter battle, the Siberians completely defeated the German formations and drove them out of the city. Soon, the entire 12th Army, replenished with reserves, went on a general offensive, which, after stubborn fighting, drove the Germans back to the borders of East Prussia; Meanwhile, the 10th Army also went on the offensive, clearing the Augustow Forest from the Germans. The front was restored, but the Russian troops could not achieve more. The Germans lost about 40 thousand people in this battle, the Russians - about 100 thousand. On February 12, the French launched a new offensive in Champagne. The losses were enormous, the French lost about 50 thousand people, having advanced almost 500 yards. This was followed by a British offensive on Neuschtal in March 1915 and a new French offensive in April in an easterly direction. However, these actions did not bring tangible results to the Allies.

In the east, on March 22, after a siege, Russian troops captured the Przemysl fortress, which dominated the bridgehead on the San River in Galicia. Over 100 thousand Austrians were captured, not counting the heavy losses suffered by Austria in unsuccessful attempts to lift the siege. Russia's strategy at the beginning of 1915 amounted to an offensive in the direction of Silesia and Hungary while securing reliable flanks. During this company, the capture of Przemysl was the main success of the Russian army (although it managed to hold this fortress only for two months). At the beginning of May 1915, a major offensive by the troops of the Central Powers in the East began. Gorlitsky breakthrough. The beginning of the Great Retreat Having failed to push back Russian troops at the borders of East Prussia and in the Carpathians, the German command decided to implement the third breakthrough option. It was supposed to be carried out between the Vistula and the Carpathians, in the Gorlitsa region. By that time, over half of the armed forces of the Austro-German bloc were concentrated against Russia. But, before launching an offensive in the Gorlitsa area, the German command undertook a series of offensive operations in

East Prussia and Poland against the troops of the Northwestern Front. Moreover, in the offensive against Russian troops near Warsaw on May 31, 1915, the Germans successfully used gases for the first time. More than nine thousand Russian soldiers were poisoned, of which 1,183 died. Russian troops did not use gas masks at that time. In the 35-kilometer section of the breakthrough at Gorlitsa, a strike group was created under the command of General Mackensen. It included the newly formed 11; the German army, consisting of three selected German corps and the 6th Austrian corps, which included Hungarians (the Hungarians were considered the best soldiers of the multi-tribal Austrian army). In addition, the 10th German Corps and the 4th Austrian Army were subordinated to Mackenzin. Mackenzin's group was superior to the Russian 3rd Army (General Radko-Dmitriev) stationed in this area in manpower - twice, in light artillery - three times, in heavy artillery - 40 times, in machine guns - two and a half times . On May 2, 1915, Mackensen’s group (357 thousand people) went on the offensive. The Russian command, knowing about the build-up of forces in this area, did not provide a timely counterattack. Large reinforcements were sent here late, were brought into battle piecemeal and quickly died in battles with superior enemy forces. The Gorlitsky breakthrough clearly revealed the problem of shortage of ammunition, especially shells.

The overwhelming superiority in heavy artillery was one of the main reasons for this, the largest German success on the Russian front. “Eleven days of the terrible roar of German heavy artillery, literally tearing down entire rows of trenches along with their defenders,” recalled General A. I. Denikin, a participant in those events. - We almost didn’t answer - we had nothing. The regiments, exhausted to the last degree, repulsed one attack after another - with bayonets or point-blank shooting, blood flowed, the ranks thinned, grave mounds grew... Two regiments were almost destroyed by one fire.” The Gorlitsky breakthrough created a threat of encirclement of Russian troops in the Carpathians. Other Austro-Hungarian armies, reinforced by German corps, also went on the offensive. The troops of the Southwestern Front began a widespread withdrawal. At the same time, the 48th division of General L.G. Kornilov found itself in a difficult situation, which fought out of encirclement, but Kornilov himself and his headquarters were captured. We also had to leave the cities conquered by the Russians with such great blood: Przemysl, Lvov, and others. By June 22, 1915, having lost 500 thousand people, Russian troops abandoned all of Galicia. The enemy lost a lot, only Mackensen’s group lost two-thirds of its personnel. Thanks to courageous resistance

Russian soldiers and Mackensen’s group were unable to quickly enter the operational space. In general, its offensive was reduced to “pushing through” the Russian front. It was seriously pushed back to the east, but not defeated. The strike forces of Field Marshal Mackensen's 11th German Army, supported by the 40th Austro-Hungarian Army, went on the offensive along a 20-mile front in Western Galicia. Russian troops were forced to leave Lvov and

Warsaw. In the summer, the German command broke through the Russian front near Gorlitsa. Soon the Germans launched an offensive in the Baltic states, and Russian troops lost Galicia, Poland, part of Latvia and Belarus. The enemy was preoccupied with the need to repel the impending attack on Serbia, as well as to return troops to the Western Front before the start of a new French offensive. During the four-month campaign, Russia lost 800 thousand soldiers alone as prisoners. However, the Russian command, switching to strategic defense, managed to withdraw its armies from the enemy’s attacks and stop his advance. Concerned and exhausted, the Austro-German armies went on the defensive along the entire front in October. Germany faced the need to continue a long war on two fronts. Russia bore the brunt of the struggle, which provided France and England with a respite to mobilize the economy for the needs of the war. On February 16, 1915, British and French warships began shelling Turkish defenses in the Dardanelles. With interruptions caused in part by bad weather, this naval operation continued for two months.

The Dardanelles operation was undertaken at the request of Russia to launch a diversionary attack on Turkey, which would relieve pressure on the Russians fighting the Turks in the Caucasus. In January, the Dardanelles Strait, about 40 miles long and 1 to 4 miles wide, connecting the Aegean Sea with the Marmara Sea, was chosen as a target. The operation to capture the Dardanelles, opening the way to an attack on Constantinople, figured in the Allied military plans before the war, but was rejected as too difficult. With Turkey's entry into the war, this plan was revised as possible, although risky. A purely naval operation was initially planned, but it immediately became clear that a combined naval and land operation had to be undertaken. This plan found active support from the English First Lord of the Admiralty, Winston Churchill. The outcome of the operation, and if it was successful, the “back door” would have been opened for Russia, was questioned by the reluctance of the allies to immediately send sufficiently large forces and the choice mainly

outdated warships. At the beginning, Türkiye had only two divisions to defend the strait. At the time of the Allied landings, it had six divisions and outnumbered five Allied divisions, not counting the presence of magnificent natural fortifications. Early on the morning of April 25, 1915, Allied troops landed at two points on the Gallipoli Peninsula. The British landed at Cape Ilyas, at the southern tip of the peninsula, and the Australians and New Zealand units advanced along the Aegean coast about 15 miles to the north. At the same time, the French brigade launched a diversionary attack on Kumkala on the Anatolian coast. Despite barbed wire and heavy machine-gun fire, both groups managed to seize a bridgehead. However, the Turks controlled the heights, as a result of which the British, Australian and New Zealand troops were unable to advance.

As a result, as on the Western Front, there was a lull here. In August, British troops landed at Suvla Bay in an attempt to capture the central part of the peninsula opposite the pass. Although the landing in the Gulf was sudden, the command of the troops was unsatisfactory, and the opportunity for a breakthrough was lost. The offensive in the south also proved unsuccessful. The British government decided to withdraw troops. W. Churchill was forced to resign as First Lord of the Admiralty. On May 23, 1915, Italy declared war on Austria, signing a secret treaty with the Allies in London in April. The Triple Alliance, which linked Italy with the Central Powers, was denounced, although at this time it refused to declare war on Germany.

At the beginning of the war, Italy declared its neutrality on the grounds that the Triple Alliance did not oblige it to take part in a war of aggression. However, the main reason for Italy's actions was the desire to gain territorial gains at the expense of Austria. Austria was unwilling to make the concessions that Italy sought, such as giving up Trieste. Moreover, by 1915, public opinion began to swing in favor of the Allies, and both former pacifists and radical socialists, led by Mussolini, saw an opportunity to bring about a revolution in the face of the lack of stability in society during the war. In March, the Austrian government took steps to satisfy Italy's demands, however, it was already too late. Under the Treaty of London, the Italians got what they wanted, or most of what they wanted. Under this treaty, Italy was promised Trentino, South Tyrol, Trieste, Istria and other predominantly Italian-speaking regions. On May 30, the Italians began military operations against Austria with the launch of an offensive by the 2nd and 3rd armies under the overall command of General Cadorna in the northeast direction.

Italy had very limited capabilities for warfare; its army had low combat effectiveness, especially after the Libyan campaign. The Italian offensive floundered, and the fighting in 1915 took on a positional character.

Change of Supreme Commander-in-Chief During the Great Retreat, the Headquarters of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief moved from Baradovichi to Mogilev in mid-August 1915. Soon after the change in Headquarters, there was a change in the commander-in-chief. On September 5, 1915, this mission was undertaken by the sovereign himself, Nicholas II. He took command of the army during the most critical period of the struggle against an external enemy, thereby demonstrating a close bond of unity with his people and the Russian Imperial Army. Many tried to dissuade him, but the sovereign insisted on his own. Nikolai Alexandrovich was then 47 years old: By nature, he was a modest person, extremely delicate, easy to communicate with people. He loved his wife and children very much and was an impeccable family man.

He shunned pomp, flattery, and luxury, and almost never drank alcohol. He was also distinguished by his deep faith. Those around him often did not understand the king’s actions, but only because they themselves had lost the sincerity and purity of their faith. The Emperor managed to preserve it. He directly and directly perceived his calling as God's anointed and was guided by it in the way he understood. All his contemporaries noted his colossal restraint and self-control, and Nikolai Alexandrovich explained: “If you see that I am so calm, it is because I have a firm and decisive belief that the fate of Russia, my fate and the fate of my family is in the will of God who gave me this power. Whatever happens, I commit myself to His will, knowing that I can think of nothing else but serving the country He has entrusted to me.”

It was common in many states for the monarch to become commander-in-chief. But this was always done in anticipation of victorious laurels. Nicholas II took on a colossal burden at the most difficult moment of the war. Nikolai Nikolaevich was appointed commander of the Caucasian Front, but, concentrating rear affairs in his hands, he left the leadership of military operations to General Yudenich. The army took the change of supreme commander calmly. The soldiers already considered the king their highest superior. And the officers understood that the chief of staff would play an important role under the sovereign, and they heatedly discussed who would take this position. When they found out that it was General Alekseev, it made everyone happy. General Evert became the commander-in-chief of the Northwestern Front. The year 1916 began with the offensive of Russian troops in the Caucasus. On February 16, they took the Turkish fortress of Erzurum. Meanwhile, in England, parliament approved a law on universal conscription, which was strongly opposed by trade unions and Labor. Conservatives voted for the introduction of the law and

some liberals led by D. Lloyd George. And in the capital of Germany, a food riot broke out in Berlin; there was a catastrophic shortage of food. In the same year, the battles of Verdun and the Somme River ended.

These battles were the bloodiest of the war on the Western Front. They were distinguished by the massive use of artillery, aviation, infantry, and cavalry and did not bring success to either side. The main reason for this balance was the unconditional advantage of defensive methods of warfare over offensive methods. The Verdun Offensive signified the desire of the Chief of the German General Staff, Falkenhayn, to deliver a decisive blow on the Western Front, which was postponed in 1915 after the successes achieved in the East. Falkenhayn believed that Germany's main enemy was England, but at the same time he recognized that England could not be conquered, partly because an offensive in the English sector had little chance of success, and also because a military defeat in Europe would not England from the war. Submarine warfare was the best hope for realizing this possibility, and Falkenhayn saw his task as defeating the British allies in Europe.

Russia seemed already defeated, and the Austrians showed that they could cope with the Italians. That left France. Given the proven strength of the defenses in trench warfare, Falkenhayn abandoned the idea of ​​​​trying to break through the French lines. At Verdun, he chose a strategy of war of attrition. He planned a series of attacks to lure out the French reserves and destroy them with artillery. Verdun was chosen partly because it was on a salient and disrupted German communications, but also because of the important historical significance of this major fortress. As soon as the battle began, the Germans were determined to capture Verdun and the French to defend it. Falkenhayn was right in his assumption that the French would not give up Verdun easily. However, the task was complicated by the fact that Verdun was no longer a strong fortress and was practically deprived of artillery. And yet, forced to retreat, the French maintained their forts, while reinforcements filtered through a very narrow corridor that was not exposed to German artillery fire. By the time General Petain, commanding the Second Army, was sent to Verdun at the end of the month to lead its defense, the immediate threat had passed. The German crown prince, who commanded the army corps, scheduled the main offensive for March 4. After two days of shelling, the offensive began, but by March 9 it was stopped. However, Falkenhayn's strategy remained the same.

On June 7, the Germans captured Fort Vaux, which controlled the right flank of the French positions at Verdun. The next day they captured Fort Tiomon, which had already changed hands twice since the offensive began on June 1. It seemed that an immediate threat loomed over Verdun. In March, the Germans failed to achieve a quick victory at Verdun, but they continued their attacks with great persistence, which were carried out at short intervals. The French repulsed them and launched a series of counterattacks.

German troops continued their offensive. On 24 October, having taken over the 2nd Army after Pétain became commander-in-chief, General Nivelle launched a counter-offensive at Verdun. With the start of the Somme offensive in July, German reserves were no longer sent to Verdun. The French counterattack was covered by the "creeping artillery attack," a new invention in which infantry advanced behind a gradually moving wave of artillery fire according to a precisely timed schedule. As a result, the troops captured the initially set objectives and captured 6 thousand prisoners. The next offensive was hampered by bad weather at the end of November, but was resumed in December and became known as the Battle of Luvemen.

Almost 10 thousand prisoners were taken and more than 100 guns were captured. In December, the Battle of Verdun ended. About 120 divisions were ground in the Verdun meat grinder, including 69 French and 50 German. During the battle of Verdun, the Allies on July 1, 1916, after a week of artillery preparation, began an offensive on the Somme River. As a result of the exhaustion of the French troops near Verdun, the British units began the bulk of the offensive force, and England the leading Allied power on the Western Front. The Battle of the Somme was where tanks, a new type of weapon, first appeared on September 15. The effect of the British vehicles, which were initially called “landships,” was quite uncertain, but so was the number The number of tanks that took part in the battle was small.In the fall, the British advance was blocked by swamps.

The Battle of the Somme River, which lasted from July to the end of November 1916, did not bring success to either side. Their losses were enormous: 1 million 300 thousand people. The situation on the Eastern Front was more successful for the Entente. At the height of the battles near Verdun, the French command again turned to Russia for help. On June 4, the Russian 8th Army under the command of General Kaledin advanced into the Lutsk area, which was considered as a reconnaissance operation. To the surprise of the Russians, the Austrian defense line collapsed. And General Alexei Brusilov, who exercised overall command of the southern sector of the front, immediately intensified his offensive, bringing 3 armies into battle. The Austrians were soon put into panic flight. In three days, the Russians captured 200 thousand prisoners. The army of General Brusilov broke through the Austrian front on the Lutsk-Chernivtsi line. Russian troops again occupied most of

Galicia and Bukovina, putting Austria-Hungary on the brink of military defeat. And, although the offensive dried up by August 1916, the “Brusilovsky breakthrough” suspended the activity of the Austrians on the Italian front and greatly eased the position of the Anglo-French troops at Verdun and the Somme.

The war at sea came down to the question of whether Germany could successfully resist England's traditional superiority at sea. As on land, the presence of new types of weapons - aircraft, submarines, mines, torpedoes, and radio equipment - made defense easier than attack. The Germans, having a smaller fleet, believed that the British would seek to destroy it in a battle that they tried to avoid. However, the British strategy was aimed at achieving other goals. Having relocated the fleet to Scala Flow in the Orkney Islands at the beginning of the war and thereby establishing control over the North Sea, the British, wary of mines and torpedoes and the inaccessible coast of Germany, chose a long blockade, being constantly ready in case of an attempt to break through the German fleet. At the same time, being dependent on supplies by sea, they had to ensure security on ocean routes.

In August 1914, the Germans had relatively few battleships based abroad, although the cruisers Goeben and Breslau successfully reached Constantinople early in the war, and their presence contributed to Turkey's entry into the war on the side of the Central Powers. The most significant forces, including the battlecruisers Scharnhorst and Gneisenau, were destroyed during the fighting off the Falkland Islands, and by the end of 1914 the oceans were, at least on the surface, cleared of German raiders. The main danger to ocean trade routes was not combat squadrons, but submarines. As the war progressed, Germany's inferiority in capital ships forced her to increasingly concentrate her efforts on submarines, which the British, suffering heavy losses in the Atlantic, viewed as an illegal means of warfare. Ultimately, the policy of unrestricted submarine warfare boats, which turned out to be almost disastrous for England, indirectly brought death to Germany, since it was the direct reason for the entry of the United States of America into the war in 1917.

On May 7, 1915, the huge American liner Lusitania, on a voyage from New York to Liverpool, was sunk by a torpedo attack by a German submarine off the Irish coast. The steamer quickly sank, and with it, about 1,200 people, almost three-quarters of all those on board, went forever into the cold waters of the ocean. The sinking of the Lusitania, whose speed was thought to make it invulnerable to torpedoes, necessitated a response. The fact that the Germans gave a cautious warning to the Americans not to sail on this ship only confirmed that the attack on it was most likely pre-planned. It caused sharp anti-German protests in many countries, primarily in the USA. Among the dead were nearly 200 American citizens, including such famous figures as millionaire Alfred Vanderbilt.

This sinking had a major impact on President Woodrow Wilson's declared policy of strict neutrality, and from that time on, US entry into the war became a potential possibility. On July 18, 1915, the Italian cruiser Giuseppe Garibaldi sank after being torpedoed by an Austrian submarine. A few days earlier, the English cruiser Dublin was attacked in a similar way, however, she managed to escape despite serious damage. The French fleet, based in Malta, fell to the task of implementing a blockade in the Adriatic Sea. Austrian submarines were active, and after the loss of the battleship Jean Bart in December 1914, the French were wary of releasing their heavy ships, relying on cruisers and destroyers. German U-boats also entered the Mediterranean in the summer of 1915, and the Allies' position was complicated by the task of protecting numerous transports and supply ships making raids to and from the Gallipoli Peninsula and, later, to Thessaloniki. In September, an attempt was made to block the Strait of Otranto using nets, but German submarines managed to pass under them. Military operations in the Baltic intensified.

Russian sailors disabled a German minelayer, and a British submarine torpedoed the cruiser Prinz Adalbert. The Russian naval forces, supplemented by several British submarines, as a rule, successfully thwarted German plans to land troops in Courland and prevented the laying of mines. British submarines also tried to disrupt the supply of iron and steel from Sweden to Germany, later sinking 14 ships engaged in these shipments in 1915. But the British losses also grew. By the end of 1915, the total number of British merchant ships sunk by German submarines exceeded 250. The Battle of Jutland between the British and German fleets in the summer of 1916 led to large mutual losses, but in strategic terms it changed little. England retained naval superiority and the blockade of Germany continued. The Germans had to return to submarine warfare again. However, its effectiveness became less and less, especially after the United States entered the war.

First World War (1914 - 1918)

The Russian Empire collapsed. One of the goals of the war has been achieved.

Chamberlain

The First World War lasted from August 1, 1914 to November 11, 1918. 38 states with a population of 62% of the world took part in it. This war was quite controversial and extremely contradictory in modern history. I specifically quoted Chamberlain’s words in the epigraph in order to once again emphasize this inconsistency. A prominent politician in England (Russia's war ally) says that by overthrowing the autocracy in Russia one of the goals of the war has been achieved!

The Balkan countries played a major role in the beginning of the war. They were not independent. Their policies (both foreign and domestic) were greatly influenced by England. Germany had by that time lost its influence in this region, although it controlled Bulgaria for a long time.

  • Entente. Russian Empire, France, Great Britain. The allies were the USA, Italy, Romania, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.
  • Triple Alliance. Germany, Austria-Hungary, Ottoman Empire. Later they were joined by the Bulgarian kingdom, and the coalition became known as the “Quadruple Alliance”.

The following large countries took part in the war: Austria-Hungary (July 27, 1914 - November 3, 1918), Germany (August 1, 1914 - November 11, 1918), Turkey (October 29, 1914 - October 30, 1918), Bulgaria (October 14, 1915 - 29 September 1918). Entente countries and allies: Russia (August 1, 1914 - March 3, 1918), France (August 3, 1914), Belgium (August 3, 1914), Great Britain (August 4, 1914), Italy (May 23, 1915), Romania (August 27, 1916) .

One more important point. Initially, Italy was a member of the Triple Alliance. But after the outbreak of World War I, the Italians declared neutrality.

Causes of the First World War

The main reason for the outbreak of the First World War was the desire of the leading powers, primarily England, France and Austria-Hungary, to redistribute the world. The fact is that the colonial system collapsed by the beginning of the 20th century. The leading European countries, which had prospered for years through the exploitation of their colonies, could no longer simply obtain resources by taking them away from Indians, Africans and South Americans. Now resources could only be won from each other. Therefore, contradictions grew:

  • Between England and Germany. England sought to prevent Germany from increasing its influence in the Balkans. Germany sought to strengthen itself in the Balkans and the Middle East, and also sought to deprive England of maritime dominance.
  • Between Germany and France. France dreamed of regaining the lands of Alsace and Lorraine, which it had lost in the war of 1870-71. France also sought to seize the German Saar coal basin.
  • Between Germany and Russia. Germany sought to take Poland, Ukraine and the Baltic states from Russia.
  • Between Russia and Austria-Hungary. Controversies arose due to the desire of both countries to influence the Balkans, as well as Russia's desire to subjugate the Bosporus and Dardanelles.

The reason for the start of the war

The reason for the outbreak of the First World War was the events in Sarajevo (Bosnia and Herzegovina). On June 28, 1914, Gavrilo Princip, a member of the Black Hand of the Young Bosnia movement, assassinated Archduke Franz Ferdinand. Ferdinand was the heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne, so the resonance of the murder was enormous. This was the pretext for Austria-Hungary to attack Serbia.

The behavior of England is very important here, since Austria-Hungary could not start a war on its own, because this practically guaranteed war throughout Europe. The British at the embassy level convinced Nicholas 2 that Russia should not leave Serbia without help in the event of aggression. But then the entire (I emphasize this) English press wrote that the Serbs were barbarians and Austria-Hungary should not leave the murder of the Archduke unpunished. That is, England did everything to ensure that Austria-Hungary, Germany and Russia did not shy away from war.

Important nuances of the casus belli

In all textbooks we are told that the main and only reason for the outbreak of the First World War was the assassination of the Austrian Archduke. At the same time, they forget to say that the next day, June 29, another significant murder took place. The French politician Jean Jaurès, who actively opposed the war and had great influence in France, was killed. A few weeks before the assassination of the Archduke, there was an attempt on the life of Rasputin, who, like Zhores, was an opponent of the war and had great influence on Nicholas 2. I would also like to note some facts from the fate of the main characters of those days:

  • Gavrilo Principin. Died in prison in 1918 from tuberculosis.
  • The Russian Ambassador to Serbia is Hartley. In 1914 he died at the Austrian embassy in Serbia, where he came for a reception.
  • Colonel Apis, leader of the Black Hand. Shot in 1917.
  • In 1917, Hartley’s correspondence with Sozonov (the next Russian ambassador to Serbia) disappeared.

This all indicates that in the events of the day there were a lot of black spots that have not yet been revealed. And this is very important to understand.

England's role in starting the war

At the beginning of the 20th century, there were 2 great powers in continental Europe: Germany and Russia. They did not want to openly fight against each other, since their forces were approximately equal. Therefore, in the “July crisis” of 1914, both sides took a wait-and-see approach. British diplomacy came to the fore. She conveyed her position to Germany through the press and secret diplomacy - in the event of war, England would remain neutral or take Germany's side. Through open diplomacy, Nicholas 2 received the opposite idea that if war broke out, England would take the side of Russia.

It must be clearly understood that one open statement from England that it would not allow war in Europe would be enough for neither Germany nor Russia to even think about anything like that. Naturally, under such conditions, Austria-Hungary would not have dared to attack Serbia. But England, with all its diplomacy, pushed European countries towards war.

Russia before the war

Before the First World War, Russia carried out army reform. In 1907, a reform of the fleet was carried out, and in 1910, a reform of the ground forces. The country increased military spending many times over, and the total peacetime army size was now 2 million. In 1912, Russia adopted a new Field Service Charter. Today it is rightly called the most perfect Charter of its time, since it motivated soldiers and commanders to show personal initiative. Important point! The doctrine of the army of the Russian Empire was offensive.

Despite the fact that there were many positive changes, there were also very serious miscalculations. The main one is the underestimation of the role of artillery in war. As the course of events of the First World War showed, this was a terrible mistake, which clearly showed that at the beginning of the 20th century, Russian generals were seriously behind the times. They lived in the past, when the role of cavalry was important. As a result, 75% of all losses in the First World War were caused by artillery! This is a verdict on the imperial generals.

It is important to note that Russia never completed preparations for war (at the proper level), while Germany completed it in 1914.

The balance of forces and means before and after the war

Artillery

Number of guns

Of these, heavy guns

Austria-Hungary

Germany

According to the data from the table, it is clear that Germany and Austria-Hungary were many times superior to Russia and France in heavy weapons. Therefore, the balance of power was in favor of the first two countries. Moreover, the Germans, as usual, created an excellent military industry before the war, which produced 250,000 shells daily. By comparison, Britain produced 10,000 shells per month! As they say, feel the difference...

Another example showing the importance of artillery is the battles on the Dunajec Gorlice line (May 1915). In 4 hours, the German army fired 700,000 shells. For comparison, during the entire Franco-Prussian War (1870-71), Germany fired just over 800,000 shells. That is, in 4 hours a little less than during the entire war. The Germans clearly understood that heavy artillery would play a decisive role in the war.

Weapons and military equipment

Production of weapons and equipment during the First World War (thousands of units).

Strelkovoe

Artillery

Great Britain

TRIPLE ALLIANCE

Germany

Austria-Hungary

This table clearly shows the weakness of the Russian Empire in terms of equipping the army. In all main indicators, Russia is much inferior to Germany, but also inferior to France and Great Britain. Largely because of this, the war turned out to be so difficult for our country.


Number of people (infantry)

Number of fighting infantry (millions of people).

At the beginning of the war

By the end of the war

Casualties

Great Britain

TRIPLE ALLIANCE

Germany

Austria-Hungary

The table shows that Great Britain made the smallest contribution to the war, both in terms of combatants and deaths. This is logical, since the British did not really participate in major battles. Another example from this table is instructive. All textbooks tell us that Austria-Hungary, due to large losses, could not fight on its own, and it always needed help from Germany. But notice Austria-Hungary and France in the table. The numbers are identical! Just as Germany had to fight for Austria-Hungary, so Russia had to fight for France (it is no coincidence that the Russian army saved Paris from capitulation three times during the First World War).

The table also shows that in fact the war was between Russia and Germany. Both countries lost 4.3 million killed, while Britain, France and Austria-Hungary together lost 3.5 million. The numbers are eloquent. But it turned out that the countries that fought the most and made the most effort in the war ended up with nothing. First, Russia signed the shameful Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, losing many lands. Then Germany signed the Treaty of Versailles, essentially losing its independence.


Progress of the war

Military events of 1914

July 28 Austria-Hungary declares war on Serbia. This entailed the involvement of the countries of the Triple Alliance, on the one hand, and the Entente, on the other hand, into the war.

Russia entered World War I on August 1, 1914. Nikolai Nikolaevich Romanov (Uncle of Nicholas 2) was appointed Supreme Commander-in-Chief.

In the first days of the war, St. Petersburg was renamed Petrograd. Since the war with Germany began, the capital could not have a name of German origin - “burg”.

Historical reference


German "Schlieffen Plan"

Germany found itself under the threat of war on two fronts: Eastern - with Russia, Western - with France. Then the German command developed the “Schlieffen Plan”, according to which Germany should defeat France in 40 days and then fight with Russia. Why 40 days? The Germans believed that this was exactly what Russia would need to mobilize. Therefore, when Russia mobilizes, France will already be out of the game.

On August 2, 1914, Germany captured Luxembourg, on August 4 they invaded Belgium (a neutral country at that time), and by August 20 Germany reached the borders of France. The implementation of the Schlieffen Plan began. Germany advanced deep into France, but on September 5 it was stopped at the Marne River, where a battle took place in which about 2 million people took part on both sides.

Northwestern Front of Russia in 1914

At the beginning of the war, Russia did something stupid that Germany could not calculate. Nicholas 2 decided to enter the war without fully mobilizing the army. On August 4, Russian troops, under the command of Rennenkampf, launched an offensive in East Prussia (modern Kaliningrad). Samsonov's army was equipped to help her. Initially, the troops acted successfully, and Germany was forced to retreat. As a result, part of the forces of the Western Front was transferred to the Eastern Front. The result - Germany repelled the Russian offensive in East Prussia (the troops acted disorganized and lacked resources), but as a result the Schlieffen plan failed, and France could not be captured. So, Russia saved Paris, albeit by defeating its 1st and 2nd armies. After this, trench warfare began.

Southwestern Front of Russia

On the southwestern front, in August-September, Russia launched an offensive operation against Galicia, which was occupied by troops of Austria-Hungary. The Galician operation was more successful than the offensive in East Prussia. In this battle, Austria-Hungary suffered a catastrophic defeat. 400 thousand people killed, 100 thousand captured. For comparison, the Russian army lost 150 thousand people killed. After this, Austria-Hungary actually withdrew from the war, since it lost the ability to conduct independent actions. Austria was saved from complete defeat only by the help of Germany, which was forced to transfer additional divisions to Galicia.

The main results of the military campaign of 1914

  • Germany failed to implement the Schlieffen plan for lightning war.
  • No one managed to gain a decisive advantage. The war turned into a positional one.

Map of military events of 1914-15


Military events of 1915

In 1915, Germany decided to shift the main blow to the eastern front, directing all its forces to the war with Russia, which was the weakest country of the Entente, according to the Germans. It was a strategic plan developed by the commander of the Eastern Front, General von Hindenburg. Russia managed to thwart this plan only at the cost of colossal losses, but at the same time, 1915 turned out to be simply terrible for the empire of Nicholas 2.


Situation on the northwestern front

From January to October, Germany waged an active offensive, as a result of which Russia lost Poland, western Ukraine, part of the Baltic states, and western Belarus. Russia went on the defensive. Russian losses were gigantic:

  • Killed and wounded - 850 thousand people
  • Captured - 900 thousand people

Russia did not capitulate, but the countries of the Triple Alliance were convinced that Russia would no longer be able to recover from the losses it had suffered.

Germany's successes on this sector of the front led to the fact that on October 14, 1915, Bulgaria entered the First World War (on the side of Germany and Austria-Hungary).

Situation on the southwestern front

The Germans, together with Austria-Hungary, organized the Gorlitsky breakthrough in the spring of 1915, forcing the entire southwestern front of Russia to retreat. Galicia, which was captured in 1914, was completely lost. Germany was able to achieve this advantage thanks to the terrible mistakes of the Russian command, as well as a significant technical advantage. German superiority in technology reached:

  • 2.5 times in machine guns.
  • 4.5 times in light artillery.
  • 40 times in heavy artillery.

It was not possible to withdraw Russia from the war, but the losses on this section of the front were gigantic: 150 thousand killed, 700 thousand wounded, 900 thousand prisoners and 4 million refugees.

Situation on the Western Front

"Everything is calm on the Western Front." This phrase can describe how the war between Germany and France proceeded in 1915. There were sluggish military operations in which no one sought the initiative. Germany was implementing plans in eastern Europe, and England and France were calmly mobilizing their economy and army, preparing for further war. No one provided any assistance to Russia, although Nicholas 2 repeatedly turned to France, first of all, so that it would take active action on the Western Front. As usual, no one heard him... By the way, this sluggish war on Germany’s western front was perfectly described by Hemingway in the novel “A Farewell to Arms.”

The main result of 1915 was that Germany was unable to bring Russia out of the war, although all efforts were devoted to this. It became obvious that the First World War would drag on for a long time, since during the 1.5 years of the war no one was able to gain an advantage or strategic initiative.

Military events of 1916


"Verdun Meat Grinder"

In February 1916, Germany launched a general offensive against France with the goal of capturing Paris. For this purpose, a campaign was carried out on Verdun, which covered the approaches to the French capital. The battle lasted until the end of 1916. During this time, 2 million people died, for which the battle was called the “Verdun Meat Grinder”. France survived, but again thanks to the fact that Russia came to its rescue, which became more active on the southwestern front.

Events on the southwestern front in 1916

In May 1916, Russian troops went on the offensive, which lasted 2 months. This offensive went down in history under the name “Brusilovsky breakthrough”. This name is due to the fact that the Russian army was commanded by General Brusilov. The breakthrough of the defense in Bukovina (from Lutsk to Chernivtsi) happened on June 5. The Russian army managed not only to break through the defenses, but also to advance into its depths in some places up to 120 kilometers. The losses of the Germans and Austro-Hungarians were catastrophic. 1.5 million dead, wounded and prisoners. The offensive was stopped only by additional German divisions, which were hastily transferred here from Verdun (France) and from Italy.

This offensive of the Russian army was not without a fly in the ointment. As usual, the allies dropped her off. On August 27, 1916, Romania entered the First World War on the side of the Entente. Germany defeated her very quickly. As a result, Romania lost its army, and Russia received an additional 2 thousand kilometers of front.

Events on the Caucasian and Northwestern fronts

Positional battles continued on the Northwestern Front during the spring-autumn period. As for the Caucasian Front, the main events here lasted from the beginning of 1916 to April. During this time, 2 operations were carried out: Erzurmur and Trebizond. According to their results, Erzurum and Trebizond were conquered, respectively.

The result of 1916 in the First World War

  • The strategic initiative passed to the side of the Entente.
  • The French fortress of Verdun survived thanks to the offensive of the Russian army.
  • Romania entered the war on the side of the Entente.
  • Russia carried out a powerful offensive - the Brusilov breakthrough.

Military and political events 1917


The year 1917 in the First World War was marked by the fact that the war continued against the background of the revolutionary situation in Russia and Germany, as well as the deterioration of the economic situation of the countries. Let me give you the example of Russia. During the 3 years of the war, prices for basic products increased on average by 4-4.5 times. Naturally, this caused discontent among the people. Add to this heavy losses and a grueling war - it turns out to be excellent soil for revolutionaries. The situation is similar in Germany.

In 1917, the United States entered the First World War. The position of the Triple Alliance is deteriorating. Germany and its allies cannot effectively fight on 2 fronts, as a result of which it goes on the defensive.

The end of the war for Russia

In the spring of 1917, Germany launched another offensive on the Western Front. Despite the events in Russia, Western countries demanded that the Provisional Government implement the agreements signed by the Empire and send troops on the offensive. As a result, on June 16, the Russian army went on the offensive in the Lvov area. Again, we saved the allies from major battles, but we ourselves were completely exposed.

The Russian army, exhausted by the war and losses, did not want to fight. The issues of provisions, uniforms and supplies during the war years were never resolved. The army fought reluctantly, but moved forward. The Germans were forced to transfer troops here again, and Russia's Entente allies again isolated themselves, watching what would happen next. On July 6, Germany launched a counteroffensive. As a result, 150,000 Russian soldiers died. The army virtually ceased to exist. The front fell apart. Russia could no longer fight, and this catastrophe was inevitable.


People demanded Russia's withdrawal from the war. And this was one of their main demands from the Bolsheviks, who seized power in October 1917. Initially, at the 2nd Party Congress, the Bolsheviks signed the decree “On Peace,” essentially proclaiming Russia’s exit from the war, and on March 3, 1918, they signed the Brest-Litovsk Peace Treaty. The conditions of this world were as follows:

  • Russia makes peace with Germany, Austria-Hungary and Turkey.
  • Russia is losing Poland, Ukraine, Finland, part of Belarus and the Baltic states.
  • Russia cedes Batum, Kars and Ardagan to Turkey.

As a result of its participation in the First World War, Russia lost: about 1 million square meters of territory, approximately 1/4 of the population, 1/4 of arable land and 3/4 of the coal and metallurgical industries were lost.

Historical reference

Events in the war in 1918

Germany got rid of the Eastern Front and the need to wage war on two fronts. As a result, in the spring and summer of 1918, she attempted an offensive on the Western Front, but this offensive had no success. Moreover, as it progressed, it became obvious that Germany was getting the most out of itself, and that it needed a break in the war.

Autumn 1918

The decisive events in the First World War took place in the fall. The Entente countries, together with the United States, went on the offensive. The German army was completely driven out of France and Belgium. In October, Austria-Hungary, Turkey and Bulgaria concluded a truce with the Entente, and Germany was left to fight alone. Her situation was hopeless after the German allies in the Triple Alliance essentially capitulated. This resulted in the same thing that happened in Russia - a revolution. On November 9, 1918, Emperor Wilhelm II was overthrown.

End of the First World War


On November 11, 1918, the First World War of 1914-1918 ended. Germany signed a complete surrender. It happened near Paris, in the Compiègne forest, at the Retonde station. The surrender was accepted by the French Marshal Foch. The terms of the signed peace were as follows:

  • Germany admits complete defeat in the war.
  • The return of the province of Alsace and Lorraine to France to the borders of 1870, as well as the transfer of the Saar coal basin.
  • Germany lost all its colonial possessions, and was also obliged to transfer 1/8 of its territory to its geographical neighbors.
  • For 15 years, Entente troops were on the left bank of the Rhine.
  • By May 1, 1921, Germany had to pay members of the Entente (Russia was not entitled to anything) 20 billion marks in gold, goods, securities, etc.
  • Germany must pay reparations for 30 years, and the amount of these reparations is determined by the winners themselves and can be increased at any time during these 30 years.
  • Germany was prohibited from having an army of more than 100 thousand people, and the army had to be exclusively voluntary.

The terms of the “peace” were so humiliating for Germany that the country actually became a puppet. Therefore, many people of that time said that although the First World War ended, it did not end in peace, but in a truce for 30 years. That’s how it ultimately turned out...

Results of the First World War

The First World War was fought on the territory of 14 states. Countries with a total population of over 1 billion people took part in it (this is approximately 62% of the entire world population at that time). In total, 74 million people were mobilized by the participating countries, of whom 10 million died and another 20 million were injured.

As a result of the war, the political map of Europe changed significantly. Such independent states as Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Finland, and Albania appeared. Austro-Hungary split into Austria, Hungary and Czechoslovakia. Romania, Greece, France, and Italy have increased their borders. There were 5 countries that lost and lost territory: Germany, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, Turkey and Russia.

Map of the First World War 1914-1918

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Progress of hostilities

French Theater of Operations - Western Front

Actions beginning in 1915. The intensity of action on the Western Front decreased significantly from the beginning of 1915. Germany concentrated its forces on preparing operations against Russia. The French and British also preferred to take advantage of the resulting pause to accumulate forces. For the first four months of the year, there was almost complete calm on the front, fighting took place only in Artois, in the area of ​​​​the city of Arras (an attempted French offensive in February) and southeast of Verdun, where German positions formed the so-called Ser-Miel salient towards France (an attempt French advance in April). In March, the British made an unsuccessful attempt to attack near the village of Neuve Chapelle (see: Battle of Neuve Chapelle).

The Germans, in turn, launched a counterattack in the north of the front, in Flanders near Ypres, against British troops (April 22 - May 25, see: Second Battle of Ypres). At the same time, Germany, for the first time in the history of mankind and with complete surprise to the Anglo-French, used chemical weapons (chlorine was released from the cylinders). The gas affected 15 thousand people, of whom 5 thousand died. The Germans did not have sufficient reserves to take advantage of the gas attack and break through the front. After the Ypres gas attack, both sides very quickly managed to develop gas masks of various designs, and further attempts to use chemical weapons no longer took large numbers of troops by surprise.

During these military operations, which produced the most insignificant results with noticeable casualties, both sides became convinced that an assault on well-equipped positions (several lines of trenches, dugouts, barbed wire fences) was futile without active artillery preparation.

Spring operation in Artois. On May 3, the Entente launched a new offensive in Artois. The offensive was carried out by joint Anglo-French forces. The French advanced north of Arras, the British - in an adjacent area in the Neuve Chapelle area. The offensive was organized in a new way: huge forces (30 infantry divisions, 9 cavalry corps, more than 1,700 guns) were concentrated on a 30-kilometer offensive area. The offensive was preceded by a six-day artillery preparation (2.1 million shells were spent), which was supposed to completely suppress the resistance of German troops. The calculations did not come true. The huge losses of the Entente (130 thousand people) suffered over six weeks of fighting did not completely correspond to the results achieved - by mid-June the French had advanced 3-4 km along a 7 km front, and the British had advanced less than 1 km along a 3 km front.

Autumn operation in Champagne and Artois. By the beginning of September, the Entente had prepared a new major offensive, the task of which was to liberate the north of France. The offensive began on September 25 and took place simultaneously in two sectors separated by 120 km - on the 35 km front in Champagne (east of Reims) and on the 20 km front in Artois (near Arras, see: Third Battle of Artois). If successful, the troops advancing from both sides were supposed to close in 80-100 km on the French border (at Mons), which would lead to the liberation of Picardy. Compared to the spring offensive in Artois, the scale was increased: 67 infantry and cavalry divisions, up to 2,600 guns, were involved in the offensive; During the operation, over 5 million shells were fired. The Anglo-French troops used new attack tactics in several “waves”. By the time of the offensive, the German troops were able to improve their defensive positions - a second defensive line was built 5-6 kilometers behind the first defensive line, poorly visible from enemy positions (each of the defensive lines consisted, in turn, of three rows of trenches). The offensive, which lasted until October 7, led to extremely limited results - in both sectors it was possible to break through only the first line of German defense and recapture no more than 2-3 km of territory. At the same time, the losses of both sides were enormous - the Anglo-French lost 200 thousand people killed and wounded, the Germans - 140 thousand people.

Positions of the parties by the end of 1915 and the results of the campaign. Throughout 1915, the front practically did not move - the result of all the fierce offensives was that the front line moved by no more than 10 km. Both sides, increasingly strengthening their defensive positions, were unable to develop tactics that would allow them to break through the front, even under the conditions of an extremely high concentration of forces and many days of artillery preparation. Huge sacrifices on both sides did not produce any significant results. The situation, at the same time, allowed Germany to increase its pressure on the Eastern Front - the entire strengthening of the German army was aimed at fighting Russia, while the improvement of defensive lines and defense tactics allowed the Germans to be confident in the strength of the Western Front with a gradual reduction of those involved in it troops.

The actions of early 1915 showed that the current type of military action creates a huge burden on the economies of the warring countries. New battles required not only the mobilization of millions of citizens, but also a gigantic amount of weapons and ammunition. Pre-war stocks of weapons and ammunition were exhausted, and the warring countries began to quickly rebuild their economies for military needs. The war gradually began to turn from a battle of armies into a battle of economies. The development of new military equipment has intensified as a means of breaking out of the stalemate at the front; armies became more and more mechanized. The armies noticed the significant benefits brought by aviation (reconnaissance and artillery fire adjustment) and automobiles. Methods of trench warfare improved - trench guns, light mortars, and hand grenades appeared.

France and Russia again made attempts to coordinate the actions of their armies - the spring offensive in Artois was intended to distract the Germans from an active offensive against the Russians. On July 7, the first Inter-Allied Conference opened in Chantilly, aimed at planning joint actions of the allies on different fronts and organizing various types of economic and military assistance. The second conference took place there on November 23-26. It was considered necessary to begin preparations for a coordinated offensive by all allied armies in the three main theaters - French, Russian and Italian.

Russian Theater of Operations - Eastern Front

The German command changed its strategy for 1915, deciding to transfer the main blow from the Western Front to the Eastern Front in order to inflict military defeat on Russia and force it to a separate peace. The command of the German army intended to launch successive powerful flank attacks from East Prussia and Galicia to break through the defenses of the Russian army, encircle and defeat its main forces in the Warsaw ledge.

Winter operation in East Prussia. The beginning of the strategic plan of the German command for 1915 to encircle and defeat the Russian army was the so-called Augustow operation (named after the city of Augustow). Despite the initial success of the operation, when the infantry corps of the 10th Russian Army was surrounded and, after fierce and stubborn battles, captured, the Germans failed to break through the Russian front. The 10th Army retreated to new positions in an organized manner. And during the next battle - the Prasnysz operation (February 25 - end of March) - the Germans met fierce resistance from Russian troops, which turned into a counterattack in the Przasnysz area, which led to the Germans withdrawing to their original positions along the border of East Prussia (the Suwalki province remained with Germany ).

Winter operation in the Carpathians. On February 9-11, Austro-German troops launched an offensive in the Carpathians (see: Carpathian operation), putting especially strong pressure on the weakest part of the Russian front in the south, in Bukovina. At the same time, the Russian army launched a counter-offensive, hoping to cross the Carpathians and invade Hungary from north to south. In the northern part of the Carpathians, closer to Krakow, the enemy forces turned out to be equal, and the front practically did not move during the battles in February and March, remaining in the foothills of the Carpathians on the Russian side. But in the south of the Carpathians, the Russian army did not have time to regroup, and by the end of March, Russian troops lost most of Bukovina with Chernivtsi. On March 22, the besieged Austrian fortress of Przemysl fell, more than 120 thousand people surrendered. The capture of Przemysl was the last major success of the Russian army in 1915.

Gorlitsky breakthrough. The beginning of the Great Retreat of the Russian armies - the loss of Galicia. By mid-spring the situation at the front in Galicia had changed. The Germans expanded their area of ​​operations by transferring their troops to the northern and central part of the front in Austria-Hungary; the weaker Austro-Hungarians were now responsible only for the southern part of the front. In an area of ​​35 km, the Germans concentrated 32 divisions and 1,500 guns; Russian troops were outnumbered by 2 times and were completely deprived of heavy artillery; the shortage of main (three-inch) caliber shells also began to affect them. On April 19 (May 2), German troops launched an attack on the center of the Russian position in Austria-Hungary - Gorlitsa, aiming a basic attack at Lvov (see: Gorlitsky breakthrough). Further events were unfavorable for the Russian army: the numerical dominance of the Germans, unsuccessful maneuvering and the use of reserves, an increasing shortage of shells and the complete predominance of German heavy artillery led to the fact that by April 22 (May 5) the front in the Gorlitsy area was broken through. The beginning of the retreat of the Russian armies continued until June 9 (22) (see: The Great Retreat of 1915). The entire front south of Warsaw moved towards Russia. The Radom and Kielce provinces were left in the Kingdom of Poland, the front passed through Lublin (behind Russia); from the territories of Austria-Hungary, most of Galicia was abandoned (the newly taken Przemysl was abandoned on June 3 (16), and Lvov on June 9, only a small (up to 40 km deep) strip with Brody, the entire Tarnopol region and a small part of Bukovina. The retreat, which began with a breakthrough by the Germans, by the time Lvov was abandoned, had acquired a planned character, Russian troops were withdrawing in relative order. But nevertheless, such a major military failure was accompanied by a loss of morale in the Russian army and mass surrenders.

Continuation of the Great Retreat of the Russian armies - the loss of Poland. Having achieved success in the southern part of the theater of operations, the German command decided to immediately continue an active offensive in its northern part - in the Warsaw ledge and in East Prussia - the Baltic region. Since the Gorlitsky breakthrough did not ultimately lead to the complete collapse of the Russian front (Russian troops were able to stabilize the situation and close the front at the cost of a deep retreat), this time the tactics were changed - it was planned to break through the front not in one direction, but breakouts in three at once directions. Two directions of attack were aimed at the Warsaw salient (where the Russian front continued to form a salient towards Germany) - the Germans planned front breakthroughs from the north, from East Prussia (a breakthrough to the south between Warsaw and Lomza, in the area of ​​the Narew River), and from the south, from sides of Galicia (to the north along the Vistula and Bug rivers); Moreover, the directions of both breakthroughs converged on the border of the Kingdom of Poland, in the area of ​​​​Brest-Litovsk; If the German plan was carried out, Russian troops had to leave the entire Warsaw ledge in order to avoid encirclement in the Warsaw area. The third offensive, from East Prussia towards Riga, was planned as an offensive on a broad front, without concentration on a narrow area and without a breakthrough.

The offensive between the Vistula and Bug was launched on June 13, and on June 30 (July 13) the Narew operation began. After fierce fighting, the front was broken in both places, and the Russian army, as envisaged by the German plan, began a general retreat from the Warsaw salient. On July 22 (August 4) Warsaw and the Ivangorod fortress were abandoned, on August 7 (20) the Novogeorgievsk fortress fell, on August 9 (22) the Osovets fortress fell, on August 13 (26) Russian troops abandoned Brest-Litovsk, and on August 19 (September 2) - Grodno.

The offensive from East Prussia (Rigo-Schavel operation) began on July 1 (14). In a month of fighting, Russian troops were pushed back beyond the Neman, the Germans captured Courland with Mitava and the most important naval base of Libau, Kovno, and came close to Riga.

The success of the German offensive was facilitated by the fact that by the summer the crisis in the military supply of the Russian army had reached its maximum. Of particular importance was the so-called “shell famine” - an acute shortage of shells for the artillery guns of the Russian army. The capture of the Novogeorgievsk fortress, accompanied by the surrender of large parts of troops and undamaged weapons and property without a fight, caused a new outbreak of spy mania and rumors of treason in Russian society. the abandoned provinces of the Privislen region provided Russia with about a quarter of coal production; the loss of these deposits led to the fact that from the end of 1915 a fuel crisis began in Russia, which, at the same time, was resolved at the expense of Donbass coal already in 1916.

Completion of the great retreat and stabilization of the front. On August 9 (22), the Germans moved the direction of the main attack; now the main offensive took place along the front north of Vilno, in the Sventsyan region, and was directed towards Minsk (see: Vilna operation). On August 27-28 (September 8-9), the Germans, taking advantage of the loose location of Russian units, were able to break through the front (Sventsyansky breakthrough). Large cavalry units were thrown into the breakthrough. However, the Germans failed to expand the breakthrough; the cavalry came under a counterattack by the Russian armies and was defeated. The advance of the German armies faltered.

On December 14 (27), Russian troops launched an offensive against the Austro-Hungarian troops on the Strypa River, in the Ternopil region, caused by the need to distract the Austrians from the Serbian front, where the position of the Serbs had become very difficult. Attempts at the offensive did not bring any success, and on January 15 (29) the operation was stopped.

Meanwhile, the retreat of the Russian armies continued south of the Sventsyansky breakthrough zone. In August, Russian troops abandoned Vladimir-Volynsky, Kovel, Lutsk, and Pinsk. On the southern flank of the front the situation was stable, since by that time the Austro-Hungarian forces were distracted by battles in Serbia and on the Italian front. By the end of September - beginning of October, the front stabilized, and there was a lull along its entire length. The offensive potential of the Germans was exhausted, Russia began to restore its troops that were badly damaged during the retreat and strengthen new defensive lines.

Positions of the parties by the end of 1915. By the end of 1915, the front had become almost a straight line connecting the Baltic and Black Seas; The front bulge in the Warsaw salient completely disappeared - it was completely occupied by Germany. Courland was occupied by Germany, the front came close to Riga and then went along the Western Dvina to the fortified area of ​​​​Dvinsk. Then the front passed through the North-Western region: Kovno, Vilna, Grodno provinces, the western part of Minsk province were occupied by Germany (Minsk remained with Russia). Then the front passed through the South-Western region: the western third of the Volyn province with Lutsk was occupied by Germany, Rivne remained with Russia. After this, the front moved to the former territory of Austria-Hungary, where Russian troops retained part of the Tarnopol region in Galicia. Further, to the Bessarabia province, the front returned to the pre-war border with Austria-Hungary and ended at the border with neutral Romania.

The new configuration of the front, which had no protrusions and was densely filled with troops of both sides, naturally pushed for a transition to trench warfare and defensive tactics.

Results of the 1915 campaign on the Eastern Front. The results of the 1915 campaign for Germany in the east were in some ways similar to the 1914 campaign in the west: Germany was able to achieve significant military victories and capture enemy territory, Germany's tactical advantage in maneuver warfare was obvious; but at the same time, the general goal - the complete defeat of one of the opponents and its withdrawal from the war - was not achieved in 1915. While winning tactical victories, the Central Powers were unable to completely defeat their leading opponents, while their economy became increasingly weaker. Russia, despite large losses in territory and manpower, fully retained the ability to continue the war (despite the fact that its army lost its offensive spirit during the long period of retreat). In addition, by the end of the Great Retreat in Russia, the military supply crisis had been overcome, and the situation with artillery and shells had returned to normal by the end of the year. Fierce fighting and heavy losses of life led the economies of Germany and Austria-Hungary to overstrain, the negative results of which would be more and more noticeable in the coming years.

Russia's failures were accompanied by important personnel changes. On June 30 (July 13), Minister of War V. A. Sukhomlinov was replaced by A. A. Polivanov. Subsequently, Sukhomlinov was put on trial, which caused another outbreak of suspicion and spy mania. On August 10 (23), Nicholas II assumed the duties of commander-in-chief of the Russian army, moving Grand Duke Nikolai Nikolaevich to the Caucasian front. The actual leadership of military operations passed from N. N. Yanushkevich to M. V. Alekseev. The Tsar's assumption of supreme command entailed major positive changes in the situation at the fronts and extremely significant internal political consequences.

Italy's entry into the war

Since the beginning of the war, Italy remained neutral. On August 3, 1914, the Italian king informed William II that the conditions for the outbreak of war did not correspond to those conditions in the Treaty of the Triple Alliance under which Italy should enter the war. On the same day, the Italian government published a declaration of neutrality. After lengthy negotiations between Italy and the Central Powers and the Entente countries, the London Pact was concluded on April 26, 1915, according to which Italy pledged to declare war on Austria-Hungary within a month, and, in addition, to oppose all enemies of the Entente. A number of territories were promised to Italy as “payment for blood.” England provided Italy with a loan of 50 million pounds. Despite subsequent reciprocal offers of territories from the Central Powers, against the backdrop of fierce internal political clashes between opponents and supporters of the two blocs, on May 23 Italy declared war on Austria-Hungary.

Balkan theater of war, Bulgaria's entry into the war

Until the autumn there was no activity on the Serbian front. By the beginning of autumn, after the completion of a successful campaign to oust Russian troops from Galicia and Bukovina, the Austro-Hungarians and Germans were able to transfer a huge number of troops to attack Serbia. At the same time, it was expected that Bulgaria, impressed by the successes of the Central Powers, intended to enter the war on their side. In this case, sparsely populated Serbia with a small army found itself surrounded by enemies on two fronts, and faced inevitable military defeat. Anglo-French assistance arrived very late - only on October 5 did troops begin to land in Thessaloniki (Greece); Russia could not help, since neutral Romania refused to let Russian troops through. On October 5, the offensive of the Central Powers from Austria-Hungary began; on October 14, Bulgaria declared war on the Entente countries and began military operations against Serbia. The troops of the Serbs, British and French were numerically inferior to the forces of the Central Powers by more than 2 times and had no chance of success.

By the end of December, Serbian troops left the territory of Serbia, going to Albania, from where in January 1916 their remnants were evacuated to the island of Corfu and Bizerte. In December, Anglo-French troops retreated to Greek territory, to Thessaloniki, where they were able to gain a foothold, forming the Thessaloniki Front along the Greek border with Bulgaria and Serbia. The personnel of the Serbian Army (up to 150 thousand people) were retained and in the spring of 1916 they strengthened the Thessaloniki Front.

The accession of Bulgaria to the Central Powers and the fall of Serbia opened up direct land communication for the Central Powers with Turkey.

Military operations in the Dardanelles and Gallipoli Peninsula

By the beginning of 1915, the Anglo-French command had developed a joint operation to break through the Dardanelles Strait and enter the Sea of ​​Marmara, towards Constantinople (see: Dardanelles Operation). The objective of the operation was to ensure free maritime communication through the straits and divert Turkish forces from the Caucasian front.

According to the original plan, the breakthrough was to be carried out by the British fleet, which was to destroy the coastal batteries without landing troops. After initial unsuccessful attacks by small forces (19–25 February), the British fleet launched a general attack on 18 March, which involved more than 20 battleships, battlecruisers and obsolete ironclads. After the loss of 3 ships, the British, without achieving success, left the strait.

After this, the Entente’s tactics changed - it was decided to land expeditionary forces on the Gallipoli Peninsula (on the European side of the straits) and on the opposite Asian coast. The Entente landing force (80 thousand people), consisting of the British, French, Australians and New Zealanders, began landing on April 25. The landings took place on three beachheads, divided between the participating countries. The attackers managed to hold out only on one of the sections of Gallipoli, where the Australian and New Zealand Corps (ANZAC) was landed. Fierce fighting and the transfer of new Entente reinforcements continued until mid-August, but none of the attempts to attack the Turks produced any significant results. By the end of August, the failure of the operation became obvious, and the Entente began to prepare for the gradual evacuation of troops. The last troops from Gallipoli were evacuated in early January 1916. The bold strategic plan, initiated by W. Churchill, ended in complete failure.

Military operations on the Caucasian front

On the Caucasian Front in July, Russian troops repelled the offensive of Turkish troops in the area of ​​Lake Van, while ceding part of the territory (Alashkert operation). The fighting spread to Persian territory. On October 30, Russian troops landed in the port of Anzeli, by the end of December they defeated pro-Turkish armed detachments and took control of the territory of Northern Persia, preventing Persia from attacking Russia and securing the left flank of the Caucasian army.

Russo-Swedish War 1808-1809

Europe, Africa and the Middle East (briefly in China and the Pacific Islands)

Economic imperialism, territorial and economic claims, trade barriers, arms race, militarism and autocracy, balance of power, local conflicts, allied obligations of European powers.

Victory of the Entente. The February and October revolutions in Russia and the November revolution in Germany. Collapse of the Ottoman Empire and Austria-Hungary. The beginning of the penetration of American capital into Europe.

Opponents

Bulgaria (since 1915)

Italy (since 1915)

Romania (since 1916)

USA (since 1917)

Greece (since 1917)

Commanders

Nicholas II †

Franz Joseph I †

Grand Duke Nikolai Nikolaevich

M. V. Alekseev †

F. von Goetzendorf

A. A. Brusilov

A. von Straussenburg

L. G. Kornilov †

Wilhelm II

A. F. Kerensky

E. von Falkenhayn

N. N. Dukhonin †

Paul von Hindenburg

N. V. Krylenko

H. von Moltke (the Younger)

R. Poincaré

J. Clemenceau

E. Ludendorff

Crown Prince Ruprecht

Mehmed V †

R. Nivelle

Enver Pasha

M. Ataturk

G. Asquith

Ferdinand I

D. Lloyd George

J. Jellicoe

G. Stoyanov-Todorov

G. Kitchener †

L. Dunsterville

Prince Regent Alexander

R. Putnik †

Albert I

J. Vukotich

Victor Emmanuel III

L. Cadorna

Prince Luigi

Ferdinand I

K. Prezan

A. Averescu

T. Wilson

J. Pershing

P. Danglis

Okuma Shigenobu

Terauchi Masatake

Hussein bin Ali

Military losses

Military deaths: 5,953,372
Military injured: 9,723,991
Missing military personnel: 4,000,676

Military deaths: 4,043,397
Military injured: 8,465,286
Missing military personnel: 3,470,138

(July 28, 1914 - November 11, 1918) - one of the most large-scale armed conflicts in human history.

This name was established in historiography only after the outbreak of World War II in 1939. During the interwar period the name " Great War"(English) TheGreatWar, fr. La Grandeguerre), in the Russian Empire it was sometimes called “ Second Patriotic War", as well as informally (both before the revolution and after) - " German"; then to the USSR - “ imperialist war».

The immediate cause of the war was the Sarajevo assassination of Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand on June 28, 1914 by nineteen-year-old Serbian student Gavrilo Princip, who was one of the members of the terrorist organization Mlada Bosna, which fought for the unification of all South Slavic peoples into one state.

As a result of the war, four empires ceased to exist: Russian, Austro-Hungarian, German and Ottoman. The participating countries lost about 12 million people killed (including civilians), and about 55 million were wounded.

Participants

Allies of the Entente(supported the Entente in the war): USA, Japan, Serbia, Italy (participated in the war on the side of the Entente since 1915, despite being a member of the Triple Alliance), Montenegro, Belgium, Egypt, Portugal, Romania, Greece, Brazil, China, Cuba, Nicaragua, Siam, Haiti, Liberia, Panama, Guatemala, Honduras, Costa Rica, Bolivia, Dominican Republic, Peru, Uruguay, Ecuador.

Timeline of declaration of war

Who declared war

To whom was war declared?

Germany

Germany

Germany

Germany

Germany

Germany

British Empire and France

Germany

British Empire and France

Germany

Portugal

Germany

Germany

Panama and Cuba

Germany

Germany

Germany

Germany

Germany

Brazil

Germany

End of the war

Background to the conflict

Long before the war, contradictions were growing in Europe between the great powers - Germany, Austria-Hungary, France, Great Britain, and Russia.

The German Empire, formed after the Franco-Prussian War of 1870, sought political and economic dominance on the European continent. Having joined the struggle for colonies only after 1871, Germany wanted the redistribution of the colonial possessions of England, France, Belgium, the Netherlands and Portugal in its favor.

Russia, France and Great Britain sought to counteract the hegemonic aspirations of Germany. Why was the Entente formed?

Austria-Hungary, being a multinational empire, was a constant source of instability in Europe due to internal ethnic contradictions. She sought to retain Bosnia and Herzegovina, which she captured in 1908 (see: Bosnian crisis). It opposed Russia, which took on the role of protector of all Slavs in the Balkans, and Serbia, which claimed to be the unifying center of the South Slavs.

In the Middle East, the interests of almost all powers collided, striving to achieve the division of the collapsing Ottoman Empire (Turkey). According to the agreements reached between the members of the Entente, at the end of the war, all the straits between the Black and Aegean Seas would go to Russia, thus Russia would gain full control of the Black Sea and Constantinople.

The confrontation between the Entente countries on the one hand and Germany and Austria-Hungary on the other led to the First World War, where the opponents of the Entente: Russia, Great Britain and France - and its allies were the bloc of Central Powers: Germany, Austria-Hungary, Turkey and Bulgaria - in which Germany played a leading role. By 1914, two blocks had finally taken shape:

Entente bloc (formed by 1907 after the conclusion of the Russian-French, Anglo-French and Anglo-Russian alliance treaties):

  • Great Britain;

Block Triple Alliance:

  • Germany;

Italy, however, entered the war in 1915 on the side of the Entente - but Turkey and Bulgaria joined Germany and Austria-Hungary during the war, forming the Quadruple Alliance (or bloc of the Central Powers).

The reasons for the war mentioned in various sources include economic imperialism, trade barriers, the arms race, militarism and autocracy, the balance of power, local conflicts that took place the day before (the Balkan Wars, the Italian-Turkish War), orders for general mobilization in Russia and Germany, territorial claims and the alliance obligations of the European powers.

The state of the armed forces at the beginning of the war


A strong blow to the German army was the reduction in its numbers: the reason for this is considered to be the short-sighted policy of the Social Democrats. For the period 1912-1916 in Germany, a reduction in the army was planned, which did not contribute in any way to increasing its combat effectiveness. The Social Democratic government constantly cut funding for the army (which, however, does not apply to the navy).

This policy, destructive of the army, led to the fact that by the beginning of 1914, unemployment in Germany increased by 8% (compared to 1910 levels). The army experienced a chronic lack of necessary military equipment. There was a lack of modern weapons. There were not enough funds to sufficiently equip the army with machine guns - Germany lagged behind in this area. The same applied to aviation - the German aircraft fleet was numerous, but outdated. The main aircraft of the German Luftstreitkrafte was the most popular, but at the same time hopelessly outdated aircraft in Europe - a Taube-type monoplane.

The mobilization also saw the requisitioning of a significant number of civilian and mail aircraft. Moreover, aviation was designated as a separate branch of the military only in 1916; before that, it was listed in the “transport troops” ( Kraftfahrers). But aviation was given little importance in all armies except the French, where aviation had to carry out regular air raids on the territory of Alsace-Lorraine, Rhineland, and the Bavarian Palatinate. The total financial costs for military aviation in France in 1913 amounted to 6 million francs, in Germany - 322 thousand marks, in Russia - about 1 million rubles. The latter achieved significant success, having built, shortly before the start of the war, the world's first four-engine aircraft, which was destined to become the first strategic bomber. Since 1865, the State Agrarian University and the Obukhov plant have successfully collaborated with the Krupp company. This Krupp company collaborated with Russia and France until the very beginning of the war.

German shipyards (including Blohm & Voss) built, but did not have time to complete before the start of the war, 6 destroyers for Russia, based on the design of the later famous Novik, built at the Putilov plant and armed with weapons produced at the Obukhov plant. Despite the Russian-French alliance, Krupp and other German firms regularly sent their latest weapons for testing to Russia. But under Nicholas II, preference began to be given to French guns. Thus, Russia, taking into account the experience of two leading artillery manufacturers, entered the war with good artillery of small and medium calibers, having 1 barrel per 786 soldiers against 1 barrel per 476 soldiers in the German army, but in heavy artillery the Russian army lagged significantly behind the German army, having 1 gun per 22,241 soldiers and officers versus 1 gun per 2,798 soldiers in the German army. And this is not counting the mortars, which were already in service with the German army and which were not available at all in the Russian army in 1914.

Also, it should be noted that the saturation of infantry units with machine guns in the Russian army was not inferior to the German and French armies. So the Russian infantry regiment of 4 battalions (16 companies) had in its staff on May 6, 1910 a machine gun team of 8 Maxim heavy machine guns, that is, 0.5 machine guns per company, “in the German and French armies there were six of them per regiment of 12 companies.

Events before the start of the First World War

On June 28, 1914, Gavriil Princip, a nineteen-year-old Bosnian Serb student and member of the nationalist Serbian terrorist organization Mlada Bosna, assassinates the heir to the Austrian throne, Archduke Franz Ferdinand, and his wife Sofia Chotek in Sarajevo. The Austrian and German ruling circles decided to use this Sarajevo murder as a pretext for starting a European war. July 5 Germany promises support for Austria-Hungary in the event of a conflict with Serbia.

On July 23, Austria-Hungary, declaring that Serbia was behind the assassination of Franz Ferdinand, announces an ultimatum, in which it demands that Serbia fulfill obviously impossible conditions, including: purge the state apparatus and army of officers and officials found in anti-Austrian propaganda; arrest suspects of promoting terrorism; allow the Austrian-Hungarian police to conduct investigations and punishments for those responsible for anti-Austrian actions on Serbian territory. Only 48 hours were given for a response.

On the same day, Serbia begins mobilization, however, it agrees to all the demands of Austria-Hungary, except for the admission of the Austrian police to its territory. Germany is persistently pushing Austria-Hungary to declare war on Serbia.

On July 25, Germany begins hidden mobilization: without officially announcing it, they began sending out summonses to reservists at recruiting stations.

July 26 Austria-Hungary announces mobilization and begins to concentrate troops on the border with Serbia and Russia.

On July 28, Austria-Hungary, declaring that the demands of the ultimatum had not been fulfilled, declared war on Serbia. Russia says it will not allow the occupation of Serbia.

On the same day, Germany presents Russia with an ultimatum: stop conscription or Germany will declare war on Russia. France, Austria-Hungary and Germany are mobilizing. Germany is massing troops to the Belgian and French borders.

At the same time, on the morning of August 1, the British Foreign Minister E. Gray promised the German ambassador in London Lichnowsky that in the event of a war between Germany and Russia, England would remain neutral, provided that France was not attacked.

1914 Campaign

The war unfolded in two main theaters of military operations - in Western and Eastern Europe, as well as in the Balkans, Northern Italy (from May 1915), in the Caucasus and the Middle East (from November 1914) in the colonies of European states - in Africa, in China, in Oceania. In 1914, all participants in the war were going to end the war in a few months through a decisive offensive; no one expected the war to become protracted.

Beginning of the First World War

Germany, in accordance with a pre-developed plan for waging a lightning war, the “blitzkrieg” (Schlieffen plan), sent the main forces to the western front, hoping to defeat France with a quick blow before the completion of the mobilization and deployment of the Russian army, and then deal with Russia.

The German command intended to deliver the main blow through Belgium to the unprotected north of France, bypass Paris from the west and take the French army, whose main forces were concentrated on the fortified eastern, Franco-German border, into a huge “cauldron”.

On August 1, Germany declared war on Russia, and on the same day the Germans invaded Luxembourg without any declaration of war.

France appealed to England for help, but the British government, by a vote of 12 to 6, refused France's support, declaring that "France should not count on help that we are currently unable to provide," adding that "if the Germans invade to Belgium and will occupy only the “corner” of this country closest to Luxembourg, and not the coast, England will remain neutral.”

To which the French Ambassador to Great Britain, Kambo, said that if England now betrays its allies: France and Russia, then after the war it will have a bad time, regardless of who the winner is. The British government, in fact, pushed the Germans to aggression. The German leadership decided that England would not enter the war and moved on to decisive action.

On August 2, German troops finally occupied Luxembourg, and Belgium was given an ultimatum to allow German armies to enter the border with France. Only 12 hours were given for reflection.

On August 3, Germany declared war on France, accusing it of “organized attacks and aerial bombardments of Germany” and “violating Belgian neutrality.”

On August 4, German troops poured across the Belgian border. King Albert of Belgium turned for help to the guarantor countries of Belgian neutrality. London, contrary to its previous statements, sent an ultimatum to Berlin: stop the invasion of Belgium or England will declare war on Germany, to which Berlin declared “betrayal”. After the ultimatum expired, Great Britain declared war on Germany and sent 5.5 divisions to help France.

The First World War has begun.

Progress of hostilities

French Theater of Operations - Western Front

Strategic plans of the parties at the beginning of the war. At the beginning of the war, Germany was guided by a fairly old military doctrine - the Schlieffen plan - which provided for the instant defeat of France before the “clumsy” Russia could mobilize and advance its army to the borders. The attack was planned through the territory of Belgium (with the aim of bypassing the main French forces); Paris was initially supposed to be taken in 39 days. In a nutshell, the essence of the plan was outlined by William II: “We will have lunch in Paris and dinner in St. Petersburg”. In 1906, the plan was modified (under the leadership of General Moltke) and acquired a less categorical character - a significant part of the troops was still supposed to be left on the Eastern Front; the attack should have been through Belgium, but without touching neutral Holland.

France, in turn, was guided by a military doctrine (the so-called Plan 17), which prescribed starting the war with the liberation of Alsace-Lorraine. The French expected that the main forces of the German army would initially be concentrated against Alsace.

Invasion of the German army into Belgium. Having crossed the Belgian border on the morning of August 4, the German army, following the Schlieffen Plan, easily swept away the weak barriers of the Belgian army and moved deeper into Belgium. The Belgian army, which the Germans outnumbered by more than 10 times, unexpectedly put up active resistance, which, however, was unable to significantly delay the enemy. Bypassing and blocking the well-fortified Belgian fortresses: Liege (fell on August 16, see: Assault of Liege), Namur (fell on August 25) and Antwerp (fell on October 9), the Germans drove the Belgian army in front of them and took Brussels on August 20, at which the same day coming into contact with the Anglo-French forces. The movement of the German troops was rapid; the Germans, without stopping, bypassed the cities and fortresses that continued to defend themselves. The Belgian government fled to Le Havre. King Albert I, with the last remaining combat-ready units, continued to defend Antwerp. The invasion of Belgium came as a surprise to the French command, but the French were able to organize the transfer of their units in the direction of the breakthrough much faster than expected by German plans.

Actions in Alsace and Lorraine. On August 7, the French, with the forces of the 1st and 2nd armies, began an offensive in Alsace, and on August 14 - in Lorraine. The offensive had symbolic significance for the French - the territory of Alsace-Lorraine was torn away from France in 1871, after defeat in the Franco-Prussian War. Although they initially managed to penetrate deeper into German territory, capturing Saarbrücken and Mulhouse, the simultaneously unfolding German offensive in Belgium forced them to transfer part of their troops there. The subsequent counterattacks did not meet sufficient resistance from the French, and by the end of August the French army retreated to its previous positions, leaving Germany with a small part of French territory.

Border battle. On August 20, the Anglo-French and German troops came into contact - the Border Battle began. At the start of the war, the French command did not expect that the main offensive of German troops would take place through Belgium; the main forces of the French troops were concentrated against Alsace. From the beginning of the invasion of Belgium, the French began actively moving units in the direction of the breakthrough; by the time they came into contact with the Germans, the front was in sufficient disarray, and the French and British were forced to fight with three groups of troops that were not in contact. On the territory of Belgium, near Mons, the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) was located, and to the southeast, near Charleroi, there was the 5th French Army. In the Ardennes, approximately along the French border with Belgium and Luxembourg, the 3rd and 4th French armies were stationed. In all three regions, the Anglo-French troops suffered a heavy defeat (the Battle of Mons, the Battle of Charleroi, the Ardennes operation (1914)), losing about 250 thousand people, and the Germans from the north invaded France on a wide front, delivering the main blow to the west, bypassing Paris, thus taking the French army in a giant pincer.

The German armies were rapidly moving forward. The British units retreated to the coast in disarray; the French command was not confident in the ability to hold Paris; on September 2, the French government moved to Bordeaux. The defense of the city was led by the energetic General Gallieni. The French forces were regrouping to a new line of defense along the Marne River. The French prepared energetically to defend the capital, taking extraordinary measures. The episode is widely known when Gallieni ordered an urgent transfer of an infantry brigade to the front, using Parisian taxis for this purpose.

The unsuccessful August actions of the French army forced its commander, General Joffre, to immediately replace a large number (up to 30% of the total number) of poorly performing generals; the renewal and rejuvenation of the French generals was subsequently assessed extremely positively.

Battle of the Marne. The German army did not have enough strength to complete the operation to bypass Paris and encircle the French army. The troops, having marched hundreds of kilometers in battle, were exhausted, communications were stretched out, there was nothing to cover the flanks and emerging gaps, there were no reserves, they had to maneuver with the same units, driving them back and forth, so the Headquarters agreed with the commander’s proposal: making a roundabout maneuver 1 Von Kluck's th army reduced the front of the offensive and did not make a deep envelopment of the French army bypassing Paris, but turned east north of the French capital and hit the rear of the main forces of the French army.

Turning east north of Paris, the Germans exposed their right flank and rear to the attack of the French group concentrated to defend Paris. There was nothing to cover the right flank and rear: 2 corps and a cavalry division, originally intended to strengthen the advancing group, were sent to East Prussia to help the defeated 8th German Army. However, the German command took a fatal maneuver: it turned its troops east before reaching Paris, hoping for the passivity of the enemy. The French command did not fail to take advantage of the opportunity and struck the exposed flank and rear of the German army. The First Battle of the Marne began, in which the Allies managed to turn the tide of hostilities in their favor and push German troops on the front from Verdun to Amiens 50-100 kilometers back. The Battle of the Marne was intense, but short-lived - the main battle began on September 5, on September 9 the defeat of the German army became obvious, and by September 12-13 the German army's retreat to the line along the Aisne and Vel rivers was completed.

The Battle of the Marne had great moral significance for all sides. For the French, it was the first victory over the Germans, overcoming the shame of defeat in the Franco-Prussian War. After the Battle of the Marne, capitulatory sentiment in France began to decline. The British realized the insufficient combat power of their troops, and subsequently set a course to increase their armed forces in Europe and strengthen their combat training. German plans for the rapid defeat of France failed; Moltke, who headed the Field General Staff, was replaced by Falkenhayn. Joffre, on the contrary, acquired enormous authority in France. The Battle of the Marne was the turning point of the war in the French theater of operations, after which the continuous retreat of the Anglo-French troops ceased, the front stabilized, and the enemy forces were approximately equal.

"Run to the Sea". Battles in Flanders. The Battle of the Marne turned into the so-called “Run to the Sea” - moving, both armies tried to encircle each other from the flank, which only led to the fact that the front line closed, resting against the shore of the North Sea. The actions of the armies in this flat, populated area, saturated with roads and railways, were characterized by extreme mobility; as soon as one clash ended in the stabilization of the front, both sides quickly moved their troops north, towards the sea, and the battle resumed at the next stage. At the first stage (second half of September), the battles took place along the borders of the Oise and Somme rivers, then, at the second stage (September 29 - October 9), the battles took place along the Scarpa River (Battle of Arras); at the third stage, battles took place near Lille (October 10-15), on the Isère River (October 18-20), and at Ypres (October 30-November 15). On October 9, the last center of resistance of the Belgian army, Antwerp, fell, and the battered Belgian units joined the Anglo-French, occupying the extreme northern position at the front.

By November 15, the entire space between Paris and the North Sea was densely filled with troops of both sides, the front had stabilized, the offensive potential of the Germans had been exhausted, and both sides switched to positional warfare. An important success of the Entente can be considered that it managed to retain the ports that were most convenient for sea communications with England (primarily Calais).

By the end of 1914, Belgium was almost completely conquered by Germany. The Entente retained only a small western part of Flanders with the city of Ypres. Further, south to Nancy, the front passed through the territory of France (the territory lost by the French had the shape of a spindle, 380-400 km long along the front, 100-130 km deep at its widest point from the pre-war border of France towards Paris). Lille was given to the Germans, Arras and Laon remained with the French; The front came closest to Paris (about 70 km) in the area of ​​Noyon (behind the Germans) and Soissons (behind the French). The front then turned east (Reims remained with the French) and moved to the Verdun fortified area. After this, in the Nancy region (behind the French), the zone of active hostilities of 1914 ended, the front continued generally along the border of France and Germany. Neutral Switzerland and Italy did not participate in the war.

Results of the 1914 campaign in the French theater of operations. The 1914 campaign was extremely dynamic. Large armies of both sides maneuvered actively and quickly, which was facilitated by the dense road network of the combat area. The deployment of troops did not always form a continuous front; the troops did not erect long-term defensive lines. By November 1914, a stable front line began to take shape. Both sides, having exhausted their offensive potential, began building trenches and barbed wire barriers designed for permanent use. The war entered a positional phase. Since the length of the entire Western Front (from the North Sea to Switzerland) was a little over 700 kilometers, the density of troops on it was significantly higher than on the Eastern Front. A special feature of the company was that intensive military operations were carried out only on the northern half of the front (north of the Verdun fortified area), where both sides concentrated their main forces. The front from Verdun and to the south was considered by both sides as secondary. The zone lost to the French (of which Picardy was the center) was densely populated and important both agriculturally and industrially.

By the beginning of 1915, the warring powers were faced with the fact that the war had taken on a character that was not foreseen by the pre-war plans of either side - it had become protracted. Although the Germans managed to capture almost all of Belgium and a significant part of France, their main goal - a swift victory over the French - turned out to be completely inaccessible. Both the Entente and the Central Powers had, in essence, to start a new type of war that had not yet been seen by mankind - exhausting, long, requiring the total mobilization of the population and economies.

Germany's relative failure had another important result - Italy, the third member of the Triple Alliance, refrained from entering the war on the side of Germany and Austria-Hungary.

East Prussian operation. On the Eastern Front, the war began with the East Prussian operation. On August 4 (17), the Russian army crossed the border, launching an attack on East Prussia. The 1st Army moved towards Königsberg from the north of the Masurian Lakes, the 2nd Army - from the west of them. The first week of operations of the Russian armies was successful; the numerically inferior Germans gradually retreated; The Gumbinen-Goldap battle on August 7 (20) ended in favor of the Russian army. However, the Russian command was unable to reap the benefits of victory. The movement of the two Russian armies slowed down and became inconsistent, which the Germans were quick to take advantage of, striking from the west on the open flank of the 2nd Army. On August 13-17 (26-30), the 2nd Army of General Samsonov was completely defeated, a significant part was surrounded and captured. In German tradition, these events are called the Battle of Tanneberg. After this, the Russian 1st Army, under threat of encirclement by superior German forces, was forced to fight back to its original position; the withdrawal was completed on September 3 (16). The actions of the commander of the 1st Army, General Rennenkampf, were considered unsuccessful, which became the first episode of the later characteristic distrust of military leaders with German surnames, and, in general, disbelief in the abilities of the military command. In the German tradition, the events were mythologized and considered the greatest victory of German weapons; a huge memorial was built at the site of the battles, in which Field Marshal Hindenburg was subsequently buried.

Galician battle. On August 16 (23), the Battle of Galicia began - a huge battle in terms of the scale of forces involved between the Russian troops of the Southwestern Front (5 armies) under the command of General N. Ivanov and four Austro-Hungarian armies under the command of Archduke Frederick. Russian troops went on the offensive along a wide (450-500 km) front, with Lviv as the center of the offensive. The fighting of large armies, taking place on a long front, was divided into numerous independent operations, accompanied by both offensives and retreats of both sides.

Actions on the southern part of the border with Austria initially developed unfavorably for the Russian army (Lublin-Kholm operation). By August 19-20 (September 1-2), Russian troops retreated to the territory of the Kingdom of Poland, to Lublin and Kholm. Actions in the center of the front (Galich-Lvov operation) were unsuccessful for the Austro-Hungarians. The Russian offensive began on August 6 (19) and developed very quickly. After the first retreat, the Austro-Hungarian army put up fierce resistance on the borders of the Zolotaya Lipa and Rotten Lipa rivers, but was forced to retreat. The Russians took Lvov on August 21 (September 3), and Galich on August 22 (September 4). Until August 31 (September 12), the Austro-Hungarians did not stop trying to recapture Lviv, the battles took place 30-50 km west and north-west of the city (Gorodok - Rava-Russkaya), but ended in complete victory for the Russian army. On August 29 (September 11), a general retreat of the Austrian army began (more like a flight, since resistance to the advancing Russians was insignificant). The Russian army maintained a high tempo of offensive and in the shortest possible time captured a huge, strategically important territory - Eastern Galicia and part of Bukovina. By September 13 (26), the front had stabilized at a distance of 120-150 km west of Lvov. The strong Austrian fortress of Przemysl was under siege in the rear of the Russian army.

The significant victory caused jubilation in Russia. The seizure of Galicia, with its predominant Orthodox (and Uniate) Slavic population, was perceived in Russia not as an occupation, but as the return of a seized part of historical Rus' (see Galician General Government). Austria-Hungary lost faith in the strength of its army, and in the future did not risk embarking on major operations without the help of German troops.

Military operations in the Kingdom of Poland. The pre-war border of Russia with Germany and Austria-Hungary had a configuration that was far from smooth - in the center of the border, the territory of the Kingdom of Poland jutted sharply to the west. Obviously, both sides began the war by trying to smooth out the front - the Russians tried to level out the "dents" by advancing in the north into East Prussia and in the south into Galicia, while Germany sought to remove the "bulge" by advancing centrally into Poland. After the Russian offensive in East Prussia failed, Germany could only advance further south, in Poland, to prevent the front from falling apart into two disjointed parts. In addition, the success of the offensive in southern Poland could also help the defeated Austro-Hungarians.

On September 15 (28), the Warsaw-Ivangorod operation began with the German offensive. The offensive went in a north-eastern direction, targeting Warsaw and the Ivangorod fortress. On September 30 (October 12), the Germans reached Warsaw and reached the Vistula River. Fierce battles began, in which the advantage of the Russian army gradually became clear. On October 7 (20), the Russians began to cross the Vistula, and on October 14 (27), the German army began a general retreat. By October 26 (November 8), the German troops, having achieved no results, retreated to their original positions.

On October 29 (November 11), the Germans launched a second offensive from the same positions along the pre-war border in the same northeastern direction (Lodz operation). The center of the battle was the city of Lodz, captured and abandoned by the Germans a few weeks earlier. In a dynamically unfolding battle, the Germans first surrounded Lodz, then they themselves were surrounded by superior Russian forces and retreated. The results of the battles turned out to be uncertain - the Russians managed to defend both Lodz and Warsaw; but at the same time, Germany managed to capture the northwestern part of the Kingdom of Poland - the front, stabilized by October 26 (November 8), went from Lodz to Warsaw.

Positions of the parties by the end of 1914. By the new year of 1915, the front looked like this - on the border of East Prussia and Russia, the front followed the pre-war border, followed by a gap poorly filled by troops of both sides, after which a stable front began again from Warsaw to Lodz (northeast and east of the Kingdom of Poland with Petrokov , Czestochowa and Kalisz were occupied by Germany), in the Krakow region (remained by Austria-Hungary) the front crossed the pre-war border of Austria-Hungary with Russia and crossed into Austrian territory captured by the Russians. Most of Galicia went to Russia, Lvov (Lemberg) fell into the deep (180 km from the front) rear. In the south, the front abutted the Carpathians, which were practically unoccupied by troops of both sides. Bukovina and Chernivtsi, located east of the Carpathians, passed to Russia. The total length of the front was about 1200 km.

Results of the 1914 campaign on the Russian front. The campaign as a whole turned out in favor of Russia. Clashes with the German army ended in favor of the Germans, and on the German part of the front Russia lost part of the territory of the Kingdom of Poland. The defeat of Russia in East Prussia was morally painful and was accompanied by heavy losses. But Germany was not able to achieve the results it had planned at any point; all its successes from a military point of view were modest. Meanwhile, Russia managed to inflict a major defeat on Austria-Hungary and seize significant territories. A certain pattern of actions of the Russian army formed - the Germans were treated with caution, the Austro-Hungarians were considered a weaker enemy. Austria-Hungary turned from a full ally for Germany into a weak partner requiring continuous support. By the new year 1915, the fronts had stabilized, and the war entered the positional phase; but at the same time, the front line (unlike the French theater of operations) continued to remain unsmoothed, and the armies of the sides filled it unevenly, with large gaps. This unevenness next year will make events on the Eastern Front much more dynamic than on the Western Front. By the new year, the Russian army began to feel the first signs of a coming crisis in the supply of ammunition. It also turned out that Austro-Hungarian soldiers were prone to surrender, but German soldiers were not.

The Entente countries were able to coordinate actions on two fronts - Russia's offensive in East Prussia coincided with the most difficult moment of the fighting for France; Germany was forced to fight on two fronts simultaneously, as well as to transfer troops from front to front.

Balkan theater of operations

On the Serbian front, things were not going well for the Austrians. Despite their great numerical superiority, they managed to occupy Belgrade, which was located on the border, only on December 2, but on December 15, the Serbs recaptured Belgrade and drove the Austrians out of their territory. Although Austria-Hungary's demands on Serbia were the immediate cause of the outbreak of the war, it was in Serbia that military operations in 1914 proceeded rather sluggishly.

Japan's entry into the war

In August 1914, the Entente countries (primarily England) managed to convince Japan to oppose Germany, despite the fact that the two countries had no significant conflicts of interest. On August 15, Japan presented an ultimatum to Germany, demanding the withdrawal of troops from China, and on August 23, it declared war (see Japan in the First World War). At the end of August, the Japanese army began the siege of Qingdao, the only German naval base in China, ending on November 7 with the surrender of the German garrison (see Siege of Qingdao).

In September-October, Japan actively began to seize the island colonies and bases of Germany (German Micronesia and German New Guinea. On September 12, the Caroline Islands were captured, and on September 29, the Marshall Islands. In October, the Japanese landed on the Caroline Islands and captured the key port of Rabaul. In the end August, New Zealand troops captured German Samoa. Australia and New Zealand entered into an agreement with Japan on the division of German colonies, the equator was adopted as the dividing line of interests. German forces in the region were insignificant and sharply inferior to the Japanese, so the fighting was not accompanied by major losses.

Japan's participation in the war on the side of the Entente turned out to be extremely beneficial for Russia, completely securing its Asian part. Russia no longer needed to spend resources on maintaining the army, navy and fortifications directed against Japan and China. In addition, Japan gradually became an important source of supplying Russia with raw materials and weapons.

Entry of the Ottoman Empire into the war and opening of the Asian theater of operations

Since the beginning of the war in Turkey, there was no agreement on whether to enter the war and on whose side. In the unofficial Young Turk triumvirate, War Minister Enver Pasha and Interior Minister Talaat Pasha were supporters of the Triple Alliance, but Cemal Pasha was a supporter of the Entente. On August 2, 1914, a German-Turkish alliance treaty was signed, according to which the Turkish army was actually placed under the leadership of the German military mission. Mobilization was announced in the country. However, at the same time, the Turkish government published a declaration of neutrality. On August 10, the German cruisers Goeben and Breslau entered the Dardanelles, having escaped pursuit of the British fleet in the Mediterranean. With the advent of these ships, not only the Turkish army, but also the navy found themselves under the command of the Germans. On September 9, the Turkish government announced to all powers that it had decided to abolish the capitulation regime (preferential legal status for foreign citizens). This caused protest from all powers.

However, most members of the Turkish government, including the Grand Vizier, still opposed the war. Then Enver Pasha, together with the German command, started the war without the consent of the rest of the government, presenting the country with a fait accompli. Türkiye declared “jihad” (holy war) against the Entente countries. On October 29-30 (November 11-12), the Turkish fleet under the command of German Admiral Souchon fired at Sevastopol, Odessa, Feodosia and Novorossiysk. On November 2 (15), Russia declared war on Turkey. England and France followed on November 5 and 6.

The Caucasian Front arose between Russia and Turkey. In December 1914 - January 1915, during the Sarykamysh operation, the Russian Caucasian Army stopped the advance of Turkish troops on Kars, and then defeated them and launched a counteroffensive (see Caucasian Front).

Turkey's usefulness as an ally was diminished by the fact that the Central Powers had no communication with it either by land (between Turkey and Austria-Hungary there was still uncaptured Serbia and still neutral Romania) or by sea (the Mediterranean was controlled by the Entente).

At the same time, Russia has also lost the most convenient route of communication with its allies - through the Black Sea and the Straits. Russia has two ports left suitable for transporting large quantities of cargo - Arkhangelsk and Vladivostok; the carrying capacity of the railways approaching these ports was low.

Combat at sea

With the outbreak of the war, the German fleet launched cruising operations throughout the World Ocean, which, however, did not lead to a significant disruption of the merchant shipping of its opponents. However, part of the Entente fleet was diverted to fight the German raiders. The German squadron of Admiral von Spee managed to defeat the British squadron in the battle at Cape Coronel (Chile) on November 1, but later it itself was defeated by the British in the Battle of Falklands on December 8.

In the North Sea, the fleets of the opposing sides carried out raiding operations. The first major clash occurred on August 28 near the island of Heligoland (Battle of Heligoland). The English fleet won.

The Russian fleets behaved passively. The Russian Baltic Fleet occupied a defensive position, which the German fleet, busy with operations in other theaters, did not even approach. The Black Sea Fleet, which did not have large ships of the modern type, did not dare to engage in a collision with the two newest German-Turkish ships.

1915 Campaign

Progress of hostilities

French Theater of Operations - Western Front

Actions beginning in 1915. The intensity of action on the Western Front decreased significantly from the beginning of 1915. Germany concentrated its forces on preparing operations against Russia. The French and British also preferred to take advantage of the resulting pause to accumulate forces. For the first four months of the year, there was almost complete calm on the front, fighting took place only in Artois, in the area of ​​​​the city of Arras (an attempted French offensive in February) and southeast of Verdun, where German positions formed the so-called Ser-Miel salient towards France (an attempt French advance in April). The British made an unsuccessful attempt to attack near the village of Neuve Chapelle in March.

The Germans, in turn, launched a counterattack in the north of the front, in Flanders near Ypres, against English troops (April 22 - May 25, see Second Battle of Ypres). At the same time, Germany, for the first time in the history of mankind and with complete surprise to the Anglo-French, used chemical weapons (chlorine was released from the cylinders). The gas affected 15 thousand people, of whom 5 thousand died. The Germans did not have sufficient reserves to take advantage of the gas attack and break through the front. After the Ypres gas attack, both sides very quickly managed to develop gas masks of various designs, and further attempts to use chemical weapons no longer took large numbers of troops by surprise.

During these military operations, which produced the most insignificant results with noticeable casualties, both sides became convinced that an assault on well-equipped positions (several lines of trenches, dugouts, barbed wire fences) was futile without active artillery preparation.

Spring operation in Artois. On May 3, the Entente launched a new offensive in Artois. The offensive was carried out by joint Anglo-French forces. The French advanced north of Arras, the British - in an adjacent area in the Neuve Chapelle area. The offensive was organized in a new way: huge forces (30 infantry divisions, 9 cavalry corps, more than 1,700 guns) were concentrated on a 30-kilometer offensive area. The offensive was preceded by a six-day artillery preparation (2.1 million shells were spent), which was supposed to completely suppress the resistance of German troops. The calculations did not come true. The huge losses of the Entente (130 thousand people) suffered over six weeks of fighting did not completely correspond to the results achieved - by mid-June the French had advanced 3-4 km along a 7 km front, and the British had advanced less than 1 km along a 3 km front.

Autumn operation in Champagne and Artois. By the beginning of September, the Entente had prepared a new major offensive, the task of which was to liberate the north of France. The offensive began on September 25 and took place simultaneously in two sectors separated by 120 km - on the 35 km front in Champagne (east of Reims) and on the 20 km front in Artois (near Arras). If successful, the troops advancing from both sides were supposed to close in 80-100 km on the French border (at Mons), which would lead to the liberation of Picardy. Compared to the spring offensive in Artois, the scale was increased: 67 infantry and cavalry divisions, up to 2,600 guns, were involved in the offensive; During the operation, over 5 million shells were fired. The Anglo-French troops used new attack tactics in several “waves”. At the time of the offensive, the German troops managed to improve their defensive positions - a second defensive line was built 5-6 kilometers behind the first defensive line, poorly visible from enemy positions (each of the defensive lines consisted, in turn, of three rows of trenches). The offensive, which lasted until October 7, led to extremely limited results - in both sectors it was possible to break through only the first line of German defense and recapture no more than 2-3 km of territory. At the same time, the losses of both sides were enormous - the Anglo-French lost 200 thousand people killed and wounded, the Germans - 140 thousand people.

Positions of the parties by the end of 1915 and the results of the campaign. Throughout 1915, the front practically did not move - the result of all the fierce offensives was a movement of the front line by no more than 10 km. Both sides, increasingly strengthening their defensive positions, were unable to develop tactics that would allow them to break through the front, even under the conditions of an extremely high concentration of forces and many days of artillery preparation. Huge sacrifices on both sides did not produce any significant results. The situation, however, allowed Germany to increase its pressure on the Eastern Front - the entire strengthening of the German army was aimed at fighting Russia, while the improvement of defensive lines and defense tactics allowed the Germans to be confident in the strength of the Western Front while gradually reducing the troops involved on it.

The actions of early 1915 showed that the current type of military action creates a huge burden on the economies of the warring countries. New battles required not only the mobilization of millions of citizens, but also a gigantic amount of weapons and ammunition. Pre-war reserves of weapons and ammunition were exhausted, and the warring countries began to actively rebuild their economies for military needs. The war gradually began to turn from a battle of armies into a battle of economies. The development of new military equipment has intensified as a means of breaking out of the stalemate at the front; armies became more and more mechanized. The armies noticed the significant benefits brought by aviation (reconnaissance and artillery fire adjustment) and automobiles. Methods of trench warfare improved - trench guns, light mortars, and hand grenades appeared.

France and Russia again made attempts to coordinate the actions of their armies - the spring offensive in Artois was intended to distract the Germans from an active offensive against the Russians. On July 7, the first Inter-Allied Conference opened in Chantilly, aimed at planning joint actions of the allies on different fronts and organizing various types of economic and military assistance. The second conference took place there on November 23-26. It was considered necessary to begin preparations for a coordinated offensive by all allied armies in the three main theaters - French, Russian and Italian.

Russian Theater of Operations - Eastern Front

Winter operation in East Prussia. In February, the Russian army made another attempt to attack East Prussia, this time from the southeast, from Masuria, from the city of Suwalki. Poorly prepared and unsupported by artillery, the offensive instantly floundered and turned into a counterattack by German troops, the so-called Augustow operation (named after the city of Augustow). By February 26, the Germans managed to advance to oust Russian troops from the territory of East Prussia and advance deeper into the Kingdom of Poland 100-120 km, capturing Suwalki, after which in the first half of March the front stabilized, Grodno remained with Russia. The XX Russian Corps was surrounded and surrendered. Despite the victory of the Germans, their hopes for the complete collapse of the Russian front were not justified. During the next battle - the Prasnysh operation (February 25 - end of March), the Germans encountered fierce resistance from Russian troops, which turned into a counterattack in the Prasnysh area, which led to the withdrawal of the Germans to the pre-war border of East Prussia (the Suwalki province remained with Germany).

Winter operation in the Carpathians. On February 9-11, Austro-German troops launched an offensive in the Carpathians, putting especially strong pressure on the weakest part of the Russian front in the south, in Bukovina. At the same time, the Russian army launched a counter-offensive, hoping to cross the Carpathians and invade Hungary from north to south. In the northern part of the Carpathians, closer to Krakow, the enemy forces turned out to be equal, and the front practically did not move during the battles in February and March, remaining in the foothills of the Carpathians on the Russian side. But in the south of the Carpathians, the Russian army did not have time to regroup, and at the end of March the Russians lost most of Bukovina with Chernivtsi. On March 22, the besieged Austrian fortress of Przemysl fell, more than 120 thousand people surrendered. The capture of Przemysl was the last major success of the Russian army in 1915.

Gorlitsky breakthrough. The beginning of the Great Retreat of the Russian armies - the loss of Galicia. By mid-spring the situation at the front in Galicia had changed. The Germans expanded their area of ​​operations by transferring their troops to the northern and central part of the front in Austria-Hungary; the weaker Austro-Hungarians were now responsible only for the southern part of the front. In an area of ​​35 km, the Germans concentrated 32 divisions and 1,500 guns; Russian troops were outnumbered by 2 times and were completely deprived of heavy artillery; the shortage of main (three-inch) caliber shells also began to affect them. On April 19 (May 2), German troops launched an attack on the center of the Russian position in Austria-Hungary - Gorlice - aiming the main blow at Lvov. Further events were unfavorable for the Russian army: the numerical dominance of the Germans, unsuccessful maneuvering and the use of reserves, an increasing shortage of shells and the complete predominance of German heavy artillery led to the fact that by April 22 (May 5) the front in the Gorlitsy area was broken through. The beginning of the retreat of the Russian armies continued until June 9 (22) (see the Great Retreat of 1915). The entire front south of Warsaw moved towards Russia. The Radom and Kielce provinces were left in the Kingdom of Poland, the front passed through Lublin (behind Russia); from the territories of Austria-Hungary, most of Galicia was abandoned (the newly taken Przemysl was abandoned on June 3 (16), and Lviv on June 9 (22), only a small (up to 40 km deep) strip with Brody remained for the Russians, the entire region Tarnopol and a small part of Bukovina. The retreat, which began with the German breakthrough, by the time Lvov was abandoned, had acquired a planned character, the Russian troops were withdrawing in relative order. But nevertheless, such a major military failure was accompanied by a loss of fighting spirit in the Russian army and mass surrenders.

Continuation of the Great Retreat of the Russian armies - the loss of Poland. Having achieved success in the southern part of the theater of operations, the German command decided to immediately continue an active offensive in its northern part - in Poland and in East Prussia - the Baltic region. Since the Gorlitsky breakthrough did not ultimately lead to the complete collapse of the Russian front (the Russians were able to stabilize the situation and close the front at the cost of a significant retreat), this time the tactics were changed - it was not supposed to break through the front at one point, but three independent offensives. Two directions of attack were aimed at the Kingdom of Poland (where the Russian front continued to form a salient towards Germany) - the Germans planned front breakthroughs from the north, from East Prussia (a breakthrough to the south between Warsaw and Lomza, in the area of ​​the Narew River), and from the south, from sides of Galicia (to the north along the Vistula and Bug rivers); at the same time, the directions of both breakthroughs converged on the border of the Kingdom of Poland, in the area of ​​​​Brest-Litovsk; If the German plan was carried out, Russian troops had to leave all of Poland to avoid encirclement in the Warsaw area. The third offensive, from East Prussia towards Riga, was planned as an offensive on a broad front, without concentration on a narrow area and without a breakthrough.

The offensive between the Vistula and Bug was launched on June 13 (26), and the Narew operation began on June 30 (July 13). After fierce fighting, the front was broken in both places, and the Russian army, as envisaged by the German plan, began a general retreat from the Kingdom of Poland. On July 22 (August 4) Warsaw and the Ivangorod fortress were abandoned, on August 7 (20) the Novogeorgievsk fortress fell, on August 9 (22) the Osovets fortress fell, on August 13 (26) the Russians abandoned Brest-Litovsk, and on August 19 (September 2) Grodno.

The offensive from East Prussia (Rigo-Schavel operation) began on July 1 (14). During a month of fighting, Russian troops were pushed back beyond the Neman, the Germans captured Courland with Mitau and the most important naval base of Libau, Kovno, and came close to Riga.

The success of the German offensive was facilitated by the fact that by the summer the crisis in the military supply of the Russian army had reached its maximum. Of particular importance was the so-called “shell famine” - an acute shortage of shells for the 75-mm guns that predominated in the Russian army. The capture of the Novogeorgievsk fortress, accompanied by the surrender of large parts of troops and intact weapons and property without a fight, caused a new outbreak of spy mania and rumors of treason in Russian society. The Kingdom of Poland gave Russia about a quarter of coal production, the loss of Polish deposits was never compensated, and from the end of 1915 a fuel crisis began in Russia.

Completion of the great retreat and stabilization of the front. On August 9 (22), the Germans moved the direction of the main attack; Now the main offensive took place along the front north of Vilno, in the Sventsyan region, and was directed towards Minsk. On August 27-28 (September 8-9), the Germans, taking advantage of the loose location of Russian units, were able to break through the front (Sventsyansky breakthrough). The result was that the Russians were able to fill the front only after they withdrew directly to Minsk. The Vilna province was lost to the Russians.

On December 14 (27), the Russians launched an offensive against the Austro-Hungarian troops on the Strypa River, in the Ternopil region, caused by the need to distract the Austrians from the Serbian front, where the position of the Serbs had become very difficult. Attempts at the offensive did not bring any success, and on January 15 (29) the operation was stopped.

Meanwhile, the retreat of the Russian armies continued south of the Sventsyansky breakthrough zone. In August, Vladimir-Volynsky, Kovel, Lutsk, and Pinsk were abandoned by the Russians. On the more southern part of the front, the situation was stable, since by that time the Austro-Hungarian forces were distracted by fighting in Serbia and on the Italian front. By the end of September - beginning of October, the front stabilized, and there was a lull along its entire length. The offensive potential of the Germans was exhausted, the Russians began to restore their troops, which were badly damaged during the retreat, and strengthen new defensive lines.

Positions of the parties by the end of 1915. By the end of 1915, the front had become almost a straight line connecting the Baltic and Black Seas; The frontline in the Kingdom of Poland completely disappeared - Poland was completely occupied by Germany. Courland was occupied by Germany, the front came close to Riga and then went along the Western Dvina to the fortified area of ​​​​Dvinsk. Further, the front passed through the North-Western region: Kovno, Vilna, Grodno provinces, the western part of the Minsk province was occupied by Germany (Minsk remained with Russia). Then the front passed through the South-Western region: the western third of the Volyn province with Lutsk was occupied by Germany, Rivne remained with Russia. After this, the front moved to the former territory of Austria-Hungary, where the Russians retained part of the Tarnopol region in Galicia. Further, to the Bessarabia province, the front returned to the pre-war border with Austria-Hungary and ended at the border with neutral Romania.

The new configuration of the front, which had no protrusions and was densely filled with troops of both sides, naturally pushed for a transition to trench warfare and defensive tactics.

Results of the 1915 campaign on the Eastern Front. The results of the 1915 campaign for Germany in the east were in some ways similar to the 1914 campaign in the west: Germany was able to achieve significant military victories and capture enemy territory, Germany's tactical advantage in maneuver warfare was obvious; but at the same time, the general goal - the complete defeat of one of the opponents and its withdrawal from the war - was not achieved in 1915. While winning tactical victories, the Central Powers were unable to completely defeat their leading opponents, while their economy became increasingly weaker. Russia, despite large losses in territory and manpower, fully retained the ability to continue the war (although its army lost its offensive spirit during the long period of retreat). In addition, by the end of the Great Retreat, the Russians managed to overcome the military supply crisis, and the situation with artillery and shells for it returned to normal by the end of the year. Fierce fighting and heavy losses of life led the economies of Russia, Germany and Austria-Hungary to overstrain, the negative results of which would be more and more noticeable in the coming years.

Russia's failures were accompanied by important personnel changes. On June 30 (July 13), Minister of War V. A. Sukhomlinov was replaced by A. A. Polivanov. Subsequently, Sukhomlinov was put on trial, which caused another outbreak of suspicion and spy mania. On August 10 (23), Nicholas II assumed the duties of commander-in-chief of the Russian army, moving Grand Duke Nikolai Nikolaevich to the Caucasian front. The actual leadership of military operations passed from N. N. Yanushkevich to M. V. Alekseev. The Tsar's assumption of supreme command entailed extremely significant domestic political consequences.

Italy's entry into the war

Since the beginning of the war, Italy remained neutral. On August 3, 1914, the Italian king informed William II that the conditions for the outbreak of war did not correspond to those conditions in the Treaty of the Triple Alliance under which Italy should enter the war. On the same day, the Italian government published a declaration of neutrality. After lengthy negotiations between Italy and the Central Powers and the Entente countries, the London Pact was concluded on April 26, 1915, according to which Italy pledged to declare war on Austria-Hungary within a month, as well as to oppose all enemies of the Entente. A number of territories were promised to Italy as “payment for blood.” England provided Italy with a loan of 50 million pounds. Despite subsequent reciprocal offers of territories from the Central Powers, against the backdrop of fierce internal political clashes between opponents and supporters of the two blocs, on May 23, Italy declared war on Austria-Hungary.

Balkan theater of war, Bulgaria's entry into the war

Until the autumn there was no activity on the Serbian front. By the beginning of autumn, after the completion of a successful campaign to oust Russian troops from Galicia and Bukovina, the Austro-Hungarians and Germans were able to transfer a large number of troops to attack Serbia. At the same time, it was expected that Bulgaria, impressed by the successes of the Central Powers, intended to enter the war on their side. In this case, sparsely populated Serbia with a small army found itself surrounded by enemies on two fronts, and faced inevitable military defeat. Anglo-French assistance arrived very late - only on October 5 did troops begin to land in Thessaloniki (Greece); Russia could not help, since neutral Romania refused to let Russian troops through. On October 5, the offensive of the Central Powers from Austria-Hungary began; on October 14, Bulgaria declared war on the Entente countries and began military operations against Serbia. The troops of the Serbs, British and French were numerically inferior to the forces of the Central Powers by more than 2 times and had no chance of success.

By the end of December, Serbian troops left the territory of Serbia, going to Albania, from where in January 1916 their remnants were evacuated to the island of Corfu and Bizerte. In December, Anglo-French troops retreated to Greek territory, to Thessaloniki, where they were able to gain a foothold, forming the Thessaloniki Front along the Greek border with Bulgaria and Serbia. The personnel of the Serbian Army (up to 150 thousand people) were retained and in the spring of 1916 they strengthened the Thessaloniki Front.

The accession of Bulgaria to the Central Powers and the fall of Serbia opened up direct land communication for the Central Powers with Turkey.

Military operations in the Dardanelles and Gallipoli Peninsula

By the beginning of 1915, the Anglo-French command developed a joint operation to break through the Dardanelles Strait and reach the Sea of ​​Marmara, towards Constantinople. The objective of the operation was to ensure free maritime communication through the straits and divert Turkish forces from the Caucasian front.

According to the original plan, the breakthrough was to be made by the British fleet, which was to destroy the coastal batteries without landing troops. After initial unsuccessful attacks by small forces (19–25 February), the British fleet launched a general attack on 18 March, which involved more than 20 battleships, battlecruisers and obsolete ironclads. After the loss of 3 ships, the British, without achieving success, left the strait.

After this, the Entente’s tactics changed - it was decided to land expeditionary forces on the Gallipoli Peninsula (on the European side of the straits) and on the opposite Asian coast. The Entente landing force (80 thousand people), consisting of the British, French, Australians and New Zealanders, began landing on April 25. The landings took place on three beachheads, divided between the participating countries. The attackers managed to hold out only on one of the sections of Gallipoli, where the Australian and New Zealand Corps (ANZAC) was landed. Fierce fighting and the transfer of new Entente reinforcements continued until mid-August, but none of the attempts to attack the Turks produced any significant results. By the end of August, the failure of the operation became obvious, and the Entente began to prepare for the gradual evacuation of troops. The last troops from Gallipoli were evacuated in early January 1916. The bold strategic plan, initiated by W. Churchill, ended in complete failure.

On the Caucasian Front in July, Russian troops repelled the offensive of Turkish troops in the area of ​​Lake Van, while ceding part of the territory (Alashkert operation). The fighting spread to Persian territory. On October 30, Russian troops landed in the port of Anzeli, by the end of December they defeated pro-Turkish armed forces and took control of the territory of Northern Persia, preventing Persia from attacking Russia and securing the left flank of the Caucasian army.

1916 campaign

Having failed to achieve decisive success on the Eastern Front in the 1915 campaign, the German command decided in 1916 to deliver the main blow in the west and take France out of the war. It planned to cut it off with powerful flank attacks at the base of the Verdun ledge, encircling the entire Verdun enemy group, and thereby create a huge gap in the Allied defense, through which it was then supposed to strike the flank and rear of the central French armies and defeat the entire Allied front.

On February 21, 1916, German troops launched an offensive operation in the area of ​​the Verdun fortress, called the Battle of Verdun. After stubborn fighting with huge losses on both sides, the Germans managed to advance 6-8 kilometers forward and take some of the forts of the fortress, but their advance was stopped. This battle lasted until December 18, 1916. The French and British lost 750 thousand people, the Germans - 450 thousand.

During the Battle of Verdun, a new weapon was used for the first time by Germany - a flamethrower. In the skies over Verdun, for the first time in the history of wars, the principles of aircraft combat were worked out - the American Lafayette squadron fought on the side of the Entente troops. The Germans pioneered the use of a fighter aircraft in which machine guns fired through the rotating propeller without damaging it.

On June 3, 1916, a major offensive operation of the Russian army began, called the Brusilov breakthrough after the front commander A. A. Brusilov. As a result of the offensive operation, the Southwestern Front inflicted a heavy defeat on German and Austro-Hungarian troops in Galicia and Bukovina, whose total losses amounted to more than 1.5 million people. At the same time, the Naroch and Baranovichi operations of the Russian troops ended unsuccessfully.

In June, the Battle of the Somme began, which lasted until November, during which tanks were used for the first time.

On the Caucasian front in January-February, in the Battle of Erzurum, Russian troops completely defeated the Turkish army and captured the cities of Erzurum and Trebizond.

The successes of the Russian army prompted Romania to take the side of the Entente. On August 17, 1916, an agreement was concluded between Romania and the four Entente powers. Romania undertook to declare war on Austria-Hungary. For this she was promised Transylvania, part of Bukovina and the Banat. On August 28, Romania declared war on Austria-Hungary. However, by the end of the year the Romanian army was defeated and most of the country was occupied.

The military campaign of 1916 was marked by an important event. On May 31 - June 1, the largest naval battle of Jutland took place in the entire war.

All previous described events demonstrated the superiority of the Entente. By the end of 1916, both sides had lost 6 million people killed, and about 10 million were wounded. In November-December 1916, Germany and its allies proposed peace, but the Entente rejected the offer, pointing out that peace was impossible “until the restoration of violated rights and freedoms, recognition of the principle of nationalities and the free existence of small states is ensured.”

1917 campaign

The situation of the Central Powers in 17 became catastrophic: there were no longer reserves for the army, the scale of hunger, transport devastation and the fuel crisis grew. The Entente countries began to receive significant assistance from the United States (food, industrial goods, and later reinforcements), while simultaneously strengthening the economic blockade of Germany, and their victory, even without offensive operations, was only a matter of time.

However, when after the October Revolution the Bolshevik government, which came to power under the slogan of ending the war, concluded a truce with Germany and its allies on December 15, the German leadership began to hope for a favorable outcome of the war.

Eastern front

On February 1-20, 1917, the Petrograd Conference of the Entente countries took place, at which plans for the 1917 campaign and, unofficially, the internal political situation in Russia were discussed.

In February 1917, the size of the Russian army, after a major mobilization, exceeded 8 million people. After the February Revolution in Russia, the Provisional Government advocated continuing the war, which was opposed by the Bolsheviks led by Lenin.

On April 6, the United States came out on the side of the Entente (after the so-called “Zimmerman telegram”), which finally changed the balance of forces in favor of the Entente, but the offensive that began in April (the Nivelle Offensive) was unsuccessful. Private operations in the area of ​​Messines, on the Ypres River, near Verdun and Cambrai, where tanks were used on a massive scale for the first time, did not change the general situation on the Western Front.

On the Eastern Front, due to the defeatist agitation of the Bolsheviks and the indecisive policies of the Provisional Government, the Russian army was disintegrating and losing its combat effectiveness. The offensive launched in June by the forces of the Southwestern Front failed, and the front armies retreated 50-100 km. However, despite the fact that the Russian army had lost the ability for active combat operations, the Central Powers, which suffered huge losses in the 1916 campaign, could not use the favorable opportunity created for themselves to inflict a decisive defeat on Russia and take it out of the war by military means.

On the Eastern Front, the German army limited itself to only private operations that did not in any way affect the strategic position of Germany: as a result of Operation Albion, German troops captured the islands of Dago and Ezel and forced the Russian fleet to leave the Gulf of Riga.

On the Italian front in October-November, the Austro-Hungarian army inflicted a major defeat on the Italian army at Caporetto and advanced 100-150 km deep into Italian territory, reaching the approaches to Venice. Only with the help of British and French troops deployed to Italy was it possible to stop the Austrian offensive.

In 1917, there was relative calm on the Thessaloniki front. In April 1917, the Allied forces (which consisted of British, French, Serbian, Italian and Russian troops) carried out an offensive operation that brought minor tactical results to the Entente forces. However, this offensive could not change the situation on the Thessaloniki front.

Due to the extremely harsh winter of 1916-1917, the Russian Caucasian Army did not conduct active operations in the mountains. In order not to suffer unnecessary losses from frost and disease, Yudenich left only military guards at the achieved lines, and placed the main forces in the valleys in populated areas. At the beginning of March, the 1st Caucasian Cavalry Corps Gen. Baratova defeated the Persian group of Turks and, having captured the important road junction of Sinnah (Sanandaj) and the city of Kermanshah in Persia, moved southwest to the Euphrates to meet the British. In mid-March, units of the 1st Caucasian Cossack Division of Raddatz and the 3rd Kuban Division, having covered more than 400 km, joined the allies at Kizil Rabat (Iraq). Türkiye lost Mesopotamia.

After the February Revolution, there were no active military operations by the Russian army on the Turkish front, and after the Bolshevik government concluded the truce with the countries of the Quadruple Alliance in December 1917, it ceased completely.

On the Mesopotamian front, British troops achieved significant success in 1917. Having increased the number of troops to 55 thousand people, the British army launched a decisive offensive in Mesopotamia. The British captured a number of important cities: Al-Kut (January), Baghdad (March), etc. Volunteers from the Arab population fought on the side of the British troops, who greeted the advancing British troops as liberators. Also, by the beginning of 1917, British troops invaded Palestine, where fierce fighting ensued near Gaza. In October, having increased the number of their troops to 90 thousand people, the British launched a decisive offensive near Gaza and the Turks were forced to retreat. By the end of 1917, the British captured a number of settlements: Jaffa, Jerusalem and Jericho.

In East Africa, German colonial troops under the command of Colonel Lettow-Vorbeck, significantly outnumbered by the enemy, put up prolonged resistance and in November 1917, under pressure from Anglo-Portuguese-Belgian troops, invaded the territory of the Portuguese colony of Mozambique.

Diplomatic efforts

On July 19, 1917, the German Reichstag adopted a resolution on the need for peace by mutual agreement and without annexations. But this resolution did not meet with a sympathetic response from the governments of England, France and the USA. In August 1917, Pope Benedict XV offered his mediation to conclude peace. However, the Entente governments also rejected the papal proposal, since Germany stubbornly refused to give unequivocal consent to the restoration of Belgian independence.

1918 Campaign

Decisive victories of the Entente

After the conclusion of peace treaties with the Ukrainian People's Republic (Ukr. Beresteysky world), Soviet Russia and Romania and the liquidation of the Eastern Front, Germany was able to concentrate almost all of its forces on the Western Front and try to inflict a decisive defeat on the Anglo-French troops before the main forces of the American army arrived at the front.

In March-July, the German army launched a powerful offensive in Picardy, Flanders, on the Aisne and Marne rivers, and during fierce battles advanced 40-70 km, but was unable to defeat the enemy or break through the front. Germany's limited human and material resources were depleted during the war. In addition, having occupied vast territories of the former Russian Empire after the signing of the Brest-Litovsk Treaty, the German command, in order to maintain control over them, was forced to leave large forces in the east, which negatively affected the course of hostilities against the Entente. General Kuhl, Chief of Staff of Prince Ruprecht's Army Group, puts the number of German troops on the Western Front at approximately 3.6 million; There were about 1 million people on the Eastern Front, including Romania and excluding Turkey.

In May, American troops began operating at the front. In July-August, the second Battle of the Marne took place, which marked the beginning of the Entente counter-offensive. By the end of September, Entente troops, in the course of a series of operations, eliminated the results of the previous German offensive. In a further general offensive in October and early November, most of the captured French territory and part of Belgian territory were liberated.

In the Italian Theater at the end of October, Italian troops defeated the Austro-Hungarian army at Vittorio Veneto and liberated Italian territory captured by the enemy the previous year.

In the Balkan theater, the Entente offensive began on September 15. By November 1, Entente troops liberated the territory of Serbia, Albania, Montenegro, entered the territory of Bulgaria after the truce and invaded the territory of Austria-Hungary.

On September 29, Bulgaria concluded a truce with the Entente, on October 30 - Turkey, on November 3 - Austria-Hungary, on November 11 - Germany.

Other theaters of war

There was a lull on the Mesopotamian front throughout 1918; the fighting here ended on November 14, when the British army, without encountering resistance from Turkish troops, occupied Mosul. There was also a lull in Palestine, for the eyes of the parties were turned to more important theaters of military operations. In the fall of 1918, the British army launched an offensive and occupied Nazareth, the Turkish army was surrounded and defeated. Having captured Palestine, the British invaded Syria. The fighting here ended on October 30.

In Africa, German troops, pressed by superior enemy forces, continued to resist. After leaving Mozambique, the Germans invaded the territory of the British colony of Northern Rhodesia. Only when the Germans learned of Germany's defeat in the war did the colonial troops (which numbered only 1,400 people) lay down their arms.

Results of the war

Political results

In 1919, the Germans were forced to sign the Treaty of Versailles, which was drawn up by the victorious states at the Paris Peace Conference.

Peace treaties with

  • Germany (Treaty of Versailles (1919))
  • Austria (Treaty of Saint-Germain (1919))
  • Bulgaria (Treaty of Neuilly (1919))
  • Hungary (Treaty of Trianon (1920))
  • Turkey (Treaty of Sèvres (1920)).

The results of the First World War were the February and October Revolutions in Russia and the November Revolution in Germany, the liquidation of three empires: the Russian, Ottoman Empires and Austria-Hungary, and the latter two were divided. Germany, having ceased to be a monarchy, is reduced territorially and weakened economically. The Civil War began in Russia; on July 6-16, 1918, the left Socialist Revolutionaries (supporters of Russia's continued participation in the war) organized the murder of the German ambassador Count Wilhelm von Mirbach in Moscow and the royal family in Yekaterinburg, with the aim of disrupting the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk between Soviet Russia and Kaiser Germany. After the February Revolution, the Germans, despite the war with Russia, were worried about the fate of the Russian imperial family, because the wife of Nicholas II, Alexandra Feodorovna, was German, and their daughters were both Russian princesses and German princesses. The USA has become a great power. The difficult conditions of the Treaty of Versailles for Germany (payment of reparations, etc.) and the national humiliation it suffered gave rise to revanchist sentiments, which became one of the prerequisites for the Nazis coming to power and unleashing World War II.

Territorial changes

As a result of the war, England annexed Tanzania and South-West Africa, Iraq and Palestine, parts of Togo and Cameroon; Belgium - Burundi, Rwanda and Uganda; Greece - Eastern Thrace; Denmark - Northern Schleswig; Italy - South Tyrol and Istria; Romania - Transylvania and Southern Dobrudzha; France - Alsace-Lorraine, Syria, parts of Togo and Cameroon; Japan - the German islands in the Pacific Ocean north of the equator; French occupation of the Saarland.

The independence of the Belarusian People's Republic, the Ukrainian People's Republic, Hungary, Danzig, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Estonia, Finland and Yugoslavia was proclaimed.

The Republic of Austria is founded. The German Empire became a de facto republic.

The Rhineland and the Black Sea straits have been demilitarized.

Military results

The First World War spurred the development of new weapons and means of warfare. For the first time, tanks, chemical weapons, gas masks, anti-aircraft and anti-tank guns were used. Airplanes, machine guns, mortars, submarines, and torpedo boats became widespread. The firepower of the troops increased sharply. New types of artillery appeared: anti-aircraft, anti-tank, infantry escort. Aviation became an independent branch of the military, which began to be divided into reconnaissance, fighter and bomber. Tank troops, chemical troops, air defense troops, and naval aviation emerged. The role of engineering troops increased and the role of cavalry decreased. “Trench tactics” of warfare also appeared with the aim of exhausting the enemy and depleting his economy, working on military orders.

Economic results

The enormous scale and protracted nature of the First World War led to an unprecedented militarization of the economy for industrial states. This had an impact on the course of economic development of all major industrial states in the period between the two world wars: strengthening state regulation and economic planning, the formation of military-industrial complexes, accelerating the development of national economic infrastructures (energy systems, a network of paved roads, etc.) , an increase in the share of production of defense products and dual-use products.

Opinions of contemporaries

Humanity has never been in such a situation. Without having reached a much higher level of virtue and without the benefit of much wiser guidance, people for the first time received in their hands such instruments with which they could destroy all mankind without fail. This is the achievement of all their glorious history, all the glorious labors of previous generations. And people will do well to stop and think about this new responsibility. Death stands on the alert, obedient, expectant, ready to serve, ready to sweep away all peoples "en masse", ready, if necessary, to turn into powder, without any hope of revival, all that remains of civilization. She is only waiting for the word of command. She is waiting for this word from the fragile, frightened creature, who has long served as her victim and who has now become her master for the only time.

Churchill

Churchill on Russia in the First World War:

Losses in the First World War

The losses of the armed forces of all powers participating in the world war amounted to about 10 million people. There is still no generalized data on civilian casualties from the effects of military weapons. Famine and epidemics caused by the war caused the death of at least 20 million people.

Memory of the war

France, UK, Poland

Armistice Day (French) jour de l'Armistice) 1918 (11 November) is a national holiday of Belgium and France, celebrated annually. In England, Armistice Day ArmisticeDay) is celebrated on the Sunday closest to November 11 as Remembrance Sunday. On this day, the fallen of both the First and Second World Wars are remembered.

In the first years after the end of the First World War, every municipality in France erected a monument to fallen soldiers. In 1921, the main monument appeared - the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier under the Arc de Triomphe in Paris.

The main British monument to those killed in the First World War is the Cenotaph (Greek Cenotaph - “empty coffin”) in London on Whitehall Street, the monument to the Unknown Soldier. It was built in 1919 to mark the first anniversary of the end of the war. On the second Sunday of every November, the Cenotaph becomes the center of national Remembrance Day. A week before this, small plastic poppies appear on the chests of millions of Englishmen, which are bought from a special charity Fund for Veterans and War Widows. At 11pm on Sunday, the Queen, ministers, generals, bishops and ambassadors lay poppy wreaths at the Cenotaph and the whole country pauses for two minutes of silence.

The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Warsaw was also originally built in 1925 in memory of those who fell on the fields of the First World War. Now this monument is a monument to those who fell for their Motherland in various years.

Russia and Russian emigration

There is no official day of remembrance in Russia for those killed in the First World War, despite the fact that Russia's losses in this war were the largest of all the countries involved in it.

According to the plan of Emperor Nicholas II, Tsarskoe Selo was to become a special place for the memory of the war. The Sovereign's Military Chamber, founded there back in 1913, was to become the Museum of the Great War. By order of the emperor, a special plot was allocated for the burial of the dead and deceased ranks of the Tsarskoye Selo garrison. This site became known as the “Heroes’ Cemetery.” At the beginning of 1915, the “Cemetery of Heroes” was named the First Fraternal Cemetery. On its territory, on August 18, 1915, the foundation stone of a temporary wooden church took place in honor of the icon of the Mother of God “Quench My Sorrows” for the funeral service of soldiers who died and died from wounds. After the end of the war, instead of a temporary wooden church, it was planned to erect a temple - a monument to the Great War, designed by architect S. N. Antonov.

However, these plans were not destined to come true. In 1918, a people's museum of the war of 1914-1918 was created in the building of the War Chamber, but already in 1919 it was abolished, and its exhibits replenished the funds of other museums and repositories. In 1938, the temporary wooden church at the Fraternal Cemetery was dismantled, and what remained of the graves of soldiers was a wasteland overgrown with grass.

On June 16, 1916, a monument to the heroes of the Second Patriotic War was unveiled in Vyazma. In the 1920s, this monument was destroyed.

On November 11, 2008, a memorial stele (cross) dedicated to the heroes of the First World War was erected on the territory of the Fraternal Cemetery in the city of Pushkin.

Also in Moscow on August 1, 2004, on the occasion of the 90th anniversary of the start of the First World War, on the site of the Moscow City Fraternal Cemetery in the Sokol district, memorial signs were placed “To those who fell in the World War of 1914-1918”, “To the Russian Sisters of Mercy”, “To the Russian Aviators” , buried in the Moscow city fraternal cemetery."

“The times have already passed when other nations divided lands and waters among themselves, and we, the Germans, were content with only the blue sky... We also demand a place in the sun for ourselves,” said Chancellor von Bülow. As in the times of the Crusaders or Frederick II, the focus on military force is becoming one of the leading guidelines of Berlin politics. Such aspirations were based on a solid material base. The unification allowed Germany to significantly increase its potential, and rapid economic growth turned it into a powerful industrial power. At the beginning of the 20th century. It has reached second place in the world in terms of industrial production.

The reasons for the brewing world conflict were rooted in the intensification of the struggle between rapidly developing Germany and other powers for sources of raw materials and markets. To achieve world domination, Germany sought to defeat its three most powerful opponents in Europe - England, France and Russia, who united in the face of the emerging threat. Germany's goal was to seize the resources and "living space" of these countries - colonies from England and France and western lands from Russia (Poland, the Baltic states, Ukraine, Belarus). Thus, the most important direction of Berlin’s aggressive strategy remained the “onslaught towards the East”, into the Slavic lands, where the German sword was supposed to win a place for the German plow. In this Germany was supported by its ally Austria-Hungary. The reason for the outbreak of the First World War was the aggravation of the situation in the Balkans, where Austro-German diplomacy managed, on the basis of the division of Ottoman possessions, to split the union of the Balkan countries and cause a second Balkan war between Bulgaria and the rest of the countries of the region. In June 1914, in the Bosnian city of Sarajevo, the Serbian student G. Princip killed the heir to the Austrian throne, Prince Ferdinand. This gave the Viennese authorities a reason to blame Serbia for what they had done and start a war against it, which had the goal of establishing the dominance of Austria-Hungary in the Balkans. The aggression destroyed the system of independent Orthodox states created by Russia's centuries-long struggle with the Ottoman Empire. Russia, as the guarantor of Serbian independence, tried to influence the position of the Habsburgs by starting mobilization. This prompted the intervention of William II. He demanded that Nicholas II stop mobilization, and then, interrupting negotiations, declared war on Russia on July 19, 1914.

Two days later, William declared war on France, in whose defense England came out. Türkiye became an ally of Austria-Hungary. She attacked Russia, forcing it to fight on two land fronts (Western and Caucasian). After Turkey entered the war, closing the straits, the Russian Empire found itself virtually isolated from its allies. Thus began the First World War. Unlike other main participants in the global conflict, Russia did not have aggressive plans to fight for resources. The Russian state by the end of the 18th century. achieved its main territorial goals in Europe. It did not need additional lands and resources, and therefore was not interested in war. On the contrary, it was its resources and markets that attracted aggressors. In this global confrontation, Russia, first of all, acted as a force restraining German-Austrian expansionism and Turkish revanchism, which were aimed at seizing its territories. At the same time, the tsarist government tried to use this war to solve its strategic problems. First of all, they were associated with seizing control of the straits and ensuring free access to the Mediterranean. The annexation of Galicia, where Uniate centers hostile to the Russian Orthodox Church were located, was not excluded.

The German attack caught Russia in the process of rearmament, which was scheduled to be completed by 1917. This partly explains the insistence of Wilhelm II in unleashing aggression, the delay of which deprived the Germans of any chance of success. In addition to military-technical weakness, Russia's "Achilles heel" was the insufficient moral preparation of the population. The Russian leadership was poorly aware of the total nature of the future war, in which all types of struggle would be used, including ideological ones. This was of great importance for Russia, since its soldiers could not compensate for the lack of shells and ammunition with a firm and clear belief in the justice of their struggle. For example, the French people lost part of their territories and national wealth in the war with Prussia. Humiliated by defeat, he knew what he was fighting for. For the Russian population, who had not fought with the Germans for a century and a half, the conflict with them was largely unexpected. And not everyone in the highest circles saw the German Empire as a cruel enemy. This was facilitated by: family dynastic ties, similar political systems, long-standing and close relations between the two countries. Germany, for example, was Russia's main foreign trade partner. Contemporaries also drew attention to the weakening sense of patriotism in the educated strata of Russian society, which were sometimes brought up in thoughtless nihilism towards their homeland. Thus, in 1912, the philosopher V.V. Rozanov wrote: “The French have “che”re France,” the British have “Old England.” The Germans call it “our old Fritz.” Only those who went through a Russian gymnasium and university have “damned Russia.” A serious strategic miscalculation of the government of Nicholas II was the inability to ensure the unity and cohesion of the nation on the eve of a formidable military conflict. As for Russian society, it, as a rule, did not feel the prospect of a long and grueling struggle with a strong, energetic enemy. Few foresaw the onset of the “terrible years of Russia.” Most hoped for the end of the campaign by December 1914.

1914 Campaign Western Theater

The German plan for a war on two fronts (against Russia and France) was drawn up in 1905 by the Chief of the General Staff A. von Schlieffen. It envisaged holding back the slowly mobilizing Russians with small forces and delivering the main blow in the west against France. After its defeat and capitulation, it was planned to quickly transfer forces to the east and deal with Russia. The Russian plan had two options - offensive and defensive. The first was compiled under the influence of the Allies. It envisaged, even before the completion of mobilization, an offensive on the flanks (against East Prussia and Austrian Galicia) to ensure a central attack on Berlin. Another plan, drawn up in 1910-1912, assumed that the Germans would deliver the main blow in the east. In this case, Russian troops were withdrawn from Poland to the defensive line of Vilno-Bialystok-Brest-Rovno. Ultimately, events began to develop according to the first option. Having started the war, Germany unleashed all its power on France. Despite the lack of reserves due to slow mobilization across the vast expanses of Russia, the Russian army, true to its allied obligations, went on the offensive in East Prussia on August 4, 1914. The haste was also explained by persistent requests for help from allied France, which was suffering a strong onslaught from the Germans.

East Prussian operation (1914). On the Russian side, the 1st (General Rennenkampf) and 2nd (General Samsonov) armies took part in this operation. The front of their advance was divided by the Masurian lakes. The 1st Army advanced north of the Masurian Lakes, the 2nd Army to the south. In East Prussia, the Russians were opposed by the German 8th Army (generals Prittwitz, then Hindenburg). Already on August 4, the first battle took place near the city of Stallupenen, in which the 3rd Corps of the 1st Russian Army (General Epanchin) fought with the 1st Corps of the 8th German Army (General Francois). The fate of this stubborn battle was decided by the 29th Russian Infantry Division (General Rosenschild-Paulin), which struck the Germans in the flank and forced them to retreat. Meanwhile, General Bulgakov's 25th Division captured Stallupenen. Russian losses amounted to 6.7 thousand people, Germans - 2 thousand. On August 7, German troops fought a new, larger battle for the 1st Army. Using the division of its forces, which were advancing in two directions towards Goldap and Gumbinnen, the Germans tried to break up the 1st Army piecemeal. On the morning of August 7, the German shock force fiercely attacked 5 Russian divisions in the Gumbinnen area, trying to capture them in a pincer movement. The Germans pressed the Russian right flank. But in the center they suffered significant damage from artillery fire and were forced to begin a retreat. The German onslaught at Goldap also ended in failure. The total German losses were about 15 thousand people. The Russians lost 16.5 thousand people. Failures in the battles with the 1st Army, as well as the offensive from the southeast of the 2nd Army, which threatened to cut off Prittwitz’s path to the west, forced the German commander to initially order a withdrawal across the Vistula (this was provided for in the first version of the Schlieffen plan). But this order was never carried out, largely due to the inaction of Rennenkampf. He did not pursue the Germans and stood in place for two days. This allowed the 8th Army to get out of the attack and regroup its forces. Without precise information about the location of Prittwitz's forces, the commander of the 1st Army then moved it to Konigsberg. Meanwhile, the German 8th Army withdrew in a different direction (south from Königsberg).

While Rennenkampf was marching on Konigsberg, the 8th Army, led by General Hindenburg, concentrated all its forces against Samsonov’s army, which did not know about such a maneuver. The Germans, thanks to the interception of radiograms, were aware of all the Russian plans. On August 13, Hindenburg unleashed an unexpected blow on the 2nd Army from almost all of his East Prussian divisions and inflicted a severe defeat on it in 4 days of fighting. Samsonov, having lost control of his troops, shot himself. According to German data, the damage to the 2nd Army amounted to 120 thousand people (including over 90 thousand prisoners). The Germans lost 15 thousand people. They then attacked the 1st Army, which by September 2 withdrew beyond the Neman. The East Prussian operation had dire consequences for the Russians in tactical and especially moral terms. This was their first such major defeat in history in battles with the Germans, who gained a sense of superiority over the enemy. However, won by the Germans tactically, this operation strategically meant for them the failure of the plan for a lightning war. To save East Prussia, they had to transfer considerable forces from the western theater of military operations, where the fate of the entire war was then decided. This saved France from defeat and forced Germany to be drawn into a disastrous struggle on two fronts. The Russians, having replenished their forces with fresh reserves, soon went on the offensive again in East Prussia.

Battle of Galicia (1914). The most ambitious and significant operation for the Russians at the beginning of the war was the battle for Austrian Galicia (August 5 - September 8). It involved 4 armies of the Russian Southwestern Front (under the command of General Ivanov) and 3 Austro-Hungarian armies (under the command of Archduke Friedrich), as well as the German Woyrsch group. The sides had approximately equal numbers of fighters. In total it reached 2 million people. The battle began with the Lublin-Kholm and Galich-Lvov operations. Each of them exceeded the scale of the East Prussian operation. The Lublin-Kholm operation began with a strike by Austro-Hungarian troops on the right flank of the Southwestern Front in the area of ​​Lublin and Kholm. There were: the 4th (General Zankl, then Evert) and 5th (General Plehve) Russian armies. After fierce encounter battles at Krasnik (August 10-12), the Russians were defeated and were pressed to Lublin and Kholm. At the same time, the Galich-Lvov operation took place on the left flank of the Southwestern Front. In it, the left-flank Russian armies - the 3rd (General Ruzsky) and 8th (General Brusilov), repelling the onslaught, went on the offensive. Having won the battle near the Rotten Lipa River (August 16-19), the 3rd Army broke into Lvov, and the 8th captured Galich. This created a threat to the rear of the Austro-Hungarian group advancing in the Kholm-Lublin direction. However, the general situation at the front was developing threateningly for the Russians. The defeat of Samsonov's 2nd Army in East Prussia created a favorable opportunity for the Germans to advance in a southern direction, towards the Austro-Hungarian armies attacking Kholm and Lublin. A possible meeting of German and Austro-Hungarian troops west of Warsaw, in the area of ​​​​the city of Siedlce, threatened to encircle the Russian armies in Poland.

But despite persistent calls from the Austrian command, General Hindenburg did not attack Sedlec. He focused primarily on clearing East Prussia of the 1st Army and abandoned his allies to their fate. By that time, the Russian troops defending Kholm and Lublin received reinforcements (the 9th Army of General Lechitsky) and launched a counteroffensive on August 22. However, it developed slowly. Holding back the onslaught from the north, the Austrians at the end of August tried to seize the initiative in the Galich-Lvov direction. They attacked Russian troops there, trying to recapture Lvov. In fierce battles near Rava-Russkaya (August 25-26), Austro-Hungarian troops broke through the Russian front. But the 8th Army of General Brusilov still managed with its last strength to close the breakthrough and hold its positions west of Lvov. Meanwhile, the Russian onslaught from the north (from the Lublin-Kholm region) intensified. They broke through the front at Tomashov, threatening to encircle the Austro-Hungarian troops at Rava-Russkaya. Fearing the collapse of their front, the Austro-Hungarian armies began a general withdrawal on August 29. Pursuing them, the Russians advanced 200 km. They occupied Galicia and blocked the Przemysl fortress. Austro-Hungarian troops lost 325 thousand people in the Battle of Galicia. (including 100 thousand prisoners), Russians - 230 thousand people. This battle undermined the forces of Austria-Hungary, giving the Russians a sense of superiority over the enemy. Subsequently, if Austria-Hungary achieved success on the Russian front, it was only with the strong support of the Germans.

Warsaw-Ivangorod operation (1914). Victory in Galicia opened the way for Russian troops to Upper Silesia (the most important industrial region of Germany). This forced the Germans to help their allies. To prevent a Russian offensive to the west, Hindenburg transferred four corps of the 8th Army (including those arriving from the western front) to the Warta River area. Of these, the 9th German Army was formed, which, together with the 1st Austro-Hungarian Army (General Dankl), launched an offensive on Warsaw and Ivangorod on September 15, 1914. At the end of September - beginning of October, Austro-German troops (their total number was 310 thousand people) reached the closest approaches to Warsaw and Ivangorod. Fierce battles broke out here, in which the attackers suffered heavy losses (up to 50% of personnel). Meanwhile, the Russian command deployed additional forces to Warsaw and Ivangorod, increasing the number of its troops in this area to 520 thousand people. Fearing the Russian reserves brought into the battle, the Austro-German units began a hasty retreat. The autumn thaw, the destruction of communications routes by the retreating, and poor supply of Russian units did not allow active pursuit. By the beginning of November 1914, the Austro-German troops retreated to their original positions. Failures in Galicia and near Warsaw did not allow the Austro-German bloc to win over the Balkan states to its side in 1914.

First August operation (1914). Two weeks after the defeat in East Prussia, the Russian command again tried to seize the strategic initiative in this area. Having created superiority in forces over the 8th (Generals Schubert, then Eichhorn) German Army, it launched the 1st (General Rennenkampf) and 10th (Generals Flug, then Sievers) armies on the offensive. The main blow was dealt in the Augustow Forests (in the area of ​​the Polish city of Augustow), since fighting in forested areas did not allow the Germans to take advantage of their advantages in heavy artillery. By the beginning of October, the 10th Russian Army entered East Prussia, occupied Stallupenen and reached the Gumbinnen-Masurian Lakes line. Fierce fighting broke out at this line, as a result of which the Russian offensive was stopped. Soon the 1st Army was transferred to Poland and the 10th Army had to hold the front in East Prussia alone.

Autumn offensive of the Austro-Hungarian troops in Galicia (1914). Siege and capture of Przemysl by the Russians (1914-1915). Meanwhile, on the southern flank, in Galicia, Russian troops besieged Przemysl in September 1914. This powerful Austrian fortress was defended by a garrison under the command of General Kusmanek (up to 150 thousand people). For the blockade of Przemysl, a special Siege Army was created led by General Shcherbachev. On September 24, its units stormed the fortress, but were repulsed. At the end of September, Austro-Hungarian troops, taking advantage of the transfer of part of the forces of the Southwestern Front to Warsaw and Ivangorod, went on the offensive in Galicia and managed to unblock Przemysl. However, in the fierce October battles of Khirov and San, Russian troops in Galicia under the command of General Brusilov stopped the advance of the numerically superior Austro-Hungarian armies, and then threw them back to their original lines. This made it possible to blockade Przemysl for the second time at the end of October 1914. The blockade of the fortress was carried out by the Siege Army of General Selivanov. In the winter of 1915, Austria-Hungary made another powerful but unsuccessful attempt to recapture Przemysl. Then, after a 4-month siege, the garrison tried to break through to its own. But his foray on March 5, 1915 ended in failure. Four days later, on March 9, 1915, Commandant Kusmanek, having exhausted all means of defense, capitulated. 125 thousand people were captured. and more than 1 thousand guns. This was the largest success of the Russians in the 1915 campaign. However, 2.5 months later, on May 21, they left Przemysl in connection with a general retreat from Galicia.

Lodz operation (1914). After the completion of the Warsaw-Ivangorod operation, the Northwestern Front under the command of General Ruzsky (367 thousand people) formed the so-called. Lodz ledge. From here the Russian command planned to launch an invasion of Germany. The German command knew about the impending attack from intercepted radiograms. In an effort to prevent him, the Germans launched a powerful pre-emptive strike on October 29 with the goal of encircling and destroying the 5th (General Plehwe) and 2nd (General Scheidemann) Russian armies in the Lodz area. The core of the advancing German group with a total number of 280 thousand people. formed part of the 9th Army (General Mackensen). Its main blow fell on the 2nd Army, which, under pressure from superior German forces, retreated, putting up stubborn resistance. The heaviest fighting broke out in early November north of Lodz, where the Germans tried to cover the right flank of the 2nd Army. The culmination of this battle was the breakthrough of General Schaeffer's German corps into the eastern Lodz region on November 5-6, which threatened the 2nd Army with complete encirclement. But units of the 5th Army, which arrived from the south in a timely manner, managed to stop the further advance of the German corps. The Russian command did not begin to withdraw troops from Lodz. On the contrary, it strengthened the “Lodz patch”, and German frontal attacks against it did not bring the desired results. At this time, units of the 1st Army (General Rennenkampf) launched a counterattack from the north and linked up with units of the right flank of the 2nd Army. The gap where Schaeffer's corps had broken through was closed, and he himself found himself surrounded. Although the German corps managed to escape from the bag, the German command's plan to defeat the armies of the Northwestern Front failed. However, the Russian command also had to say goodbye to the plan to attack Berlin. On November 11, 1914, the Lodz operation ended without giving decisive success to either side. Nevertheless, the Russian side still lost strategically. Having repelled the German onslaught with heavy losses (110 thousand people), Russian troops were now unable to really threaten German territory. The Germans suffered 50 thousand casualties.

"The Battle of Four Rivers" (1914). Having failed to achieve success in the Lodz operation, the German command a week later again tried to defeat the Russians in Poland and push them back across the Vistula. Having received 6 fresh divisions from France, German troops with the forces of the 9th Army (General Mackensen) and the Woyrsch group again went on the offensive in the Lodz direction on November 19. After heavy fighting in the area of ​​the Bzura River, the Germans pushed the Russians back beyond Lodz, to the Ravka River. After this, the 1st Austro-Hungarian Army (General Dankl), located to the south, went on the offensive, and from December 5, a fierce “battle on four rivers” (Bzura, Ravka, Pilica and Nida) unfolded along the entire Russian front line in Poland. Russian troops, alternating defense and counterattacks, repelled the German onslaught on Ravka and drove the Austrians back beyond Nida. The “Battle of Four Rivers” was distinguished by extreme tenacity and significant losses on both sides. The damage to the Russian army amounted to 200 thousand people. Its personnel suffered especially, which directly influenced the sad outcome of the 1915 campaign for the Russians. The losses of the 9th German Army exceeded 100 thousand people.

Campaign of 1914 Caucasian theater of military operations

The Young Turk government in Istanbul (which came to power in Turkey in 1908) did not wait for the gradual weakening of Russia in the confrontation with Germany and already entered the war in 1914. Turkish troops, without serious preparation, immediately launched a decisive offensive in the Caucasian direction in order to recapture the lands lost during the Russian-Turkish war of 1877-1878. The 90,000-strong Turkish army was led by War Minister Enver Pasha. These troops were opposed by units of the 63,000-strong Caucasian Army under the overall command of the governor in the Caucasus, General Vorontsov-Dashkov (the actual commander of the troops was General A.Z. Myshlaevsky). The central event of the 1914 campaign in this theater of military operations was the Sarykamysh operation.

Sarykamysh operation (1914-1915). It took place from December 9, 1914 to January 5, 1915. The Turkish command planned to encircle and destroy the Sarykamysh detachment of the Caucasian Army (General Berkhman), and then capture Kars. Having thrown back the advanced units of the Russians (Olta detachment), the Turks on December 12, in severe frost, reached the approaches to Sarykamysh. There were only a few units here (up to 1 battalion). Led by Colonel of the General Staff Bukretov, who was passing through there, they heroically repelled the first onslaught of an entire Turkish corps. On December 14, reinforcements arrived to the defenders of Sarykamysh, and General Przhevalsky led its defense. Having failed to take Sarykamysh, the Turkish corps in the snowy mountains lost only 10 thousand people due to frostbite. On December 17, the Russians launched a counteroffensive and pushed the Turks back from Sarykamysh. Then Enver Pasha transferred the main attack to Karaudan, which was defended by the units of General Berkhman. But here, too, the furious onslaught of the Turks was repelled. Meanwhile, Russian troops advancing near Sarykamysh completely surrounded the 9th Turkish Corps on December 22. On December 25, General Yudenich became commander of the Caucasian Army, who gave the order to launch a counteroffensive near Karaudan. Having thrown back the remnants of the 3rd Army by 30-40 km by January 5, 1915, the Russians stopped the pursuit, which was carried out in a 20-degree cold. Enver Pasha's troops lost 78 thousand people killed, frozen, wounded and prisoners. (over 80% of the composition). Russian losses amounted to 26 thousand people. (killed, wounded, frostbitten). The victory at Sarykamysh stopped Turkish aggression in Transcaucasia and strengthened the position of the Caucasian Army.

1914 Campaign War at sea

During this period, the main actions took place on the Black Sea, where Turkey began the war by shelling Russian ports (Odessa, Sevastopol, Feodosia). However, soon the activity of the Turkish fleet (the basis of which was the German battle cruiser Goeben) was suppressed by the Russian fleet.

Battle at Cape Sarych. November 5, 1914 The German battlecruiser Goeben, under the command of Rear Admiral Souchon, attacked a Russian squadron of five battleships at Cape Sarych. In fact, the entire battle came down to an artillery duel between the Goeben and the Russian lead battleship Eustathius. Thanks to the well-aimed fire of Russian artillerymen, the Goeben received 14 accurate hits. A fire broke out on the German cruiser, and Souchon, without waiting for the rest of the Russian ships to enter the battle, gave the order to retreat to Constantinople (there the Goeben was repaired until December, and then, going out to sea, it hit a mine and was again undergoing repairs). "Eustathius" received only 4 accurate hits and left the battle without serious damage. The battle at Cape Sarych became a turning point in the struggle for dominance in the Black Sea. Having tested the strength of Russia's Black Sea borders in this battle, the Turkish fleet stopped active operations off the Russian coast. The Russian fleet, on the contrary, gradually seized the initiative in sea communications.

1915 Campaign Western Front

By the beginning of 1915, Russian troops held the front close to the German border and in Austrian Galicia. The 1914 campaign did not bring decisive results. Its main result was the collapse of the German Schlieffen plan. “If there had been no casualties on the part of Russia in 1914,” said British Prime Minister Lloyd George a quarter of a century later (in 1939), “then German troops would not only have captured Paris, but their garrisons would still have been in Belgium and France." In 1915, the Russian command planned to continue offensive operations on the flanks. This implied the occupation of East Prussia and an invasion of the Hungarian Plain through the Carpathians. However, the Russians did not have sufficient forces and means for a simultaneous offensive. During active military operations in 1914, the Russian personnel army was killed in the fields of Poland, Galicia and East Prussia. Its decline had to be made up by a reserve, insufficiently trained contingent. “From that time on,” recalled General A.A. Brusilov, “the regular character of the troops was lost, and our army began to look more and more like a poorly trained police force.” Another serious problem was the arms crisis, one way or another characteristic of all warring countries. It turned out that the consumption of ammunition was tens of times higher than calculated. Russia, with its underdeveloped industry, is particularly affected by this problem. Domestic factories could only meet 15-30% of the army's needs. The task of urgently restructuring the entire industry on a war footing became clear. In Russia, this process dragged on until the end of the summer of 1915. The lack of weapons was aggravated by poor supplies. Thus, the Russian armed forces entered the New Year with a shortage of weapons and personnel. This had a fatal impact on the 1915 campaign. The results of the battles in the east forced the Germans to radically reconsider the Schlieffen plan.

The German leadership now considered Russia to be its main rival. Its troops were 1.5 times closer to Berlin than the French army. At the same time, they threatened to enter the Hungarian Plain and defeat Austria-Hungary. Fearing a protracted war on two fronts, the Germans decided to throw their main forces to the east to finish off Russia. In addition to the personnel and material weakening of the Russian army, this task was made easier by the ability to wage a maneuver war in the east (in the west, by that time, a continuous positional front had already emerged with a powerful system of fortifications, the breakthrough of which cost enormous casualties). In addition, the capture of the Polish industrial region gave Germany an additional source of resources. After an unsuccessful frontal attack in Poland, the German command switched to a plan of flank attacks. It consisted of deep envelopment from the north (from East Prussia) of the right flank of Russian troops in Poland. At the same time, Austro-Hungarian troops attacked from the south (from the Carpathian region). The ultimate goal of these “strategic Cannes” was to be the encirclement of the Russian armies in the “Polish pocket”.

Battle of the Carpathians (1915). It became the first attempt by both sides to implement their strategic plans. The troops of the Southwestern Front (General Ivanov) tried to break through the Carpathian passes to the Hungarian Plain and defeat Austria-Hungary. In turn, the Austro-German command also had offensive plans in the Carpathians. It set the task of breaking through from here to Przemysl and driving the Russians out of Galicia. In a strategic sense, the breakthrough of Austro-German troops in the Carpathians, together with the onslaught of the Germans from East Prussia, was aimed at encircling Russian troops in Poland. The Battle of the Carpathians began on January 7 with an almost simultaneous offensive by the Austro-German armies and the Russian 8th Army (General Brusilov). A counter battle took place, called the “rubber war.” Both sides, pressing on each other, had to either go deeper into the Carpathians or retreat back. The fighting in the snowy mountains was characterized by great tenacity. The Austro-German troops managed to push back the left flank of the 8th Army, but they were unable to break through to Przemysl. Having received reinforcements, Brusilov repelled their advance. “As I toured the troops in the mountain positions,” he recalled, “I bowed to these heroes who steadfastly endured the terrifying burden of a mountainous winter war with insufficient weapons, facing three times the strongest enemy.” Only the 7th Austrian Army (General Pflanzer-Baltin), which took Chernivtsi, was able to achieve partial success. At the beginning of March 1915, the Southwestern Front launched a general offensive in the conditions of the spring thaw. Climbing the Carpathian steeps and overcoming fierce enemy resistance, Russian troops advanced 20-25 km and captured part of the passes. To repel their onslaught, the German command transferred new forces to this area. The Russian Headquarters, due to heavy battles in the East Prussian direction, could not provide the Southwestern Front with the necessary reserves. Bloody frontal battles in the Carpathians continued until April. They cost enormous sacrifices, but did not bring decisive success to either side. The Russians lost about 1 million people in the Battle of the Carpathians, the Austrians and Germans - 800 thousand people.

Second August operation (1915). Soon after the start of the Carpathian Battle, fierce fighting broke out on the northern flank of the Russian-German front. On January 25, 1915, the 8th (General von Below) and 10th (General Eichhorn) German armies went on the offensive from East Prussia. Their main blow fell in the area of ​​the Polish city of Augustow, where the 10th Russian Army (General Sivere) was located. Having created numerical superiority in this direction, the Germans attacked the flanks of Sievers’ army and tried to encircle it. The second stage provided for a breakthrough of the entire North-Western Front. But due to the tenacity of the soldiers of the 10th Army, the Germans failed to completely capture it in pincers. Only the 20th Corps of General Bulgakov was surrounded. For 10 days, he valiantly repelled attacks by German units in the snowy Augustow forests, preventing them from further advancing. Having used up all the ammunition, the remnants of the corps in a desperate impulse attacked the German positions in the hope of breaking through to their own. Having overthrown the German infantry in hand-to-hand combat, the Russian soldiers died heroically under the fire of German guns. “The attempt to break through was complete madness. But this holy madness is heroism, which showed the Russian warrior in his full light, which we know from the time of Skobelev, the times of the storming of Plevna, the battle in the Caucasus and the storming of Warsaw! The Russian soldier knows how to fight very well, he endures all kinds of hardships and is able to be persistent, even if certain death is inevitable!”, wrote the German war correspondent R. Brandt in those days. Thanks to this courageous resistance, the 10th Army was able to withdraw most of its forces from attack by mid-February and took up defense on the Kovno-Osovets line. The Northwestern Front held out and then managed to partially restore its lost positions.

Prasnysh operation (1915). Almost simultaneously, fighting broke out on another section of the East Prussian border, where the 12th Russian Army (General Plehve) was stationed. On February 7, in the Prasnysz area (Poland), it was attacked by units of the 8th German Army (General von Below). The city was defended by a detachment under the command of Colonel Barybin, who for several days heroically repelled the attacks of superior German forces. February 11, 1915 Prasnysh fell. But its staunch defense gave the Russians time to bring up the necessary reserves, which were being prepared in accordance with the Russian plan for a winter offensive in East Prussia. On February 12, General Pleshkov’s 1st Siberian Corps approached Prasnysh and immediately attacked the Germans. In a two-day winter battle, the Siberians completely defeated the German formations and drove them out of the city. Soon, the entire 12th Army, replenished with reserves, went on a general offensive, which, after stubborn fighting, drove the Germans back to the borders of East Prussia. Meanwhile, the 10th Army also went on the offensive and cleared the Augustow Forests of the Germans. The front was restored, but the Russian troops could not achieve more. The Germans lost about 40 thousand people in this battle, the Russians - about 100 thousand people. Encounter battles along the borders of East Prussia and in the Carpathians depleted the reserves of the Russian army on the eve of a formidable blow, which the Austro-German command was already preparing for it.

Gorlitsky breakthrough (1915). The beginning of the Great Retreat. Having failed to push back Russian troops at the borders of East Prussia and in the Carpathians, the German command decided to implement the third breakthrough option. It was supposed to be carried out between the Vistula and the Carpathians, in the Gorlice region. By that time, over half of the armed forces of the Austro-German bloc were concentrated against Russia. In the 35-kilometer section of the breakthrough at Gorlice, a strike group was created under the command of General Mackensen. It was superior to the Russian 3rd Army (General Radko-Dmitriev) stationed in this area: in manpower - 2 times, in light artillery - 3 times, in heavy artillery - 40 times, in machine guns - 2.5 times. On April 19, 1915, Mackensen’s group (126 thousand people) went on the offensive. The Russian command, knowing about the build-up of forces in this area, did not provide a timely counterattack. Large reinforcements were sent here late, were brought into battle piecemeal and quickly died in battles with superior enemy forces. The Gorlitsky breakthrough clearly revealed the problem of shortage of ammunition, especially shells. The overwhelming superiority in heavy artillery was one of the main reasons for this, the largest German success on the Russian front. “Eleven days of the terrible roar of German heavy artillery, literally tearing down entire rows of trenches along with their defenders,” recalled General A.I. Denikin, a participant in those events. “We almost didn’t respond - we had nothing. The regiments, exhausted to the last degree, repelled one attack after the other - with bayonets or point-blank shooting, blood flowed, the ranks thinned, grave mounds grew... Two regiments were almost destroyed by one fire."

The Gorlitsky breakthrough created a threat of encirclement of Russian troops in the Carpathians, the troops of the Southwestern Front began a widespread withdrawal. By June 22, having lost 500 thousand people, they left all of Galicia. Thanks to the courageous resistance of Russian soldiers and officers, Mackensen’s group was not able to quickly enter the operational space. In general, its offensive was reduced to “pushing through” the Russian front. It was seriously pushed back to the east, but not defeated. Nevertheless, the Gorlitsky breakthrough and the German offensive from East Prussia created a threat of encirclement of the Russian armies in Poland. The so-called The Great Retreat, during which Russian troops left Galicia, Lithuania, and Poland in the spring and summer of 1915. Russia's allies, meanwhile, were busy strengthening their defenses and did almost nothing to seriously distract the Germans from the offensive in the East. The Union leadership used the respite given to it to mobilize the economy for the needs of the war. “We,” Lloyd George later admitted, “left Russia to its fate.”

Battles of Prasnysh and Narev (1915). After the successful completion of the Gorlitsky breakthrough, the German command began to carry out the second act of its “strategic Cannes” and struck from the north, from East Prussia, against the positions of the North-Western Front (General Alekseev). On June 30, 1915, the 12th German Army (General Galwitz) went on the offensive in the Prasnysh area. She was opposed here by the 1st (General Litvinov) and 12th (General Churin) Russian armies. German troops had superiority in numbers of personnel (177 thousand versus 141 thousand people) and weapons. The superiority in artillery was especially significant (1256 versus 377 guns). After hurricane fire and a powerful onslaught, German units captured the main defense line. But they failed to achieve the expected breakthrough of the front line, much less the defeat of the 1st and 12th armies. The Russians stubbornly defended themselves everywhere, launching counterattacks in threatened areas. In 6 days of continuous fighting, Galwitz's soldiers were able to advance 30-35 km. Without even reaching the Narew River, the Germans stopped their offensive. The German command began to regroup its forces and pull up reserves for a new attack. In the Battle of Prasnysh, the Russians lost about 40 thousand people, the Germans - about 10 thousand people. The tenacity of the soldiers of the 1st and 12th armies thwarted the German plan to encircle Russian troops in Poland. But the danger looming from the north over the Warsaw region forced the Russian command to begin withdrawing its armies beyond the Vistula.

Having brought up their reserves, the Germans went on the offensive again on July 10. The 12th (General Galwitz) and 8th (General Scholz) German armies took part in the operation. The German onslaught on the 140-kilometer Narev front was held back by the same 1st and 12th armies. Having an almost double superiority in manpower and a fivefold superiority in artillery, the Germans persistently tried to break through the Narew line. They managed to cross the river in several places, but the Russians, with fierce counterattacks, did not give the German units the opportunity to expand their bridgeheads until the beginning of August. A particularly important role was played by the defense of the Osovets fortress, which covered the right flank of the Russian troops in these battles. The resilience of its defenders did not allow the Germans to reach the rear of the Russian armies defending Warsaw. Meanwhile, Russian troops were able to evacuate from the Warsaw area without hindrance. The Russians lost 150 thousand people in the Battle of Narevo. The Germans also suffered considerable losses. After the July battles, they were unable to continue an active offensive. The heroic resistance of the Russian armies in the battles of Prasnysh and Narew saved Russian troops in Poland from encirclement and, to a certain extent, decided the outcome of the 1915 campaign.

Battle of Vilna (1915). The end of the Great Retreat. In August, the commander of the Northwestern Front, General Mikhail Alekseev, planned to launch a flank counterattack against the advancing German armies from the Kovno region (now Kaunas). But the Germans forestalled this maneuver and at the end of July they themselves attacked the Kovno positions with the forces of the 10th German Army (General von Eichhorn). After several days of assault, the commandant of Kovno Grigoriev showed cowardice and on August 5 surrendered the fortress to the Germans (for this he was later sentenced to 15 years in prison). The fall of Kovno worsened the strategic situation in Lithuania for the Russians and led to the withdrawal of the right wing of the North-Western Front troops beyond the Lower Neman. Having captured Kovno, the Germans tried to encircle the 10th Russian Army (General Radkevich). But in the stubborn oncoming August battles near Vilna, the German offensive stalled. Then the Germans concentrated a powerful group in the Sventsyan area (north of Vilno) and on August 27 launched an attack on Molodechno from there, trying to reach the rear of the 10th Army from the north and capture Minsk. Due to the threat of encirclement, the Russians had to leave Vilna. However, the Germans failed to develop their success. Their path was blocked by the timely arrival of the 2nd Army (General Smirnov), which had the honor of finally stopping the German offensive. Decisively attacking the Germans at Molodechno, she defeated them and forced them to retreat back to Sventsyany. By September 19, the Sventsyansky breakthrough was eliminated, and the front in this area stabilized. The Battle of Vilna ends, in general, the Great Retreat of the Russian army. Having exhausted their offensive forces, the Germans switched to positional defense in the east. The German plan to defeat Russia's armed forces and exit the war failed. Thanks to the courage of its soldiers and the skillful withdrawal of troops, the Russian army avoided encirclement. “The Russians broke out of the pincers and achieved a frontal retreat in a direction favorable to them,” the Chief of the German General Staff, Field Marshal Paul von Hindenburg, was forced to state. The front has stabilized on the Riga - Baranovichi - Ternopil line. Three fronts were created here: Northern, Western and Southwestern. From here the Russians did not retreat until the fall of the monarchy. During the Great Retreat, Russia suffered the largest losses of the war - 2.5 million people. (killed, wounded and captured). The damage to Germany and Austria-Hungary exceeded 1 million people. The retreat intensified the political crisis in Russia.

Campaign 1915 Caucasian theater of military operations

The beginning of the Great Retreat seriously influenced the development of events on the Russian-Turkish front. Partly for this reason, the grandiose Russian landing operation on the Bosphorus, which was planned to support the Allied forces landing at Gallipoli, was disrupted. Under the influence of the German successes, Turkish troops became more active on the Caucasian front.

Alashkert operation (1915). On June 26, 1915, in the area of ​​Alashkert (Eastern Turkey), the 3rd Turkish Army (Mahmud Kiamil Pasha) went on the offensive. Under the pressure of superior Turkish forces, the 4th Caucasian Corps (General Oganovsky) defending this area began to retreat to the Russian border. This created the threat of a breakthrough of the entire Russian front. Then the energetic commander of the Caucasian Army, General Nikolai Nikolaevich Yudenich, brought into battle a detachment under the command of General Nikolai Baratov, which dealt a decisive blow to the flank and rear of the advancing Turkish group. Fearing encirclement, units of Mahmud Kiamil began to retreat to Lake Van, near which the front stabilized on July 21. The Alashkert operation destroyed Turkey's hopes of seizing the strategic initiative in the Caucasus theater of military operations.

Hamadan Operation (1915). From October 17 to December 3, 1915, Russian troops took offensive actions in Northern Iran to suppress the possible intervention of this state on the side of Turkey and Germany. This was facilitated by the German-Turkish residency, which became more active in Tehran after the failures of the British and French in the Dardanelles operation, as well as the Great Retreat of the Russian army. The introduction of Russian troops into Iran was also sought by the British allies, who thereby sought to strengthen the security of their possessions in Hindustan. In October 1915, the corps of General Nikolai Baratov (8 thousand people) was sent to Iran, which occupied Tehran. Advancing to Hamadan, the Russians defeated Turkish-Persian troops (8 thousand people) and eliminated German-Turkish agents in the country . This created a reliable barrier against German-Turkish influence in Iran and Afghanistan, and also eliminated a possible threat to the left flank of the Caucasian army.

1915 Campaign War at sea

Military operations at sea in 1915 were, on the whole, successful for the Russian fleet. Among the largest battles of the 1915 campaign, one can highlight the campaign of the Russian squadron to the Bosphorus (Black Sea). Gotlan battle and Irben operation (Baltic Sea).

March to the Bosphorus (1915). A squadron of the Black Sea Fleet, consisting of 5 battleships, 3 cruisers, 9 destroyers, 1 air transport with 5 seaplanes, took part in the campaign to the Bosphorus, which took place on May 1-6, 1915. On May 2-3, the battleships "Three Saints" and "Panteleimon", having entered the Bosphorus Strait area, fired at its coastal fortifications. On May 4, the battleship Rostislav opened fire on the fortified area of ​​Iniada (northwest of the Bosphorus), which was attacked from the air by seaplanes. The apotheosis of the campaign to the Bosphorus was the battle on May 5 at the entrance to the strait between the flagship of the German-Turkish fleet on the Black Sea - the battle cruiser Goeben - and four Russian battleships. In this skirmish, as in the battle at Cape Sarych (1914), the battleship Eustathius distinguished itself, which disabled the Goeben with two accurate hits. The German-Turkish flagship ceased fire and left the battle. This campaign to the Bosphorus strengthened the superiority of the Russian fleet in the Black Sea communications. Subsequently, the greatest danger to the Black Sea Fleet was German submarines. Their activity did not allow Russian ships to appear off the Turkish coast until the end of September. With the entry of Bulgaria into the war, the zone of operation of the Black Sea Fleet expanded, covering a new large area in the western part of the sea.

Gotland Fight (1915). This naval battle took place on June 19, 1915 in the Baltic Sea near the Swedish island of Gotland between the 1st brigade of Russian cruisers (5 cruisers, 9 destroyers) under the command of Rear Admiral Bakhirev and a detachment of German ships (3 cruisers, 7 destroyers and 1 minelayer ). The battle was in the nature of an artillery duel. During the firefight, the Germans lost the Albatross minelayer. He was severely damaged and, engulfed in flames, washed up on the Swedish coast. There his team was interned. Then a cruising battle took place. It was attended by: from the German side the cruisers "Roon" and "Lubeck", from the Russian side - the cruisers "Bayan", "Oleg" and "Rurik". Having received damage, the German ships ceased fire and left the battle. The Gotlad battle is significant because for the first time in the Russian fleet, radio reconnaissance data was used to fire.

Irben operation (1915). During the offensive of the German ground forces in the Riga direction, the German squadron under the command of Vice Admiral Schmidt (7 battleships, 6 cruisers and 62 other ships) tried at the end of July to break through the Irbene Strait into the Gulf of Riga to destroy Russian ships in the area and blockade Riga at sea . Here the Germans were opposed by ships of the Baltic Fleet led by Rear Admiral Bakhirev (1 battleship and 40 other ships). Despite the significant superiority in forces, the German fleet was unable to complete the assigned task due to minefields and the successful actions of Russian ships. During the operation (July 26 - August 8), he lost 5 ships (2 destroyers, 3 minesweepers) in fierce battles and was forced to retreat. The Russians lost two old gunboats (Sivuch and Koreets). Having failed in the Battle of Gotland and the Irben operation, the Germans were unable to achieve superiority in the eastern part of the Baltic and switched to defensive actions. Subsequently, serious activity of the German fleet became possible only here thanks to the victories of the ground forces.

1916 Campaign Western Front

Military failures forced the government and society to mobilize resources to repel the enemy. Thus, in 1915, the contribution to defense of private industry, whose activities were coordinated by military-industrial committees (MIC), expanded. Thanks to the mobilization of industry, the supply of the front improved by 1916. Thus, from January 1915 to January 1916, the production of rifles in Russia increased 3 times, various types of guns - 4-8 times, various types of ammunition - 2.5-5 times. Despite the losses, the Russian armed forces in 1915 grew due to additional mobilizations by 1.4 million people. The plan of the German command for 1916 provided for a transition to positional defense in the East, where the Germans created a powerful system of defensive structures. The Germans planned to deliver the main blow to the French army in the Verdun area. In February 1916, the famous “Verdun meat grinder” began, forcing France to once again turn to its eastern ally for help.

Naroch operation (1916). In response to persistent requests for help from France, the Russian command carried out an offensive on March 5-17, 1916 with troops from the Western (General Evert) and Northern (General Kuropatkin) fronts in the area of ​​Lake Naroch (Belarus) and Jacobstadt (Latvia). Here they were opposed by units of the 8th and 10th German armies. The Russian command set the goal of driving the Germans out of Lithuania and Belarus and throwing them back to the borders of East Prussia. But the preparation time for the offensive had to be sharply reduced due to requests from the allies to speed it up due to their difficult situation at Verdun. As a result, the operation was carried out without proper preparation. The main blow in the Naroch area was delivered by the 2nd Army (General Ragosa). For 10 days she unsuccessfully tried to break through the powerful German fortifications. The lack of heavy artillery and the spring thaw contributed to the failure. The Naroch massacre cost the Russians 20 thousand killed and 65 thousand wounded. The offensive of the 5th Army (General Gurko) from the Jacobstadt area on March 8-12 also ended in failure. Here, Russian losses amounted to 60 thousand people. The total damage to the Germans was 20 thousand people. The Naroch operation benefited, first of all, Russia's allies, since the Germans were unable to transfer a single division from the east to Verdun. “The Russian offensive,” wrote the French general Joffre, “forced the Germans, who had only insignificant reserves, to bring all these reserves into action and, in addition, to attract stage troops and transfer entire divisions removed from other sectors.” On the other hand, the defeat at Naroch and Jacobstadt had a demoralizing effect on the troops of the Northern and Western Fronts. They were never able, unlike the troops of the Southwestern Front, to conduct successful offensive operations in 1916.

Brusilov breakthrough and offensive at Baranovichi (1916). On May 22, 1916, the offensive of the troops of the Southwestern Front (573 thousand people), led by General Alexei Alekseevich Brusilov, began. The Austro-German armies opposing him at that moment numbered 448 thousand people. The breakthrough was carried out by all armies of the front, which made it difficult for the enemy to transfer reserves. At the same time, Brusilov used a new tactic of parallel strikes. It consisted of alternating active and passive breakthrough sections. This disorganized the Austro-German troops and did not allow them to concentrate forces on the threatened areas. The Brusilov breakthrough was distinguished by careful preparation (including training on exact models of enemy positions) and an increased supply of weapons to the Russian army. So, there was even a special inscription on the charging boxes: “Don’t spare shells!” Artillery preparation in various areas lasted from 6 to 45 hours. According to the figurative expression of the historian N.N. Yakovlev, on the day the breakthrough began, “the Austrian troops did not see the sunrise. Instead of serene sunrays, death came from the east - thousands of shells turned the inhabited, heavily fortified positions into hell.” It was in this famous breakthrough that the Russian troops were able to achieve the greatest degree of coordinated action between infantry and artillery.

Under the cover of artillery fire, the Russian infantry marched in waves (3-4 chains in each). The first wave, without stopping, passed the front line and immediately attacked the second line of defense. The third and fourth waves rolled over the first two and attacked the third and fourth lines of defense. This Brusilov method of “rolling attack” was then used by the Allies to break through German fortifications in France. According to the original plan, the Southwestern Front was supposed to deliver only an auxiliary strike. The main offensive was planned in the summer on the Western Front (General Evert), to which the main reserves were intended. But the entire offensive of the Western Front came down to a week-long battle (June 19-25) in one sector near Baranovichi, which was defended by the Austro-German group Woyrsch. Having gone on the attack after many hours of artillery bombardment, the Russians managed to move forward somewhat. But they failed to completely break through the powerful, defense in depth (there were up to 50 rows of electrified wire at the front line alone). After bloody battles that cost the Russian troops 80 thousand people. losses, Evert stopped the offensive. The damage of Woyrsch's group amounted to 13 thousand people. Brusilov did not have sufficient reserves to successfully continue the offensive.

The headquarters was unable to shift the task of delivering the main attack to the Southwestern Front in time, and it began to receive reinforcements only in the second half of June. The Austro-German command took advantage of this. On June 17, the Germans, with the forces of the created group of General Liesingen, launched a counterattack in the Kovel area against the 8th Army (General Kaledin) of the Southwestern Front. But she repelled the onslaught and on June 22, together with the 3rd Army that finally received reinforcements, launched a new offensive on Kovel. In July, the main battles took place in the Kovel direction. Brusilov's attempts to take Kovel (the most important transport hub) were unsuccessful. During this period, other fronts (Western and Northern) froze in place and did not provide Brusilov with virtually any support. The Germans and Austrians transferred reinforcements here from other European fronts (over 30 divisions) and managed to close the gaps that had formed. By the end of July, the forward movement of the Southwestern Front was stopped.

During the Brusilov breakthrough, Russian troops broke through the Austro-German defenses along its entire length from the Pripyat marshes to the Romanian border and advanced 60-150 km. The losses of the Austro-German troops during this period amounted to 1.5 million people. (killed, wounded and captured). The Russians lost 0.5 million people. To hold the front in the East, the Germans and Austrians were forced to weaken the pressure on France and Italy. Influenced by the successes of the Russian army, Romania entered the war on the side of the Entente countries. In August - September, having received new reinforcements, Brusilov continued the onslaught. But he did not have the same success. On the left flank of the Southwestern Front, the Russians managed to somewhat push back the Austro-German units in the Carpathian region. But persistent attacks in the Kovel direction, which lasted until the beginning of October, ended in vain. The Austro-German units, strengthened by that time, repelled the Russian onslaught. In general, despite the tactical success, the offensive operations of the Southwestern Front (from May to October) did not bring a turning point in the course of the war. They cost Russia enormous casualties (about 1 million people), which became more and more difficult to restore.

Campaign of 1916 Caucasian theater of military operations

At the end of 1915, clouds began to gather over the Caucasian front. After the victory in the Dardanelles operation, the Turkish command planned to transfer the most combat-ready units from Gallipoli to the Caucasian front. But Yudenich got ahead of this maneuver by conducting the Erzurum and Trebizond operations. In them, Russian troops achieved their greatest success in the Caucasian theater of military operations.

Erzurum and Trebizond operations (1916). The goal of these operations was to capture the fortress of Erzurum and the port of Trebizond - the main bases of the Turks for operations against the Russian Transcaucasus. In this direction, the 3rd Turkish Army of Mahmud-Kiamil Pasha (about 60 thousand people) operated against the Caucasian Army of General Yudenich (103 thousand people). On December 28, 1915, the 2nd Turkestan (General Przhevalsky) and 1st Caucasian (General Kalitin) corps went on the offensive on Erzurum. The offensive took place in snow-capped mountains with strong winds and frost. But despite the difficult natural and climatic conditions, the Russians broke through the Turkish front and on January 8 reached the approaches to Erzurum. The assault on this heavily fortified Turkish fortress in conditions of severe cold and snow drifts, in the absence of siege artillery, was fraught with great risk. But Yudenich still decided to continue the operation, taking full responsibility for its implementation. On the evening of January 29, an unprecedented assault on the Erzurum positions began. After five days of fierce fighting, the Russians broke into Erzurum and then began pursuing the Turkish troops. It lasted until February 18 and ended 70-100 km west of Erzurum. During the operation, Russian troops advanced from their borders deeper into Turkish territory by more than 150 km. In addition to the courage of the troops, the success of the operation was also ensured by reliable material preparation. The warriors had warm clothes, winter shoes and even dark glasses to protect their eyes from the blinding glare of the mountain snow. Each soldier also had firewood for heating.

Russian losses amounted to 17 thousand people. (including 6 thousand frostbitten). The damage to the Turks exceeded 65 thousand people. (including 13 thousand prisoners). On January 23, the Trebizond operation began, which was carried out by the forces of the Primorsky detachment (General Lyakhov) and the Batumi detachment of ships of the Black Sea Fleet (Captain 1st Rank Rimsky-Korsakov). The sailors supported the ground forces with artillery fire, landings and the supply of reinforcements. After stubborn fighting, the Primorsky detachment (15 thousand people) reached the fortified Turkish position on the Kara-Dere River on April 1, which covered the approaches to Trebizond. Here the attackers received reinforcements by sea (two Plastun brigades numbering 18 thousand people), after which they began the assault on Trebizond. The first to cross the stormy cold river on April 2 were the soldiers of the 19th Turkestan Regiment under the command of Colonel Litvinov. Supported by the fire of the fleet, they swam to the left bank and drove the Turks out of the trenches. On April 5, Russian troops entered Trebizond, abandoned by the Turkish army, and then advanced west to Polathane. With the capture of Trebizond, the basing of the Black Sea Fleet improved, and the right flank of the Caucasian Army was able to freely receive reinforcements by sea. The Russian capture of Eastern Turkey was of great political significance. He seriously strengthened Russia's position in future negotiations with the allies regarding the future fate of Constantinople and the straits.

Kerind-Kasreshiri operation (1916). Following the capture of Trebizond, the 1st Caucasian Separate Corps of General Baratov (20 thousand people) carried out a campaign from Iran to Mesopotamia. He was supposed to provide assistance to an English detachment surrounded by the Turks in Kut el-Amar (Iraq). The campaign took place from April 5 to May 9, 1916. Baratov’s corps occupied Kerind, Kasre-Shirin, Hanekin and entered Mesopotamia. However, this difficult and dangerous campaign through the desert lost its meaning, since on April 13 the English garrison in Kut el-Amar capitulated. After the capture of Kut el-Amara, the command of the 6th Turkish Army (Khalil Pasha) sent its main forces to Mesopotamia against the Russian corps, which was greatly thinned out (from heat and disease). At Haneken (150 km northeast of Baghdad), Baratov had an unsuccessful battle with the Turks, after which the Russian corps abandoned the occupied cities and retreated to Hamadan. Eastern of this Iranian city, the Turkish offensive was stopped.

Erzrincan and Ognot operations (1916). In the summer of 1916, the Turkish command, having transferred up to 10 divisions from Gallipoli to the Caucasian front, decided to take revenge for Erzurum and Trebizond. The first to go on the offensive from the Erzincan area on June 13 was the 3rd Turkish Army under the command of Vehib Pasha (150 thousand people). The hottest battles broke out in the Trebizond direction, where the 19th Turkestan Regiment was stationed. With his steadfastness, he managed to hold back the first Turkish onslaught and gave Yudenich the opportunity to regroup his forces. On June 23, Yudenich launched a counterattack in the Mamakhatun area (west of Erzurum) with the forces of the 1st Caucasian Corps (General Kalitin). In four days of fighting, the Russians captured Mamakhatun and then launched a general counteroffensive. It ended on July 10 with the capture of Erzincan station. After this battle, the 3rd Turkish Army suffered huge losses (over 100 thousand people) and stopped active operations against the Russians. Having been defeated near Erzincan, the Turkish command entrusted the task of returning Erzurum to the newly formed 2nd Army under the command of Ahmet Izet Pasha (120 thousand people). On July 21, 1916, it went on the offensive in the Erzurum direction and pushed back the 4th Caucasian Corps (General de Witt). This created a threat to the left flank of the Caucasian army. In response, Yudenich launched a counterattack on the Turks at Ognot with the forces of General Vorobyov’s group. In stubborn oncoming battles in the Ognotic direction, which lasted throughout August, Russian troops thwarted the offensive of the Turkish army and forced it to go on the defensive. Turkish losses amounted to 56 thousand people. The Russians lost 20 thousand people. So, the attempt of the Turkish command to seize the strategic initiative on the Caucasian front failed. During two operations, the 2nd and 3rd Turkish armies suffered irreparable losses and ceased active operations against the Russians. The Ognot operation was the last major battle of the Russian Caucasian Army in the First World War.

1916 Campaign War at sea

In the Baltic Sea, the Russian fleet supported the right flank of the 12th Army defending Riga with fire, and also sank German merchant ships and their convoys. Russian submarines also did this quite successfully. One of the retaliatory actions of the German fleet is its shelling of the Baltic port (Estonia). This raid, based on insufficient understanding of Russian defenses, ended in disaster for the Germans. During the operation, 7 of the 11 German destroyers participating in the campaign were blown up and sank on Russian minefields. None of the fleets knew such a case during the entire war. On the Black Sea, the Russian fleet actively contributed to the offensive of the coastal flank of the Caucasian Front, participating in the transportation of troops, landing troops and fire support for the advancing units. In addition, the Black Sea Fleet continued to blockade the Bosphorus and other strategically important places on the Turkish coast (in particular, the Zonguldak coal region), and also attacked the enemy’s sea communications. As before, German submarines were active in the Black Sea, causing significant damage to Russian transport ships. To combat them, new weapons were invented: diving shells, hydrostatic depth charges, anti-submarine mines.

1917 campaign

By the end of 1916, Russia's strategic position, despite the occupation of part of its territories, remained quite stable. Its army held its position firmly and carried out a number of offensive operations. For example, France had a higher percentage of occupied lands than Russia. If the Germans were more than 500 km from St. Petersburg, then from Paris they were only 120 km. However, the internal situation in the country has seriously deteriorated. Grain collection decreased by 1.5 times, prices rose, and transport went wrong. An unprecedented number of men were drafted into the army - 15 million people, and the national economy lost a huge number of workers. The scale of human losses also changed. On average, every month the country lost as many soldiers at the front as in entire years of previous wars. All this required unprecedented effort from the people. However, not all society bore the burden of war. For certain strata, military difficulties became a source of enrichment. For example, huge profits came from placing military orders at private factories. The source of income growth was the deficit, which allowed prices to inflate. Evasion from the front by joining rear organizations was widely practiced. In general, the problems of the rear, its correct and comprehensive organization, turned out to be one of the most vulnerable places in Russia in the First World War. All this created an increase in social tension. After the failure of the German plan to end the war at lightning speed, the First World War became a war of attrition. In this struggle, the Entente countries had a total advantage in the number of armed forces and economic potential. But the use of these advantages depended to a large extent on the mood of the nation and strong and skillful leadership.

In this regard, Russia was the most vulnerable. Nowhere has such an irresponsible split at the top of society been observed. Representatives of the State Duma, aristocracy, generals, left parties, liberal intelligentsia and associated bourgeoisie circles expressed the opinion that Tsar Nicholas II was unable to bring the matter to a victorious conclusion. The growth of opposition sentiments was partly determined by the connivance of the authorities themselves, who failed to establish proper order in the rear during wartime. Ultimately, all this led to the February Revolution and the overthrow of the monarchy. After the abdication of Nicholas II (March 2, 1917), the Provisional Government came to power. But its representatives, powerful in criticizing the tsarist regime, turned out to be helpless in governing the country. A dual power arose in the country between the Provisional Government and the Petrograd Soviet of Workers', Peasants' and Soldiers' Deputies. This led to further destabilization. There was a struggle for power at the top. The army, which became hostage to this struggle, began to fall apart. The first impetus for the collapse was given by the famous Order No. 1 issued by the Petrograd Soviet, which deprived officers of disciplinary power over soldiers. As a result, discipline fell in the units and desertion increased. Anti-war propaganda intensified in the trenches. The officers suffered greatly, becoming the first victims of soldiers' discontent. The purge of the senior command staff was carried out by the Provisional Government itself, which did not trust the military. Under these conditions, the army increasingly lost its combat effectiveness. But the Provisional Government, under pressure from the allies, continued the war, hoping to strengthen its position with successes at the front. Such an attempt was the June Offensive, organized by Minister of War Alexander Kerensky.

June Offensive (1917). The main blow was delivered by the troops of the Southwestern Front (General Gutor) in Galicia. The offensive was poorly prepared. To a large extent, it was of a propaganda nature and was intended to raise the prestige of the new government. At first, the Russians enjoyed success, which was especially noticeable in the sector of the 8th Army (General Kornilov). It broke through the front and advanced 50 km, occupying the cities of Galich and Kalush. But the troops of the Southwestern Front could not achieve more. Their pressure quickly wilted under the influence of anti-war propaganda and the increased resistance of the Austro-German troops. At the beginning of July 1917, the Austro-German command transferred 16 new divisions to Galicia and launched a powerful counterattack. As a result, the troops of the Southwestern Front were defeated and were thrown back significantly east of their original lines, to the state border. The offensive actions in July 1917 of the Romanian (General Shcherbachev) and Northern (General Klembovsky) Russian fronts were also associated with the June offensive. The offensive in Romania, near Maresti, developed successfully, but was stopped by order of Kerensky under the influence of defeats in Galicia. The offensive of the Northern Front at Jacobstadt completely failed. The total loss of Russians during this period amounted to 150 thousand people. Political events that had a disintegrating effect on the troops played a significant role in their failure. “These were no longer the old Russians,” German General Ludendorff recalled about those battles. The defeats of the summer of 1917 intensified the crisis of power and aggravated the internal political situation in the country.

Riga operation (1917). After the defeat of the Russians in June - July, the Germans, on August 19-24, 1917, carried out an offensive operation with the forces of the 8th Army (General Goutier) to capture Riga. The Riga direction was defended by the 12th Russian Army (General Parsky). On August 19, German troops went on the offensive. By noon they crossed the Dvina, threatening to go to the rear of the units defending Riga. Under these conditions, Parsky ordered the evacuation of Riga. On August 21, the Germans entered the city, where German Kaiser Wilhelm II arrived specially on the occasion of this celebration. After the capture of Riga, German troops soon stopped the offensive. Russian losses in the Riga operation amounted to 18 thousand people. (of which 8 thousand were prisoners). German damage - 4 thousand people. The defeat near Riga caused an aggravation of the internal political crisis in the country.

Moonsund operation (1917). After the capture of Riga, the German command decided to take control of the Gulf of Riga and destroy Russian naval forces there. To this end, on September 29 - October 6, 1917, the Germans carried out the Moonsund operation. To implement it, they allocated a Special Purpose Naval Detachment, consisting of 300 ships of various classes (including 10 battleships) under the command of Vice Admiral Schmidt. For the landing of troops on the Moonsund Islands, which blocked the entrance to the Gulf of Riga, the 23rd reserve corps of General von Katen (25 thousand people) was intended. The Russian garrison of the islands numbered 12 thousand people. In addition, the Gulf of Riga was protected by 116 ships and auxiliary vessels (including 2 battleships) under the command of Rear Admiral Bakhirev. The Germans occupied the islands without much difficulty. But in the battle at sea, the German fleet met stubborn resistance from Russian sailors and suffered heavy losses (16 ships were sunk, 16 ships were damaged, including 3 battleships). The Russians lost the battleship Slava and the destroyer Grom, which fought heroically. Despite the great superiority in forces, the Germans were unable to destroy the ships of the Baltic Fleet, which retreated in an organized manner to the Gulf of Finland, blocking the German squadron’s path to Petrograd. The battle for the Moonsund archipelago was the last major military operation on the Russian front. In it, the Russian fleet defended the honor of the Russian armed forces and worthily completed their participation in the First World War.

Brest-Litovsk Truce (1917). Treaty of Brest-Litovsk (1918)

In October 1917, the Provisional Government was overthrown by the Bolsheviks, who advocated an early conclusion of peace. On November 20, in Brest-Litovsk (Brest), they began separate peace negotiations with Germany. On December 2, a truce was concluded between the Bolshevik government and German representatives. On March 3, 1918, the Brest-Litovsk Peace Treaty was concluded between Soviet Russia and Germany. Significant territories were torn away from Russia (the Baltic states and part of Belarus). Russian troops were withdrawn from the territories of newly independent Finland and Ukraine, as well as from the districts of Ardahan, Kars and Batum, which were transferred to Turkey. In total, Russia lost 1 million square meters. km of land (including Ukraine). The Treaty of Brest-Litovsk threw it back in the west to the borders of the 16th century. (during the reign of Ivan the Terrible). In addition, Soviet Russia was obliged to demobilize the army and navy, establish customs duties favorable to Germany, and also pay a significant indemnity to the German side (its total amount was 6 billion gold marks).

The Treaty of Brest-Litovsk meant a severe defeat for Russia. The Bolsheviks took upon themselves historical responsibility for it. But in many ways, the Brest-Litovsk Peace Treaty only recorded the situation in which the country found itself, driven to collapse by war, the helplessness of the authorities and the irresponsibility of society. The victory over Russia made it possible for Germany and its allies to temporarily occupy the Baltic states, Ukraine, Belarus and Transcaucasia. During World War I, the death toll in the Russian army was 1.7 million people. (killed, died from wounds, gases, in captivity, etc.). The war cost Russia 25 billion dollars. A deep moral trauma was also inflicted on the nation, which for the first time in many centuries suffered such a heavy defeat.

Shefov N.A. The most famous wars and battles of Russia M. "Veche", 2000.
"From Ancient Rus' to the Russian Empire." Shishkin Sergey Petrovich, Ufa.