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  • Hi I'm John Green and this is Crash Course European History.

  • So, World War I was a “total war,” meaning it wasn't just something that affected soldiers.

  • All citizens were mobilized to participate in the strugglesome on the battlefront

  • and others on the so-called home front.

  • In fact, the phrasethe home frontwas coined during World War I, as a way of reminding

  • people that even if they weren't firing guns, they were still participating in a war.

  • [Intro] The home front is often defined as the site

  • where battles did not rage but where civilians produced the goods for those battles.

  • So factory workers in cities made munitions, and weapons, and ships, and tanks, and poisonous

  • gas.

  • And farmers in rural areas grew food, and raised animals for meat, and provided other

  • raw materials.

  • Also on the home front, government officials rationed food, and allocated raw materials

  • to factories, and determined railroad schedules, and censored newspapers and public speech

  • as part of the war effort.

  • Civilians were expected to shift every ounce of their energy away from everyday concerns--like

  • about the well-being of their families and themselves--and into material support for

  • the battle front.

  • In the first months of the war, textile and other factories that producedluxuries

  • were closed and the workersmany of them womenwere fired and were left destitute.

  • But as the war extended beyond the few weeks most expected it to last, these closed factories

  • were converted.

  • They started making parts for airplanes and parachutes, for example, or creating the many

  • new uniforms that were suddenly needed to replace those of the dead.

  • And this meant that many of the women who had been made unemployed by initial factory

  • closures were rehired to work in munitions and other jobs that had traditionally been

  • seen as men's work . As the war progressed, governments increased

  • the number of hours civilians needed to work.

  • Care for children and the elderly became a huge problem for the hard-pressed head of

  • the familywhich was often a woman.

  • To address the women's struggle to feed themselves and their families, some local

  • governments and factory owners set up canteens to provide food for workers and also day-care

  • centers for children.

  • And Civilian work hours were mostly devoted to fueling the war, not, like, building housing,

  • or providing medical care, or repairing infrastructure, and other ordinary things that civilizations

  • need to grow.

  • Early on, leaders in all countries called a political truce on the home front.

  • Kaiser William announced on August 4, 1914: “I no longer recognize [political] parties.

  • I recognize only Germans.”

  • Which is one of those statements that suspiciously benefits the person saying it.

  • Like, Kaiser William was basically saying, “there's only one party at this party...my

  • party.”

  • But across Europe, people did often leave behind their internal divisions.

  • Like, Socialists, for instance, largely put aside their belief in the international brotherhood

  • and adopted theBurgfriedenor party truce, also called theunion sacrée”

  • or sacred union in France and Russia.

  • Instead of acting on their belief thatthe working man has no country,” socialist men

  • mostly volunteered for service like men from other political perspectives.

  • Feminists, many of whom were pacifists, rolled up their sleeves and volunteered in hospitals.

  • Some even served as nurses on the front lines.

  • One German rabbi reinforced the Kaiser's celebration of unity: “In the German fatherland

  • there are no longer any Christians and Jews, any believers and disbelievers, there are

  • only Germans.”

  • Politicians felt that criticism and normal complaints from inside communities had to

  • be put aside, because there was an existential threat to the community from the outside.

  • So, to ensure the continuation of unity, they enacted censorship laws that made certain

  • types of criticism crimes against the state.

  • But initially at least, the warm glow of patriotism and shared sacrifice meant that those laws

  • were hardly needed.

  • However, the home front did eventually become a site of tension around many issues, but

  • especially gender roles.

  • Industrialists and government officials had summoned women out of the home and into factories,

  • or driving ambulances and trucks, or conducting streetcars, and serving the war effort in

  • any way needed.

  • Many women were elated to have jobs, especially when their husbands and fathers had left for

  • war and the family needed funds to survive.

  • But , some civilians saw the situation as chaos.

  • Women were heading households; And by taking jobs, women in factories weresending men

  • to the slaughter,” at least according to one male worker.

  • Of course, that's not how war works.

  • It doesn't happen merely because there are available bodies.

  • But if there's one thing we can say about misogyny: It ain't rational.

  • At any rate, instead of calming gender tensions, war accelerated them.

  • And that unity and patriotism among civilians also became complicated because of soaring

  • inflation across Europe.

  • Inflation: The Most Underrated Historical Force.

  • Furthermore, farmland was turned into trenches on the western front and into a vast battlefield

  • stripped of produce and animals on the eastern front.

  • So the food allotted to the civilian population declined, and the British naval blockade of

  • the Central Powers prevented foodstuffs from neutral countries reaching workers in cities,

  • which intensified the shortages.

  • Anti-Semitism also flourished; So, throughout history hard times often get blamed on those

  • considered outsiders, and people standing in line for ever more expensive food often

  • wrongly blamed the rising prices on Jewish people.

  • Meanwhile, because some countries, notably Germany, did not tax war profits, some civilians

  • grew incredibly rich from the war and showed off that rising wealth.

  • And the resulting growing class differences weakened the sense of solidarity that was

  • supposed to keep all the civilians mobilized together to sacrifice for the armies at the

  • front.

  • I mean, it didn't seem like the people making all this untaxed wealthe were sacrificing

  • much.

  • I wonder if the workers will ever figure out that they can seize the means of production

  • and just take back the excess wealth of the rich?

  • What's that?

  • Oh, apparently we're talking about that next week.

  • By 1916, east-central and eastern Europe had become ever more barren battlefields.

  • In the first year of the war, Russian and Central Power armies pushed the front back

  • and forth across hundreds of miles of farmland.

  • And both pursued a scorched earth policy in Poland, and parts of Latvia and Lithuania,

  • and Ukraine.

  • So, the retreating Russian army in late 1914 and 1915 drove people from their houses, torched

  • entire villages, burned crops in the fields, and took all the cattle, so that advancing

  • Germans would have no resources.

  • Germans and Austro-Hungarians did the same to deprive Russians of resources.

  • And of course in all this, civilians suffered tremendously. did the center of the world

  • just open?

  • Is there a camera in there?

  • There is!

  • You may have noticed there are a lot more images in these episodes of Crash Course European

  • History than in our early episodes, and the reason for that is, there were many more images.

  • Like, today it's difficult to even process how common the image has become, and how much

  • we interact with images in our everyday life.

  • Like, for instance, you are interacting with one now...

  • But the growing proliferation of both still and moving pictures dramatically shaped people's

  • understanding of the world in the early twentieth century, and also, their understanding of

  • each other's suffering.

  • So remember, when you're looking at footage like this, you're looking at footage that

  • literally wasn't available in, for instance, the Wars of 1848,

  • OK.

  • So, amid all of this violence, some six million people were registered as refugees in Russia,

  • a number that does not include the many who were living in forests and deserted areas.

  • Altogether an estimated two million houses were burned in the region.

  • Roads were so clogged with fleeing civilians that armies had a difficult time advancing

  • or retreating, a situation that was made more difficult by the many bodies of those who

  • did not survive.

  • Meanwhile other civilians were driven westward, taking shelter in cities like Vienna, which

  • was a nightmarish site of disease and starvation.

  • The Habsburg government was hard-pressed to offer any help, leaving the task of public

  • welfare to civilians.

  • That meant that across multiethnic eastern Europe, clubs and other organizations took

  • to tending to refugees of their own ethnicity, helping to provide food and medical services

  • and find at least minimal housing.

  • And all that civilian activism really undermined the claims and credibility of the imperial

  • governments of Germany, and Austria-Hungary, and Russia, and the Ottoman Empire.

  • Like, if governments don't provide people with security, or create stable and just social

  • orders in which people can live and work and raise their children in peace and some measure

  • of prosperity, what's even the point of governments?

  • As one group of ten starving peasant women wrote to the Ottoman minister of the interior

  • in 1917: “Either deport us all to another place or cast us into the sea,” What crops

  • they grew were often taken by deserters or the army and their livestock and even pots

  • and pans were seized by the government.

  • And so as the war and its miseries dragged on and on and on, the so-called home front

  • (which in the case of eastern Europe was often simultaneously a battlefront) became a site

  • of uprisings.

  • And all this expanded beyond Europe as the war expanded: The Allies inflicted a famine

  • in Greater Syria (today Lebanon and Syria) to provoke an uprising.

  • In Africa, many villages became wastelands.

  • And so, really, it's no wonder that the armistice on November 11, 1918 failed to bring

  • a true end to the fighting.

  • In October and November in Germany, citizens were on the streets demanding the Kaiser's

  • ouster; in Vienna, soldiers manned the streets to keep order among starving civilians who

  • were demanding change because their lives literally depended on it.

  • As the Spanish influenza hit, causing an estimated 100 million deaths worldwide, caregiving and

  • death added to the tragedies of civilian life in the early 20th century.

  • Meanwhile after the armistice, Britain, backed by the United States, encouraged the Greeks

  • to invade Turkey, with Britain hoping to gain Constantinople for itself.

  • The Turkish countryside went up in flames as the Greek army and Greek civilians burned

  • Turkish villages, while Turkish people retaliated in kind.

  • Eastern Europe also remained a site of bloodshed as many soldiers refused to demobilize and

  • formed paramilitary groups supporting the rise of new states to replace the defeated

  • Habsburg Empire.

  • And many soldiers returned home deeply traumatized, in ways that often lasted for the rest of

  • their lives.

  • So, as Europe remained a militarized powder-keg of civil war and revolution, in 1919 representatives

  • from the victorious powersBritain, France, Italy, the United States, and their allies--met

  • in Paris.

  • Their goal was to determine conditions for creating a “lasting peaceto end this

  • great war.”

  • Unlike the Congress of Vienna following Napoleon's defeat in which France participated, the meeting

  • in Paris excluded Germany, Austria-Hungary, and the Ottomans, as well as Russia, which

  • was busy having the civil war we'll be talking about next week.

  • All right , Let's go to the Thought Bubble.

  • 1.

  • The air at the meeting was hardly pacifistic:

  • 2.

  • Hang the Kaiser,” had been Prime Minister David Lloyd George's recent election slogan.

  • 3.

  • Some 20 million people had officially been declared dead in the war,

  • 4.

  • approximately half soldiers and half civilians.

  • 5.

  • So, French and British negotiators saw U.S. President Woodrow Wilson's Fourteen Points

  • peace proposal as deeply naive-

  • 6.

  • -not least because one of the Points involved colonial rulers and colonies just, like, getting

  • together and settling their differences.

  • 7.

  • The Allies also rejected Japan's drive to declare an allied opposition to racism.

  • 8.

  • Instead in six treaties, collectively called the Peace of Paris

  • 9. and enacted between 1919 and 1923,

  • 10.

  • the victors dismantled and reduced in size the Austro-Hungarian, Ottoman, and German

  • Empires.

  • 11.

  • From the vast, multi-ethnic Habsburg Empire the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye created

  • small successor states:

  • 12.

  • Austria, Hungary, Poland, Czechoslovakia,

  • 13. and the Balkan states that would eventually unite to become Yugoslavia.

  • 14.

  • The Treaty of Trianon drastically shrank the size of Hungary,

  • 15.

  • while the Treaty of Neuilly dealt with Bulgaria.

  • 16.

  • But the centerpiece of the settlement was the 1919 Treaty of Versailles,

  • 17. which stripped Germany of its colonies,

  • 18.

  • imposed a massive penalty for warmongering,

  • 19. and forbid it to have an air force or to build an army bigger than 100,000.

  • 20.

  • And importantly it also imposed a “war guiltclause blaming Germany for the war.

  • Thanks Thought Bubble.

  • So, heads of state and negotiators also founded the League of Nations, Point 14 in Woodrow

  • Wilson's 14 Points.

  • Some historians maintain that the League of Nations should more appropriately be called

  • the League of Empires.

  • Indeed, instead of recognizing the promises made by Britain to give Arab countries their

  • freedom in exchange for help in the war, Britain and France expanded their empires by taking

  • oil-rich regions of the Middle East asmandatesbecause the people were supposedly incapable

  • of ruling themselves.

  • And in the end, despite the League of Nations being an American President's idea, the

  • U.S. never actually joined it, which further weakened its ability to accomplish much on

  • a global scale.

  • Many were outraged at the peace settlement, especially Germans, Hungarians, and Middle

  • Eastern people, and of course, it would have further consequences.

  • When I was a kid, I usually imagined World War I and World War II as being separated

  • by generations--my grandparents and many other people I knew during my childhood had fought

  • in World War II, while World War I seemed very distant.

  • a But in fact, they were only separated by a

  • couple decades, and both the nature of World War I's violence and the nature of the war's

  • peace treaties had a profound impact on the rest of the 20th century--a reminder that

  • how you fight a war matters, and how you end one matters, too.

  • Thanks for watching.

  • I'll see you next time.

Hi I'm John Green and this is Crash Course European History.

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第一次世界大戦の民間人、最前線、そして不安な平和。クラッシュ・コース ヨーロッパの歴史 第34回 (WWI's Civilians, the Homefront, and an Uneasy Peace: Crash Course European History #34)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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