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A century ago, an assassin, a Serbian nationalist, killed the heir to the throne of Austria-Hungary as he visited Sarajevo. This act was the catalyst for a massive conflict that lasted four years.
More than 65 million soldiers were mobilized by more than 30 nations, with battles taking place around the world. Industrialization brought modern weapons, machinery, and tactics to warfare, vastly increasing the killing power of armies. Battlefield conditions were horrific, typified by the chaotic, cratered hellscape of the Western Front, where soldiers in muddy trenches faced bullets, bombs, gas, bayonet charges, and more.
On this year anniversary, I've gathered photographs of the Great War from dozens of collections, some digitized for the first time, to try to tell the story of the conflict, those caught up in it, and how much it affected the world. This entry is part 1 of a part series on World War I. In this installment, I hope to give a glimpse of the war's beginnings, and a preview of what is to come. Soldiers of an Australian 4th Division field artillery brigade walk on a duckboard track laid across a muddy, shattered battlefield in Chateau Wood, near Hooge, Belgium, on October 29, This was during the Battle of Passchendaele, fought by British forces and their allies against Germany for control of territory near Ypres, Belgium.
Of the remaining monarchs pictured, over the next decade one would be assassinated Greece , three would keep their nations neutral Norway, Spain, and Denmark , and two would be forced out of power by revolutions. In , Austria-Hungary was a powerful and huge country, larger than Germany, with nearly as many citizens.
It had been ruled by Emperor Franz Joseph I since , who had been grooming his nephew, Archduke Franz Ferdinand as the heir to the throne.