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THE CONCLUSION TO ONE WAR AND THE INTRODUCTION TO ANOTHER PARIS PEACE CONFERENCE

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Paris Peace Conference. The Conclusion to One war and the Introduction to another. Review. World War I ends when Germany signs an Armistice in late 1918 The Paris Peace Conference is convened in 1919 to iron out the details for a formal treaty. Armistice vs. peace treaty. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Paris Peace Conference

T H E C O N C L U S I O N T O O N E W A R A N D T H E I N T R O D U C T I O N T O A N O T H E R

PARIS PEACE CONFERENCE

Page 2: Paris Peace Conference

REVIEW

• World War I ends when Germany signs an Armistice in late 1918• The Paris Peace Conference is convened in 1919

to iron out the details for a formal treaty.

Page 3: Paris Peace Conference

ARMISTICE VS. PEACE TREATY

• Armistice: An agreement to stop fighting.• Peace Treaty: An agreement to formally end a

war.

Page 4: Paris Peace Conference

OVERVIEW

• The Fourteen Points• Paris Peace Conference• Finding Peace After the War• The aims of the Big Four

• The Treaty of Versailles with Germany• Established the League of Nations

• The Other Treaties

Page 5: Paris Peace Conference

THE FOURTEEN POINTS

Page 6: Paris Peace Conference

WILSON’S FOURTEEN POINTS

• A list of ideas designed to prevent future war.• German’s signed the armistice under the terms

set by the Fourteen Points.

Page 7: Paris Peace Conference

FOURTEEN POINTS CONT’D

Major Ideas:

Open Diplomacy

Free Trade

Freedom of the Seas

Multilateral Disarmament

National Self-Determination

Defeated Countries Didn’t Have to Pay “Reparations”League of Nations Created

Page 8: Paris Peace Conference

TIMELINE

The Terms of the Treaty Created Conditions in Europe Which Ultimately Led to the Second World War?????

Germany Forced to Signed

The Aims of the Big Four Conflict, Ultimately Resulting in the Treaty of Versailles; it is Less Favorable to Germany than the Fourteen Points

The Paris Peace Conference Occurs to Iron Out the Details of an Official Peace Treaty

Germany Signs Armistice Agreeing to the Terms of the Fourteen Points

The Fourteen Points Speech Given by Woodrow Wilson

Page 9: Paris Peace Conference

THE PARIS PEACE CONFERENCE

Page 10: Paris Peace Conference

THE PARIS PEACE CONFERENCE

• A meeting between the allies to set the terms of the peace treaty.• Not invited: Russia and Central Powers

Page 11: Paris Peace Conference

THE BIG FOUR

USA: Woodrow

Wilson

France: George

Clemenceau

Britain: David Lloyd

George

Italy: Vittorio Orlando

Page 12: Paris Peace Conference

ACTIVITY

• You’ll be placed into groups of 5• Each person in the group pick a country from the

following:• France• Britain• USA• Germany• Italy

• Await Instructions

Page 13: Paris Peace Conference

AIMS OF THE BIG FOUR

• Wished to gain as much territory as possible and to assure that the secret treaties between Italy and the allies were followedItaly

• Woodrow Wilson wanted a “fair and lasting peace” through the Fourteen Points and the League of NationsUSA

• Wanted to make Germany weakened so it would never start another war. France

• To expand its overseas colonies; to keep control of the seas; to keep the UK economically viable; also wanted to weaken Germany, but not as much as France.

The United Kingdom

Page 14: Paris Peace Conference

THE CYCLE OF WAR

Propaganda• Creates

Feelings of Nationalism and Othering

Nationalism• Our people are

superior.

Othering• Your people are

inferior.

Page 15: Paris Peace Conference

GERMAN PROPAGANDA• Example of Nationalism: • Example of Othering:

Page 16: Paris Peace Conference

FRENCH PROPAGANDA• Example of Nationalism: • Example of Othering:

Page 17: Paris Peace Conference

BRITISH PROPAGANDA• Example of Nationalism: • Example of Othering:

Page 18: Paris Peace Conference

AMERICAN PROPAGANDA• Example of Nationalism: • Example of Othering:

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WHY WOULD PROPAGANDA, NATIONALISM, AND OTHERING MAKE DIPLOMACY DIFFICULT?

Page 20: Paris Peace Conference

WHY WOULD PROPAGANDA, NATIONALISM, AND OTHERING MAKE DIPLOMACY DIFFICULT?

• Nationalism: Countries only cared about their own goals, not those of other countries. Propaganda showed their country as being superior or unique, and they could care less about what was “right” or “just” – as long as they got more out of the deal.• Ex: Britain refusing Freedom to the Seas since it conflicted with

their naval power.• Ex: America refusing the League of Nations since it conflicted

with their goals of isolationism.• Othering: Countries were too angry at their enemies

to bother attempting diplomacy. Propaganda often depicted them as being evil.• Ex: France’s determination to weaken Germany.

Page 21: Paris Peace Conference

OUTCOMES OF THE PARIS PEACE CONFERENCE

• The Treaty of Versailles with Germany• Four Other Treaties with Other Powers

Page 22: Paris Peace Conference

THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES

Page 24: Paris Peace Conference

QUIZ

• Describe the changes in literature and art that occurred after World War I. Who was “the Lost Generation”?

Page 25: Paris Peace Conference

TERMS OF THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES

• Article 231: “The War Guilt Clause”• Germany forced to admit blame for the war.• Forced to pay massive “reparations” (payments) to the

allies.• German military reduced substantially• Germany lost territory

Page 26: Paris Peace Conference

WHICH OF THE FOURTEEN POINTS ULTIMATELY PASSED?

Major Ideas:

Open Diplomacy

Free Trade

Freedom of the Seas

Multilateral Disarmament

National Self-Determination

Defeated Countries Didn’t Have to Pay “Reparations”League of Nations Created

Page 27: Paris Peace Conference

WHICH OF THE FOURTEEN POINTS ULTIMATELY PASSED?

Major Ideas:

Open Diplomacy

Free Trade

Freedom of the Seas

Multilateral Disarmament

National Self-Determination

Defeated Countries Didn’t Have to Pay “Reparations”League of Nations Created

Page 28: Paris Peace Conference

GERMANY’S REACTION

• The terms of the treaty were presented to the Germans who complained of its severity

• The Germans complained about nearly every clause. The allies ignored all but a few complaints.

• With no other option, the Germans signed the treaty. ‘Peace’ was signed in the Hall of Mirrors, at Versailles.

• The Germans felt cheated by this treaty, because virtually none of Wilson’s ‘Fourteen Points’ had been included in the treaty.

• The Germans called the treaty a ‘diktat’ because it was dictated to them, without real consultation. The Weimar government, especially Ebert who had signed the treaty, was looked upon as traitorous.

Page 29: Paris Peace Conference

AMERICA’S REACTION• America refused to ratify the treaty. • Congress refused to ratify the Treaty of Versailles because:-• The Republican majority in Congress wanted ‘isolation’

Page 30: Paris Peace Conference

LONG-TERM CONSEQUENCES

• German economy never regained traction• Germans resented the treaty and especially the

“War Guilt Clause”• The country becomes increasingly radicalized; they start

embracing the Nazi Party led by Adolf Hitler

Page 31: Paris Peace Conference

THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS

Page 33: Paris Peace Conference

GOOD IDEA, BAD IMPLEMENTATION

• The United States not joining doomed the League of Nations from the start.• Economic sanctions not enough.

Page 34: Paris Peace Conference

THE OTHER TREATIES

Page 35: Paris Peace Conference

THE OTHER TREATIES• Besides the Treaty of Versailles, four other Treaties are

signed setting up the conditions of peace with other Alliance nations.• Treaty of Versailles: Germany• Treaty of St. Germaine: Austria• Treaty of Trianon: Hungary• Treaty of Neuilly: Bulgaria• Treaty of Serves: Ottoman Empire

• Partitioning of the German, Austrian, and Ottoman Empires:• Poland becomes a nation.• Baltic States: Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia.• Austria-Hungary becomes: Czechoslovakia, Austria, and Hungary• Balkans: Yugoslavia

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THE MANDATE SYSTEM

• Pink = Mandates on behalf of the League of Nations given to the French• Green = Mandates on behalf of the League of

Nations to the British

Page 39: Paris Peace Conference

THE MANDATE SYSTEM CONT’D

• Britain controlled: Iraq, Nauru, Palestine, Transjordan, Tanganyika, half of Togoland, and half of Cameroon.• France controlled: Syria, Lebanon, half of

Cameroon, and half of Togoland.

Page 40: Paris Peace Conference

THE TREATY OF LOCARNO

• 1925: Guaranteed Germany’s new western borders with Belgium and France. Additionally, it allowed Germany into the League of Nations.