<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></SPAN>CHAPTER I</h2>
<h3>EUROPE BEFORE THE GREAT WAR</h3>
<p>To understand the Great War it is not sufficient to
read the daily happenings of military and naval events
as they are told in newspapers and magazines. We
must go back of the facts of to-day and find in national
history and personal ambition the causes of the present
struggle. Years of preparation were necessary
before German military leaders could convert a nation
to their views, or get ready the men, munitions, and
transportation for the war they wanted. Conflicts of
races for hundreds of years have made the southeastern
part of Europe a firebrand in international affairs.
The course of the Russian revolution has been determined
largely by the history of the Russian people and
of the Russian rulers during the past two centuries.
The entrance of England and Italy into the war against
Germany was in each case brought about by causes
which came into existence long before August, 1914.
A person who understands, even in part, the causes of
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 6]<SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6"></SPAN></span>this great struggle, will be in a better position to realize
why America entered the war and what our nation is<span class="pagenum">[Pg 7]<SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7"></SPAN></span>
fighting for. And better yet, he will be more ready to
take part in settling the many problems of peace which
must come after the war is over. For these reasons,
the first few chapters of this book are devoted to a study
of the important facts of recent European history.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN href="images/006.png"><ANTIMG src="images/thumb_006.png" width-obs="500" height-obs="316" alt="EUROPE IN 1913" title="" /></SPAN> <span class="caption">EUROPE IN 1913</span></div>
<p><b>A Hundred Years Ago.</b>—It is remarkable that almost
exactly a century before the present world war,
Europe was engaged in a somewhat similar struggle
to prevent an ambitious French general, Napoleon
Bonaparte, from becoming the ruler of all that continent,
and of America as well. He had conquered or
intimidated nearly all the states of Europe—Austria,
Prussia, Russia, Spain, etc.—except Great Britain.
He once planned a great settlement on the Mississippi
River, and so alarmed President Jefferson that the
latter said the United States might be compelled to
"marry themselves to the British fleet and nation."
But England's navy kept control of the seas; Napoleon's
colony in North America was never founded;
and at last the peoples of Europe rose against their
conqueror, and in the battle of Waterloo, June 18, 1815,
finally overthrew him.</p>
<p><b>Europe Since 1815.</b>—After the downfall of Napoleon
the rulers of Europe met in conference at Vienna
and sought to restore conditions as they had been before
the war. They were particularly anxious that the
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 8]<SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8"></SPAN></span>great masses of the people in their several nations should
continue to respect what was termed "the divine right
of kings to rule over their subjects." They did not,
except in Great Britain, believe in representative governments.
They feared free speech and independent
newspapers and liberal educational institutions. They
hated all kinds of popular movements by which the
inhabitants of any country might throw off the monarch's
yoke and secure a share in their own government.
For over thirty years the "Holy Allies,"—the name
applied to the monarchs of Austria, Prussia, and Russia,—succeeded
tolerably well in keeping the peoples in
subjection. But they had many difficulties to face,
and after 1848 their policy was largely given up.</p>
<p><b>Democratic Movements.</b>—During the nineteenth
century the people of Europe were restive under the
rule of kings, and gradually governments controlled in
greater or less degree by the people were established.
Almost every decade saw popular uprisings in some of
the European states. About 1820 insurrections occurred
in Greece, in Spain, and in southern Italy; and
the Spanish American colonies revolted from the mother
country. In 1830 popular uprisings took place in
France, Belgium, Germany, Poland, and other places.
In 1848 a far more serious movement occurred, which
overthrew the French monarchy and established a
republic. From France the flame of liberty lighted
fires of insurrection in Germany, Austria, Poland, and
Italy. Similar attempts were made at later times. As
a result of these popular uprisings and of the growing
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 9]<SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9"></SPAN></span>education of all classes of the people, manhood suffrage
and representative institutions were established in most
of the European states.</p>
<p><b>National Aspirations.</b>—The Holy Allies had refused
to recognize the right of nations to independent existence.
They had bartered peoples and provinces "as
if they were chattels and pawns in a game." But when
the peoples tried to found democratic governments,
they often discovered that the quickest and surest way
was to unite under one government all who belonged to
a given nationality. Thus the last hundred years in
Europe has witnessed the erection of a number of new
national states created by throwing off the yoke of
some foreign ruler. Among the new nations thus
established were (1) Belgium, freed from the kingdom
of Holland; (2) Greece, Serbia, Roumania, Bulgaria,
and Albania, freed from Turkish rule; (3) Italy, united
out of territories controlled by petty sovereigns and
Austrian rulers; (4) Norway, separated from Sweden.
The same period saw also the unification of a number of
German states into the German Empire. But during
this time several races were unsuccessful in obtaining
independence, among which we may note the Poles
(in Russia, Prussia, and Austria), the Czechs (checks),
or Bohemians (in northern Austria), the Finns (in the
northwestern part of the Russian Empire), and the
Slavic people in the southern part of Austria-Hungary.</p>
<p><b>Industrial Development.</b>—The nineteenth century
was not only a period of political change in Europe. It
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 10]<SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10"></SPAN></span>was also a time of great changes in the general welfare
of the people. It witnessed a remarkable alteration
in everyday employments and habits. In 1800 a great
part of the population was engaged in agriculture.
Manufacturing and commerce were looked upon as of
minor importance. The goods that were produced
were made by hand labor in the workman's own home.
Beginning first in England about 1750 and extending
to the Continent between 1820 and 1860, there came
a great industrial change. The steam engine was applied
to spinning, weaving, and countless other operations
which previously had been performed by hand.
Steam engines could not of course be installed in every
small cottage; hence a number of machines were put
in one factory to be run by one steam engine. The
workers left their small huts and gardens in the country
and came to live in towns and cities. After the steam
engine came steam transportation on land and water.
Then followed an enormous demand for coal, iron, steel,
and other metals. More goods could be produced in
the factories than were needed for the people at home.
Hence arose more extended commerce and the search
for foreign markets.</p>
<p><b>Colonial Expansion.</b>—In the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries, Spain, Portugal, France, and England
settled the American continents and parts of Asia. By
a series of wars in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries
the Dutch secured part of the possessions of
Spain and Portugal; and England obtained almost all
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 11]<SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11"></SPAN></span>of the French colonial territories. In the eighteenth
century the thirteen English colonies on the Atlantic
seaboard made good their independence; and in the
nineteenth, Spain lost all of her vast possessions in
America. During the early nineteenth century, Great
Britain, in spite of the loss of the thirteen colonies, was
by far the most successful colonizing country, and her
possessions were to be found in Canada, India, the East
and West Indies, Australia, and Africa.</p>
<p>Leaders of other nations in Europe thought these
colonies of Great Britain were the cause of her wealth
and prosperity. Naturally they too tried to found
colonies in those parts of the world not occupied by
Europeans. They hoped by this means to extend their
power, to find homes for their surplus population, and
to obtain markets for their new manufactured goods.
Thus Africa was parceled out among France, Germany,
Great Britain, Portugal, Belgium, Spain, and Italy.
The islands of the Pacific were seized in the same manner.
Proposals for a partition of China were made by Germany,
Russia, Japan, France, and Great Britain; and
if it had not been for the American demands for the
"open door of trade" and for the "territorial integrity"
of China, that nation probably would have shared the
fate of Africa. The noteworthy fact about this rivalry
for colonies is that almost the entire world, except
China and Japan, came under the domination of Europeans
and their descendants.</p>
<p>Having noted a few general features of European
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 12]<SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12"></SPAN></span>history during the nineteenth century, we shall now
take up in turn each of the more important countries.</p>
<p><b>Germany.</b>—After the overthrow of Napoleon, a
German Confederation was formed. This comprised
thirty-nine states which were bound to each other by
a very weak tie. The union was not so strong even as
that in our own country under the Articles of Confederation.
But there were two states in the German Confederation
which were far stronger than any of the
others; these were Austria and Prussia. Austria had
been a great power in German and European affairs for
centuries; but her rulers were now incompetent and
corrupt. Prussia, on the other hand, was an upstart,
whose strength lay in universal military service. As
the century progressed, the influence of Prussia became
greater; and the jealousy of Austria grew proportionately.
Bismarck, the Prussian prime minister, adopted
a policy of "blood and iron." By this he meant that
Prussia would attain the objects of her ambition by
means of war. Under his guidance she would intimidate
or conquer the other German states and force
them into trade and commercial agreements, or annex
their territory to that of Prussia.</p>
<p>Bismarck looked for success only to the army. With
the king back of him, he defied the people's representatives,
ignored the Prussian constitution, and purposely
picked quarrels with his neighbors. In 1866, in a brief
war of seven weeks, Austria was hopelessly defeated
and forced to retire from the German Confederation.
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 13]<SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13"></SPAN></span>In 1870, when he felt sure of his military preparations,
Bismarck altered a telegram and thus brought on a
war with France. The Franco-Prussian War lasted
only a few months; but in that time the French were
thoroughly defeated. Many important results followed
the war: (1) The German states, influenced by
the patriotic excitement of a successful war, founded
the German Empire, with Prussia in the leading position,
and the Prussian king as German emperor or
"Kaiser." (2) A huge indemnity of one billion dollars
was exacted by Prussia from France, and this money,
deposited in the German banks and loaned to individuals,
played a large part in expanding the manufactures
and commerce of Germany. (3) Prussia took away
from France, against the wishes of the inhabitants,
the provinces called Alsace-Lorraine. This "wrong
done to France," as President Wilson has said, "unsettled
the peace of the world for nearly fifty years."
(4) The French people carried through a revolution
and established a republic—for the third time in
their history—which has continued down to the
present.</p>
<p>After 1870 Germany made remarkable material progress.
By 1911 her population had grown from 41,000,000
to 65,000,000. Her coal and iron production in 1911
was eight times as much as in 1871. In wealth, commerce,
coal production, and textile industries, among
European countries, Germany was second only to
Great Britain; while in the production of iron and
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 14]<SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14"></SPAN></span>steel Germany had passed Great Britain and was
second only to the United States.</p>
<p>But this great industrial and commercial advance
was not accompanied with a corresponding liberality
in government. The constitution of the German
Empire gave very large powers to the emperor, and
very little power to the representatives of the people.
Prussia, the dominant state in the empire, had an antiquated
system of voting which rated men's votes according
to the taxes they paid, and placed political
power in the hands of a small number of capitalists
and wealthy landowners, especially the Junkers
(yoong´kerz), or Prussian nobles. The educational
system, while giving a rudimentary education to all,
was really designed to keep large masses of the people
subject to the military group, the government officials,
and the capitalists. Blind devotion to the emperor
and belief in the necessity of future war in order to
increase German prosperity, were widely taught. The
"mailed fist" was clenched, and "the shining sword"
rattled in the scabbard whenever Germany thought the
other nations of Europe showed her a lack of respect.
Enormous preparations for war were made in order that
Germany might gain from her neighbors the "place
in the sun" which she was determined upon. Other
nations were to be pushed aside or be broken to
pieces in order that the German "super-men" might
enjoy all that they wished of this world's goods and
possessions.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[Pg 15]<SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15"></SPAN></span><b>Austria-Hungary.</b>—The Austro-Hungarian Monarchy
in 1910 had a population of 49,000,000, made up of
peoples and races who spoke different languages and
had different customs, habits, and ideals. These races,
instead of being brought under unifying influences as
foreigners are in the United States, had for centuries
retained their peculiarities. Germans comprised 24 per
cent of the total population; Hungarians, 20 per cent;
Slavic races (including Bohemians, Poles, South Slavs,
and others), 45 per cent; Roumanians, over 6 per
cent; and Italians less than 2 per cent. The Germans
and Hungarians, although only a minority of the total
population, had long exercised political control over
the others and by repressive measures had tried to
stamp out their schools, newspapers, and languages.
Unrest was continuous during the nineteenth century;
and the rise of the independent states of Serbia, Roumania,
and Bulgaria tended to make the Slavic and
Roumanian inhabitants of Austria-Hungary dissatisfied
with their own position.</p>
<p>After 1815 the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy continued
under the rule of the royal family of Hapsburgs,
whose proud history extends back to the fifteenth century.
Austria (but not Hungary) was part of the German
Confederation, and her representative had the
right of presiding at all meetings of the confederation.
Between 1815 and 1848 the Austrian emperor and his
Prime minister were the leaders in opposition to popular
government and national aspirations. But in 1848 a
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 16]<SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16"></SPAN></span>serious uprising took place, and it seemed for a time
that the diverse peoples would fly apart from each other
and establish separate states. The emperor abdicated
and his prime minister fled to England. Francis Joseph,
the young heir to the throne, with the aid of experienced
military leaders succeeded in suppressing the rebellion.
For sixty-eight years (1848-1916) he was personally
popular and held together the composite state.</p>
<p>In 1866 Austria was driven out of the German Confederation
by Prussia. Seven years earlier she had
lost most of her Italian possessions. Thereafter her
interests and ambitions lay to the southeast; and she
bent her energies to extend her territory, influence, and
commerce into the Balkan region. A semblance of
popular government was established in Austria and in
Hungary, which were separated from each other in
ordinary affairs, but continued under the same monarch.
In each country, however, the suffrage and
elections were so juggled that the ruling minority, of
Germans in Austria and of Hungarians in Hungary,
was enabled to keep the majority in subjection.</p>
<p>Austria-Hungary has not progressed as rapidly in
industry and commerce as the countries to the north
and west of her. Her life is still largely agricultural,
and cultivation is often conducted by primitive methods.
Before the war her wealth per person was only $500,
as compared with $1843 in the United States, $1849 in
Great Britain, $1250 in France, and $1230 in Germany.
She possessed only one good seaport, Trieste (trĭ-ĕst´),
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 17]<SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17"></SPAN></span>and this partly explained her desire to obtain access to
the Black Sea and the Ægean Sea. About half of her
foreign trade was carried on with Germany. The low
standards of national wealth and production made the
raising of taxes a difficult matter. The government
had a serious struggle to obtain the funds for a large
military and naval program.</p>
<p><b>Italy</b>.—For a thousand years before 1870 there was
no single government for the entire Italian peninsula.
Although the people were mainly of one race, their
territory was divided into small states ruled by despotic
princes, who were sometimes of Italian families, but
more often were foreigners—Greeks, Germans, French,
Spanish, and Austrians. The Pope, head of the Roman
Catholic Church, governed nearly one third of the land.
This condition continued after 1815. But during the
nineteenth century the Italians began to realize that
they belonged to one race. They saw that the rule of
foreigners was opposed to the national welfare.</p>
<p>By 1870 the union of all Italy into one kingdom was
completed. In this work three great men participated,
as well as many lesser patriots. The first was Garibal´di,
a man of intense courage and patriotism. He aroused
the young men of Italy to the need of national union
and the expulsion of the foreigners. For over thirty
years he was engaged in various military expeditions
which aided greatly in the establishment of the national
union. The second leader was of an entirely different
character. Count Cavour (ka-voor´) was a statesman,
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 18]<SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18"></SPAN></span>a politician, a deep student of European history, and a
man of great tact. He, too, wished for a united Italy,
but he believed union could not be gained without
foreign assistance. By most skillful means he secured
the support of France and of England, while at the same
time he used Garibaldi and his revolutionists. He had
succeeded, at the time of his death in 1861, in bringing
together all of Italy except Rome and Venice. He won
for the new Italian kingdom a place among the great
nations of Europe.</p>
<p>The third great Italian was Victor Emman´uel, king
of Sardinia. He approved of a limited monarchy, like
that of England, instead of the corrupt despotisms which
existed in most of the Italian peninsula. He knew
how to use men like Cavour and Garibaldi to achieve
the national ambitions. By a popular vote in each
part of Italy Victor Emmanuel was accepted as king of
the united nation. The country was not ready for a
republic; but Victor Emmanuel proved a wise national
leader, willing to reign, according to a written constitution
under which the people's representatives had
the determining voice in the government. In 1870
the king entered Rome and early the next year proclaimed
the city to be the capital of Italy.</p>
<p><b>Belgium.</b>—The country we now know as Belgium
has had a very checkered history. At one time or
another it has been controlled by German, French,
Spanish, and Austrian rulers. At the opening of the
nineteenth century it was annexed to the kingdom of
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 19]<SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19"></SPAN></span>Holland (1815). But a revolt took place in 1830, and
the Belgians separated from the Dutch and chose a
king for themselves. Their constitution declares that
the government is a "constitutional, representative,
and hereditary monarchy." The government is largely
in the control of the people or their representatives.
There is one voter for every five persons in the population,
nearly the same proportion as in the United
States. In 1839 the principal states of Europe agreed
to recognize Belgium's independence, and in case of
war among themselves to treat her territory as neutral
land, not to be invaded. This treaty was signed by
Prussia as well as by Austria, France, Great Britain,
and Russia. The treaty was again acknowledged by
Prussia in 1870. It was in violation of these treaties,
as we shall see, that Prussian and other German troops
invaded Belgium on August 4, 1914.</p>
<p><b>France.</b>—In 1789 France entered upon a period of
revolution. The old monarchy was shortly overthrown,
and with it went aristocracy and all the inequalities
of the Middle Ages. A republic, however, did not
long endure; and Napoleon Bonaparte used his position
as a successful general to establish a new monarchy
called the French Empire. After Napoleon's downfall,
the allied monarchs of Europe restored the old line of
kings in France. But the country had outgrown despotism.
A revolution in 1830 deposed one king and
set up another who was ready to rule under the terms
of a constitution. In 1848 this monarchy was displaced
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 20]<SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20"></SPAN></span>and the second French republic was established.
But again a Bonaparte, nephew of Napoleon I,
seized the government and established a second empire,
calling himself Napoleon III. He aped the ways
of his great predecessor and tried by foreign conquest
or annexation in Africa, Italy, and Mexico to dazzle
the French people. But he was never popular, and his
reign closed in the defeat and disgrace of the Franco-Prussian
War (1870-71), for which he was partly responsible.</p>
<p>The third French republic was proclaimed in 1870
and is the present government of the country. Under
the constitution there is a senate, the members of which
are elected for nine years, and a lower house, elected
for four years. The president is chosen by these two
houses of the legislature for a term of seven years. No
member of the old royal families may become president
of the republic. The president of France does not
possess nearly so much power as the president of the
United States. Many of the executive duties are performed
by the premier, or prime minister, and other
cabinet ministers.</p>
<p>Republican France has become one of the great
nations of the world, and its democratic institutions are
firmly rooted in the hearts of the people. It has been
compelled to face German militarism by erecting a
system of universal military training. The patriotism
and self-sacrifice of all classes during the Great War
have been beyond praise.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[Pg 21]<SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21"></SPAN></span><b>Great Britain</b>.—During the nineteenth century Great
Britain did not experience any of the sudden revolutions
which appeared in nearly every other country of
Europe. For centuries England, Scotland, and Ireland
had possessed representative institutions. When
reforms were needed, they were adopted gradually, by
the natural process of lawmaking, instead of resulting
from rebellion and revolt. In this way Great Britain
had been changed from an aristocratic government to
one founded on democratic principles. By 1884 the
suffrage was nearly as extensive as in the United States.
Parliament became as truly representative of the people's
will as our American Congress. Far-reaching
social reforms were adopted which advanced the general
welfare. Among these reforms were acts for improving
housing conditions, regulating hours of labor and
use of machinery in factories, and establishing a national
insurance system, old-age pensions, and compensation
to injured workmen.</p>
<p>Great Britain was the first nation to experience the
advantages and disadvantages of the new age of coal
and iron, and the new methods of factory production.
Her wealth and commerce grew at a rapid rate, and
she invested her profits in enterprises in many parts of
the world. The factory system drew so many workers
from the farms, that Great Britain no longer raised
sufficient food for her population. She became dependent
upon the United States, Australia, South America,
and other lands for wheat, meat, and other necessaries
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 22]<SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22"></SPAN></span>of life. Her merchant vessels were to be found in all
parts of the world; and her navy was increased from
year to year to protect her commerce and colonies.
From now on it became evident that England's existence
depended upon her ships. If in time of war she lost
control of the seas the enemy could starve her into
submission. Hence during the nineteenth century
Great Britain's policy was to maintain a fleet stronger
than that of any possible combination against her.</p>
<p>England's colonial system had been developed into a
great empire. Principles of English liberty and representative
government were carried by Britishers to
many parts of the world. The American Revolution
showed the mother country that Englishmen would not
brook oppression even by their own king and parliament.
During the nineteenth and twentieth centuries
England adopted the policy of erecting her colonies
into self-governing communities. Thus the separate
colonies in Canada, in Australia, and in South Africa
were grouped in each case into a federal government,
somewhat similar to that of the United States, and
three great British democracies were formed within
the boundaries of the empire. So successful has been
the British system of colonial government that there
has been virtually no question of loyalty during the
Great War. All parts of the dominions have contributed
in men and money to the common cause, and
frequent imperial war conferences have been held in
London. In these conferences representatives from
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 23]<SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23"></SPAN></span>the colonies and the mother country have joined in the
discussion of important imperial questions.</p>
<p><b>Turkey and the Balkans.</b>—In 1453 the Turks captured
Constantinople. Thereafter their power was
rapidly extended in southeastern Europe and for several
centuries they were the dominant power in the Balkan
peninsula. During this time they overran Hungary
and invaded Austria up to the walls of Vienna. They
subjugated Greece and all the lands now included in
Serbia, Roumania, Bulgaria, Albania, as well as a
number of near-by Austrian, Hungarian, and Russian
provinces.</p>
<p>Many diverse races were included within the Turkish
dominions. They differed among themselves in language,
religion, and culture. The Turks were Mohammedans,
while their subject peoples in Europe were
mainly Christians belonging to the Greek Orthodox
Church.</p>
<p>First driven out of Hungary and Russia during the
eighteenth century, the Turks lost nearly all their
European possessions in the nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries. The subject peoples had kept
their national traditions and customs and from time
to time they aimed at independence. The Turkish
rule was oppressive and at times its methods were
barbarous. If there had been no jealousies among the
great European powers, it is probable that Russia
would have occupied Constantinople long ago. The
other powers, fearing this might make Russia too strong,
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 24]<SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24"></SPAN></span>interfered on several occasions to prevent such an
occupation. But the powers could not prevent the
smaller nationalities from attaining their independence
from Turkey. Greece, Serbia, Roumania, Bulgaria,
and Albania were freed from the rule of the "unspeakable
Turk" and erected into independent kingdoms at
various times between 1829 and 1913. Of her great
empire in Europe, Turkey retained, at the outbreak
of the Great War, an area of less than 11,000 square
miles (less than the area of the state of Maryland),
and a population of 1,890,000, which was almost altogether
resident in the two cities of Constantinople and
Adrianople.</p>
<p><b>Russia.</b>—In 1914 Russia was an empire occupying
one seventh of the land area of the world and inhabited
by about 180,000,000 people. During the nineteenth
century the country was ruled by absolute monarchs
called czars, under whom political and social conditions
were corrupt and oppressive. However, some progress
was made during the century. Serfdom or slavery was
abolished from 1861 to 1866; restraints upon newspapers,
publishers, and schools were partly withdrawn.
Natural resources were developed, factories established,
and railroads built. But these measures only served
to whet the appetite of the people for more liberal
government. The activities of revolutionists and reformers
were met by most severe measures on the
part of the government. Thousands were transported
to Siberia and many were executed. Even as late as
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 25]<SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25"></SPAN></span>1903 five thousand persons were imprisoned, exiled,
or executed for political activity against the Czar's
government. An attempt of the people to force a
representative government upon the Czar failed after
a seeming success in 1905-1906; for the Duma, or legislative
assembly, then created was given little power.</p>
<p>Russia has not been fortunate in her relations with
the neighboring states. Her great ambition, the occupation
of Constantinople, was repeatedly balked by
other countries. In an attempt to obtain an ice-free
harbor on the Pacific, Russia brought on the Russo-Japanese
War of 1904-1905, in which she was disastrously
defeated. In another direction Russia was more
successful. She posed as the protector of the Slavic
provinces under Turkish rule and saw the day when
nearly all of them were free.</p>
<p>Russia is a country of vast territory, enormous
population, and unbounded natural resources. But
before the war it had no experience in self-government.
Its land and mineral resources were not used for
national purposes. A small governing class, with the
Czar at the head, controlled its tremendous powers and
wealth. Naturally, when an insurrection is successful
against such a government, the people lose all self-control
and go to great extremes. Liberty and self-government
succeed only when all the people are
willing to abide by the laws made by the majority.
May this time soon come for Russia!</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[Pg 26]<SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26"></SPAN></span></p>
<div class="blockquot"><p><b>Suggestions for Study.</b>—1. Look up facts concerning Napoleon
Bonaparte, Gladstone, Bismarck, Cavour, Garibaldi, Victor
Emmanuel I. 2. On outline maps of the world show the principal
colonial possessions of Great Britain, France, Germany,
Italy, Belgium, and Holland. 3. Show on an outline map of
Europe the location of peoples that had not attained to national
independence before 1914. 4. Compare the size and population
of the European countries with your own state in the American
Union. 5. How far did the people in European countries possess
a share in their government in 1914? 6. Look up in detail the
government of Germany.</p>
<p><b>References.</b>—For facts such as those mentioned above see
the <i>World Almanac</i>, the <i>Statesman's Yearbook</i>, and any good
encyclopedia. For Germany, see Hazen, <i>The Government of
Germany</i>, published by the Committee on Public Information,
Washington, D.C.<SPAN name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</SPAN> Reference may also be made to Harding's
<i>New Medieval and Modern History</i> or to other histories of
Europe.</p>
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