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{{Short description|East European theater of World War I}}
{{Refimprove|date=November 2012}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2020}}
{{Infobox military conflict
{{Infobox military conflict
|conflict = Eastern Front
| conflict = Eastern Front
|partof = [[World War I]]
| partof = the [[European theatre of World War I]]
|image = [[File:Eastern Front (World War I).jpg|300px]]
| image = Eastern Front (World War I).jpg
| image_size = 350 px
|caption = Clockwise from top left: [[Carpathian Mountains]], 1915; German soldiers in [[Kiev]], March 1918; the russian ship Slava, October 1917; Russian infantry, 1914; Romanian infantry.
| caption = Clockwise from top left: soldiers stationed in the [[Carpathian Mountains]], 1915; German soldiers in [[Kyiv|Kiev]]<!--Do not change per consensus at WP:KYIV-->, March 1918; the Russian ship ''[[Russian battleship Slava|Slava]]'', October 1917; Russian infantry, 1914; Romanian infantry
|place = [[Central Europe|Central]] and [[Eastern Europe]]
| place = [[Central and Eastern Europe]]
|date = 17 August 1914 – 3 March 1918 <br>({{Age in years, months, weeks and days|month1=08|day1=17|year1=1914|month2=03|day2=03|year2=1918}})
| date = 1 August 1914{{snd}}3 March 1918
|result = Central Powers victory until the end of [[World War I]]
| result = Central Powers victory<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Pearson |first1=Raymond |title=The Longman Companion to European Nationalism 1789-1920 |page=15 |year=2014 |publisher=[[Routledge]] |isbn=9781317897774 |quote=Cheered by the Central Powers' victory on, then dissolution of, the eastern front, Germany finds herself fighting on one front for the first time.}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last1=Weinhauer |first1=Klaus |last2=McElligott |first2=Anthony |last3=Heinsohn |first3=Kirsten |title=Germany 1916-23: A Revolution in Context |page=159 |year=2015 |publisher=transcript Verlag |isbn=9783839427347 |quote=The defeat of Russia gave Ludendorff only a small window of opportunity in order to concentrate military forces in France prior to an inevitable flood of fresh American troops.}}</ref>
* Collapse of the [[Russian Empire]] leading to the [[Russian Revolution (1917)|Russian Revolution]]
| combatant1 = [[Central Powers]]:{{ubl
* [[Treaty of Brest-Litovsk (Ukraine–Central Powers)|Treaty of Brest-Litovsk (Ukraine)]], [[Treaty of Brest-Litovsk|Treaty of Brest-Litovsk (Russia)]], [[Treaty of Bucharest, 1918|Treaty of Bucharest]]
| {{flagcountry|German Empire}}
|combatant1 = {{flag|German Empire}}<br />{{flag|Austria-Hungary}}<br />{{flagcountry|Kingdom of Bulgaria}} <small>(1916–17)</small> <br />{{flag|Ottoman Empire}} <small>(1916–17)</small>
| {{flag|Austria-Hungary}}
|combatant2 = {{flag|Russian Empire}} <small>(1914–17)</small><br>{{flagdeco|Russia}} [[Russian Republic]] <small>(1917)</small><br>{{flagcountry|Kingdom of Romania}} <small>(1916–17)</small>
| {{flagcountry|Kingdom of Bulgaria}} (1916–1917)
| {{flag|Ottoman Empire}} (1916–1917)
}}
| combatant2 = [[Allied Powers of WWI|Allied Powers]]:{{ubl
| {{flagcountry|Russian Empire}}{{efn|[[Russian Empire]] during 1914–1917, [[Russian Provisional Government]] and [[Russian Republic|Republic]] during 1917.}} (1914–1917)
| {{flagcountry|Kingdom of Romania}} (1916–1917)
| {{flagcountry|Kingdom of Serbia}}
(1916–1917)
| {{flagicon|Belgium}} [[Belgian government at Sainte-Adresse|Belgium]] (1915–1917)
| {{nowrap|{{flagcountry|UKGBI}} (1916–1917)}}
| {{flagcountry|French Third Republic}} (1916–1917)
----
----
{{flagicon|Russian SFSR|1918}} [[Russian SFSR]] <small>(1918)</small>
| {{flagicon|Soviet Russia|1918}} [[Russian SFSR|Soviet Russia]] (1917–1918)
}}
|commander1 = {{flagicon|German Empire}} [[Paul von Hindenburg]]<br>
| commander1 = {{ubl
{{flagicon|German Empire}} [[Erich Ludendorff]]<br>
{{flagicon|German Empire}} [[Prince Leopold of Bavaria|Leopold of Bavaria]]<br>
| {{flagdeco|German Empire }} [[Wilhelm II]]
{{flagicon|German Empire}} [[Max Hoffmann]]<br>
| {{flagdeco|German Empire}} [[Paul von Hindenburg]]
{{flagicon|German Empire}} [[August von Mackensen]]<br>
| {{flagdeco|German Empire}} [[Erich Ludendorff]]
| {{flagdeco|German Empire}} [[Prince Leopold of Bavaria|Leopold of Bavaria]]
{{flagicon|Austria-Hungary}} [[Conrad von Hötzendorf]]<br>
| {{flagdeco|German Empire}} [[Max Hoffmann]]
{{flagicon|Austria-Hungary}} [[Arthur Arz von Straußenburg]]<br>
| {{flagdeco|Austria-Hungary}} [[Franz Joseph I]]
{{flagicon|Kingdom of Bulgaria}} [[Nikola Zhekov]]
| {{flagdeco|Austria-Hungary}} [[Conrad von Hötzendorf]]
|commander2 = {{flagicon|Russian Empire}} [[Nicholas II of Russia|Tsar Nicholas II]]<br>
| {{flagdeco|Austria-Hungary}} [[Arthur Arz von Straußenburg|A. A. von Straußenburg]]
{{flagicon|Russian Empire}} [[Grand Duke Nicholas]]<br>
| {{flagdeco|Kingdom of Bulgaria}} [[Ferdinand I of Bulgaria]]
{{flagicon|Russian Empire}} [[Mikhail Alekseyev]]<br>
| {{flagdeco|Kingdom of Bulgaria}} [[Nikola Zhekov]]
{{flagicon|Russian Empire}} [[Aleksei Brusilov]]<br>
{{flagicon|Russia}} [[Lavr Kornilov]]<br>
| {{flagdeco|Ottoman Empire}} [[Enver Pasha]]
}}
{{flagicon|Russia}} [[Nikolay Dukhonin]]<br>
| commander2 = {{ubl
{{flagicon|Kingdom of Romania}} [[Constantin Prezan]]
|{{flagicon image|Flag_of_Russia_(1914-1917).svg}} [[Nicholas II]]
| {{flagicon image|Flag_of_Russia_(1914-1917).svg}} [[Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich of Russia (1856–1929)|Grand Duke Nicholas]]
| {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[Mikhail Alekseyev]]
| {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[Aleksei Brusilov]]
| {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[Lavr Kornilov]]
| {{flagdeco|Kingdom of Romania}} [[Ferdinand I of Romania|Ferdinand I]]
| {{flagdeco|Kingdom of Romania}} [[Constantin Prezan]]
----
----
{{flagicon|Russian SFSR|1918}} [[Nikolai Krylenko]]
| {{flagdeco|Soviet Russia|1918}} [[Nikolai Krylenko]]
}}
|strength1 =
| units1 = {{Collapsible list
|strength2 =
|title = Units
|casualties1 = {{flagicon|German Empire}} 317,100 dead & missing<ref>«Sanitatsbericht fiber das Deutsche Heer... im Weltkriege 1914—1918», Bd. Ill, Berlin, 1934, S. 151 </ref><br> {{flagicon|Austria-Hungary}} On all fronts during the entire war (including Italian and Balkan fronts): 1,100,000 dead , 1,980,000 wounded, 1,800,000 P.O.W <ref>Кривошеев Г.Ф. Россия и СССР в войнах 20 века, 2001, стр. 106</ref> Austria-Hungary's Eastern front 1914-1917 about 50% of total losses
|'''East Prussia'''
{{flagicon|Ottoman Empire}} 10,000 P.O.W<ref name=Yanikdag>{{cite book|last= Yanikdag|first=Yucel |title=Healing the Nation: Prisoners of War, Medicine and Nationalism in Turkey, 1914-1939|year=2013|publisher=[[Edinburgh University Press]]|location=Edinburgh|isbn= 9780748665785|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=ApYNvVsjamEC&pg=PA3&dq=Healing+the+Nation:+Prisoners+of+War,+Medicine+and+Nationalism+in+Turkey,+1914-1939&hl=nl&sa=X&ei=3P6AUq3YMMSf7gbomYDAAQ&ved=0CDUQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=Healing%20the%20Nation%3A%20Prisoners%20of%20War%2C%20Medicine%20and%20Nationalism%20in%20Turkey%2C%201914-1939&f=false|page=18}}</ref>
* {{flagicon|German Empire}} [[8th Army (German Empire)|8th Army]]

* {{flagicon|German Empire}} [[10th Army (German Empire)|10th Army]]
----
| '''Poland'''

* {{flagicon|German Empire}} [[9th Army (German Empire)|9th Army]]
'''Total: more than 3,000,000 casualties'''
* {{flagicon|Austria-Hungary}} [[1st Army (Austria-Hungary)|1st Army]]
|casualties2 = {{flagicon|Russian Empire}} 2,254,400 killed, 3,749,000 wounded, 3,343,900 P.O.W <ref>Кривошеев Г.Ф., 2001, стр. 106</ref><br>{{flagicon|Romania}} 659,800 casualties<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pbs.org/greatwar/resources/casdeath_pop.html |title=The Great War . Resources . WWI Casualties and Deaths |publisher=[[PBS]] |date= |accessdate=2012-11-03}}</ref>
* {{flagicon|POL}} [[Polish Legions in World War I|Polish Legionnaires]]
----
|'''Galicia'''
'''Total: more than 10,000,000 casualties'''
* {{flagicon|Austria-Hungary}} [[2nd Army (Austria-Hungary)|2nd Army]]
* {{flagicon|Austria-Hungary}} [[3rd Army (Austria-Hungary)|3rd Army]]
* {{flagicon|Austria-Hungary}} [[4th Army (Austria-Hungary)|4th Army]]
* {{flagicon|German Empire}} [[11th Army (German Empire)|11th Army]]
* {{flagicon|Ottoman Empire}} [[XV Corps (Ottoman Empire)|XV Corps]]
* {{flagdeco|Ukrainian People's Republic}} [[Ukrainian People's Army]]
|'''Romania'''
* {{flagicon|German Empire}} [[9th Army (German Empire)|9th Army]]
* {{flagicon|German Empire}} [[52nd Corps (German Empire)|Danube Army]]
* {{flagicon|Austria-Hungary}} [[1st Army (Austria-Hungary)|1st Army]]
* {{flagicon|Bulgaria}} [[Third Army (Bulgaria)|3rd Army]]
* {{flagicon|Ottoman Empire}} [[VI Corps (Ottoman Empire)|VI Corps]]
----''Naval units''<br />{{flagdeco|German Empire|naval}} [[Imperial German Navy|German Navy]] (Baltic Sea)<br />{{flagdeco|German Empire|naval}} [[Constantinople Flotilla]]<br />{{nowrap|{{flagicon image|Naval standard of the Ottoman Sultan.svg}} [[Ottoman Navy]] (Black Sea)}}<br />{{flagicon|Austria-Hungary|naval}} [[Austro-Hungarian Danube Flotilla|Danube Flotilla]]
}}
| units2 = {{Collapsible list
|title = Units
|'''[[Northern Front (Russian Empire)|Northern Front]]'''
* {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[1st Army (Russian Empire)|1st Army]]
* {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[5th Army (Russian Empire)|5th Army]]
* {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[6th Army (Russian Empire)|6th Army]]
* {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[12th Army (Russian Empire)|12th Army]]
|'''[[Western Front (Russian Empire)|Western Front]]'''
* {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[2nd Army (Russian Empire)|2nd Army]]
* {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[10th Army (Russian Empire)|10th Army]]
* {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[Special Army]]
|'''[[Southwestern Front (Russian Empire)|Southwestern Front]]'''
* {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[3rd Army (Russian Empire)|3rd Army]]
* {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[4th Army (Russian Empire)|4th Army]]
* {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[7th Army (Russian Empire)|7th Army]]
* {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[11th Army (Russian Empire)|11th Army]]
|'''[[Romanian Front (Russian Empire)|Romanian Front]]'''
* {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[4th Army (Russian Empire)|4th Army]]
* {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[6th Army (Russian Empire)|6th Army]]
* {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[8th Army (Russian Empire)|8th Army]]
* {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} [[9th Army (Russian Empire)|9th Army]]
* {{flagicon|Kingdom of Romania}} [[Second Army (Romania)|2nd Army]]
* {{flagicon|Kingdom of Romania}} [[1st Army (Romania)|1st Army]]
{{flagicon|Kingdom of Romania}} [[4th Army (Romania)|4th Army]]<br />{{flagicon|Kingdom of Romania}} [[Third Army (Romania)|3rd Army]]<hr />{{flagicon|Bohemia}} [[Czechoslovak Legions]]<br />{{flagicon|Kingdom of Serbia}} [[First Serbian Volunteer Division|1st Serbian Division]]<br />{{flagicon|Belgium}} [[Belgian Expeditionary Corps in Russia|Expeditionary Corps]]<br />{{flagicon|UKGBI}} [[British Armoured Car Expeditionary Force|Expeditionary Force]]<br />{{flagicon|French Third Republic}} [[French military mission to Romania (1916-1918)|French Military Mission]]<hr />''Naval units''<br />{{flagicon|Russian Empire|naval}} [[Baltic Fleet]]<br />{{flagicon|Russian Empire|naval}} [[Black Sea Fleet]]<br />{{flagicon image|Romanian Army Flag - 1872 official model.svg}} [[Romanian Black Sea Fleet during World War I|Black Sea Fleet]]<br />{{flagicon image|Romanian Army Flag - 1872 official model.svg}} [[Romanian Danube Flotilla|Danube Flotilla]]<br />{{flagicon|UKGBI|naval}} [[British submarine flotilla in the Baltic|Baltic Submarine Flotilla]]
}}
| strength1 = ''October 1917''
'''1,178,600''' infantry <br /> '''39,000''' cavalry <br />'''1,690''' light guns <br />'''2,230''' heavy guns<br/>
| strength2 = ''October 1917''
'''2,166,700''' infantry <br /> '''110,600''' cavalry <br /> '''1,226''' light guns <br /> '''1,139''' heavy guns
| casualties1 = {{flagdeco|German Empire}} '''1,612,089<ref>Churchill, W. S. (1923–1931). ''The World Crisis'' (Odhams 1938 ed.). London: Thornton Butterworth. [https://books.google.com/books?id=6l6Fgnz8fXIC&q=1%2C493%2C000 Page 558.] Total German casualties for "Russia and all other fronts" (aside from the West) are given as 1,693,000 including 517,000 dead.</ref>–2,000,000'''{{sfn|Oleynikov|2016|p=261}} <br />317,118<ref name="ReferenceA"/> dead<br />1,151,153 wounded<ref name="ReferenceA"/><br />143,818 captured<ref name="ReferenceA">Sanitatsbericht uber das Deutsche Heer (Deutsches Feld- und Besatzungsheer) im Weltkrieg 1914-1918</ref><br>{{flagdeco|Austria-Hungary}} '''4,377,000–5,172,000:'''<ref>Bodart, Gaston: "{{lang|de|Erforschung der Menschenverluste Österreich-Ungarns im Weltkriege 1914–1918|italic=no}}", Austrian State Archive, War Archive Vienna, Manuscripts, History of the First World War, in general, A 91. Reports that 60% of Austro-Hungarian killed/wounded were incurred on the Eastern Front (including 312,531 out of 521,146 fatalities). While the casualty records are incomplete (Bodart on the same page estimates the missing war losses and gets a total figure of 1,213,368 deaths rather than 521,146), the proportions are accurate. 60% of casualties [[World War I casualties#Austria-Hungary|equates to]] 726,000 dead and 2,172,000 wounded.</ref><br />726,000–1,150,000 dead<ref>Россия в мировой войне 1914—1918 (в цифрах). — М.: ЦСУ, 1925. — Табл. 33. — С. 41.</ref><br />2,172,000 wounded<br />1,479,289–1,850,000 captured<ref>Volgyes, Ivan. (1973). "Hungarian Prisoners of War in Russia 1916–1919". {{lang|fr|Cahiers du Monde Russe et Soviétique|italic=yes}}, 14(1/2). Page 54. Gives the figure of 1,479,289 prisoners captured in the East, from the Austro-Hungarian Ministry of Defence archives.</ref><ref>The most common data on Austrian prisoners vary from 1,800,000 to 1,950,000</ref><br>{{flagdeco|Ottoman Empire}} '''45,000:'''<ref>Erickson, Edward J. ''Ordered to die : a history of the Ottoman army in the first World War'', p. 147. Total casualties of 20,000 are given for the VI Army Corps in Romania.</ref><ref>Atlı, Altay (25 September 2008). "Campaigns, Galicia". turkesywar.com. Archived from the original on 20 July 2011. Total casualties of 25,000 are given for the XV Army Corps in Galicia.</ref><br />8,000 dead<ref name="turkeyswar">{{cite web|access-date=14 April 2011|archive-date=20 July 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110720205558/http://www.turkeyswar.com/campaigns/europe.htm|title=turkeyswar, Campaigns, Eastern Europe.|url=http://www.turkeyswar.com/campaigns/europe.htm|url-status=live}}<!-- auto-translated by Module:CS1 translator --></ref><br />22,000 wounded<ref name="turkeyswar">{{cite web|access-date=14 April 2011|archive-date=20 July 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110720205558/http://www.turkeyswar.com/campaigns/europe.htm|title=turkeyswar, Campaigns, Eastern Europe.|url=http://www.turkeyswar.com/campaigns/europe.htm|url-status=live}}<!-- auto-translated by Module:CS1 translator --></ref><br />10,000 captured<ref name=Yanikdag>{{cite book|last= Yanikdag|first=Yucel |title=Healing the Nation: Prisoners of War, Medicine and Nationalism in Turkey, 1914–1939|year=2013|publisher=[[Edinburgh University Press]]|location=Edinburgh|isbn=978-0-7486-6578-5|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ApYNvVsjamEC&pg=PA3 |page=18}}</ref><br>{{flagdeco|Kingdom of Bulgaria}} '''30,250'''<ref>{{lang|bg|Министерство на войната|italic=no}} (1939), p. 677 (in Bulgarian)</ref><ref>{{lang|bg|Симеонов, Радослав, Величка Михайлова и Донка Василева. Добричката епопея. Историко-библиографски справочник, Добрич 2006, с. 181|italic=no}} (in Bulgarian)</ref><hr />'''Total:<br />5,952,000–6,452,000+ casualties{{Bulletedlist|1,038,000–1,458,000 dead}}'''
| casualties2 = {{flagdeco|Russian Empire}} '''6,500,000{{sfn|Oleynikov|2016|p=245}}–9,000,000'''<br>See [[#Casualties|casualties section]]{{efn|The data varies too much}}<hr />{{flagdeco|Kingdom of Romania}} '''535,700:'''<ref>Cox, Michael; Ellis, John (2001). ''The World War I Databook: The Essential Facts and Figures for all the Combatants''. London: Aurum Press.</ref><br />335,706 dead<br />120,000 wounded<br />80,000 captured<hr />'''Total: <br />~7,035,700–8,054,569+ casualties{{Bulletedlist|1,110,706–2,590,100 dead}}'''
| casualties3 = '''Civilian deaths:''' <br /> '''2,000,000+''' <br /> '''Russian Empire:'''<br />410,000 civilians died due to military action<br />730,000 civilians died of war-related causes<ref>Erlikman, Vadim (2004). {{lang|ru-Latn|Poteri narodonaseleniia v XX veke : spravochnik}}. Moscow. Page 18 {{ISBN|978-5-93165-107-1}}.(Civilians killed on Eastern Front)</ref><br />'''Kingdom of Romania:'''<br />130,000 civilians died due to military action<br />200,000 civilians died of war-related causes<ref>Erlikman, Vadim (2004). {{lang|ru-Latn|Poteri narodonaseleniia v XX veke : spravochnik}}. Moscow. Page 51 {{ISBN|978-5-93165-107-1}}.</ref><br />'''Austria-Hungary:'''<br />120,000 civilians died due to military action<br />467,000 civilians died of war-related causes<ref>Erlikman, Vadim (2004). {{lang|ru-Latn|Poteri narodonaseleniia v XX veke : spravochnik}}. Moscow. Page 49 {{ISBN|978-5-93165-107-1}}.</ref>
| width = 360px
}}
}}
{{Campaignbox Eastern Front (World War I)}}
{{Campaignbox Eastern Front (World War I)}}
{{Campaignbox World War I}}
{{Campaignbox World War I|sp=us}}


During [[World War I]], the '''Eastern Front''' (sometimes called the "[[Second Fatherland War]]" in Russian sources)<ref>{{cite journal |last=Moore |first=Colleen M. |title=Demonstrations and Lamentations: Urban and Rural Responses to War in Russia in 1914 |journal=[[The Historian (journal)|The Historian]] |volume=71 |issue=3 |year=2009 |pages=555–575 [p. 563] |doi=10.1111/j.1540-6563.2009.00245.x }}</ref> was a [[theatre of operations]] that encompassed at its greatest extent the entire frontier between the [[Russian Empire]] and [[Kingdom of Romania|Romania]] on one side and the [[Austria-Hungary|Austro-Hungarian Empire]], [[Kingdom of Bulgaria|Bulgaria]] and [[German Empire|Germany]] on the other. It stretched from the [[Baltic Sea]] in the north to the [[Black Sea]] in the south, included most of [[Eastern Europe]] and stretched deep into [[Central Europe]] as well.
The '''Eastern Front''' or '''Eastern Theater''', of [[World War I]].{{hairspace}}{{efn|name="other names"}} For Russia '''Second Patriotic War'''{{sfn|Borisyuk|2024|p=4}}{{sfn|Miltatuli|2017|p=2}} ({{langx|ru|Вторая Отечественная Война}}). Was a [[theater (warfare)|theater of operations]] that encompassed at its greatest extent the entire frontier between [[Russian Empire|Russia]] and [[Kingdom of Romania|Romania]] on one side and [[Austria-Hungary]], [[Kingdom of Bulgaria|Bulgaria]], the [[Ottoman Empire]], and [[German Empire|Germany]] on the other. It ranged from the [[Baltic Sea]] in the north to the [[Black Sea]] in the south, involved most of [[Eastern Europe]], and stretched deep into [[Central Europe]]. The term contrasts with the [[Western Front (World War I)|Western Front]], which was being fought in [[Belgium]] and [[French Third Republic|France]]. Unlike the static warfare on the Western Front, the fighting on the geographically larger Eastern Front was [[maneuver warfare|more dynamic]], often involving the flanking and encirclement of entire formations, and resulted in over 100,000 square miles of territory becoming occupied by a foreign power.{{sfn|Stone|2015|page=1}}{{sfn|Stone|2015|page=312}}


At the start of the war Russia launched offensives against both Germany and Austria-Hungary that were meant to achieve a rapid victory. The [[Russian invasion of East Prussia (1914)|invasion of East Prussia]] was completely defeated while the [[Battle of Galicia|advance]] into Austria-Hungary [[Carpathian Campaign|stalled in the Carpathians]], and following successful offensives by the [[Central Powers]] in 1915 its gains were reversed. Germany and Austria-Hungary defeated Russian forces [[Gorlice-Tarnów offensive|in Galicia]] [[Vistula–Bug offensive|and Poland]], causing Russia to [[Great Retreat (Russia)|abandon]] the [[Congress Poland|Polish salient]], parts of [[Belarus]] and the [[Baltic region]], and [[Galicia (Eastern Europe)|Galicia]].{{sfn|Reese|2023|pages=96—98}} However, the campaigns of 1914–1915 also failed to achieve Germany's objective of taking Russia out of the war, and by 1916 Germany prioritized its resources for winning in the West.{{sfn|Stone|2015|page=6}}
The term contrasts with "[[Western Front (World War I)|Western Front]]". Despite the geographical separation, events in all the European theaters strongly influenced one another. In 1914, the Russians' [[Battle of Galicia|invasion of Galicia]] relieved the pressure on the [[Serbian Campaign (World War I)|Serbian Front]], and in 1916, the [[Brusilov Offensive]] was intended to do the same for the [[Italian Campaign (World War I)|Italian Front]]. Ultimately, both times the Russians ignored the German forces to their north, which resulted in them over-stretching their supply lines, then suffering further defeats against superior German artillery.<ref name="Tunstall2008" /><ref>{{Cite journal|author-first=Nicholas|author-last=Golovin|year=1935|title=Brusilov's Offensive: The Galician Battle of 1916|journal=[[The Slavonic and East European Review]]|volume=13|issue=39|pages=571–96}}</ref>


Russia went on the offensive to take pressure off of France at [[Battle of Verdun|Verdun]]: Russia's [[Lake Naroch offensive|attack near Lake Naroch]] in early 1916 was quickly defeated by Germany, but in the summer of 1916 the [[Brusilov offensive]] became the largest [[Allies of World War I|Entente]] victory in the war. Russia inflicted over one million casualties on Austria-Hungary and forced Germany to redeploy divisions from the Western Front, at the cost of its own heavy losses. In August 1916 [[Romania during World War I|Romania entered the war]] but was [[The Romanian Debacle|quickly overrun]] by Germany, though Russia [[Romanian Front (Russian Empire)|helped prevent]] a total Romanian collapse.{{sfn|Reese|2023|pages=98—100}}<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/brusilov-offensive-begins | title=Brusilov Offensive Begins | archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150330195953/http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/brusilov-offensive-begins |archive-date=2015-03-30 | publisher=history.com | access-date=14 August 2021}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|author-first=Nicholas|author-last=Golovin|year=1935|title=Brusilov's Offensive: The Galician Battle of 1916|journal=[[The Slavonic and East European Review]]|volume=13|issue=39|pages=571–96}}</ref> The events of the [[February Revolution]] in {{OldStyleDateNY|March|February}} 1917, caused by food shortages in Russian cities,{{sfn|Stevenson|2017|pages=91—101}} began a decline in discipline among the troops.{{sfn|Reese|2023|pages=101–102}}{{sfn|Stevenson|2017|page=113}}
== Geography ==
The front in the east was much longer than that in the west. The theater of war was roughly delimited by the [[Baltic Sea]] in the west and [[Minsk]] in the east, and [[Saint Petersburg]] in the north and the [[Black Sea]] in the south, a distance of more than {{convert|1600|km|mi}}. This had a drastic effect on the nature of the warfare.


After the abdication of Emperor [[Nicholas II of Russia|Nicholas II]], the [[Russian Provisional Government]] chose to continue the war to fulfill its obligations to the Entente.{{sfn|Beevor|2022|pages=53—56}} In July 1917 Russia's [[Kerensky offensive|last offensive of the war]] ended in failure, and in September Germany [[Riga offensive (1917)|captured Riga]], bringing the [[Imperial German Army|German Army]] closer to the Russian capital. This was followed by a [[Kornilov affair|military coup attempt]] that weakened the Provisional Government. The [[Bolsheviks]] overthrew the [[Russian Republic]] in the [[October Revolution]] of {{OldStyleDateNY|November|October}} 1917. Despite the political instability, the majority of the [[Russian Army (1917)|Russian Army]] was still intact and stayed at the front line until early 1918,<ref>{{Cite book |last=Reese |first=Roger R. |title=The Imperial Russian Army in Peace, War, and Revolution, 1856–1917 |year=2019 |publisher=University Press of Kansas |location=Lawrence |isbn= 978-0-7006-2860-5 |pages=285–286}}</ref> though the Bolsheviks began taking steps to dissolve it in December 1917 while maintaining some forces against the Central Powers as their negotiations were ongoing.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Ziemke |first=Earl F. |title=The Red Army, 1918–1941: From Vanguard of World Revolution to America's Ally |publisher=Taylor & Francis |year=2004 |isbn= 978-1-135-76918-5 |page=23}}</ref>
While World War I on the Western Front developed into [[trench warfare]], the battle lines on the Eastern Front were much more fluid and trenches never truly developed. This was because the greater length of the front ensured that the density of soldiers in the line was lower so the line was easier to break. Once broken, the sparse communication networks made it difficult for the defender to rush reinforcements to the rupture in the line, mounting rapid counteroffensives to seal off any breakthrough.


The [[Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic|new Soviet government]] established by the [[Bolsheviks]] signed the [[Treaty of Brest-Litovsk]] with the Central Powers in March 1918 after [[Operation Faustschlag]], taking Russia out of the war; leading to a Central Powers victory. However, the Western Entente soon defeated the Central Powers, with the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk being annulled by the [[Armistice of 11 November 1918]]. Romania and the Central Powers signed a separate [[Treaty of Bucharest (1918)|peace treaty]] on 7 May 1918, but it was canceled by Romania on 10 November 1918.
== Propaganda ==
Propaganda was a key component of the culture of World War One. It was most commonly deployed through the state-controlled media to glorify the homeland and demonize the enemy. Propaganda often took the form of images which portrayed stereotypes from folklore about the enemy or from glorified moments from the nation's history. In the eastern front, propaganda took many forms such as opera, film, spy fiction, theater, spectacle, war novels and graphic art. Across the eastern front the amount of propaganda used in each country varied from state to state. Propaganda took many forms within each country and was distributed by many different groups. Most commonly the state produced propaganda, but other groups, such as anti-war organizations, also generated propaganda.<ref>{{cite book|editor1-last=Roshwald|editor1-first=Aviel|editor2-last=Stites|editor2-first=Richard|title=European Culture in the Great War:The Arts, Entertainment and Propaganda 1914-1918|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=uteV3ytfmqQC&pg=PA176&lpg=PA176&dq=European+Culture+in+the+Great+War&source=bl&ots=4lDEL50MJH&sig=12jz-6CvoydP1tK6f99jWJk5Pv0&hl=en&sa=X&ei=h8gXU4LjLNXqoATf8YGICg&ved=0CGwQ6AEwCA#v=onepage&q=European%20Culture%20in%20the%20Great%20War&f=false|year=1999|publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]]|location=Cambridge|pages=6,349–358}}</ref>


== Background ==
== Initial Situation in Belligerent Countries ==
{{Main|July Crisis}}
The [[assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand]] eventually led to [[Austria-Hungary]]'s ultimatum to [[Kingdom of Serbia|Serbia]] on 23 July 1914 with German backing, and after the Serbian response to it was rejected, Austria-Hungary declared war against Serbia on 28 July. Russia had made a decision to support Serbia and defend its interests in the [[Balkans]] before that, and on 29 July Russian emperor [[Nicholas II]] ordered a partial mobilization of the [[Imperial Russian Army|Russian Army]] in the military districts that bordered Austria. The following day he was convinced by his advisors to order a full mobilization to follow the military's existing mobilization schedule. Nicholas hoped Germany would see this as a regional conflict between Russia and Austria, but because their war plans depended on taking advantage of Russia's slower mobilization speed, and due to the position of both countries, they felt pressure to go to war immediately. Austria-Hungary began full mobilization on 31 July, and Germany declared war on Russia on 1 August 1914.{{sfn|Stone|2015|pages=28–31}}


=== Germany ===
=== Russia ===
{{Main|Russian entry into World War I}}
Prior to the outbreak of war, German strategy was based almost entirely on the Schlieffen Plan. With the Franco-Russian Agreement in place, Germany knew that war with either of these combatants would result in war with the other, which meant that there would be war in both the west and the east. Therefore, the German General Staff, Alfred von Schlieffen, planned a quick, all-out ground war on the western front to take France and, upon victory, Germany would turn its attention to Russia in the east.
Russia's plan at the outbreak of war was known as Schedule 19. Approved by Emperor Nicholas II in July 1910 and amended over the next two years, the plan concentrated Russia's armies on its western border with Germany and Austria-Hungary and was initially defensive. The original Schedule 19 would have had the Russian Army mobilize its troops to locations that were a significant distance away from its western border and leave the entire [[Congress Poland|Polish salient]] to be defended by local fortresses and the Warsaw garrison. Under this version Russia would not have taken any offensive action and would have waited to react to movements by Germany and Austria-Hungary.{{sfn|Stone|2015|pages=47–48}} The defensive nature of Russian planning went back to the military reforms in the 1860s following the [[Crimean War]]{{sfn|Stone|2015|page=44}} and was also influenced by the limited capability of Russia's railway network to facilitate the quick mobilization of troops, though that was gradually improving.{{sfn|Stone|2015|pages=46–47}}
However, for this plan to be successful, von Schlieffen knew that Germany would need, at the very least, British neutrality. If Germany could assure British neutrality if she invaded France, she believed she would be able to defeat France quickly enough to prepare to defend herself against any Russian retaliation. Von Schlieffen believed Russia would not be ready or willing to move against and attack Germany due to the huge losses of military equipment that Russia suffered in the [[Russo-Japanese war]].
However, Germany’s foreign policy at the time was not guided towards gaining the support of Britain. A German-British naval arms race would inevitably prove to be detrimental to gaining British support. Moreover, General von Moltke the Younger recognized that the German navy was preparing itself to attack Britain, but due to an institutional oversight that made it impossible to coordinate the army and navy, the General had no direct influence or control over the German navy. This meant that the General who needed British support could not stop the German navy from attacking Britain. Von Moltke’s inability to ensure British neutrality would prove to be particularly devastating to Germany’s plan to quickly defeat France and focus its military force toward an eastern front.


Russian strategy remained this way until developments that took place starting in 1911. That was the year that the [[French Army]] chief of staff visited Russia and asked the Russian high command to plan for an immediate offensive if war with Germany broke out to help prevent them from capturing Paris. This was also in accordance with Russia's 1892 promise to attack Germany if France was invaded in order to open a second front. In 1912 the Russian chief of staff, [[Yakov Zhilinsky]], told the French that Russia would go on the offensive against Germany fifteen days after the start of its mobilization. By this point, the improvements in Russia's infrastructure made this a lot more feasible, and there was also domestic pressure for Russia to not abandon its borderlands to foreign occupation. In 1911 new proposals for modifying Schedule 19 were made by army officers, with the most notable among them being Quartermaster-General [[Yuri Danilov]]'s argument for going on the offensive against both Germany and Austria-Hungary.{{sfn|Stone|2015|pages=48–49}}
Conversely, the German navy believed it could be victorious over Britain with Russian neutrality, something which von Moltke knew would not be possible.


In early 1912, the Russian high command decided on a variant of the plan known as Schedule 19A, in which two Russian armies would invade [[East Prussia]] while four armies would invade [[Galicia (Central Europe)|Galicia]]. This did not give Russia the decisive advantage in either location, but it tried to balance the need for Russia to support France by attacking Germany while also acknowledging that the main interest of [[International relations (1814–1919)|Russian foreign policy was in the Balkans]]. The plan also meant that Russia would begin its offensive before its army was fully mobilized, but it was believed that this was a necessary risk, because there would be a limited amount of time to attack Germany in support of France. The adoption of Schedule 19A in 1912 marked the first time in decades that Russian war planning was primarily offensive.{{sfn|Stone|2015|pages=48–49}}
=== Romania ===
In the immediate years preceding the [[First World War]], the kingdom of Romania was involved in the [[Second Balkan War]] on the side of Serbia, Montenegro, Greece and the Ottoman empire against Bulgaria. The Treaty of Bucharest, signed on August 10, 1913, ended the Balkan conflict and added 139,713 square kilometers to Romania’s territory.<ref>{{cite book|last=Miller, William|title=The Balkans: Roumania, Bulgaria, Serbia and Montenegro|year=1922|publisher=T. Fisher Unwin Ltd|location=London|page=474}}</ref> Although militarized, Romania decided upon a policy of neutrality at the start of the First World War, mainly due to having territorial interests in both Austria-Hungary ([[Transylvania]] and [[Bukovina]]) and in Russia ([[Bessarabia]]). Strong cultural influences also affected Romanian leanings, however. King [[Carol I]], as a [[Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen]], favoured his Germanic roots, while the Romanian people, influenced by their Latin-based language, were inclined to join France. Perhaps King Carol’s attempts at joining the war on the side of the Central powers would have been fruitful had he not died in 1914, but Romanian disenchantment with Austria-Hungary had already influenced public and political opinion. French endorsement of Romanian action against Bulgaria, and support of the terms of the Treaty of Bucharest was particularly effective at inclining Romania towards the Entente. Furthermore, Russian courting of Romanian sympathies, exemplified by the visit of the Tsar to Constanta on June 14, 1914, signaled in a new era of positive relations between the two countries.<ref>{{cite book|last=Hitchins, Keith|title=Rumania:1866-1947|year=1994|publisher=Clarendon Press|location=Oxford|pages=153–4}}</ref> Nevertheless, King [[Ferdinand I of Romania|Ferdinand I]] of Romania maintained a policy of neutrality, intending to gain the most for Romania by negotiating between competing powers. According to historian John Keegan, the enticements offered by the Allies were never concrete, for in secret, Russia and France agreed not to honour any conventions when the end of the war came.<ref>{{cite book|last=Keegan, John|title=the First World War|year=1998|publisher=Random House Inc.|location=New York|pages=306}}</ref>


=== Russia ===
=== Germany ===
{{Main|German entry into World War I}}
Russia’s immediate reason for its involvement in the [[First World War]] was a direct result of the decisions made by the statesmen and generals during July 1914. The [[July crisis]] was the series of diplomatic conflicts that took place in the decade prior to 1914, thus to understanding the position Russia was in prior to the War. According to [[Dominic Lieven|D. C. Lieven]], Russia was a formidable force that was able to back up her diplomatic policies by force. In 1870 – 1914, the four leading powers were, Russia, Prussia, Austria and France; each of whom had equal amounts of power of Europe at the time. One of the biggest factors for Russia entering into a position of war was the downfall of her economy.{{Sfn|Lieven|1983|p=5}} The 20 percent jump in defense expenditure during 1866-77 and in 1871-5 forced them to changed their respective position within Europe and shift the balance of power out of her favour.{{Sfn|Lieven|1983|p=8}} At the time Russian infrastructure was backward and the Russian government had to invest far more that its European rivals in structural changes plus the overwhelming burdens of defense would ultimately result in an economic downfall for the Russians. This essentially was a major strain on the Russian population, but also served as a direct threat to military expenditure.{{Sfn|Lieven|1983|p=27}} Thus the only way the Russians could sustain the strains of European war, would be to place more emphasis on foreign investment from the French who essentially came to Russia aid for industrial change.{{Sfn|Lieven|1983|p=28}} The Franco- Russian Alliance allowed for the Russian Defense to grow and aid the European balance of power during the growth of the German Empires might. In 1914 Germany was the most powerful state in all of Europe, nevertheless one of the key factors was that of the Russian foreign policy between 1890 and 1914.
Prior to the outbreak of war, German strategy was based on the [[Schlieffen Plan]]. With the [[Franco-Russian Alliance|Franco-Russian Agreement]] in place from the early 1890s, Germany knew that war with either of these combatants would result in war with the other, which meant that there would be a [[two-front war]] in both the west and the east. Therefore, the German General Staff, led by [[Alfred von Schlieffen]] from 1891 to 1906, developed a plan that called for German armies to pass through [[Belgium]] and then turn south to quickly capture Paris, while a smaller German force would pin down the French defenders along the Franco-German border. With France being defeated before Russia could fully mobilize, Germany could then turn its focus on Russia, which Schlieffen believed would not be taken out of the war as quickly because of its much larger territory. The Schlieffen Plan was actually a change from his predecessor in the 1880s, [[Helmuth von Moltke the Elder]], who believed that Germany should first be on the defensive in the west and should coordinate with Austria to defeat Russia.{{sfn|Stone|2015|pages=23–25}}


Schlieffen's successor at the General Staff, [[Helmuth von Moltke the Younger]], maintained the basic plan that Schlieffen put forward in 1905 of quickly knocking out France in the west before turning to focus on Russia, thereby avoiding a two-front war. This strategy was fully adopted by the German government in 1913. But the plan did not take into account that the growing military capabilities of Russia in the years since the [[Russo-Japanese War]] meant that the Russian mobilization would proceed faster than Schlieffen had originally thought.{{sfn|Stone|2015|pages=23–25}} Another problem with the German strategy was the deliberate choice to not coordinate it with their allies in Austria-Hungary. Moltke the Younger wanted Austria to assist Germany by going on the offensive against Russia in the early stages of the war, and never told his Austrian counterpart, [[Franz Conrad von Hötzendorf]], that Germany was not going have its own offensive in the east. Conrad, for his part, was also misleading the Germans by allowing them to think Austria would prioritize an attack against Russia, when he actually planned to focus the Austro-Hungarian offensive power against Serbia.{{sfn|Stone|2015|pages=25–26}}
==== Russian Propaganda ====
In order for the Russians to legitimize its war efforts the government constructed an image of the enemy through state instituted [[propaganda]]. Their main aim was to help overcome the legend of the “invincible” German war machine, in order to boost the moral of civilians and soldiers. Russian propaganda often took the form of showing the Germans as a civilized nation, with barbaric “inhuman” traits. Russian propaganda also exploited the image of the Russian [[POW]] who were in the Germans camps, in order to boost the morale of their troops. This served as encouragement to defeat the enemy and to get their fellow soldiers out of the “inhuman” German POW camps.<ref name="oxana475">{{cite journal|last=Oxana Nagornaja|first=Jeffrey Mankoff|title=United by Barbed Wire: Russian POWs in Germany, National Stereotypes, and International Relations|journal=Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History|year=2009|volume=10|issue=3|pages=475–498|url=http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/kritika/v010/10.3.nagornaja.html|accessdate=February 14, 2014}}</ref>


Conversely, the [[Imperial German Navy]] believed it could be victorious over Britain with Russian neutrality, something which Moltke knew would not be possible.
A key element of the Russian propaganda was the Investigate Commission formed in April 1915. It was lead by Aleksei Krivtsov and the study was tasked with the job of studying the law violations of the [[Central Powers]] and then getting this information to the Russian Public. This commission published photographs of letters that were allegedly found on fallen German soldiers. These letters document the German correspondents saying to “take no prisoners.” A museum was also set up in Petrograd, which displayed pictures that showed how “inhuman” the Germans were treating prisoners of war.<ref name="oxana475"/>


=== Austria-Hungary ===
=== Austria-Hungary ===
{{Main|Austro-Hungarian entry into World War I}}
[[File:Bosnian Crisis 1908.jpg|thumb|upright|left|Illustration from the French magazine Le Petit Journal on the Bosnian Crisis. Bulgaria declares its independence and its prince [[Ferdinand I of Bulgaria|Ferdinand]] is named Tsar. Austria-Hungary, in the person of Emperor [[Franz Joseph I of Austria|Francis Joseph]], annexes Bosnia and Herzegovina, while the Ottoman Sultan [[Abdul Hamid II]] looks on helplessly.]]
Austria-Hungary's participation in the outbreak of World War I has been neglected by historians, as emphasis has traditionally been placed on Germany's role as the prime instigator.<ref name="Williamson 1991 1">{{cite book|last=Williamson|first=Samuel R.|title=Austria-Hungary and the Origins of the First World War|year=1991|publisher=St. Martin's Press|location=New York|page=1}}</ref> However, the "spark" that ignited the First World War is attributed to the [[assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand]] by Gavrilo Princip, which took place on 28 June 1914. Approximately a month later, on 28 July 1914, Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia. This act led to a series of events that would quickly expand into the First World War; thus, the Habsburg government in Vienna initiated the pivotal decision that would begin the conflict.<ref name="Williamson 1991 1" />


The causes of the Great War have generally been defined in diplomatic terms, but certain deep-seated issues in Austria-Hungary undoubtedly contributed to the beginnings of the First World War.<ref>{{cite book|last=Mason|first=John W.|title=The Dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire 1867–1918|year=1985|publisher=Longman Group Limited|location=London|page=61}}</ref> The Austro-Hungarian situation in the Balkans pre-1914 is a primary factor in its involvement in the war. The [[Pan-Slavism|movement towards South Slav unity]] was a major problem for the Habsburg Empire, which was facing increasing nationalist pressure from its multinational populace. As Europe's third largest state, the Austro-Hungarian monarchy was hardly homogeneous; comprising over fifty million people and eleven nationalities, the Empire was a conglomeration of a number of diverse cultures, languages, and peoples.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Mamatey|first=Albert|title=The Situation in Austria-Hungary|journal=The Journal of Race Development|year=1915|volume=6|issue=2|page=204|doi=10.2307/29738124|jstor=29738124}}</ref>
[[File:Bosnian Crisis 1908.jpg|thumb|Illustration from the French magazine Le Petit Journal on the Bosnian Crisis: Bulgaria declares its independence and its prince [[Ferdinand]] is named Tsar, Austria-Hungary, in the person of Emperor [[Franz Joseph I of Austria|Francis Joseph]], annexes Bosnia and Herzegovina, while the Ottoman Sultan [[Abdul Hamid II]] looks on helplessly.]]


Specifically, the South Slavic people of Austria-Hungary desired to amalgamate with Serbia in an effort to officially solidify their shared cultural heritage. Over seven million South Slavs lived inside the Empire, while three million lived outside it.<ref>{{cite book|last=Mason|first=John W.|title=The Dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire 1867–1918|year=1985|publisher=Longman Group Limited|location=London|page=67}}</ref> With the growing emergence of nationalism in the twentieth century, unity of all South Slavs looked promising. This tension is exemplified by [[Conrad von Hötzendorf]]'s letter to Franz Ferdinand:
Austria-Hungary's participation in the outbreak of World War I has been neglected by historians, as emphasis has traditionally been placed on Germany's role as the prime instigator.<ref name="Williamson 1991 1">{{cite book|last=Williamson|first=Samuel R.|title=Austria-Hungary and the Origins of the First World War|year=1991|publisher=St. Martin's Press|location=New York|page=1}}</ref> However, the "spark" that ignited the First World War is attributed to the [[assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand]] by Gavrilo Princip, which took place on June 28, 1914. Approximately a month later, on July 18, 1914, Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia. This act led to a series of events that would quickly expand into the First World War; thus, the Habsburg government in Vienna initiated the pivotal decision that would begin the conflict.<ref name="Williamson 1991 1"/>


<blockquote>The unification of the South Slav race is one of the powerful national movements which can neither be ignored nor kept down. The question can only be, whether unification will take place within the boundaries of the Monarchy – that is at the expense of Serbia's independence – or under Serbia's leadership at the expense of the Monarchy. The cost to the Monarchy would be the loss of its South Slav provinces and thus of almost its entire coastline. The loss of territory and prestige would relegate the Monarchy to the status of a small power.<ref>{{cite book|last=Mason, John W.|title=The Dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire 1867–1918|year=1985|publisher=Longman Group Limited|location=London|page=67}}</ref></blockquote>
The causes of the Great War have generally been defined in diplomatic terms, but certain deep-seated issues in Austria-Hungary undoubtedly contributed to the beginnings of the First World War.<ref>{{cite book|last=Mason|first=John W.|title=The Dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire 1867-1918|year=1985|publisher=Longman Group Limited|location=London|page=61}}</ref> The Austro-Hungarian situation in the Balkans pre-1914 is a primary factor in its involvement in the war. The [[Pan-Slavism|movement towards South Slav unity]] was a major problem for the Habsburg Empire, which was facing increasing nationalist pressure from its multinational populace. As Europe's third largest state, the Austro-Hungarian monarchy was hardly homogeneous; comprising over fifty million people and eleven nationalities, the Empire was a conglomeration of a number of diverse cultures, languages, and peoples.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Mamatey|first=Albert|title=The Situation in Austria-Hungary|journal=The Journal of Race Development|year=1915|volume=6|issue=2|page=204}}</ref>


Specifically, the South Slavic people of Austria-Hungary desired to amalgamate with Serbia in an effort to official solidify their shared cultural heritage. Over seven million South Slavs lived inside the Empire, while three million lived outside it.<ref>{{cite book|last=Mason|first=John W.|title=The Dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire 1867-1918|year=1985|publisher=Longman Group Limited|location=London|page=67}}</ref> With the growing emergence of nationalism in the twentieth century, unity of all South Slavs looked promising. This tension is exemplified by [[Conrad von Hötzendorf]]'s letter to Franz Ferdinand:
The [[Bosnian crisis|annexation of Bosnia-Herzegovina]] in 1908 by Austrian foreign minister Baron von Aehrenthal in an effort to assert domination over the Balkans inflamed Slavic nationalism and angered Serbia. Bosnia-Herzegovina became a "rallying cry" for South Slavs, with hostilities between Austria-Hungary and Serbia steadily increasing.<ref>{{cite book|last=Williamson|first=Samuel R.|title=Austria-Hungary and the Origins of the First World War|year=1991|publisher=St. Martin's Press|location=New York|page=72}}</ref> The situation was ripe for conflict, and when the Serbian nationalist Gavrilo Princip assassinated Austrian imperial heir, Franz Ferdinand, these longstanding hostilities culminated into an all-out war.


The Allied Powers wholeheartedly supported the Slavs' nationalistic fight. [[George Macaulay Trevelyan]], a British historian, saw Serbia's war against Austria-Hungary as a "war of liberation" that would "free South Slavs from tyranny."<ref>{{cite journal|last=Trevelyan|first=George Macaulay|title=Austria-Hungary and Serbia|journal=The North American Review|date=June 1915|volume=201|issue=715|page=860}}</ref> In his own words: "If ever there was a battle for freedom, there is such a battle now going on in Southeastern Europe against Austrian and Magyar. If this war ends in the overthrow of the Magyar tyranny, an immense step forward will have been taken toward racial liberty and European peace."<ref>{{cite journal|last=Trevelyan|first=George Macaulay|title=Austria-Hungary and Serbia|journal=The North American Review|date=June 1915|volume=201|issue=715|page=868}}</ref>
<blockquote>The unification of the South Slav race is one of the powerful national movements which can neither be ignored nor kept down. The question can only be, whether unification will take place within the boundaries of the Monarchy - that is at the expense of Serbia's independence - or under Serbia's leadership at the expense of the Monarchy. The cost to the Monarchy would be the loss of its South Slav provinces and thus of almost its entire coastline. The loss of territory and prestige would relegate the Monarchy to the status of a small power.</blockquote><ref>{{cite book|last=Mason, John W.|title=The Dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire 1867-1918|year=1985|publisher=Longman Group Limited|location=London|page=67}}</ref>


=== Romania ===
The [[Bosnian crisis|annexation of Bosnia-Herzegovina]] in 1908 by Austrian foreign minister Baron von Aehrenthal in an effort to assert domination over the Balkans inflamed Slavic nationalism and angered Serbia. Bosnia-Herzegovina became a "rallying cry" for South Slavs, with hostilities between Austria-Hungary and Serbia steadily increasing.<ref>{{cite book|last=Williamson|first=Samuel R.|title=Austria-Hungary and the Origins of the First World War|year=1991|publisher=St. Martin's Press|location=New York|page=72}}</ref> The situation was ripe for conflict, and when Bosnian Princip assassinated Austrian Ferdinand, these longstanding hostilities culminated into an all-out war.
[[File:Greater Rumania, New York Times, 1919.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|Border changes in favor of Romania as stipulated in the [[Treaty of Bucharest (1916)|Treaty of Bucharest]]]]
In the immediate years preceding the [[First World War]], the Kingdom of Romania was involved in the [[Second Balkan War]] on the side of Serbia, Montenegro, Greece and the Ottoman Empire against Bulgaria. The [[Treaty of Bucharest (1913)|Treaty of Bucharest]], signed on 10 August 1913, ended the Balkan conflict and added 6,960 square kilometers to Romania's territory.<ref>{{cite book|last=Miller, William|title=The Balkans: Roumania, Bulgaria, Serbia and Montenegro|year=1922|publisher=T. Fisher Unwin Ltd|location=London|page=474}}</ref> Although militarized, Romania decided upon a policy of neutrality at the start of the First World War, mainly due to having territorial interests in both Austria-Hungary ([[Transylvania]] and [[Bukovina]]) and in Russia ([[Bessarabia]]). Strong cultural influences also affected Romanian leanings, however. King [[Carol I]], as a [[Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen]], favoured his Germanic roots, while the Romanian people, influenced by their Orthodox church and Latin-based language, were inclined to join France. Perhaps King Carol's attempts at joining the war on the side of the Central powers would have been fruitful had he not died in 1914, but Romanian disenchantment with Austria-Hungary had already influenced public and political opinion. French endorsement of Romanian action against Bulgaria, and support of the terms of the Treaty of Bucharest was particularly effective at inclining Romania towards the Entente. Furthermore, Russian courting of Romanian sympathies, exemplified by the visit of the Tsar to [[Constanța]] on 14 June 1914, signaled in a new era of positive relations between the two countries.<ref>{{cite book|last=Hitchins|first=Keith|author-link=Keith Hitchins|title=Rumania:1866–1947|year=1994|publisher=Clarendon Press|location=Oxford|pages=153–4}}</ref> Nevertheless, King [[Ferdinand I of Romania]] maintained a policy of neutrality, intending to gain the most for Romania by negotiating between competing powers. The result of the negotiations with the Entente was the [[Treaty of Bucharest (1916)]], which stipulated the conditions under which Romania agreed to join the war on the side of the Entente, particularly territorial promises in [[Austria-Hungary]]: Transylvania, [[Crișana]] and [[Maramureș (historical region)|Maramureș]], the whole [[Banat]] and most of Bukovina. According to historian John Keegan, these enticements offered by the Allies were never concrete, for in secret, Russia and France agreed not to honor any conventions when the end of the war came.<ref>{{cite book|last=Keegan, John|title=the First World War|year=1998|publisher=Random House Inc.|location=New York|pages=306}}</ref>


== 1914 ==
The Allied Powers wholeheartedly supported the Slavs nationalistic fight. George Macaulay Trevelyan, a British historian, saw Serbia's war against Austria-Hungary as a "war of liberation" that would "free South Slavs from tyranny."<ref>{{cite journal|last=Trevelyan|first=George Macaulay|title=Austria-Hungary and Serbia|journal=The North American Review|date=June 1915|volume=201|issue=715|page=860}}</ref> In his own words: "If ever there was a battle for freedom, there is such a battle now going on in Southeastern Europe against Austrian and Magyar. If this war ends in the overthrow of the Magyar tyranny, an immense step forward will have been taken toward racial liberty and European peace."<ref>{{cite journal|last=Trevelyan|first=George Macaulay|title=Austria-Hungary and Serbia|journal=The North American Review|date=June 1915|volume=201|issue=715|page=868}}</ref>
In the years prior to 1914, Austro-Russian co-operation was both crucial for European peace and difficult to maintain. Old suspicions exacerbated by the [[Bosnian crisis]] stood in the way of agreement between the two empires, as did ethnic sensitivities.


The Russian military was the largest in the world consisting of 1,400,000 men. They could also mobilize up to 5 million men, but only had 4.6 million rifles to give them. Russian troops were satisfactorily supplied at the beginning of the war, there was more light artillery than France, and no less than Germany. {{Sfn|Борисюк|2023|p=83}}{{sfn|Oldenburg|2022|p=448}}
== Russia prior to 1914 ==
Prior to 1914, the Russian’s lack of success in war and diplomacy in the six decades before 1914 snapped the country’s moral strength in half. The triumphs of the British and Germany in the military, in diplomatic and economic spheres put these countries in the front rank of the worlds leading nations and enabled Englishmen and Germans to feel a foot taller than the rest of mankind.{{Sfn|Lieven|1983|p=35}} This was a source of national pride, self-confidence and unity. It helped reconcile the worker to the state and the Bavarian or Scotsman to rule from Berlin or London.
In the years prior to 1914 Austro- Russian co-operation was unfortunately both crucial for European peace and very difficult to maintain. Old suspicions exacerbated by the [[Bosnian crisis]] stood in the way of agreement between the two empires, as did racial sensitivities. Russia’s historical role as liberator of the Balkans was difficult to square with Austria’s determination to control adjacent territories in which irredentist movements would be based. {{Sfn|Lieven|1983|p=39}} In 1913-4 Petersburg was however to concerned with its own weakness and what it saw as threats to vital Russian interests to spare much thought for Vienna’s feelings. The Russians were, with some justice, indignant that the concessions they had made after the first [[Balkan war]] in the interest of European peace had not been reciprocated by the central powers.{{Sfn|Lieven|1983|p=42}}
This was doubly dangerous given the growing evidence flowing into Petersburg about Germany’s aggressive intentions. Both Bazarov and the agents of the Russian Secret political police in Germany reported the concern aroused in public opinion by the press war against Russia, which raged in the spring of 1914.{{Sfn|Lieven|1983|p=49}}


=== First combat (August 1914) ===
=== The empires clash ===
[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 103-121-018, Tannenberg, Hindenburg auf Schlachtfeld.jpg|thumb|[[Paul von Hindenburg|Hindenburg]] at Tannenberg,<br /> by [[Hugo Vogel (painter)|Hugo Vogel]]]]
The war in the east began with [[East Prussian Campaign (1914)|the Russian invasion of East Prussia]] on 17 August 1914 and the Austro-Hungarian province of [[Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria|Galicia]].<ref>{{Cite book|last=Gilbert|first=Martin|authorlink=Martin Gilbert|title=The First World War: A Complete History|publisher=[[Henry Holt and Company]]|location=New York|year=1994|isbn=080501540X}}</ref> The first effort quickly turned to a defeat following the [[Battle of Tannenberg (1914)|Battle of Tannenberg]] in August 1914.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/582679/Battle-of-Tannenberg |title=Battle of Tannenberg (World War I) |publisher=[[Encyclopedia Britannica]] |date= |accessdate=2014-03-05}}</ref> The second incursion was completely successful, with the [[Russian Empire|Russians]] controlling almost all of Galicia by the end of 1914. Under the command of [[Nikolai Judovich Ivanov|Nikolai Ivanov]] and [[Aleksei Brusilov]], the Russians won the [[Battle of Galicia]] in September and began the [[Siege of Przemyśl]], the next fortress on the road towards [[Kraków]].<ref>{{cite book|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=xN7t7DgsclcC&pg=PA98&dq=Battle+of+Gumbinnen&hl=en&sa=X&ei=HHkSU6zLAc3voATFsID4Bg&ved=0CEsQ6AEwBg#v=onepage&q=lemberg&f=false |title=World War I |author-first=Samuel Lyman Atwood |author-last=Marshall |authorlink=S.L.A. Marshall |publisher=[[American Heritage (magazine)|American Heritage]] |location=New York |year=2001 |accessdate=2014-03-05 |pages=113–114 |isbn=0618056866}}</ref>
[[File:An engagement in Hungary between an Austro-Hungarian force and Russian cavalry.jpg|thumb|An engagement in Hungary]]


The first events were the capture of Kalish and Chenhostov by the Germans without fighting, and the first real clash was [[Battle of the Wierzbołów station|clashes at Wierzbołów]].<br>The first full-scale operation was [[Russian invasion of East Prussia (1914)|invasion of East Prussia]] on 17 August 1914 and the Austro-Hungarian province of [[Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria|Galicia]].<ref>{{Cite book|last=Gilbert|first=Martin|author-link=Martin Gilbert|title=The First World War: A Complete History|publisher=[[Henry Holt and Company]]|location=New York|year=1994|isbn=0-8050-1540-X|url=https://archive.org/details/firstworldwarcom00gilb}}</ref> The Russian offensive in the [[Battle of Stallupönen]], which was the opening battle of the Eastern Front,<ref>{{cite book|last=Keegan, John|title=the First World War|year=1998|publisher=Random House Inc.|location=New York|pages=144–145}}</ref> quickly turned to a disastrous defeat following the [[Battle of Tannenberg]] in August 1914;<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/582679/Battle-of-Tannenberg |title=Battle of Tannenberg (World War I) |publisher=[[Encyclopædia Britannica]] |access-date=2014-03-05 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131019143633/https://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/582679/Battle-of-Tannenberg |archive-date=2013-10-19 |url-status=live }}</ref> even though the Russians were [[Battle of Gumbinnen|successfully defending at Gumbinnen]] a while before Tannenberg. After the Russian disaster, German troops under the command of Hindenburg inflicted another crushing defeat on the numerically superior Russian army in the [[First Battle of the Masurian Lakes]]. A second Russian incursion into Galicia was more successful, with the [[Russian Empire|Russians]] controlling almost all of that region by the end of 1914, routing four Austrian armies in the process. Under the command of [[Nikolai Judovich Ivanov|Nikolai Ivanov]], [[Nikolai Ruzsky]] and [[Aleksei Brusilov]], the Russians won the [[Battle of Galicia]] in September and began the [[Siege of Przemyśl]], the next fortress on the road towards [[Kraków]].<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xN7t7DgsclcC&q=lemberg&pg=PA98 |title=World War I |author-first=Samuel Lyman Atwood |author-last=Marshall |author-link=S.L.A. Marshall |publisher=[[American Heritage (magazine)|American Heritage]] |location=New York |year=2001 |access-date=2014-03-05 |pages=113–114 |isbn=0-618-05686-6}}</ref>
This early Russian success in 1914 on the Austro-Russian border was a reason for concern to the Central Powers and caused considerable [[German Empire|German]] forces to be transferred to the East to take pressure off the Austrians, leading to the creation of the new [[9th Army (German Empire)|German Ninth Army]]. At the end of 1914, the main focus of the fighting shifted to central part of [[Congress Poland|Russian Poland]], west of the river [[Vistula]].{{sfn|Dupuy|1967|p=31}} The October [[Battle of the Vistula River]] and the November [[Battle of Łódź (1914)|Battle of Łódź]] brought little advancement for the Germans, but at least kept the Russians at a safe distance.{{sfn|Dupuy|1967|p=3}}


This early Russian success in 1914 on the Austro-Russian border was a reason for concern to the Central Powers and caused considerable [[German Empire|German]] forces to be transferred to the East to take pressure off the Austrians, leading to the creation of the new [[9th Army (German Empire)|German Ninth Army]]. The Austro-Hungarian government accepted the Polish proposal of establishing the [[Supreme National Committee]] as the Polish central authority within the Empire, responsible for the formation of the [[Polish Legions in World War I|Polish Legions]], an auxiliary military formation within the Austro-Hungarian army. At the end of 1914, the main focus of the fighting shifted to central part of [[Congress Poland|Russian Poland]], west of the river [[Vistula]].{{sfn|Dupuy|Onacewicz|1967|p=31}} The October [[Battle of the Vistula River]], [[Battle of Augustów (1914)|Augustow operation]], and the November [[Battle of Łódź (1914)|Battle of Łódź]] they brought the Germans only huge losses, and the strengthening of the Russians in the region. Germans' initial plans to destroy the Russians in Poland ended in desperate attempts to prevent their invasion of Silesia{{sfn|Dupuy|Onacewicz|1967|p=3}}
The Russian and Austro-Hungarian armies continued to clash in and near the [[Carpathian Mountains]] throughout the winter of 1914–1915. Przemysl fortress managed to hold out deep behind enemy lines throughout this period, with the Russians bypassing it in order to attack the Austro-Hungarian troops further to the west. They made some progress, crossing the [[Carpathian Mountains|Carpathians]] in February and March 1915, but then the Germans sent relief and stopped further Russian advance. In the meantime, Przemysl was almost entirely destroyed and the [[Siege of Przemysl]] ended in a defeat for the [[Austria-Hungary|Austrian]]s.{{sfn|Dupuy|1967|pp=15-16}}

At the same time, Austria-Hungary was trying to regain the territories lost in the summer, they attacked the Russians on the [[Battle of the San river (1914)|San River]], and after a long period of fighting they were forced to retreat. The Russians went on the [[Battle of Kraków (1914)|offensive]], came close to Krakow and occupied Chernivtsi, but a [[Battle of Limanowa|counterattack]] by the Central Powers saved the situation.

The year ended with a [[Battle of the Four Rivers|bloody battle]] on the rivers Bzura, Ravka, Nida and Pilica, where the Central Powers planned to take Warsaw, but could not and were forced to withdraw from the battle.


== 1915 ==
== 1915 ==
===Central Powers victories, retreat of the Imperial Russian Army===
In 1915 the German command decided to make its main effort on the Eastern Front, and accordingly transferred considerable forces there. To eliminate the Russian threat the [[Central Powers]] began the campaign season of 1915 with the successful [[Gorlice-Tarnow Offensive]] in Galicia in May 1915.
[[image:Russian Troops NGM-v31-p372.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Russian troops going to the front: Support for the imperial guard being hurried into the fighting line]]
[[File:Russian Troops NGM-v31-p372.jpg|thumb|Russian troops going to the front: Support for the imperial guard being hurried into the fighting line]]
[[File:Sieg unfern pereinigten Waffen! - postcard.jpg|thumb|Postcard depicting a German and Austro-Hungarian soldier fighting together against Russia. Translated caption: "Victory with our united weapons!"]]
After the [[Second Battle of the Masurian Lakes]], the German and Austro-Hungarian troops in the Eastern Front functioned under a unified command. The offensive soon turned into a general advance and then a strategic retreat by the Russian army. The cause of the reverses suffered by the Russian army was not so much errors in the tactical sphere, as the deficiency in technical equipment, particularly in artillery and ammunition as well as the corruption and incompetence of the Russian officers. Only by 1916 did buildup of Russian war industries increase production of war material and improve the supply situation.
In 1915 the Chief of [[German General Staff|German Great General Staff]], General of Infantry [[Erich von Falkenhayn]] decided to make its main effort on the Eastern Front, and accordingly transferred considerable forces there. The year began with a successful German offensive in the area of the [[Second Battle of the Masurian Lakes|Masurian lakes]]. At the same time, [[First Battle of Przasnysz|a large battle for the city of Przasnysz]] took place on the Polish front. The city changed hands several times but eventually remained in Russian hands. As a result of the battle, the Germans lost from 38,000 to 60,000 soldiers and Russian losses amounted to about 40,000 men.{{sfn|Oleynikov|2016|p=254}} In March, the Germans tried to take Poland again, the [[Second Battle of the Vistula River|third Battle of Warsaw]] began, and like the previous two, ended with the defeat of Germany. In May 1915, to eliminate the Russian threat the [[Central Powers]] began the successful [[Gorlice–Tarnów Offensive]] in Galicia.


After the [[Second Battle of the Masurian Lakes]], the German and Austro-Hungarian troops on the Eastern Front functioned under a unified command. The offensive soon turned into a general advance and a [[Great Retreat (Russian)|corresponding strategic retreat]] by the Russian Army. The cause of the reverses suffered by the Russian Army, despite a significant numerical superiority over the German enemy, was not so many errors in the tactical sphere, as the deficiency in technical equipment, particularly in artillery and ammunition as well as the corruption and incompetence of the Russian officers. Only by 1916 did the buildup of Russian war industries increase the production of war material and improve the supply situation.
By mid-1915, the Russians had been expelled from [[Congress Poland|Russian Poland]] and hence pushed hundreds of kilometers away from the borders of the Central Powers, removing the threat of Russian invasion of Germany or Austria-Hungary. At the end of 1915 German-Austrian advance was stopped on the line [[Riga]]–[[Jēkabpils|Jakobstadt]]–[[Dünaburg]]–[[Baranovichi]]–[[Pinsk]]–[[Dubno]]–[[Ternopil]]. The general outline of this front line did not change until the Russian collapse in 1917.


By mid-1915, the Russians had been expelled from [[Bug-Narew Offensive|Russian Poland]], The whole campaign cost the Russians about 400,000 men,{{sfn|Oleynikov|2024|p=22}} however, the Germans and Austrians suffered setbacks, their attempt to break through to Lublin was repulsed with losses of 37,500 people, the Russians lost 9,524 people,{{sfn|Oleynikov|2024|p=100-101}} and hence pushed [[Vistula–Bug offensive|hundreds of kilometers]] away from the borders of the Central Powers, removing the threat of Russian invasion of Germany, although there was still slight Russian penetration into Austria-Hungary. At the end of 1915 the German-Austrian advance was stopped on the line [[Riga]]–[[Jēkabpils|Jakobstadt]]–[[Dünaburg]]–[[Baranovichi]]–[[Pinsk]]–[[Dubno]]–[[Ternopil|Tarnopol]]. The general outline of this front line did not change until the Russian collapse in 1917.
=== Russo-Turkish Offensive, Winter 1915-1916 ===


During the campaign of 1915, the Russian Empire lost the entire line of western fortresses, and more than 4,000 guns. The causes of heavy defeats and losses of personnel, weapons, and as a result - vast territories (the entire Kingdom of Poland, part of the Baltic states, [[Grodno]], partly [[Volhynia]] and [[Podolia]] provinces - up to 300,000 square kilometers) were to a large extent systemic shortcomings in the management of the armed forces and the defense industry. The multi-stage placement of military orders, their slow passage in the depths of the War Ministry, the disunity of the front and rear played a negative role. Thus, until the autumn of 1915, the Russian Supreme Commander-in-Chief only coordinated the actions of the commanders-in-chief of the armies of the fronts, distributed reinforcements, requesting them from the War Ministry. The Minister of War was responsible for organizing the production of weapons and ammunition, the implementation of the replenishment of troop personnel, military transportation outside the provinces declared a theater of military operations. The military districts in the theater of operations were subordinate to the commanders-in-chief of the armies of the fronts, but not to the Headquarters. Military production also lagged behind: until the end of autumn, the active army suffered from a shortage of rifles and ammunition, the consumption of which turned out to be incommensurable with the volume of production.<ref>С.Г. Нелипович, Русский фронт Первой мировой войны. Потери сторон 1915, 2022, p. 844-845</ref>
<!-- Deleted image removed: [[File:Russian Cavalry Entering Trabzon, 1916.png|thumb|right|Russian cavalry entering the Turkish city Trabzon.]] -->


Contemporaries also noted the isolation of the Russian commanding staff from the soldiers, the lack of practical warfare skills among the top-level commanders. "We did have courage to send people to mass slaughter, hiding behind the difficulty of tactical responsibility, to slaughter often without purpose. We sent them, being ourselves far away, not seeing either our own or the enemy, and therefore not conforming to reality. Instead of punishment, we reward such leaders, because as far as the leaders were far away, the same, but still more, the higher leaders kept even more distant. People ceased to be people, but turned into pawns. We went to the fight in a state of some kind of oblivion and stunnedness", wrote the representative of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief, Infantry General [[Fyodor Palitzin]], in his diary.<ref>Палицын Ф. Ф. Записки. Северо-Западный фронт и Кавказ (1914-1916). М., 2014, volume 1, p. 281</ref>
After the [[Battle of Sarikamis]], the Russo-Turkish front was relatively stagnant for a year, although there were local campaigns in Azerbaijan and Lake Van in April and June. The Turks were concerned with reorganizing their army, the [[Gallipoli Campaign]], and [[Armenian Genocide|"ethnic cleansing" in Turkish Armenia]].<ref name="Jukes, Geoffrey 2002 38">{{cite book|last=Jukes, Geoffrey|title=Essential Histories: The First World War, The Eastern Front 1914-1918|year=2002|publisher=Osprey Publishing|location=Oxford|page=38}}</ref> Meanwhile, the Caucasus Army had low priority, as Russia was preoccupied with other armies on the Eastern Front. However, the appointment of [[Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich of Russia (1856-1929)|Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich]] as Viceroy and Commander in the Caucasus in September 1915 radically changed the situation of the Russo-Turkish front.


Failures in the Russian system of command and control of troops and the organization of hostilities occurred at other levels. Thus, serious shortcomings in reconnaissance led to the absence of any analysis of the enemy's plans and actions. With a general superiority in forces, almost every Central Powers's operation in 1915 was "unexpected" for the command from the front to the regimental level. Passion for undercover intelligence in the highest Russian headquarters did not justify itself, and tactical intelligence was still based on barely reliable testimony of prisoners, in the absence of which the command up to the army, inclusive, was simply "blind". The separation of artillery from infantry with subordination to the inspectors of the corps and ammunition supply units (park brigades and divisions) created difficulties in the operational replenishment of ammunition and shells in the combat units. At the same time, huge stockpiles of ammunition were created in the fortresses, which were then delivered to the enemy during the retreat or destroyed due to the impossibility of evacuation. Special units were not created for the construction of fortifications in the rear of the troops. Most often, such work was hastily carried out by militia squads and the mobilized local population, sometimes including women, and then brought to the necessary defensive state by the combat units retreating on them, already exhausted by battles and night marches.<ref>С.Г. Нелипович, 2022, p. 845</ref>
When the Allies withdrew from Gallipolli in December, the Caucasus Army's Chief of Staff General [[Nikolai Yudenich]] believed Turkish forces would take action against his army. This concern was legitimate: Bulgaria's entry into the war as Germany's ally in October caused serious alarm, as a land route from Germany to Turkey was now open and would allow for an unrestricted flow of German weapons to the Turks.<ref name="Jukes, Geoffrey 2002 38"/> A "window of opportunity" appeared that would allow the Russians to destroy the Turkish Third Army, as the British required assistance in Mesopotamia (now modern day Iraq). Britain's efforts to besiege Baghdad had been halted at Ctesiphon, and they were forced to retreat. This led to an increasing number of attacks by Turkish forces. The British requested the Russians to attack Anatolia in an attempt to distract the Turks, and Yudenich agreed. Resultantly, the offensive began on January 10, 1916.<ref name="Jukes, Geoffrey 2002 39">{{cite book|last=Jukes, Geoffrey|title=Essential Histories: The First World War, The Eastern Front 1914-1918|year=2002|publisher=Osprey Publishing|location=Oxford|page=39}}</ref>


Russian strategic expanses allowed the army to take a break from failures and start active resistance, the Germans could no longer use the lack of artillery supplies from the Russians and the first setbacks began, the [[Vilno-Dvinsk offensive|breakthrough to Minsk and the offensive on Dvinsk]] completely failed with heavy losses for the Germans, the offensive in [[Battle of Smorgon|central Belarus]] also turned out to be unsuccessful, the Russians began to behave more actively on the southern front, where Austria-Hungary suffered a [[Rovno offensive|heavy defeat]] near Lutsk, the situation was saved by German reserves. The Russians also began to go on the [[Battle of the Strypa River|offensive]] to ease the pressure on Serbia, although unsuccessfully, but there was a turning point in the war in favor of Russia, failing to finish the campaign in 1915, the Germans were deprived of the opportunity to win the war.{{sfn|Oleynikov|2016|p=129}}
This offensive was unanticipated by the Turks, as it was in the middle of winter. The Turkish situation was exacerbated by the Third Army's commander Kamil Pasha and Chief of Staff Major Guse absence. Coupled with an imbalance of forces - the Russians had 325 000 troops, while the Turks only 78 000 - the situation appeared grim for the Central Powers.<ref name="Jukes, Geoffrey 2002 39"/> After three months of fighting, the Russians captured the city of [[Trabzon]] on April 18, 1916.


=== Russo-Turkish offensive, winter 1915–1916 ===
== 1916 ==
After the [[Battle of Sarikamish]], the Russo-Turkish front quickly turned in favor of Russian forces. The Turks were concerned with reorganizing their army and also fighting the massive Allied armada that landed in [[Galipoli]]. Meanwhile, Russia was preoccupied with other armies on the Eastern Front. However, the appointment of [[Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich of Russia (1856–1929)|Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich]] as Viceroy and Commander in the Caucasus in September 1915 revived the situation of the Russo-Turkish front.


When the Allies withdrew from Gallipoli in December, the Caucasus Army's Chief of Staff General [[Nikolai Yudenich]] believed Turkish forces would take action against his army. This concern was legitimate: Bulgaria's entry into the war as Germany's ally in October caused serious alarm, as a land route from Germany to Turkey was now open and would allow for an unrestricted flow of German weapons to the Turks.<ref name="Jukes, Geoffrey 2002 38">{{cite book|last=Jukes, Geoffrey|title=Essential Histories: The First World War, The Eastern Front 1914–1918|year=2002|publisher=Osprey Publishing|location=Oxford|page=38}}</ref> A "window of opportunity" appeared that would allow the Russians to destroy the Turkish Third Army, as the British required assistance in Mesopotamia (now modern day Iraq). Britain's efforts to besiege Baghdad had been halted at Ctesiphon, and they were forced to retreat. This led to an increasing number of attacks by Turkish forces. The British requested the Russians to attack in an attempt to distract the Turks, and Yudenich agreed. [[Erzurum Offensive|The resulting offensive]] began on 10 January 1916.<ref name="Jukes, Geoffrey 2002 39">{{cite book|last=Jukes, Geoffrey|title=Essential Histories: The First World War, The Eastern Front 1914–1918|year=2002|publisher=Osprey Publishing|location=Oxford|page=39}}</ref>
The operations in 1916 were dictated by urgent need to force Germany to transfer forces from its Western to Eastern fronts, to relieve the pressure on the French at the [[Battle of Verdun]]. This was to be accomplished by a series of Russian offensives which would force the Germans to deploy additional forces to counter them. The first such operation was the unsuccessful [[Lake Naroch Offensive]] in March-April 1916, which ended in failure.


This offensive was unanticipated by the Turks, as it was in the middle of winter. The Turkish situation was exacerbated by the absences of Third Army's commander Kamil Pasha and Chief of Staff Major Guse. Coupled with an imbalance of forces – the Russians had 325,000 troops while the Turks only 78,000 – the situation appeared grim for the Central Powers.<ref name="Jukes, Geoffrey 2002 39" /> After three months of fighting, the Russians captured the city of [[Trabzon]] on 18 April 1916.{{citation needed|date=August 2021}}
=== Brusilov Offensive ===


== 1916 ==
The Italian operations during 1916 had one extraordinarily positive result: Austrian divisions were pulled away from the Russian southern front. This allowed the Russian forces to organize a counter-offensive. The [[Brusilov Offensive]] was a large tactical assault carried out by Russian forces against Austro-Hungarian forces in Galicia. General [[Alexei Brusilov]] believed victory against the Central Powers was possible if close attention was paid to preparation. Brusilov suggested that the Russians should attack on a wide front, and to position their trenches a mere seventy-five yard away from Austrian trenches.<ref>{{cite book|last=Keegan, John|title=The First World War|year=1998|publisher=Random House Inc.|location=New York|pages=303–4}}</ref>
Allied operations in 1916 were dictated by an urgent need to force Germany to transfer forces from its Western to Eastern fronts, to relieve the pressure on the French at the [[Battle of Verdun]]. This was to be accomplished by a series of Russian offensives which would force the Germans to deploy additional forces to counter them. The first such operation was the [[Lake Naroch Offensive]] in March–April 1916, the Germans repulsed the attacks, but the offensive achieved its main goal - the Germans stopped the attack on Verdun, giving the French a break.


=== Brusilov offensive ===
Brusilov's plan worked impeccably. The Russians outnumbered the Austrians 200,000 to 150,000, and held a considerable advantage in guns, with 904 large guns to 600.<ref name="Keegan, John 1998 304">{{cite book|last=Keegan |first=John|title=The First World War|year=1998|publisher=Random House Inc.|location=New York|page=304}}</ref> The Russian Eighth Army overwhelmed the Austrian Fourth and pushed on to Lutsk, advancing forty miles beyond the starting position. A large number of Austrians were lost, with over 100,000 men killed or taken prisoner by mid-June.<ref name="Keegan, John 1998 304"/>
{{See also|Brusilov offensive}}
[[File:Eastern Front 1916-8.jpg|thumb|Brusilov offensive]]
The Italian operations during 1916 had one extraordinary result: Austrian divisions were pulled away from the Russian southern front. This allowed the Russian forces to organize a counter-offensive. The Brusilov offensive was a large tactical assault carried out by Russian forces against Austro-Hungarian forces in Galicia. General [[Aleksei Brusilov]] believed victory against the Central Powers was possible if close attention was paid to preparation. Brusilov suggested that the Russians should attack on a wide front, and to position their trenches a mere {{convert|75|yd|m}} away from Austrian trenches.<ref>{{cite book|last=Keegan, John|title=The First World War|year=1998|publisher=Random House Inc.|location=New York|pages=303–4}}</ref>


Brusilov's plan worked impeccably. The Russians outnumbered the Austrians 200,000 to 150,000, and held a considerable advantage in guns, with 904 large guns to 600. Most importantly innovative new tactics similar to those independently invented by [[Erwin Rommel]] were used to perform quick and effective close-range surprise attacks that allowed a steady advance.<ref name="Keegan, John 1998 304">{{cite book|last=Keegan |first=John|title=The First World War|year=1998|publisher=Random House Inc.|location=New York|page=304}}</ref> The Russian Eighth Army overwhelmed the Austrian Fourth and pushed on to Lutsk, advancing {{convert|40|mi}} beyond the starting position. Over a million Austrians were lost, with over 500,000 men killed or taken prisoner by mid-June.<ref name="Keegan, John 1998 304" />
Although the [[Brusilov Offensive]] was initially successful, it slowed down considerably. An inadequate number of troops and poorly maintained supply lines hindered Brusilov's ability to follow up on the initial victories in June. The [[Brusilov Offensive]] is considered to be the greatest Russian victory of the First World War.<ref name="Tunstall2008">{{cite journal |first=Graydon A. |last=Tunstall |title=Austria-Hungary and the Brusilov Offensive of 1916 |journal=[[The Historian (journal)|The Historian]] |volume=70 |issue=1 |year=2008 |pages=30–53 |doi=10.1111/j.1540-6563.2008.00202.x }}</ref>{{rp|52}} Although it cost the Russians a million casualties, the offensive successfully diverted substantial forces of the Central Powers from the Western front, and pulled Romania into the war.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Vinogradov |first=V. N. |title=Romania in the First World War: The Years of Neutrality, 1914-16 |journal=The International History Review |volume=14 |issue=3 |year=1992 |pages=452–461 [p. 453] |doi=10.1080/07075332.1992.9640620 }}</ref>


Although the Brusilov offensive was initially successful, it slowed down considerably. An inadequate number of troops and poorly maintained supply lines hindered Brusilov's ability to follow up on the initial victories in June. The Brusilov offensive is considered to be the greatest Russian victory of the First World War.<ref name="Tunstall2008">{{cite journal |first=Graydon A. |last=Tunstall |title=Austria-Hungary and the Brusilov Offensive of 1916 |journal=[[The Historian (journal)|The Historian]] |volume=70 |issue=1 |year=2008 |pages=30–53 |doi=10.1111/j.1540-6563.2008.00202.x |s2cid=145525513 |doi-access= }}</ref>{{rp|52}} Although it cost the Russians half a million casualties during the first two months alone, the offensive successfully diverted substantial forces of the Central Powers from the Western front, and persuaded Romania to join the war, diverting even more Central Powers forces to the East.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Vinogradov |first=V. N. |title=Romania in the First World War: The Years of Neutrality, 1914–16 |journal=The International History Review |volume=14 |issue=3 |year=1992 |pages=452–461 [p. 453] |doi=10.1080/07075332.1992.9640620 }}</ref>
=== Romania Enters the War ===

=== Development of Russian industry ===
A series of failures in 1915 gave the Russians time to reconfigure industry for wartime, and they did it successfully, Russian industry began to overtake Austrian in terms of growth rates and eventually increased the productivity of ammunition several times. Here is what information was announced at the Duma meeting:
{{Blockquote|text=The production of rifles doubled, the production of machine guns increased 6 times, the production of light guns increased 9 times, the production of artillery shells increased 40 times, the production of heavy artillery increased 4 times, and finally, the production of aircraft increased 4 times.{{sfn|Oldenburg|2022|p=592}}}}

=== Romania enters the war ===
{{See also|Romanian Campaign (World War I)}}
{{See also|Romanian Campaign (World War I)}}
<blockquote>Rumania may be the turning point of the campaign. If the Germans fail there it will be the greatest disaster inflicted upon them. Afterwards it will only be a question of time. But should Germany succeed, I hesistate to think what the effect will be on the fortunes of our campaign....and yet no one seems to have thought it his particular duty to prepare a plan... - Lloyd George</blockquote><ref>{{cite book|last=George, David Lloyd|title=War Memoirs|year=1938|publisher=Odhams|location=London|page=1:549}}</ref>
{{Blockquote|text=It is no exaggeration to say that Roumania may be the turning-point of the campaign. If the Germans fail there it will be the greatest disaster inflicted upon them. Afterwards it will only be a question of time. But should Germany succeed I hesitate to think what the effect will be on the fortunes of the campaign.and yet no one seems to have thought it his particular duty to prepare a plan...|author=[[David Lloyd George]]|source=''War Memoirs''<ref>{{cite book|last=Lloyd George|first = David|title=War Memoirs|year=1938|publisher=Odhams|edition = New|location=London|volume = 1 of 2|page = 549|chapter = XXXII: The Military Position at the End of the 1916 Campaign}}</ref>}}

[[File:WWI Poster Rumania.jpg|thumb|upright|[[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|British]] poster, welcoming Romania's decision to join the [[Entente Cordiale|Entente]]]]


Up until 1916, the Romanians followed the tides of war with interest, while attempting to situate themselves in the most advantageous position. French and Russian diplomats had begun courting the Romanians early on, but persuasion tactics gradually intensified. For King Ferdinand to commit his force of half a million men, he expected the Allies to offer a substantial incentive.<ref>{{cite book|last=Mosier, John|title=The Myth of the Great War|year=2002|publisher=Perennial|location=New York|page=254}}</ref> Playing on Romanian anti-Hungarian sentiment the Allies promised the Austria-Hungarian territory of Ardeal (Transylvania) to Romania. Transylvanian [[History of Transylvania#Demographics and historical research|demographics]] strongly favoured the Romanians. Romania succumbed to Allied enticement on 18 August 1916.<ref>{{cite book|last=Mosier, John|title=The Myth of the Great War|year=2002|publisher=Perennial|location=New York|page=256}}</ref> Nine days later, on 27 August, Romanian troops marched into Transylvania.
[[File:WWI Poster Rumania.jpg|thumb|150px|right|[[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|British]] poster, welcoming Romania's decision to join the [[Entente Cordiale|Entente]]]]


Up until 1916, the Romanians followed the tides of war with interest, while attempting to situate themselves in the most advantageous position. French and Russian diplomats had begun courting the Romanians early on, but persuasion tactics gradually intensified. For King Ferdinand to commit his force of half a million men, he expected the Allies to offer a substantial incentive.<ref>{{cite book|last=Mosier, John|title=The Myth of the Great War|year=2002|publisher=Perennial|location=New York|page=254}}</ref> Playing on Romanian anti-Hungarian sentiment and the constant objective of territorial expansion, the Allies promised the territory of Ardeal (Transylvania) to Romania. Romania succumbed to Allied enticement on August 18, 1916.<ref>{{cite book|last=Mosier, John|title=The Myth of the Great War|year=2002|publisher=Perennial|location=New York|page=256}}</ref> Nine days later, on August 27, Romanian troops marched into the Austria-Hungarian territory of Transylvania.
Romania's entry into the war provoked major strategic changes for the Germans. In September 1916, German troops were mobilized to the Eastern Front. Additionally, the German Chief of the General Staff, General [[Erich Von Falkenhayn]] was forced to resign from office though his successor appointed him to command the combined Central Powers forces against Romania, along with General [[August von Mackensen]]. [[Kaiser Wilhelm II]] immediately replaced Falkenhayn with [[Paul von Hindenburg]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Gilbert, Martin|title=The First World War: A Complete History|year=1994|publisher=Henry Holt and Company|location=New York|page=282}}</ref> Von Hindenburg's deputy, the more adept [[Erich Ludendorff]], was given effective control of the army and ordered to advance on Romania. On 3 September, the first troops of the Central Powers marched into Romanian territory. Simultaneously, the [[Bulgarian Air Force]] commenced an incessant bombing of [[Bucharest]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Gilbert, Martin|title=The First World War: A Complete History|year=1994|publisher=Henry Holt and Company|location=New York|page=283}}</ref> In an attempt to relieve some pressure, French and British forces launched a new offensive known as the [[Battle of the Somme]], while the Brusilov offensive continued in the East.


{{Blockquote|text=It is certain that so relatively small a state as Rumania had never before been given a role so important, and, indeed, so decisive for the history of the world at so favorable a moment. Never before had two Great Powers like Germany and Austria found themselves so much at the mercy of the military resources of a country which had scarcely one twentieth of the population of the two great states. Judging by the military situation, it was to be expected that Rumania had only to advance where she wished to decide the world war in favor of those Powers which had been hurling themselves at us in vain for years. Thus everything seemed to depend on whether Rumania was ready to make any sort of use of her momentary advantage.|author=Paul von Hindenburg|source=''Out of My Life''<ref>Paul von Hindenburg, Out of My Life, Vol. I, trans. F.A. Holt (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1927), 243.</ref>}}
Romania's entry into the war provoked major strategic changes for the Germans. In September 1916, German troops were mobilized to the Eastern Front. Additionally, the German Chief of the General Staff, General [[Erich Von Falkenhayn]] was forced to resign from office. [[Kaiser Wilhelm II]] immediately replaced Falkenhayn with [[Paul von Hindenburg]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Gilbert, Martin|title=The First World War: A Complete History|year=1994|publisher=Henry Holt and Company|location=New York|page=282}}</ref> Von Hindenburg's deputy, the more adept [[Erich Ludendorff]], was given effective control of the army and ordered to advance on Romania. On September 3, the first troops of the Central Powers marched into Romanian territory. Simultaneously, the Bulgarian air force commenced an incessant bombing of [[Bucharest]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Gilbert, Martin|title=The First World War: A Complete History|year=1994|publisher=Henry Holt and Company|location=New York|page=283}}</ref> In an attempt to relieve some pressure, French and British forces launched a new offensive known as the [[Battle of the Somme]], while the [[Brusilov Offensive]] continued in the East.


The entrance of Romania into the war was disconcerting for von Hindenburg. On 15 September, [[Paul von Hindenburg]] issued the following order, stating that: "The main task of the Armies is now to hold fast all positions on the Western, Eastern, Italian and Macedonian Fronts, and to employ all other available forces against Rumania."<ref>{{cite book|last=Gilbert, Martin|title=The First World War: A Complete History|year=1994|publisher=Henry Holt and Company|location=New York|page=287}}</ref> Fortunately for the Central Powers, the quantity and quality of the Romanian Army was overestimated. Although numbering half a million men, the Romanian Army suffered from poor training and a lack of appropriate equipment.
<blockquote>It is certain that so relatively small a state as Rumania had never before been given a role so important, and, indeed, so decisive for the history of the world at so favorable a moment. Never before had two great Powers like Germany and Austria found themselves so much at the mercy of the military resources of a country which had scarcely one twentieth of the population of the two great states. Judging by the military situation, it was to be expected that Rumania had only to advance where she wished to decide the world war in favor of those Powers which had been hurling themselves at us in vain for years. Thus everything seemed to depend on whether Rumania was ready to make any sort of use of her momentary advantage. -Paul Von Hindeburg</blockquote>
<ref>Paul von Hindenburg, Out of My Life, Vol. I, trans. F.A. Holt (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1927), 243.</ref>


The initial success of the Romanian Army in Austria-Hungarian territory was quickly undermined by the Central Powers. German and Austro-Hungarian troops advanced from the north, while Bulgarian-Turkish-German forces marched into Romania from the south. Although thought to be a tactical blunder by contemporaries, the Romanians opted to mount operations in both directions.<ref>{{cite book|last=Mosier, John|title=The Myth of the Great War|year=2002|publisher=Perennial|location=New York|page=259}}</ref> By the middle of November the German force passed through the Carpathians, suffering significant casualties due to determined Romanian resistance. By 5 December, Bulgarian troops had crossed the Danube and were approaching the capital, [[Bucharest]]. At the same time as the Austro-Hungarian troops moved east, and as the Bulgarians marched north, the Turks had sent in two army divisions by sea to the [[Dobruja]] from the east.<ref>{{cite book|last=Keegan, John|title=The First World War|year=1998|publisher=Random House Inc.|location=New York|pages=306}}</ref> Eventually, the Romanian forces were pushed back behind the [[Siret (river)|Siret]] in northern [[Moldavia]]. They received help from the Allies, notably from France which sent a [[French military mission to Romania (1916-1918)|military mission]] of more than a thousand officers, health and support staff.
The entrance of Romania into the war was disconcerting for Von Hidenburg. On September 15, [[Paul von Hindenburg]] issued the following order, stating that: "The main task of the Armies is now to hold fast all positions on the Western, Eastern, Italian and Macedonian Fronts, and to employ all other available forced against Roumania."<ref>{{cite book|last=Gilbert, Martin|title=The First World War: A Complete History|year=1994|publisher=Henry Holt and Company|location=New York|page=287}}</ref> Fortunately for the Central Powers, the quantity and quality of the Romanian army was overestimated. Although numbering at half a million men, the Romanian army suffered from poor training and a lack of appropriate equipment.


=== Proclamation to win over the Poles ===
The initial success of the Romanian army in Austria-Hungarian territory was quickly undermined by the Central powers. German and Austrian troops advanced from the north, while Bulgarian forces marched into Romania from the south. Although thought to be a tactical blunder by contemporaries, the Romanians opted to mount operations in both directions.<ref>{{cite book|last=Mosier, John|title=The Myth of the Great War|year=2002|publisher=Perennial|location=New York|page=259}}</ref> By the middle of November the German force passed through the Carpathians, a mountain chain believed to be impregnable if defended. By December 5, Bulgarian troops had crossed the Danube and was approaching the capital, [[Bucharest]]. At the same time as the Austro-Hungarian troops moved east, and as the Bulgarians marched north, the Turks had sent in two army divisions by sea to the [[Dobruja]] from the east.<ref>{{cite book|last=Keegan, John|title=The First World War|year=1998|publisher=Random House Inc.|location=New York|pages=306}}</ref> Eventually, the Romanian forces were pushed back behind the Seret in northern Moldova.
The [[Act of 5 November]] 1916 was proclaimed then to the [[Polish people|Poles]] jointly by the Emperors [[Wilhelm II of Germany|Wilhelm II]] of [[German Empire|Germany]] and [[Franz Joseph of Austria|Franz Joseph]] of Austria-Hungary. This act promised the creation of the [[Kingdom of Poland (1916-1918)|Kingdom of Poland]] out of territory of [[Congress Poland]], envisioned by its authors as a [[puppet state]] controlled by the [[Central Powers]]. The origin of that document was the dire need to draft new recruits from German-occupied Poland for the [[Eastern Front (WWI)|war with Russia]]. Following the [[Armistice of 11 November 1918]] ending the World War I, in spite of the previous initial total dependence of the kingdom on its sponsors, it ultimately served against their intentions as the cornerstone [[proto state]] of the nascent [[Second Polish Republic]], the latter composed also of territories never intended by the Central Powers to be ceded to Poland.


=== Aftermath of 1916 ===
=== Aftermath of 1916 ===
By January 1917, the ranks of the Romanian army had been significantly thinned. Roughly 150,000 Romanian soldiers had been taken prisoner, 200,000 men were dead or wounded, and lost two thirds of their country, including the capital.<ref>{{cite book|last=Mosier, John|title=The Myth of the Great War|year=2002|publisher=Perennial|location=New York|page=260}}</ref> Importantly, the [[Ploiești]] oilfields, the only significant source of oil in Europe west of the Black Sea, had been destroyed before they were abandoned to the Central Powers.


== 1917 ==
By January 1917, the Romanian army had been decimated. Roughly 150,000 Romanian soldiers had been taken prisoner, 200,000 men were dead or wounded, and lost almost the whole of their country.<ref>{{cite book|last=Mosier, John|title=The Myth of the Great War|year=2002|publisher=Perennial|location=New York|page=260}}</ref> Importantly, the [[Ploesti oilfields]], the only significant source of oil in Europe west of the Black Sea, had been destroyed before they were abandoned to the Central Powers.
[[File:Eastern Front As of 1917.jpg|thumb|Eastern Front as of 1917]]


=== The Russian Army in 1917 ===
Enticing Romania into the First World War proved to be more of a hindrance than an advantage to the Allies forces. The swift defeat of Romania forced Russia to commit significant resources and troops to rescue Romania from total collapse. Furthermore, it allowed the Germans to extract a million tons of oil and to collect two million tons of grain.<ref>{{cite book|last=Keegan, John|title=The First World War|year=1998|publisher=Random House Inc.|location=New York|pages=308}}</ref>
Most modern people believe that the Russian army was destined to lose the war after 1916. However, Russian General [[Aleksei Brusilov]] held a different opinion and wrote in his memoirs: "People mistakenly believe that after the retreat of 1915, the Russian army could not fight, by the end of 1916 it was well trained and accomplished an incredible feat... She defeated the superior forces of the enemy, and in such numbers that no other army in the world could have won."{{sfn|Брусилов|2023|p=263}} Russia's withdrawal from the war turned out to be a nightmare for the Western Allies. Even the entry of the United States into the war did not immediately help the Allies recover from the loss of strength and assistance that the Russian army had brought to the Allied war effort.<ref>Лиддел-Гарт Б. Правда о войне 1914-1918 гг. –М.,1935.С.255</ref>


[[Winston Churchill]] also confirms the strength of the Russian army: "History was not so merciless to any country as to Russia. Her ship was pulled when the harbor was already visible, the ship was wrecked when the storm passed. All the victims had already been transferred, the work was already over. Despair and change overcame the authorities when the task was already completed.”<ref>a quote from the book: Будберг А.П. Вооружённые силы Российской империи.С.46</ref> These words are also supported by Russian monogrophist [[Sergei Sergeyevich Oldenburg|Sergei Oldenburg]], who wrote one of the largest works about the time of Tsar Nicholas II.{{sfn|Oldenburg|2022|p=651-652}} Oldenburg believes that the Russian troops were in excellent condition by the beginning of 1917, he claims the army was well supplied and well fed, and there were 50 percent more Russians than Austro-Germans in terms of the number of armed men at the front, and the Russians had 10 percent more artillery in terms of the number of guns.<ref>Барсуков Е.З. Артиллерия русской армии 1900-1917. М., 1948-1959. Т1. С. 183-185</ref> The supply of new guns was also significant, allegedly almost as much as the total of Britain and France combined.{{Sfn|Борисюк|2023|p=102}} In the army of the Central Powers, due to the war, there were declines in industrial opportunities, except for Austria, but the growth rate of Russian industry was still higher.{{sfn|Rady|2023|p=425}}{{sfn|Борисюк|2023|p=96}}
== 1917 ==
'''Russia - The [[February Revolution]]'''


Even the armies of the Central Powers assessed the condition of the Russians and their combat strength, more than 72 percent of all infantry divisions were characterized by the information committee of the Austrian General Staff as: "outstanding units" and "first-class troops".{{sfn|Oleynikov|2016|p=215}} However, all these material successes came to naught after the [[February Revolution]], which killed the moral composition of the army, causing an incredible wave of deserters. Also worth noting is the [[Russian Expeditionary Force in France|Russian Expeditionary Force]], which continued to maintain a presence on both the Western Front and the Macedonian front, even after the October Revolution, remaining on those fronts until the Armistice on 11 November 1918.<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20080119212837/http://members.aol.com/begemot/legion/lrmarne.htm</ref><ref>Олейников А. Россия-щит Антанты. С предисловием Николая Старикова.-СПб.:Питер, 2016. – 336 с.-( серия «Николай Стариков рекомендует прочитать») ISBN 978-5-496-01795-4</ref> Even after the February Revolution, most of the Russian Army remained intact and the front, willing to fight defensively but ineffective on the offensive. The demands of the soldiers after the revolution were mainly about reducing certain powers that officers had, and many still supported fighting a defensive war. Units in the rear were most likely to demand immediate peace than front line units. Desertions on a significant scale only began after the October Revolution, and accelerated in February 1918 when peace negotiations between the Bolsheviks and Germans broke down.{{sfn|Stevenson|2017|page=113}}{{sfn|Reese|2023|page=102}}<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Ferro |first=Marc |title=The Russian Soldier in 1917: Undisciplined, Patriotic, and Revolutionary |journal=Slavic Review |volume=30 |issue=3 |year=1971 |pages=511 |doi=10.2307/2493539 |jstor=2493539 |doi-access=free }}</ref>
The February Russian Revolution sole desire was to topple the Russian monarchy thus it would result in the creation of Provisional Government. The revolution was the turning point of in History for Russia, and its significance and influence can be felt in most countries of the World today.{{Sfn|McCauley|1975|p=79}} Although many Russians wanted a revolution, no one had expected it to happen when it did let alone how it did. On Thursday, February 23, 1917, Female workers in the city of Petrograd left their factory jobs and entered into the streets to protest. That day itself was a day of significance as it was the International Women's Day, thus the irony of women marching was a message that stated the “women of Russia were ready to be heard”. It is estimated that over 90,000 women marched through the streets, shouting "Bread" and "Down With the Autocracy!" and "Stop the War!" These women were tired, hungry, and angry. {{Sfn|McCauley|1975|p=84}}These were all the results of women working long hours and being placed in miserable conditions in order to feed their families because their husbands and fathers were at the frontlines fighting in the War, specifically for these women it was a sign for them to stand up for themselves for their own independence. They wanted change, they demanded change and evidently they were not the only ones as the following day, more than 150,000 men and other women took to the streets to protest this, soon this became more evident as more people joined them. By Saturday, February 25 the city of Petrograd was essentially shut down, no one was allowed to work or wanted to work. {{Sfn|McCauley|1975|p=87}}Even though there were a few incidents of police and soldiers firing into the crowds, those groups soon mutinied and joined the protesters to join in the revolution.{{Sfn|McCauley|1975|p=86}} Czar Nicholas II, who was not in Petrograd during the revolution, had heard reports of the protests. However he chose not to take them seriously. By March 1, it was obvious to everyone except the czar himself that his rule was over. On March 2 it was made official.{{Sfn|McCauley|1975|p=88}}


'''Russia - The [[October Revolution]]'''
=== Russia the February Revolution ===
The Russian [[February Revolution]] aimed to topple the Russian monarchy and resulted in the creation of the Provisional Government. The revolution was a turning point in Russian history, and its significance and influence can still be felt in many countries today.{{Sfn|McCauley|1975|p=79}} Although many Russians wanted a revolution, no one had expected it to happen when it did – let alone how it did.


On [[International Women's Day]], Thursday, 23 February 1917/8 March 1917, as many as 90,000 female workers in the city of Petrograd left their factory jobs and marched through the streets, shouting "Bread", "Down with the autocracy!" and "Stop the War!" These women were tired, hungry, and angry,{{Sfn|McCauley|1975|p=84}} after working long hours in miserable conditions to feed their families because their menfolk were fighting at the front. They were not alone in demanding change; more than 150,000 men and women took to the streets to protest the next day.
The October Revolution stirred the radical and revolutionary wing of the Marxist movement that existed in Russia, the extreme left had triumphed as they had carried through the first successful radical revolution. This was the first revolution in modern times which had not been countered by another revolution. By September 1917, Lenin believed the Russian people were ready for another revolution just months after the February revolution.{{Sfn|McCauley|1975|p=89}}Thus on October 10, a secret meeting of the Bolshevik party leaders was held. This was the moment in which Lenin used all his power to convince the others that it was time for an armed insurrection. It took 24 hours to debated this motion put fourth by Lenin, thus a vote was taken the following morning; and the result was ten to two in favour of a revolution. The troops who were loyal to the Bolsheviks took control of the telegraph stations, power stations, strategic bridges, post offices, train stations, and state banks.{{Sfn|McCauley|1975|p=92}} Lenin knew that the control of these and other posts within the city would be acquired without any gunfire and any sort of resistance. Petrograd was officially in the hands of the Bolsheviks, however the Bolsheviks greatly increased their organization in factory groups throughout Petrograd, and in many barracks in the city. They concentrated on devising a plan for overturning the Provisional Government, with a coup d’état.{{Sfn|McCauley|1975|p=94}} During these times Lenin was in hiding in a suburb. On October 24, he entered the city and put in place a three-phase plan that would highlight three key areas to overtake. Lenin had set up his headquarters at the Smolny Institute to oversee his entire operation. His three main objectives were the main bridges, main railways and the Winter Palace. Two of which were completed. On the evening of November 7, the troops that were loyal to the Bolsheviks infiltrated the Winter Palace. After nearly a bloodless coup, the Bolsheviks were the new leaders of Russia. {{Sfn|McCauley|1975|p=94}} Lenin announced that the new regime would end the war, abolish all private land ownership, and would create a system for workers' control over the factories.

By Saturday, 25 February, the city of Petrograd was essentially shut down. No one was allowed to work or wanted to work.{{Sfn|McCauley|1975|p=87}} Even though there were a few incidents of police and soldiers firing into the crowds, those groups soon mutinied and joined the protesters.{{Sfn|McCauley|1975|p=86}} Tsar Nicholas II, who was not in Petrograd during the revolution, heard reports of the protests but chose not to take them seriously. By 1 March, it was obvious to everyone except the Tsar himself, that his rule was over. On 2 March it was made official.{{Sfn|McCauley|1975|p=88}} From this point onwards Russia was administered by the [[Russian Provisional Government]] until the [[October Revolution]].

=== Romania – the Summer Campaign ===
In early July 1917, on a relatively small area of the [[Romania during World War I#1917 campaign and armistice|Romanian front]], there began one of the largest concentrations of combat forces and means known during the conflagration: nine armies, 80 infantry divisions with 974 battalions, 19 cavalry divisions with 550 squadrons and 923 artillery batteries; in total they numbered some 800,000 men, with about one million in their immediate [[Military reserve|reserve]]. Between late July and early September, the Romanian Army fought the battles of [[Battle of Mărăști|Mărăști]], [[Battle of Mărășești|Mărășești]] and [[Third Battle of Oituz|Oituz]], managing to stop the German-Austro-Hungarian advance, inflicting heavy losses in the process and winning the most important Allied victories on the Eastern Front in 1917.<ref name="Romania834">România în anii primului război mondial, vol. 2, p. 834</ref> As a result of these operations, the remaining Romanian territories remained unoccupied, tying down nearly 1,000,000 Central Powers troops and prompting ''[[The Times]]'' to describe the Romanian front as "The only point of light in the East".

=== Kerensky offensive ===
{{Main|Kerensky offensive}}
On 29 June 1917, [[Alexander Kerensky]], the Minister of War in the [[Russian Provisional Government]], launched the Kerensky offensive to end Austria-Hungary once and for all. The Russians made only 6 miles (9.7&nbsp;km) of progress but the Austrians counterattacked and drove them almost entirely out of Austria-Hungary, and they retreated 150 miles (240&nbsp;km), losing [[Ternopil|Tarnopol]], [[Ivano-Frankivsk|Stanislau]] and [[Chernivtsi|Czernowitz]]. This defeat was accompanied by 60,000 casualties and contributed greatly to the [[October Revolution]].

=== Russia – the October Revolution ===
{{Main|October Revolution}}

Although the February Revolution had overthrown the Tsar, the Bolsheviks still were not satisfied. In their view, the new Provisional Government was merely a more deceptive continuation of the previous government; they still refused to withdraw from the war despite how badly it was going. The upper class still wielded considerable influence in Russian economics and politics, so by September 1917, Lenin began advocating for a second revolution - one that would allow the workers and peasants to gain total control over the country. {{Sfn|McCauley|1975|p=89}} The Central Committee of the Bolshevik Party convened on 10 October, and after much heated debate, agreed that it was time to begin planning for an armed insurrection. Troops who were loyal to the Bolsheviks took control of the telegraph stations, power stations, strategic bridges, post offices, train stations, and state banks.{{Sfn|McCauley|1975|p=92}}

Petrograd was officially in the hands of the Bolsheviks, who greatly increased their organization in factory groups and in many barracks throughout Petrograd. They concentrated on devising a plan for overturning the Provisional Government, with a coup d'état.{{Sfn|McCauley|1975|p=94}} On 24 October, Lenin emerged from hiding in a suburb, entered the city, set up his headquarters at the Smolny Institute and worked to complete his three-phase plan. With the main bridges and the main railways secured, only the Winter Palace, and with it the Provisional Government, remained to be taken. On the evening of 7 November, the troops that were loyal to the Bolsheviks infiltrated the Winter Palace. After an almost bloodless coup, the Bolsheviks were the new leaders of Russia.{{Sfn|McCauley|1975|p=94}} Lenin announced that the new Bolshevik government would immediately be seeking an end to the war, implementing a system of worker's democracy, and establishing collective ownership of all farms and factories.


== 1918 ==
== 1918 ==
[[File:Map Treaty of Brest-Litovsk-en.jpg|thumb|Territory lost by Russia under the 1918 [[Treaty of Brest-Litovsk]] ]]
{{main|Operation Faustschlag}}

{{see also|Russian Civil War|Ukrainian–Soviet War}}
{{Main|Operation Faustschlag}}
{{See also|Russian Civil War|Ukrainian–Soviet War}}


On 7 November 1917, the Communists [[Bolsheviks]] took power under their leader [[Vladimir Lenin]]. Lenin’s new Bolshevik government tried to end the war, with a ceasefire being declared on December 15, 1917 along lines agreed in November. At the same time Bolsheviks launched a full-scale military offensive against its opponents: [[Ukrainian People's Republic|Ukraine]] and separatist governments in the Don region. During the peace negotiations between Soviets and Central Powers, the Germans demanded enormous concessions, eventually resulting in the failure of the long-drawn-out peace negotiations on February 17, 1918. At same time the Central Powers concluded a military treaty with Ukraine which was losing ground in the fight with invading Bolshevik forces. {{Sfn|Kowalski|1997|p=115}} The Russian Civil War would tear apart Russia for a period of three years, the civil war occurred just after November 1917. As a result of the events during 1917, many groups had formed as they opposed Lenin’s Bolsheviks. With the fall of Nicholas II, many parts of the Russian Empire took the opportunity to declare their independence, one of which being Finland who did so in December 1917, however they too had collapsed into a civil war themselves.{{Sfn|Kowalski|1997|p=119}} A group led by Carl Gustaf Mannerheim, who later became known as "the German," aided the “Whites”. They even contemplated putting a German prince in power in Finland once the “Whites” had won. With German help, the Finnish Whites pushed the Finnish-Russian border to the southern part of Karelian Isthmus, thus placing Saint Petersburg within artillery range.{{Sfn|Kowalski|1997|p=121}}
Lenin's new Bolshevik government tried to end the war, with a [[Armistice between Russia and the Central Powers|ceasefire being declared on 15 December 1917]] along lines agreed in November. At the same time, the Bolsheviks launched a full-scale military offensive against its opponents: [[Ukrainian People's Republic|Ukraine]] and separatist governments in the Don region. During the peace negotiations between the Soviets and the Central Powers, the Germans demanded enormous concessions, eventually resulting in the failure of the long-drawn-out peace negotiations on 17 February 1918. At the same time, the Central Powers concluded a military treaty with Ukraine which was losing ground in the fight with invading Bolshevik forces. {{Sfn|Kowalski|1997|p=115}} The [[Russian Civil War]], which started just after November 1917, would tear apart Russia for three years. As a result of the events in 1917, many groups opposed to Lenin's Bolsheviks had formed. With the fall of Nicholas II, many parts of the Russian Empire took the opportunity to declare their independence, one of which was Finland, which did so in December 1917; however, Finland too collapsed into a [[Finnish Civil War|civil war]]. Finland declared itself independent on 6 December 1917, and this was accepted by Lenin a month later.
The Finnish Parliament elected a German prince as King of Finland. However, the Socialists (The Reds) and the Whites in Finland fell into war with each other in January 1918. The Reds wanted Finland to be a Soviet republic and were aided by Russian forces still in Finland.
The Whites of Finland were led by General [[Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim|C.G.E.Mannerheim]], a Finnish baron who had been in the Tsar's service since he was 15 years old.
The Whites were also offered help by a German Expeditionary Corps led by German General Goltz. Though Mannerheim never accepted the offer, the German corps landed in Finland in April 1918.


=== Formation of the Red Army ===
Within the borders of Russia itself, those who opposed the Bolsheviks looked to the western powers for help. This was for their own benefit, the western powers wanted to re-establish an Eastern Front so that the German Army would be split once again, thus relieving the problems that were being experienced on the Western Front. The old army was an instrument of class oppression of the working people led by the bourgeoisie.{{Sfn|McMcauley|1975|p=138}} The workers and the peasants which essentially made up the base of the Red Army joined the ranks, it required organization and standing on the platform of Soviet power, thus the search for a compulsory military training system. One of the main objectives of Socialism is to simply deliver mankind from the burden of barbarity of bloody clashes between nations.{{Sfn|McMcauley|1975|p=139}} This was the Russian thought process to rid the world’s capitalistic powers of their power and thus transferring it to the working classes.
Although the majority of the Russian army was still at the front lines in late 1917, the Council of People's Commissars headed by Leon Trotsky set about creating a new army controlled by the Bolsheviks. By a decree on 28 January 1918, the council created the Workers' and Peoples' Red Army; it began recruitment on a voluntary basis, but on 22 April, the Soviet government made serving in the army compulsory for anyone who did not employ hired labor. Several officers who had served in the Russian Imperial Army defected to the Red Army in support of the Bolshevik cause. Many of them were of an aristocratic background but became disillusioned with imperialism and monarchism, although the Red Army still mostly consisted of ordinary workers and peasants.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Red-Army|title=Red Army – Soviet history|website=britannica.com|access-date=22 October 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160629212429/https://www.britannica.com/topic/Red-Army|archive-date=29 June 2016|url-status=live}}</ref>


== Aftermath ==
=== Treaty of Brest-Litovsk (March 1918) ===
=== Treaty of Brest-Litovsk (March 1918) ===
With the German Army just {{convert|85|mi}} from the Russian capital [[Petrograd]] (St. Petersburg) on 3 March 1918, the [[Treaty of Brest-Litovsk]] was signed and the Eastern Front ceased to be a war zone. In the treaty, Soviet Russia ceded 34% of the former empire's population, 54% of its industrial land, 89% of its coalfields, and 26% of its railroads. The total losses in land amounted to 1 million square kilometers. Lenin bitterly called the settlement "that abyss of defeat, dismemberment, enslavement and humiliation."<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.history.com/topics/world-war-i/treaties-of-brest-litovsk |title=Treaties of Brest-Litovsk |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |date=9 November 2009 |website=history.com |location=[[New York City|New York]] |publisher=A&E Television Networks, LLC |access-date=14 December 2023 }}</ref> While the treaty was practically obsolete before the end of the year, it did provide some relief to the Bolsheviks, who were embroiled in a civil war, and affirmed the independence of [[Ukraine]]. However, [[Estonia]] and [[Latvia]] were intended to become a [[United Baltic Duchy]] to be ruled by German princes and German nobility as fiefdoms under the German Kaiser. A [[Regency Kingdom|rump Polish state]] was also foreseen on the formerly Russian territories. [[Finland]]'s sovereignty had already been declared in December 1917, and accepted by most nations, including France and Russia, but not by the United Kingdom and the United States.
[[File:Armisticebrestlitovsk.jpg|thumb|Territory lost by Russia under the 1918 [[Treaty of Brest-Litovsk]]]]
With the German army just {{convert|85|mi}} from the Russian capital [[Petrograd]] (St. Petersburg) on March 3, 1918, the [[Treaty of Brest-Litovsk]] was signed and the Eastern Front ceased to be a war zone. While the treaty was practically obsolete before the end of the year, it did provide some relief to the Bolsheviks, who were embroiled in a civil war, and affirmed the independence of [[Ukraine]]. However, [[Estonia]], [[Latvia]], [[Lithuania]] were intended to become a [[United Baltic Duchy]] to be ruled by German princes and German nobility as fiefdoms under the German Kaiser. [[Finland]]'s sovereignty had already been declared in December 1917, and accepted by most nations, including France and the Soviet Union, but not by the United Kingdom and the United States. The Germans were able to transfer substantial forces to the west in order to mount an [[Spring Offensive|offensive in France]] in the spring of 1918.{{citation needed|date=August 2013}}


=== Treaty of Bucharest (May 1918) ===
This offensive on the Western front failed to achieve a decisive breakthrough, and the arrival of more and more [[American Expeditionary Force|American units]] in Europe was sufficient to offset the German advantage. Even after the Russian collapse, about a million German soldiers remained tied up in the east until the end of the war, attempting to run a short-lived addition to the German Empire in Europe. In the end, Germany and Austria lost all their captured lands, and more, under various treaties (such as the [[Treaty of Versailles]]) signed after the armistice in 1918.{{citation needed|date=August 2013}}
[[File:Romanian_troops_at_Marasesti_in_1917.jpg|right|thumb|Romanian troops during the [[Battle of Mărășești]], 1917]]
On 7 May 1918 Romania signed the [[Treaty of Bucharest (1918)|Treaty of Bucharest]] with the Central Powers, which recognised Romanian sovereignty over Bessarabia in return for ceding control of passes in the Carpathian Mountains to Austria-Hungary and granting oil concessions to Germany.{{Sfn|Crampton|1994|pp=24–25}} Although approved by [[Parliament of Romania|Parliament]], [[Ferdinand I of Romania|Ferdinand I]] refused to sign the treaty, hoping for an Allied victory; Romania re-entered the war on 10 November 1918 on the side of the Allies and the Treaty of Bucharest was formally annulled by the Armistice of 11 November 1918.{{Sfn|Béla|1998|p=429}}{{Efn|Bessarabia remained part of Romania until 1940, when it was annexed by [[Joseph Stalin]] as the [[Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic]];{{Sfn|Rothschild|1975|p=314}} following the dissolution of the USSR in 1991, it became the independent Republic of [[Moldova]]}} Between 1914 and 1918, an estimated 400,000 to 600,000 ethnic Romanians served with the Austro-Hungarian army, of whom up to 150,000 were killed in action; total military and civilian deaths within contemporary Romanian borders are estimated at 748,000.{{Sfn|Erlikman|2004|p=51}}


The Germans were able to repair the oil fields around [[Ploiești]] and by the end of the war had pumped a million tons of oil. They also requisitioned two million tons of grain from Romanian farmers. These materials were vital in keeping Germany in the war to the end of 1918.<ref>John Keegan, ''World War I'', pg. 308</ref>
== Role of Women on the Eastern Front ==


=== End of war ===
In comparison to the attention directed to the role played by women on the Western front during the First World War, the role of women in the East has garnered limited scholarly focus. It is estimated that 20 percent of the Russian industrial working class was conscripted into the army; therefore, women's share of industrial jobs increased dramatically. There were percentage increases in every industry, but the most noticeable increase happened in industrial labour, which increased from 31.4 percent in 1913 to 45 percent in 1918.<ref>{{cite book|first=Goldman, Wendy Z.|title=Women at the Gates: Gender and Industry in Stalin's Russia|year=2002|publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]]|location=Cambridge|pages=10–11}}</ref>
{{more citations needed section|date=May 2024}}
With the end of major combat on the Eastern Front, the Germans were able to transfer substantial forces to the west in order to mount an [[German spring offensive|offensive in France]] in the spring of 1918.


This offensive on the Western Front failed to achieve a decisive breakthrough, and the arrival of more and more [[American Expeditionary Force|American units]] in Europe was sufficient to offset the German advantage. Even after the Russian collapse, about a million German soldiers remained tied up in the east until the end of the war, attempting to run a short-lived addition to the German Empire in Europe.
British nursing efforts were not limited to the Western Front. Nicknamed the "Gray partridges" in reference to their dark gray overcoats, Scottish volunteer nurses arrived in Romania in 1916 under the leadership of [[Elsie Inglis]]. In addition to nursing injured personnel, Scottish nurses manned transport vehicles and acted as regimental cooks.<ref>{{cite book|first=Coroban, Costel|title=Potarnichile gri. Spitalele Femeilor Scotiene in Romania (1916-1917)|year=2012|publisher=Cetatea de Scaun|location=Târgovişte|page=18}}</ref> The "Gray Partridges" were well respected by Romanian, Serbian and Russian troops and as a result, the Romanian press went as far as to characterize them as "healthy, masculine, and tanned women." As a testament to her abilities, [[Elsie Inglis]] and her volunteers were entrusted to turn an abandoned building in the city of [[Galati]] into an operational hospital, which they did in a little more than a day.<ref>{{cite book|first=Coroban, Costel|title=Potarnichile gri. Spitalele Femeilor Scotiene in Romania (1916-1917)|year=2012|publisher=Cetatea de Scaun|location=Târgovişte|pages=65–6}}</ref> Yvonne Fitzroy's published journal, "With the Scottish Nurses in Roumania," provides an excellent first hand account Scottish nursing activities in the Eastern Front.<ref>{{cite book|first=Fitzroy, Yvonne|title=With the Scottish Nurses in Roumania|year=1918|publisher=John Murray|location=London}}</ref>


In the end, the Central Powers had to relinquish all of their captured lands on the eastern front, with Germany even being forced to cede territory they held before the war, under various treaties (such as the [[Treaty of Versailles]]) signed after the armistice in 1918.{{citation needed|date=August 2013}} Although the Allied Powers' victory led to the Central Powers being forced to cancel the treaty signed with Russia, the victors were at the time intervening in the Russian Civil War, causing bad relations between Russia and the Allied Powers.
== Prisoners of War in Russia ==


For [[Treaty of Versailles|Versailles Peace]] Brest Peace was canceled, as well as reserved the rights of Russia to demand reparations.{{Sfn|Борисюк|2023|p=98-99}}
During World War One, approximately 200,000 German soldiers and 2.5 million soldiers from the Austro-Hungarian army entered Russian captivity. During the 1914 Russian campaign the Russians began taking thousands of Austrian Prisoners. As a result the Russian Authorities made emergency facilities in Kiev, Penza, Kazan, and later Turkestan to hold the Austrian prisoners of war. As the war continued Russia began to detain soldiers from Germany as well as a growing number from the Austro-Hungarian army. The Tsarist state saw the large population of POWs as workforce that could benefit the war economy in Russia. Many [[POWs]] were employed as farm laborers and miners in Donbas and Krivoi Rog. However, the majority of POWs were employed as laborers constructing canals and building rail roads. The living and working environments for these POWs was bleak. There was a shortage of food, clean drinking water, and proper medical care. During the summer months malaria was a major problem and the malnutrition among the POWs led to many cases of scurvy. While working on the Murmansk rail building project over 25, 000 POWs died. Information about the bleak conditions of the labor camps reached the German and Austro-Hungarian governments. They began to complain about the treatment of POWs. The Tsarist authorities initially refused to acknowledge the German and Habsburg governments. They rejected their claims because Russian POW’s were working on railway construction in Serbia. However, they slowly agreed to stop using prison labor.<ref name="Project Muse">{{cite journal|last=Gatrell|first=Peter|title=Prisoners of War on the Eastern Front during World War I|journal=Kritika|year=2005|volume=6|issue=3|pages=557–566|url=http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/kritika/v006/6.3gatrell.html|accessdate=March 18, 2014}}</ref> Life in the camps was extremely rough for the men who resided in them. The Tsarist government could not provided adequate supplies for the men living in their POW camps. The Russian governments inability to supply the POWs in their camp with supplies was due to inadequate resources and bureaucratic rivalries. However, the condition in the POW camps varied, some condition were more bearable then others.<ref name="Project Muse"/>


=== New conflicts ===
== Disease on the Eastern Front ==
{{expand section|date=May 2024}}
After the central powers capitulated, the countries in the east took advantage of the situation: Soviet Russia immediately cancelled the peace treaty and [[Soviet westward offensive of 1918–1919|launched an offensive]] against the Baltic States, Belarus and Ukraine. Romania formally [[Second Romanian campaign of World War I|rejoined]] the war a day before its end in the West, soon followed by [[Hungarian–Romanian War|conflict]] with newly independent Hungary.


== Role of women ==
Disease played a critical role in the loss of life on the Eastern Front. In the East, disease accounted for approximately four times the amount of deaths caused by direct combat, in contrast to the three to one ratio in the West.{{Sfn|Liulevicius|2000|p=22}} Malaria, cholera, and dysentery contributed to the epidemiological crisis on the Eastern Front; however, typhoid spotted fever, transmitted by pathogenic lice and previously unknown to German medical officers before the outbreak of the war, was the most deadly. There was a direct correlation between the environmental conditions of the East and the prevalence of disease. With cities excessively crowded by refugees fleeing their native countries, unsanitary medical conditions created a suitable environment for diseases to spread. Primitive hygienic conditions, along with general lack of knowledge about proper medical care was evident in the German occupied [[Ober Ost]].{{Sfn|Liulevicius|2000|p=81}}
[[File:EcaterinaTeodoroiu.jpg|thumb|2nd Lt. [[Ecaterina Teodoroiu]], killed in action at [[Battle of Mărășești|Mărășești]] in 1917, regarded as a national heroine in Romania]]
{{See also|Capture and escape of Ecaterina Teodoroiu}}
{{Globalize|section|date=January 2015}}


In comparison to the attention directed to the role played by women on the Western Front during the First World War, the role of women in the east has garnered limited scholarly focus. It is estimated that 20 percent of the Russian industrial working class was conscripted into the army; therefore, women's share of industrial jobs increased dramatically. There were percentage increases in every industry, but the most noticeable increase happened in industrial labour, which increased from 31.4 percent in 1913 to 45 percent in 1918.<ref>{{cite book|last=Goldman |first=W. Z.|title=Women at the Gates: Gender and Industry in Stalin's Russia|year=2002|publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]]|location=Cambridge|pages=10–11}}</ref>
Ultimately, a large scale sanitation program was put into effect. This program, named ''Santitätswesen'' (Medical Affairs), was responsible for ensuring proper hygienic procedures were being carried out in Latvia, Lithuania, and Poland. Quarantine centers were built, and diseased neighbourhoods were isolated from the rest of the population. Delousing stations were prevalent in the countryside and in cities to prevent the spread of typhoid spotted fever, with mass numbers of natives being forced to take part in this process at military bathhouses. A "sanitary police" was also introduced to confirm the cleanliness of homes, and any home deemed unfit would be boarded up with a warning sign.{{Sfn|Liulevicius|2000|p=81}} Dogs and cats were also killed for fear of possible infection.


Women also fought on the Eastern Front. In the later stages of Russia's participation in the war, Russia began forming all-woman combat units, the [[Women's Battalion]]s, in part to fight plummeting morale among male soldiers by demonstrating Russian women's willingness to fight. In Romania, [[Ecaterina Teodoroiu]] actively fought in the Romanian Army and is remembered today as a national hero.
To avoid the spread of disease, prostitution became regulated. Prostitutes were required to register for a permit, and authorities demanded mandatory medical examinations for all prostitutes, estimating that seventy percent of prostitutes carried a venereal disease.{{Sfn|Liulevicius|2000|p=81}} Military brothels were introduced to combat disease; the city of [[Kowno]] emphasized proper educational use of contraceptives such condoms, encouraged proper cleansing of the genital area after intercourse, and gave instructions on treatment in the case of infection.{{Sfn|Liulevicius|2000|p=81}}

British nursing efforts were not limited to the Western Front. Nicknamed the "Gray partridges" in reference to their dark gray overcoats, Scottish volunteer nurses arrived in Romania in 1916 under the leadership of [[Elsie Inglis]]. In addition to nursing injured personnel, Scottish nurses manned transport vehicles and acted as regimental cooks.<ref>{{cite book|last=Coroban |first=Costel|title=Potarnichile gri. Spitalele Femeilor Scotiene in Romania (1916–1917)|year=2012|publisher=Cetatea de Scaun|location=Târgovişte|page=18}}</ref> The "Gray Partridges" were well respected by Romanian, Serbian and Russian troops and as a result, the Romanian press went as far as to characterize them as "healthy, masculine, and tanned women." As a testament to her abilities, Elsie Inglis and her volunteers were entrusted to turn an abandoned building in the city of [[Galați]] into an operational hospital, which they did in a little more than a day.<ref>{{cite book|last=Coroban |first=Costel|title=Potarnichile gri. Spitalele Femeilor Scotiene in Romania (1916–1917)|year=2012|publisher=Cetatea de Scaun|location=Târgovişte|pages=65–6}}</ref> Yvonne Fitzroy's published journal, "With the Scottish Nurses in Roumania," provides an excellent first hand account of Scottish nursing activities in the Eastern Front.<ref>{{cite book|last=Fitzroy |first=Y. |title=With the Scottish Nurses in Roumania|year=1918|publisher=John Murray|location=London}}</ref>

== Propaganda ==
[[File:Военныя карикатуры.jpg|thumb|upright|World War I caricature from Russia depicting [[Wilhelm II, German Emperor|Wilhelm II]], [[Franz Joseph I of Austria|Franz Joseph I]] and [[Mehmed V]]. Top: "If only we could get to the top – it would be ours!" Bottom: "Let me help you with that!"]]
Propaganda was a key component of the culture of World War I. It was often shown through state-controlled media, and helped to bolster [[nationalism]] and [[patriotism]] within countries. On the Eastern Front, propaganda took many forms such as opera, film, spy fiction, theater, spectacle, war novels and graphic art. Across the Eastern Front the amount of propaganda used in each country varied from state to state. Propaganda took many forms within each country and was distributed by many different groups. Most commonly the state produced propaganda, but other groups, such as anti-war organizations, also generated propaganda.<ref>{{cite book|editor1-last=Roshwald|editor1-first=Aviel|editor2-last=Stites|editor2-first=Richard|title=European Culture in the Great War:The Arts, Entertainment and Propaganda 1914–1918|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uteV3ytfmqQC&q=European+Culture+in+the+Great+War&pg=PA176|year=1999|publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]]|location=Cambridge|pages=6,349–358|isbn=978-0-521-01324-6}}</ref>

In order for the Russians to legitimize their war efforts, the government constructed an image of the enemy through state-instituted [[propaganda]]. Their main aim was to help overcome the legend of the "invincible" German war machine, in order to boost the morale of civilians and soldiers. Russian propaganda often took the form of showing the Germans as a civilized nation, with barbaric "inhuman" traits. Russian propaganda also exploited the image of the Russian [[POW]]s who were in the German camps, again in order to boost the morale of their troops, serving as encouragement to defeat the enemy and to get their fellow soldiers out of German POW camps that were perceived as inhumane.<ref name="oxana475">{{cite journal|last1=Oxana Nagornaja|first1=Jeffrey Mankoff|title=United by Barbed Wire: Russian POWs in Germany, National Stereotypes, and International Relations|journal=Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History|year=2009|volume=10|issue=3|pages=475–498|url=http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/kritika/v010/10.3.nagornaja.html|access-date=14 February 2014|doi=10.1353/kri.0.0111|last2=Jeffrey Mankoff|s2cid=143586373}}</ref>

An element of the Russian propaganda was the Investigate Commission formed in April 1915. It was led by Aleksei Krivtsov, and the study was tasked with the job of studying the legal violations committed by of the [[Central Powers]] and then getting this information to the Russian public. This commission published photographs of letters that were allegedly found on fallen German soldiers. These letters document the German correspondents saying to "take no prisoners." A museum was also set up in Petrograd, which displayed pictures that showed how "inhumanly" the Germans were treating prisoners of war.<ref name="oxana475" />

Also, the Russians chose to discard the name [[Saint Petersburg]] to remove the German-sounding "Saint" and "-burg", favouring the more Russian-sounding Petrograd.

== Prisoners of war in Russia ==
During World War I, approximately 200,000 German soldiers and 2.5 million soldiers from the Austro-Hungarian army entered Russian captivity. During the 1914 Russian campaign the Russians began taking thousands of Austrian prisoners. As a result, the Russian authorities made emergency facilities in Kiev, Penza, Kazan, and later Turkestan to hold the Austrian prisoners of war. As the war continued Russia began to detain soldiers from Germany as well as a growing number from the Austro-Hungarian army. The Tsarist state saw the large population of POWs as a workforce that could benefit the war economy in Russia. Many [[POWs]] were employed as farm laborers and miners in Donbas and Krivoi Rog. However, the majority of POWs were employed as laborers constructing canals and building railroads. The living and working environments for these POWs was bleak. There was a shortage of food, clean drinking water and proper medical care. During the summer months [[malaria]] was a major problem, and the malnutrition among the POWs led to many cases of [[scurvy]]. While working on the Murmansk rail building project over 25,000 POWs died. Information about the bleak conditions of the labor camps reached the German and Austro-Hungarian governments. They began to complain about the treatment of POWs. The Tsarist authorities initially refused to acknowledge the German and Habsburg governments. They rejected their claims because Russian POWs were working on railway construction in Serbia. However, they slowly agreed to stop using prison labor.<ref name="Project Muse">{{cite journal|last=Gatrell|first=Peter|title=Prisoners of War on the Eastern Front during World War I|journal=Kritika|year=2005|volume=6|issue=3|pages=557–566|url=http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/kritika/v006/6.3gatrell.html|access-date=18 March 2014|doi=10.1353/kri.2005.0036|s2cid=159671450}}</ref> Life in the camps was extremely rough for the men who resided in them. The Tsarist government could not provide adequate supplies for the men living in their POW camps. The Russian government's inability to supply the POWs in their camps with supplies was due to inadequate resources and bureaucratic rivalries. However, the conditions in the POW camps varied; some were more bearable than others.<ref name="Project Muse" /> The attitude towards Russian prisoners from the Central Powers was even worse, in some camps the mattress was for 4 people, and in others people were starved on purpose. At the beginning of 1915, a case was recorded of three prisoners being forced to run around the camp without stopping, in parallel they were stabbed with bayonets and beaten.{{sfn|Gilbert|2023|pp=186-187}}

== Disease ==
Disease played a critical role in the loss of life on the Eastern Front. In the East, disease accounted for approximately four times the number of deaths caused by direct combat, in contrast to the three to one ratio in the West.{{Sfn|Liulevicius|2000|p=22}} Malaria, [[cholera]], and [[dysentery]] contributed to the epidemiological crisis on the Eastern Front; however, [[typhus fever]], transmitted by pathogenic lice and previously unknown to German medical officers before the outbreak of the war, was the most deadly. There was a direct correlation between the environmental conditions of the East and the prevalence of disease. With cities excessively crowded by refugees fleeing their native countries, unsanitary medical conditions created a suitable environment for diseases to spread. Primitive hygienic conditions, along with general lack of knowledge about proper medical care was evident in the German-occupied [[Ober Ost]].{{Sfn|Liulevicius|2000|p=81}}

Ultimately, a large scale sanitation program was put into effect. This program, named ''Sanititätswesen'' (Medical Affairs), was responsible for ensuring proper hygienic procedures were being carried out in Latvia, Lithuania, and Poland. Quarantine centers were built, and diseased neighbourhoods were isolated from the rest of the population. Delousing stations were prevalent in the countryside and in cities to prevent the spread of typhus fever, with mass numbers of natives being forced to take part in this process at military bathhouses. A "sanitary police" was also introduced to confirm the cleanliness of homes, and any home deemed unfit would be boarded up with a warning sign.{{Sfn|Liulevicius|2000|p=81}} Dogs and cats were also killed for fear of possible infection.

To avoid the spread of disease, prostitution became regulated. Prostitutes were required to register for a permit, and authorities demanded mandatory medical examinations for all prostitutes, estimating that seventy percent of prostitutes carried a venereal disease.{{Sfn|Liulevicius|2000|p=81}} Military brothels were introduced to combat disease; the city of [[Kowno]] emphasized proper educational use of contraceptives such as condoms, encouraged proper cleansing of the genital area after intercourse, and gave instructions on treatment in the case of infection.{{Sfn|Liulevicius|2000|p=81}}


== Casualties ==
== Casualties ==
{{Details3|[[World War I casualties#endnote Russia|Russian casualties in WWI]]|Russian losses}}
{{Further|topic=Russian losses|World War I casualties#endnote Russia}}

===Russian casualties===
The Russian casualties in the First World War are difficult to estimate, due to the poor quality of available statistics.
The Russian casualties in the First World War are difficult to estimate, due to the poor quality of available statistics.


Cornish gives a total of 2,006,000 military dead (700,000 killed in action, 970,000 died of wounds, 155,000 died of disease and 181,000 died while POWs). This measure of Russian losses is similar to that of the British Empire, 5% of the male population in the 15 to 49 age group. He says civilian casualties were five to six hundred thousand in the first two years, and were then not kept, so a total of ''over 1,500,000'' is not unlikely. He has over five million men ''passing into captivity'', the majority during 1915.<ref>{{cite book | last = Cornish | first = Nik | title = The Russian Army and the First World War | publisher = Tempus | location = Stroud | year = 2006 | isbn = 1-86227-288-3|url=http://books.google.com/books/about/The_Russian_Army_and_the_First_World_War.html?id=BeVmAAAAMAAJ}}</ref>
Cornish gives a total of 2,006,000 military dead (700,000 killed in action, 970,000 died of wounds, 155,000 died of disease and 181,000 died while POWs). This measure of Russian losses is similar to that of the British Empire, 5% of the male population in the 15 to 49 age group. He says civilian casualties were five to six hundred thousand in the first two years, and were then not kept, so a total of ''over 1,500,000'' is not unlikely. He has over five million men ''passing into captivity'', the majority during 1915.<ref>{{cite book | last = Cornish | first = Nik | title = The Russian Army and the First World War | publisher = Tempus | location = Stroud | year = 2006 | isbn = 1-86227-288-3|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BeVmAAAAMAAJ}}</ref> However, these figures on the number of prisoners are very contradictory, since the extreme reports on prisoners issued by the official commission of the USSR called the figure at 3.3 million. These data have been criticized by Imperial Russian Army general and military historian [[Nikolai Golovin|Golovin]], who conducted a study together with German veterans in the archives of the central powers, and named a figure of 2,410,000 people.{{sfn|Golovin|2014|p=187}}


When Russia withdrew from the war, 2,500,000 Russian POWs were in German and Austrian hands. This by far exceeded the total number of prisoners of war (1,880,000) lost by the armies of [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|Britain]], France and Germany combined. Only the [[Austro-Hungarian Army]], with 2,200,000 POWs, came even close.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pbs.org/greatwar/resources/casdeath_pop.html |title=WWI Casualties and Deaths |publisher=[[PBS]] |date= |accessdate=2014-03-07}}</ref>
When Russia withdrew from the war, ~2,500,000 Russian POWs were in German and Austrian hands. This by far exceeded the total number of prisoners of war (1,880,000) lost by the armies of [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|Britain]], France and Germany combined. Only the [[Austro-Hungarian Army]], with 2,200,000 POWs, came even close.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.pbs.org/greatwar/resources/casdeath_pop.html |title=WWI Casualties and Deaths |publisher=[[PBS]] |access-date=2014-03-07 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161003230916/https://www.pbs.org/greatwar/resources/casdeath_pop.html |archive-date=2016-10-03 |url-status=live }}</ref>


According to other data, the number of irretrievable losses in Russia ranges from 700,000<ref>Россия в мировой войне 1914-1918 гг. (в цифрах). – М., 1925. С. 4.</ref> to 1,061,000.<ref>Количество русских солдат - участников войны 1914-1917 гг. (по архивным данным) // военное дело. 1918 N17 С.19</ref>
== Drawing Borders after the War ==
Golovin wrote a huge work dedicated to the losses of Russians in World Wat I, he based on the documents of the headquarters and the documents of the German archive, working there together with German veterans, correlated the losses and came to the conclusion that the total losses are 7,917,000, including 1,300,000 dead, 4,200,000 wounded and 2,410,000 prisoners.{{sfn|Golovin|2014|p=178}}
Later estimates have adjusted this number to 2,420,000 people.{{sfn|Oleynikov|2016|p=243}}
Per [[Alexei Oleynikov]] total losses for the 1914–1917 campaigns look like this:
*'''1914:''' 1,000,000+
*'''1915:''' 3,000,000
*'''1916:''' 2,000,000
*'''1917:''' 400,000{{sfn|Oleynikov|2016|p=245}}
The death toll of a maximum of ~1,000,000+ people is also shared by other authors.{{sfn|Борисюк|2023|p=100}}{{efn|1,700,000{{sfn|Gilbert|2023|p=717}}<ref>Ураланис Б. Войны и народонаселения европы p.146</ref>}}
There is also an estimate by Krivosheev, according to him, the Russians lost 2,254,000 dead, but this estimate does not at all match the number of wounded - 2,844,500{{According to whom|date=December 2024}}.<ref>[[Grigori F. Krivosheev|Grigori Krivosheev]] [http://www.lib.ru/MEMUARY/1939-1945/KRIWOSHEEW/poteri.txt#w02.htm Россия и СССР в войнах XX столетия. Потери вооружённых сил: Первая мировая] (Russia and the USSR in the wars of the XX century. Losses of the armed forces: The First World War)</ref>
According to the Russian historian {{ill|Kernosovsky|ru|Керсновский, Антон Антонович}}, Russia's losses amounted to 9,000,000.{{sfn|Kernosovsky|1938|pp=560-561}}


=== Poland ===
===Central Powers casualties===
At that time, the losses of the Austro-German troops were as great.
The creation of a free and Independent Poland was one of Wilson’s fourteen points. At the end of the 18th century the state of Poland was broken apart by Prussia, Russia, and Austria. A commission on Polish Affairs was created which recommended there be a passageway across West Prussia and Posen, in order to give Poland access to the Baltic through the port of Danzig at the mouth of the Vistula River. The creation of the state of Poland would cut off 1.5 million Germans in East Prussia from the rest of Germany. Poland also received Upper Silesia. Englishman Lord Curzon established Poland’s eastern border with Russia after the war. Neither the Russians nor the Polish were happy with the demarcation of the border and they went to war over the dispute.<ref name="Tucker 1998 220–223">{{cite book|last=Tucker|first=Spencer .C|title=The Great War 1914-18|year=1998|publisher=Indiana University Press|location=Bloomington|pages=220–223}}</ref>
As General [[Günther Blumentritt]] wrote in his memoirs: «I will cite a little-known but significant fact, our losses on the eastern front were much higher than on the western.»<ref>Блюментрит Г. Роковые решения. – М.:Воениздат, 1958. С. 73.</ref>
Historian [[Alexei Oleynikov|Oleynikov]] estimated the total losses at 5,100,000 people,{{sfn|Oleynikov|2016|p=261}} The maximum estimate was up to 6,000,000 casualties, this ratio is much better than on the western front.{{sfn|Borisyuk|2024|p=349}}

Similarly, the losses of the central powers in the East in the period from 1914 to 1916 were greater than similar losses on all other fronts, the Russian army was able to inflict damage to the enemy, estimates range from 4,600,000{{sfn|Oleynikov|2016|p=261}} to 5,400,000{{sfn|Borisyuk|2024|p=349}} people from a total loss of 8,090,000. The Russians also took the most prisoners, as many as 2,130,000,{{sfn|Oleynikov|2016|p=262}} and according to other data 1,961,000.{{sfn|Oldenburg|2022|p=592}}
There is also an estimate of 2,200,000 prisoners, but the general trend remains to estimate about 2,000,000 people, which is six times more than all those prisoners who were captured by all the Entente countries combined.{{sfn|Kernosovsky|1938|p=557}}

== Territorial changes ==
{{See also|Austria-Hungary#Territorial legacy}}

=== Austria ===
The empire of [[Austria]] lost approximately 60% of its territory as a result of the war, and evolved into a smaller state with a small homogeneous population of 6.5 million people. With the loss, [[Vienna]] was now an imperial capital without an empire to support it. The states that were formed around Austria feared the return of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and put measures into place to prevent it from re-forming.<ref name="Tucker 1998 220–223" />


=== Czechoslovakia ===
=== Czechoslovakia ===
Czechoslovakia was created through the merging of the Czech provinces of Bohemia and Moravia, united with Slovakia and Ruthenia. Although these groups had many differences between them, they believed that together they would create s stronger state. Within the states formed on the eastern Europe Czechoslovakia experienced the most success. They had the highest standard of living within eastern Europe and was the only democracy within the region.<ref name="Tucker 1998 220–223"/>
[[Czechoslovakia]] was created through the merging of the Czech provinces of [[Bohemia]] and [[Moravia]], previously under Austrian rule, united with [[Slovakia]] and [[Ruthenia]], which were part of Hungary. Although these groups had many differences between them, they believed that together they would create a stronger state.
The new country was a multi-ethnic state. The population consisted of Czechs (51%), Slovaks (16%), Germans (22%), Hungarians (5%) and [[Rusyns]] (4%), with other ethnic groups making up 2%.<ref>"The War of the World", Niall Ferguson Allen Lane 2006.</ref> Many of the Germans, Hungarians, Ruthenians and Poles<ref name="pp">{{cite web |url=http://www.praguepost.com/articles/2005/07/06/playing-the-blame-game.php |title=Playing the blame game |date=6 July 2005 |access-date=2008-06-30 |url-status=bot: unknown |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080630084718/http://www.praguepost.com/articles/2005/07/06/playing-the-blame-game.php |archive-date=30 June 2008 }}, ''[[Prague Post]]'', 6 July 2005</ref> and some Slovaks, felt oppressed because the political elite did not generally allow political autonomy for minority ethnic groups.
The state proclaimed the official ideology that there are no Czechs and Slovaks, but only one nation of Czechoslovaks (see [[Czechoslovakism]]), to the disagreement of Slovaks and other ethnic groups. Once a unified Czechoslovakia was restored after World War II the conflict between the [[Czechs]] and the [[Slovaks]] surfaced again.


=== Yugoslavia ===
=== Hungary ===
Initially Yugoslavia began as the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. The name was changed to Yugoslavia in 1929. The State secured its territory at the Paris peace talks after the end of the war. The state suffered from many internal problems because of the many diverse cultures and languages within the state. Yugoslavia was divided on national, linguistic, economic, and religious lines.<ref name="Tucker 1998 220–223"/>
After the war [[Hungary]] was severely disrupted by the loss of 72% of its territory, 64% of its population and most of its natural resources. The loss of territory was similar to that of Austria after the breaking up the Austria-Hungary territory. They lost the territories of [[Transylvania]], [[Slovakia]], [[Croatia]], [[Slavonia]], [[Syrmia]], and [[Banat]].<ref name="Tucker 1998 220–223" />

=== Italy ===
[[Italy]] incorporated the regions of [[Trieste]] and [[South Tyrol]] from Austria.

=== Poland ===
The creation of a free and Independent [[Poland]] was one of [[Fourteen Points|Wilson's fourteen points]]. At the end of the 18th century, the state of Poland was broken apart by Prussia, Russia, and Austria. During the [[Paris Peace Conference, 1919]], the [[Commission on Polish Affairs]] was created which recommended there be a passageway across West Prussia and Posen, in order to give Poland access to the Baltic through the port of Danzig at the mouth of the Vistula River. The creation of the state of Poland would separate East Prussia from the rest of Germany, as it was before the [[Partitions of Poland]]. Poland also received Upper Silesia. British [[Foreign Office|Foreign Secretary]] [[George Curzon, 1st Marquess Curzon of Kedleston|Lord Curzon]] proposed [[Curzon Line|Poland's eastern border with Russia]]. Neither the Soviet Russians nor the Polish were happy with the demarcation of the border.<ref name="Tucker 1998 220–223">{{cite book|last=Tucker|first=Spencer .C|title=The Great War 1914–18|url=https://archive.org/details/greatwar19141800tuck|url-access=registration|year=1998|publisher=Indiana University Press|location=Bloomington|pages=[https://archive.org/details/greatwar19141800tuck/page/220 220–223]}}</ref>


=== Romania ===
=== Romania ===
The state of Romania was enlarged greatly after the war. As a result of the Paris peace conference Romania kept the Dobrudja and Transylvania. Between the states of Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, and Romania an alliance was formed. They worked together on matters of foreign policy in order to prevent a Habsburg restoration.<ref name="Tucker 1998 220–223"/>
The state of [[Romania]] was enlarged greatly after the war. As a result of the Paris peace conference Romania kept the [[Dobrudja]] and Transylvania. Between the states of Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, and Romania an alliance named the [[Little Entente]] was formed. They worked together on matters of foreign policy in order to prevent a Habsburg restoration.<ref name="Tucker 1998 220–223" />


=== Austria ===
=== Yugoslavia ===
The state of Austria lost a lot of its territory as a result of the war. They devolved into a smaller state with a small homogenous population of 6.5 million people. The states that were formed around Austria feared the return of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and put measures into place to prevent it from re-forming.<ref name="Tucker 1998 220–223"/>
Initially [[Yugoslavia]] began as the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. The name was changed to Yugoslavia in 1929. The State secured its territory at the [[Paris peace conference]] after the end of the war. The state suffered from many internal problems because of the many diverse cultures and languages within the state. Yugoslavia was divided on national, linguistic, economic, and religious lines.<ref name="Tucker 1998 220–223" />


=== Hungary ===
== See also ==
* [[Middle Eastern theatre of World War I]]
After the war Hungary lost 65 percent of its pre-war territory. The loss of territory was similar to that of Austria after the breaking up the Austria-Hungary territory. They lost the territories of Transylvania, Slovakia, Croatia, Slavonia, Syrmia, and Banat.<ref name="Tucker 1998 220–223"/>
* [[Belgian Expeditionary Corps in Russia]], a Belgian armoured car unit that fought within the Russian military.
* [[Diplomatic history of World War I]]
* [[Treaty of Brest-Litovsk]]


== Notes ==
== Notes ==
{{notelist|refs=
{{reflist|30em}}
{{efn|name="other names"|1=Other names: {{langx|de|Ostfront}}; {{langx|ro|Frontul de răsărit}}), for Russia '''Second Patriotic War'''{{sfn|Borisyuk|2024|p=4}}{{sfn|Miltatuli|2017|p=2}} ({{langx|ru|Вторая Отечественная Война}})
}} <!--other names-->
}} <!--notelist refs-->
{{notelist}}


== References ==
== References ==
{{Reflist}}


== Bibliography ==
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{{Refbegin|30em|indent=yes}}
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* {{cite book|last=Jukes|first=Geoffrey|title=Essential Histories: The First World War, The Eastern Front 1914–1918|year=2002|publisher=Osprey Publishing|location=Oxford}}
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* {{cite book |last=Kowalski |first=Ronald |title=The Russian Revolution 1917–1921 |year=1997 |publisher=[[Routledge]] |location=London |isbn=0-415-12437-9}}
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* Oxana Nagornaja, Jeffrey Mankoff (2009). "United by Barbed Wire: Russian POWs in Germany, National Stereotypes, and International Relations". Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 10 (3): 475–498. Retrieved 14 February 2014.
* Vinogradov, V.N (1992). "Romania in the First World War: The Years of Neutrality, 1914–16." The International History Review 14 (3): 452–461.
* Gatrell, Peter (2005). "Prisoners of War on the Eastern Front during World War I". Kritika 6 (3): 557–566. Retrieved 18 March 2014.
* Tucker, Spencer C. (1998). The Great War 1914–18. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. pp.&nbsp;220–223.
* {{cite book |last=Борисюк |first=Андрей |title=История России, которую приказали забыть. Николай II и его время; [5-е издание]
|location=St. Petersburg |publisher=Питер | year = 2023| isbn = 978-5-4484-3841-7 }}
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* {{cite book |last=Rady |first=Martyn |language=ru |script-title=ru: Габсбурги власть над миром |trans-title=The Habsburgs: To Rule the World' |others=Перевод с Английского–М., Альпина-Нон-Фикшн |date=2023 |isbn=978-5-00139-266-8}}
* {{cite book |last=Брусилов |first=Алексей |title=Мои воспоминания. Из царской армии в Красную|location=Moscow |publisher=Москва | year = 2023| isbn = 978-5-04-176827-0 |language=ru}}
{{refend}}


== External links ==
== Further reading ==
{{Refbegin|30em|indent=yes}}
* {{Cite book |last=Clodfelter |first=M. |title=Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures, 1492–2015 |publisher=McFarland |year=2017 |isbn=978-0-7864-7470-7 |edition=4th |location=Jefferson, NC}}
* {{Cite book |last=Dyboski |first=Roman |author-link=Roman Dyboski |url=https://archive.org/details/siedemlatwrosjii00dybouoft |title=Siedem lat w Rosji i na Syberji, 1915–1921 |publisher=Gebethner i Wolff |year=1922 |edition=Cherry Hill Books 1970 translation |location=[[Warsaw]] |language=pl |trans-title=Seven Years in Russia and Siberia |oclc=500586245}}
* {{Cite book |last=Snow |first=Edgar |title=Far Eastern Front |publisher=Harrison Smith & Robert Haas |year=1933 |location=New York |oclc=1318490}}
* {{Cite book |last=Stone |first=Norman |author-link=Norman Stone |url=https://archive.org/details/easternfront191400norm |title=The Eastern Front 1914–1917 |publisher=Penguin |year=2004 |isbn=0-14-026725-5 |orig-year=1975}}
* {{Cite book |last=Tallon |first=James N. |title=The Boundaries of War: Local and Global Perspectives in Military History |publisher=Marine Corps University Press |year=2024 |isbn=979-8-9873361-4-4 |editor-last=Brice |editor-first=Lee L. |location=Quantico, VA |pages=214–226 |chapter=International Actors Intervening in a Local War: The Long World War I of the Eastern Mediterranean, 1911–23 |doi=10.56686/9798987336144 |editor-last2=Roberts |editor-first2=Timothy M.}}
{{refend}}


== External links ==
{{Commons category|Eastern Front theatre of World War I}}
* Dowling, Timothy C.: [https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/article/eastern_front Eastern Front], in: [https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/home.html 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War].
{{portal|World War I}}
* Sanborn, Joshua A.: [https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/article/russian_empire Russian Empire], in: [https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/home.html 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War].
* [http://www.flickr.com/photos/65817306@N00/sets/486575/ WWI Eastern Front Foto].
* Steinberg, John W.: [https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/article/warfare_1914-1918_russian_empire Warfare 1914–1918 (Russian Empire)], in: [https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/home.html 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War].
* [http://www.flickr.com/photos/65817306@N00/sets/1219581/ WWI Eastern Front Part II]
* Szlanta, Piotr, Richter, Klaus: [https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/article/warfare_1914-1918_east_central_europe Warfare 1914–1918 (East Central Europe)], in: [https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/home.html 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War].
* Zhvanko, Liubov: [https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/article/ukraine Ukraine], in: [https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/home.html 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War].
* Sergeev, Evgenii Iur'evich: [https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/article/pre-war_military_planning_russian_empire Pre-war Military Planning (Russian Empire)], in: [https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/home.html 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War].
* Nachtigal, Reinhard, Radauer, Lena: [https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/article/prisoners_of_war_russian_empire Prisoners of War (Russian Empire)], in: [https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/home.html 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War].
* Szlanta, Piotr, Richter, Klaus: [https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/article/prisoners_of_war_east_central_europe Prisoners of War (East Central Europe)], in: [https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/home.html 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War].
* Shcherbinin, Pavel Petrovich: [https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/article/womens_mobilization_for_war_russian_empire Women's Mobilization for War (Russian Empire)], in: [https://encyclopedia.1914-1918-online.net/home.html 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War].
* {{cite news |title=WWI Eastern Front Foto |date=18 June 2005 |newspaper=[[Flickr]] |url=https://www.flickr.com/photos/65817306@N00/sets/486575/ }}
* {{cite news |title=WWI Eastern Front Part II |date=26 October 2005 |newspaper=Flickr |url=https://www.flickr.com/photos/65817306@N00/sets/1219581/ }}
* [https://archive.org/details/withrussianarmy101knoxuoft With the Russian army, 1914–1917] by [[Alfred Knox]]
* [https://archive.org/details/withrussianarmy101knoxuoft With the Russian army, 1914–1917] by [[Alfred Knox]]
* [https://archive.org/details/warandrevolution009671mbp War And Revolution In Russia 1914–1917] by General Basil Gourko.
* [https://archive.org/details/warandrevolution009671mbp War And Revolution In Russia 1914–1917] by General Basil Gourko.
* [http://globus.tut.by/type_tno_graves_nem.htm WWI German Military Cemeteries in Belarus] modern photos by Andrey Dybowski (rus).
* [http://globus.tut.by/type_tno_graves_nem.htm WWI German Military Cemeteries in Belarus] modern photos by Andrey Dybowski (rus).
* [http://digitalcollections.smu.edu/cdm/search/collection/eaa/searchterm/Ag1982.0048x/mode/exact Der Vormarsch der Flieger Abteilung 27 in der Ukraine] (The advance of Flight Squadron 27 in the Ukraine). This [http://digitalcollections.smu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/eaa/id/668 portfolio], comprising 263 photographs mounted on 48 pages, is a photo-documentary of the German occupation and military advances through the southern Ukraine in the spring and summer of 1918.
* [http://digitalcollections.smu.edu/cdm/search/collection/eaa/searchterm/Ag1982.0048x/mode/exact Der Vormarsch der Flieger Abteilung 27 in der Ukraine] (The advance of Flight Squadron 27 in the Ukraine). This [http://digitalcollections.smu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/eaa/id/668 portfolio], comprising 263 photographs mounted on 48 pages, is a photo-documentary of the German occupation and military advances through the southern Ukraine in the spring and summer of 1918.

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[[Category:Russian Empire in World War I]]
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Latest revision as of 17:11, 4 January 2025

Eastern Front
Part of the European theatre of World War I

Clockwise from top left: soldiers stationed in the Carpathian Mountains, 1915; German soldiers in Kiev, March 1918; the Russian ship Slava, October 1917; Russian infantry, 1914; Romanian infantry
Date1 August 1914 – 3 March 1918
Location
Result Central Powers victory[1][2]
Belligerents
Central Powers:
Allied Powers:
Commanders and leaders
Units involved
Strength

October 1917

1,178,600 infantry
39,000 cavalry
1,690 light guns
2,230 heavy guns

October 1917

2,166,700 infantry
110,600 cavalry
1,226 light guns
1,139 heavy guns
Casualties and losses
1,612,089[3]–2,000,000[4]
317,118[5] dead
1,151,153 wounded[5]
143,818 captured[5]
4,377,000–5,172,000:[6]
726,000–1,150,000 dead[7]
2,172,000 wounded
1,479,289–1,850,000 captured[8][9]
45,000:[10][11]
8,000 dead[12]
22,000 wounded[12]
10,000 captured[13]
30,250[14][15]
Total:
5,952,000–6,452,000+ casualties
  • 1,038,000–1,458,000 dead
6,500,000[16]–9,000,000
See casualties section[b]
535,700:[17]
335,706 dead
120,000 wounded
80,000 captured
Total:
~7,035,700–8,054,569+ casualties
  • 1,110,706–2,590,100 dead
Civilian deaths:
2,000,000+
Russian Empire:
410,000 civilians died due to military action
730,000 civilians died of war-related causes[18]
Kingdom of Romania:
130,000 civilians died due to military action
200,000 civilians died of war-related causes[19]
Austria-Hungary:
120,000 civilians died due to military action
467,000 civilians died of war-related causes[20]

The Eastern Front or Eastern Theater, of World War I. [c] For Russia Second Patriotic War[21][22] (Russian: Вторая Отечественная Война). Was a theater of operations that encompassed at its greatest extent the entire frontier between Russia and Romania on one side and Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, the Ottoman Empire, and Germany on the other. It ranged from the Baltic Sea in the north to the Black Sea in the south, involved most of Eastern Europe, and stretched deep into Central Europe. The term contrasts with the Western Front, which was being fought in Belgium and France. Unlike the static warfare on the Western Front, the fighting on the geographically larger Eastern Front was more dynamic, often involving the flanking and encirclement of entire formations, and resulted in over 100,000 square miles of territory becoming occupied by a foreign power.[23][24]

At the start of the war Russia launched offensives against both Germany and Austria-Hungary that were meant to achieve a rapid victory. The invasion of East Prussia was completely defeated while the advance into Austria-Hungary stalled in the Carpathians, and following successful offensives by the Central Powers in 1915 its gains were reversed. Germany and Austria-Hungary defeated Russian forces in Galicia and Poland, causing Russia to abandon the Polish salient, parts of Belarus and the Baltic region, and Galicia.[25] However, the campaigns of 1914–1915 also failed to achieve Germany's objective of taking Russia out of the war, and by 1916 Germany prioritized its resources for winning in the West.[26]

Russia went on the offensive to take pressure off of France at Verdun: Russia's attack near Lake Naroch in early 1916 was quickly defeated by Germany, but in the summer of 1916 the Brusilov offensive became the largest Entente victory in the war. Russia inflicted over one million casualties on Austria-Hungary and forced Germany to redeploy divisions from the Western Front, at the cost of its own heavy losses. In August 1916 Romania entered the war but was quickly overrun by Germany, though Russia helped prevent a total Romanian collapse.[27][28][29] The events of the February Revolution in March [O.S. February] 1917, caused by food shortages in Russian cities,[30] began a decline in discipline among the troops.[31][32]

After the abdication of Emperor Nicholas II, the Russian Provisional Government chose to continue the war to fulfill its obligations to the Entente.[33] In July 1917 Russia's last offensive of the war ended in failure, and in September Germany captured Riga, bringing the German Army closer to the Russian capital. This was followed by a military coup attempt that weakened the Provisional Government. The Bolsheviks overthrew the Russian Republic in the October Revolution of November [O.S. October] 1917. Despite the political instability, the majority of the Russian Army was still intact and stayed at the front line until early 1918,[34] though the Bolsheviks began taking steps to dissolve it in December 1917 while maintaining some forces against the Central Powers as their negotiations were ongoing.[35]

The new Soviet government established by the Bolsheviks signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk with the Central Powers in March 1918 after Operation Faustschlag, taking Russia out of the war; leading to a Central Powers victory. However, the Western Entente soon defeated the Central Powers, with the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk being annulled by the Armistice of 11 November 1918. Romania and the Central Powers signed a separate peace treaty on 7 May 1918, but it was canceled by Romania on 10 November 1918.

Background

[edit]

The assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand eventually led to Austria-Hungary's ultimatum to Serbia on 23 July 1914 with German backing, and after the Serbian response to it was rejected, Austria-Hungary declared war against Serbia on 28 July. Russia had made a decision to support Serbia and defend its interests in the Balkans before that, and on 29 July Russian emperor Nicholas II ordered a partial mobilization of the Russian Army in the military districts that bordered Austria. The following day he was convinced by his advisors to order a full mobilization to follow the military's existing mobilization schedule. Nicholas hoped Germany would see this as a regional conflict between Russia and Austria, but because their war plans depended on taking advantage of Russia's slower mobilization speed, and due to the position of both countries, they felt pressure to go to war immediately. Austria-Hungary began full mobilization on 31 July, and Germany declared war on Russia on 1 August 1914.[36]

Russia

[edit]

Russia's plan at the outbreak of war was known as Schedule 19. Approved by Emperor Nicholas II in July 1910 and amended over the next two years, the plan concentrated Russia's armies on its western border with Germany and Austria-Hungary and was initially defensive. The original Schedule 19 would have had the Russian Army mobilize its troops to locations that were a significant distance away from its western border and leave the entire Polish salient to be defended by local fortresses and the Warsaw garrison. Under this version Russia would not have taken any offensive action and would have waited to react to movements by Germany and Austria-Hungary.[37] The defensive nature of Russian planning went back to the military reforms in the 1860s following the Crimean War[38] and was also influenced by the limited capability of Russia's railway network to facilitate the quick mobilization of troops, though that was gradually improving.[39]

Russian strategy remained this way until developments that took place starting in 1911. That was the year that the French Army chief of staff visited Russia and asked the Russian high command to plan for an immediate offensive if war with Germany broke out to help prevent them from capturing Paris. This was also in accordance with Russia's 1892 promise to attack Germany if France was invaded in order to open a second front. In 1912 the Russian chief of staff, Yakov Zhilinsky, told the French that Russia would go on the offensive against Germany fifteen days after the start of its mobilization. By this point, the improvements in Russia's infrastructure made this a lot more feasible, and there was also domestic pressure for Russia to not abandon its borderlands to foreign occupation. In 1911 new proposals for modifying Schedule 19 were made by army officers, with the most notable among them being Quartermaster-General Yuri Danilov's argument for going on the offensive against both Germany and Austria-Hungary.[40]

In early 1912, the Russian high command decided on a variant of the plan known as Schedule 19A, in which two Russian armies would invade East Prussia while four armies would invade Galicia. This did not give Russia the decisive advantage in either location, but it tried to balance the need for Russia to support France by attacking Germany while also acknowledging that the main interest of Russian foreign policy was in the Balkans. The plan also meant that Russia would begin its offensive before its army was fully mobilized, but it was believed that this was a necessary risk, because there would be a limited amount of time to attack Germany in support of France. The adoption of Schedule 19A in 1912 marked the first time in decades that Russian war planning was primarily offensive.[40]

Germany

[edit]

Prior to the outbreak of war, German strategy was based on the Schlieffen Plan. With the Franco-Russian Agreement in place from the early 1890s, Germany knew that war with either of these combatants would result in war with the other, which meant that there would be a two-front war in both the west and the east. Therefore, the German General Staff, led by Alfred von Schlieffen from 1891 to 1906, developed a plan that called for German armies to pass through Belgium and then turn south to quickly capture Paris, while a smaller German force would pin down the French defenders along the Franco-German border. With France being defeated before Russia could fully mobilize, Germany could then turn its focus on Russia, which Schlieffen believed would not be taken out of the war as quickly because of its much larger territory. The Schlieffen Plan was actually a change from his predecessor in the 1880s, Helmuth von Moltke the Elder, who believed that Germany should first be on the defensive in the west and should coordinate with Austria to defeat Russia.[41]

Schlieffen's successor at the General Staff, Helmuth von Moltke the Younger, maintained the basic plan that Schlieffen put forward in 1905 of quickly knocking out France in the west before turning to focus on Russia, thereby avoiding a two-front war. This strategy was fully adopted by the German government in 1913. But the plan did not take into account that the growing military capabilities of Russia in the years since the Russo-Japanese War meant that the Russian mobilization would proceed faster than Schlieffen had originally thought.[41] Another problem with the German strategy was the deliberate choice to not coordinate it with their allies in Austria-Hungary. Moltke the Younger wanted Austria to assist Germany by going on the offensive against Russia in the early stages of the war, and never told his Austrian counterpart, Franz Conrad von Hötzendorf, that Germany was not going have its own offensive in the east. Conrad, for his part, was also misleading the Germans by allowing them to think Austria would prioritize an attack against Russia, when he actually planned to focus the Austro-Hungarian offensive power against Serbia.[42]

Conversely, the Imperial German Navy believed it could be victorious over Britain with Russian neutrality, something which Moltke knew would not be possible.

Austria-Hungary

[edit]
Illustration from the French magazine Le Petit Journal on the Bosnian Crisis. Bulgaria declares its independence and its prince Ferdinand is named Tsar. Austria-Hungary, in the person of Emperor Francis Joseph, annexes Bosnia and Herzegovina, while the Ottoman Sultan Abdul Hamid II looks on helplessly.

Austria-Hungary's participation in the outbreak of World War I has been neglected by historians, as emphasis has traditionally been placed on Germany's role as the prime instigator.[43] However, the "spark" that ignited the First World War is attributed to the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand by Gavrilo Princip, which took place on 28 June 1914. Approximately a month later, on 28 July 1914, Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia. This act led to a series of events that would quickly expand into the First World War; thus, the Habsburg government in Vienna initiated the pivotal decision that would begin the conflict.[43]

The causes of the Great War have generally been defined in diplomatic terms, but certain deep-seated issues in Austria-Hungary undoubtedly contributed to the beginnings of the First World War.[44] The Austro-Hungarian situation in the Balkans pre-1914 is a primary factor in its involvement in the war. The movement towards South Slav unity was a major problem for the Habsburg Empire, which was facing increasing nationalist pressure from its multinational populace. As Europe's third largest state, the Austro-Hungarian monarchy was hardly homogeneous; comprising over fifty million people and eleven nationalities, the Empire was a conglomeration of a number of diverse cultures, languages, and peoples.[45]

Specifically, the South Slavic people of Austria-Hungary desired to amalgamate with Serbia in an effort to officially solidify their shared cultural heritage. Over seven million South Slavs lived inside the Empire, while three million lived outside it.[46] With the growing emergence of nationalism in the twentieth century, unity of all South Slavs looked promising. This tension is exemplified by Conrad von Hötzendorf's letter to Franz Ferdinand:

The unification of the South Slav race is one of the powerful national movements which can neither be ignored nor kept down. The question can only be, whether unification will take place within the boundaries of the Monarchy – that is at the expense of Serbia's independence – or under Serbia's leadership at the expense of the Monarchy. The cost to the Monarchy would be the loss of its South Slav provinces and thus of almost its entire coastline. The loss of territory and prestige would relegate the Monarchy to the status of a small power.[47]

The annexation of Bosnia-Herzegovina in 1908 by Austrian foreign minister Baron von Aehrenthal in an effort to assert domination over the Balkans inflamed Slavic nationalism and angered Serbia. Bosnia-Herzegovina became a "rallying cry" for South Slavs, with hostilities between Austria-Hungary and Serbia steadily increasing.[48] The situation was ripe for conflict, and when the Serbian nationalist Gavrilo Princip assassinated Austrian imperial heir, Franz Ferdinand, these longstanding hostilities culminated into an all-out war.

The Allied Powers wholeheartedly supported the Slavs' nationalistic fight. George Macaulay Trevelyan, a British historian, saw Serbia's war against Austria-Hungary as a "war of liberation" that would "free South Slavs from tyranny."[49] In his own words: "If ever there was a battle for freedom, there is such a battle now going on in Southeastern Europe against Austrian and Magyar. If this war ends in the overthrow of the Magyar tyranny, an immense step forward will have been taken toward racial liberty and European peace."[50]

Romania

[edit]
Border changes in favor of Romania as stipulated in the Treaty of Bucharest

In the immediate years preceding the First World War, the Kingdom of Romania was involved in the Second Balkan War on the side of Serbia, Montenegro, Greece and the Ottoman Empire against Bulgaria. The Treaty of Bucharest, signed on 10 August 1913, ended the Balkan conflict and added 6,960 square kilometers to Romania's territory.[51] Although militarized, Romania decided upon a policy of neutrality at the start of the First World War, mainly due to having territorial interests in both Austria-Hungary (Transylvania and Bukovina) and in Russia (Bessarabia). Strong cultural influences also affected Romanian leanings, however. King Carol I, as a Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, favoured his Germanic roots, while the Romanian people, influenced by their Orthodox church and Latin-based language, were inclined to join France. Perhaps King Carol's attempts at joining the war on the side of the Central powers would have been fruitful had he not died in 1914, but Romanian disenchantment with Austria-Hungary had already influenced public and political opinion. French endorsement of Romanian action against Bulgaria, and support of the terms of the Treaty of Bucharest was particularly effective at inclining Romania towards the Entente. Furthermore, Russian courting of Romanian sympathies, exemplified by the visit of the Tsar to Constanța on 14 June 1914, signaled in a new era of positive relations between the two countries.[52] Nevertheless, King Ferdinand I of Romania maintained a policy of neutrality, intending to gain the most for Romania by negotiating between competing powers. The result of the negotiations with the Entente was the Treaty of Bucharest (1916), which stipulated the conditions under which Romania agreed to join the war on the side of the Entente, particularly territorial promises in Austria-Hungary: Transylvania, Crișana and Maramureș, the whole Banat and most of Bukovina. According to historian John Keegan, these enticements offered by the Allies were never concrete, for in secret, Russia and France agreed not to honor any conventions when the end of the war came.[53]

1914

[edit]

In the years prior to 1914, Austro-Russian co-operation was both crucial for European peace and difficult to maintain. Old suspicions exacerbated by the Bosnian crisis stood in the way of agreement between the two empires, as did ethnic sensitivities.

The Russian military was the largest in the world consisting of 1,400,000 men. They could also mobilize up to 5 million men, but only had 4.6 million rifles to give them. Russian troops were satisfactorily supplied at the beginning of the war, there was more light artillery than France, and no less than Germany. [54][55]

The empires clash

[edit]
Hindenburg at Tannenberg,
by Hugo Vogel
An engagement in Hungary

The first events were the capture of Kalish and Chenhostov by the Germans without fighting, and the first real clash was clashes at Wierzbołów.
The first full-scale operation was invasion of East Prussia on 17 August 1914 and the Austro-Hungarian province of Galicia.[56] The Russian offensive in the Battle of Stallupönen, which was the opening battle of the Eastern Front,[57] quickly turned to a disastrous defeat following the Battle of Tannenberg in August 1914;[58] even though the Russians were successfully defending at Gumbinnen a while before Tannenberg. After the Russian disaster, German troops under the command of Hindenburg inflicted another crushing defeat on the numerically superior Russian army in the First Battle of the Masurian Lakes. A second Russian incursion into Galicia was more successful, with the Russians controlling almost all of that region by the end of 1914, routing four Austrian armies in the process. Under the command of Nikolai Ivanov, Nikolai Ruzsky and Aleksei Brusilov, the Russians won the Battle of Galicia in September and began the Siege of Przemyśl, the next fortress on the road towards Kraków.[59]

This early Russian success in 1914 on the Austro-Russian border was a reason for concern to the Central Powers and caused considerable German forces to be transferred to the East to take pressure off the Austrians, leading to the creation of the new German Ninth Army. The Austro-Hungarian government accepted the Polish proposal of establishing the Supreme National Committee as the Polish central authority within the Empire, responsible for the formation of the Polish Legions, an auxiliary military formation within the Austro-Hungarian army. At the end of 1914, the main focus of the fighting shifted to central part of Russian Poland, west of the river Vistula.[60] The October Battle of the Vistula River, Augustow operation, and the November Battle of Łódź they brought the Germans only huge losses, and the strengthening of the Russians in the region. Germans' initial plans to destroy the Russians in Poland ended in desperate attempts to prevent their invasion of Silesia[61]

At the same time, Austria-Hungary was trying to regain the territories lost in the summer, they attacked the Russians on the San River, and after a long period of fighting they were forced to retreat. The Russians went on the offensive, came close to Krakow and occupied Chernivtsi, but a counterattack by the Central Powers saved the situation.

The year ended with a bloody battle on the rivers Bzura, Ravka, Nida and Pilica, where the Central Powers planned to take Warsaw, but could not and were forced to withdraw from the battle.

1915

[edit]

Central Powers victories, retreat of the Imperial Russian Army

[edit]
Russian troops going to the front: Support for the imperial guard being hurried into the fighting line
Postcard depicting a German and Austro-Hungarian soldier fighting together against Russia. Translated caption: "Victory with our united weapons!"

In 1915 the Chief of German Great General Staff, General of Infantry Erich von Falkenhayn decided to make its main effort on the Eastern Front, and accordingly transferred considerable forces there. The year began with a successful German offensive in the area of the Masurian lakes. At the same time, a large battle for the city of Przasnysz took place on the Polish front. The city changed hands several times but eventually remained in Russian hands. As a result of the battle, the Germans lost from 38,000 to 60,000 soldiers and Russian losses amounted to about 40,000 men.[62] In March, the Germans tried to take Poland again, the third Battle of Warsaw began, and like the previous two, ended with the defeat of Germany. In May 1915, to eliminate the Russian threat the Central Powers began the successful Gorlice–Tarnów Offensive in Galicia.

After the Second Battle of the Masurian Lakes, the German and Austro-Hungarian troops on the Eastern Front functioned under a unified command. The offensive soon turned into a general advance and a corresponding strategic retreat by the Russian Army. The cause of the reverses suffered by the Russian Army, despite a significant numerical superiority over the German enemy, was not so many errors in the tactical sphere, as the deficiency in technical equipment, particularly in artillery and ammunition as well as the corruption and incompetence of the Russian officers. Only by 1916 did the buildup of Russian war industries increase the production of war material and improve the supply situation.

By mid-1915, the Russians had been expelled from Russian Poland, The whole campaign cost the Russians about 400,000 men,[63] however, the Germans and Austrians suffered setbacks, their attempt to break through to Lublin was repulsed with losses of 37,500 people, the Russians lost 9,524 people,[64] and hence pushed hundreds of kilometers away from the borders of the Central Powers, removing the threat of Russian invasion of Germany, although there was still slight Russian penetration into Austria-Hungary. At the end of 1915 the German-Austrian advance was stopped on the line RigaJakobstadtDünaburgBaranovichiPinskDubnoTarnopol. The general outline of this front line did not change until the Russian collapse in 1917.

During the campaign of 1915, the Russian Empire lost the entire line of western fortresses, and more than 4,000 guns. The causes of heavy defeats and losses of personnel, weapons, and as a result - vast territories (the entire Kingdom of Poland, part of the Baltic states, Grodno, partly Volhynia and Podolia provinces - up to 300,000 square kilometers) were to a large extent systemic shortcomings in the management of the armed forces and the defense industry. The multi-stage placement of military orders, their slow passage in the depths of the War Ministry, the disunity of the front and rear played a negative role. Thus, until the autumn of 1915, the Russian Supreme Commander-in-Chief only coordinated the actions of the commanders-in-chief of the armies of the fronts, distributed reinforcements, requesting them from the War Ministry. The Minister of War was responsible for organizing the production of weapons and ammunition, the implementation of the replenishment of troop personnel, military transportation outside the provinces declared a theater of military operations. The military districts in the theater of operations were subordinate to the commanders-in-chief of the armies of the fronts, but not to the Headquarters. Military production also lagged behind: until the end of autumn, the active army suffered from a shortage of rifles and ammunition, the consumption of which turned out to be incommensurable with the volume of production.[65]

Contemporaries also noted the isolation of the Russian commanding staff from the soldiers, the lack of practical warfare skills among the top-level commanders. "We did have courage to send people to mass slaughter, hiding behind the difficulty of tactical responsibility, to slaughter often without purpose. We sent them, being ourselves far away, not seeing either our own or the enemy, and therefore not conforming to reality. Instead of punishment, we reward such leaders, because as far as the leaders were far away, the same, but still more, the higher leaders kept even more distant. People ceased to be people, but turned into pawns. We went to the fight in a state of some kind of oblivion and stunnedness", wrote the representative of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief, Infantry General Fyodor Palitzin, in his diary.[66]

Failures in the Russian system of command and control of troops and the organization of hostilities occurred at other levels. Thus, serious shortcomings in reconnaissance led to the absence of any analysis of the enemy's plans and actions. With a general superiority in forces, almost every Central Powers's operation in 1915 was "unexpected" for the command from the front to the regimental level. Passion for undercover intelligence in the highest Russian headquarters did not justify itself, and tactical intelligence was still based on barely reliable testimony of prisoners, in the absence of which the command up to the army, inclusive, was simply "blind". The separation of artillery from infantry with subordination to the inspectors of the corps and ammunition supply units (park brigades and divisions) created difficulties in the operational replenishment of ammunition and shells in the combat units. At the same time, huge stockpiles of ammunition were created in the fortresses, which were then delivered to the enemy during the retreat or destroyed due to the impossibility of evacuation. Special units were not created for the construction of fortifications in the rear of the troops. Most often, such work was hastily carried out by militia squads and the mobilized local population, sometimes including women, and then brought to the necessary defensive state by the combat units retreating on them, already exhausted by battles and night marches.[67]

Russian strategic expanses allowed the army to take a break from failures and start active resistance, the Germans could no longer use the lack of artillery supplies from the Russians and the first setbacks began, the breakthrough to Minsk and the offensive on Dvinsk completely failed with heavy losses for the Germans, the offensive in central Belarus also turned out to be unsuccessful, the Russians began to behave more actively on the southern front, where Austria-Hungary suffered a heavy defeat near Lutsk, the situation was saved by German reserves. The Russians also began to go on the offensive to ease the pressure on Serbia, although unsuccessfully, but there was a turning point in the war in favor of Russia, failing to finish the campaign in 1915, the Germans were deprived of the opportunity to win the war.[68]

Russo-Turkish offensive, winter 1915–1916

[edit]

After the Battle of Sarikamish, the Russo-Turkish front quickly turned in favor of Russian forces. The Turks were concerned with reorganizing their army and also fighting the massive Allied armada that landed in Galipoli. Meanwhile, Russia was preoccupied with other armies on the Eastern Front. However, the appointment of Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich as Viceroy and Commander in the Caucasus in September 1915 revived the situation of the Russo-Turkish front.

When the Allies withdrew from Gallipoli in December, the Caucasus Army's Chief of Staff General Nikolai Yudenich believed Turkish forces would take action against his army. This concern was legitimate: Bulgaria's entry into the war as Germany's ally in October caused serious alarm, as a land route from Germany to Turkey was now open and would allow for an unrestricted flow of German weapons to the Turks.[69] A "window of opportunity" appeared that would allow the Russians to destroy the Turkish Third Army, as the British required assistance in Mesopotamia (now modern day Iraq). Britain's efforts to besiege Baghdad had been halted at Ctesiphon, and they were forced to retreat. This led to an increasing number of attacks by Turkish forces. The British requested the Russians to attack in an attempt to distract the Turks, and Yudenich agreed. The resulting offensive began on 10 January 1916.[70]

This offensive was unanticipated by the Turks, as it was in the middle of winter. The Turkish situation was exacerbated by the absences of Third Army's commander Kamil Pasha and Chief of Staff Major Guse. Coupled with an imbalance of forces – the Russians had 325,000 troops while the Turks only 78,000 – the situation appeared grim for the Central Powers.[70] After three months of fighting, the Russians captured the city of Trabzon on 18 April 1916.[citation needed]

1916

[edit]

Allied operations in 1916 were dictated by an urgent need to force Germany to transfer forces from its Western to Eastern fronts, to relieve the pressure on the French at the Battle of Verdun. This was to be accomplished by a series of Russian offensives which would force the Germans to deploy additional forces to counter them. The first such operation was the Lake Naroch Offensive in March–April 1916, the Germans repulsed the attacks, but the offensive achieved its main goal - the Germans stopped the attack on Verdun, giving the French a break.

Brusilov offensive

[edit]
Brusilov offensive

The Italian operations during 1916 had one extraordinary result: Austrian divisions were pulled away from the Russian southern front. This allowed the Russian forces to organize a counter-offensive. The Brusilov offensive was a large tactical assault carried out by Russian forces against Austro-Hungarian forces in Galicia. General Aleksei Brusilov believed victory against the Central Powers was possible if close attention was paid to preparation. Brusilov suggested that the Russians should attack on a wide front, and to position their trenches a mere 75 yards (69 m) away from Austrian trenches.[71]

Brusilov's plan worked impeccably. The Russians outnumbered the Austrians 200,000 to 150,000, and held a considerable advantage in guns, with 904 large guns to 600. Most importantly innovative new tactics similar to those independently invented by Erwin Rommel were used to perform quick and effective close-range surprise attacks that allowed a steady advance.[72] The Russian Eighth Army overwhelmed the Austrian Fourth and pushed on to Lutsk, advancing 40 miles (64 km) beyond the starting position. Over a million Austrians were lost, with over 500,000 men killed or taken prisoner by mid-June.[72]

Although the Brusilov offensive was initially successful, it slowed down considerably. An inadequate number of troops and poorly maintained supply lines hindered Brusilov's ability to follow up on the initial victories in June. The Brusilov offensive is considered to be the greatest Russian victory of the First World War.[73]: 52  Although it cost the Russians half a million casualties during the first two months alone, the offensive successfully diverted substantial forces of the Central Powers from the Western front, and persuaded Romania to join the war, diverting even more Central Powers forces to the East.[74]

Development of Russian industry

[edit]

A series of failures in 1915 gave the Russians time to reconfigure industry for wartime, and they did it successfully, Russian industry began to overtake Austrian in terms of growth rates and eventually increased the productivity of ammunition several times. Here is what information was announced at the Duma meeting:

The production of rifles doubled, the production of machine guns increased 6 times, the production of light guns increased 9 times, the production of artillery shells increased 40 times, the production of heavy artillery increased 4 times, and finally, the production of aircraft increased 4 times.[75]

Romania enters the war

[edit]

It is no exaggeration to say that Roumania may be the turning-point of the campaign. If the Germans fail there it will be the greatest disaster inflicted upon them. Afterwards it will only be a question of time. But should Germany succeed I hesitate to think what the effect will be on the fortunes of the campaign. … and yet no one seems to have thought it his particular duty to prepare a plan...

— David Lloyd George, War Memoirs[76]
British poster, welcoming Romania's decision to join the Entente

Up until 1916, the Romanians followed the tides of war with interest, while attempting to situate themselves in the most advantageous position. French and Russian diplomats had begun courting the Romanians early on, but persuasion tactics gradually intensified. For King Ferdinand to commit his force of half a million men, he expected the Allies to offer a substantial incentive.[77] Playing on Romanian anti-Hungarian sentiment the Allies promised the Austria-Hungarian territory of Ardeal (Transylvania) to Romania. Transylvanian demographics strongly favoured the Romanians. Romania succumbed to Allied enticement on 18 August 1916.[78] Nine days later, on 27 August, Romanian troops marched into Transylvania.

Romania's entry into the war provoked major strategic changes for the Germans. In September 1916, German troops were mobilized to the Eastern Front. Additionally, the German Chief of the General Staff, General Erich Von Falkenhayn was forced to resign from office though his successor appointed him to command the combined Central Powers forces against Romania, along with General August von Mackensen. Kaiser Wilhelm II immediately replaced Falkenhayn with Paul von Hindenburg.[79] Von Hindenburg's deputy, the more adept Erich Ludendorff, was given effective control of the army and ordered to advance on Romania. On 3 September, the first troops of the Central Powers marched into Romanian territory. Simultaneously, the Bulgarian Air Force commenced an incessant bombing of Bucharest.[80] In an attempt to relieve some pressure, French and British forces launched a new offensive known as the Battle of the Somme, while the Brusilov offensive continued in the East.

It is certain that so relatively small a state as Rumania had never before been given a role so important, and, indeed, so decisive for the history of the world at so favorable a moment. Never before had two Great Powers like Germany and Austria found themselves so much at the mercy of the military resources of a country which had scarcely one twentieth of the population of the two great states. Judging by the military situation, it was to be expected that Rumania had only to advance where she wished to decide the world war in favor of those Powers which had been hurling themselves at us in vain for years. Thus everything seemed to depend on whether Rumania was ready to make any sort of use of her momentary advantage.

— Paul von Hindenburg, Out of My Life[81]

The entrance of Romania into the war was disconcerting for von Hindenburg. On 15 September, Paul von Hindenburg issued the following order, stating that: "The main task of the Armies is now to hold fast all positions on the Western, Eastern, Italian and Macedonian Fronts, and to employ all other available forces against Rumania."[82] Fortunately for the Central Powers, the quantity and quality of the Romanian Army was overestimated. Although numbering half a million men, the Romanian Army suffered from poor training and a lack of appropriate equipment.

The initial success of the Romanian Army in Austria-Hungarian territory was quickly undermined by the Central Powers. German and Austro-Hungarian troops advanced from the north, while Bulgarian-Turkish-German forces marched into Romania from the south. Although thought to be a tactical blunder by contemporaries, the Romanians opted to mount operations in both directions.[83] By the middle of November the German force passed through the Carpathians, suffering significant casualties due to determined Romanian resistance. By 5 December, Bulgarian troops had crossed the Danube and were approaching the capital, Bucharest. At the same time as the Austro-Hungarian troops moved east, and as the Bulgarians marched north, the Turks had sent in two army divisions by sea to the Dobruja from the east.[84] Eventually, the Romanian forces were pushed back behind the Siret in northern Moldavia. They received help from the Allies, notably from France which sent a military mission of more than a thousand officers, health and support staff.

Proclamation to win over the Poles

[edit]

The Act of 5 November 1916 was proclaimed then to the Poles jointly by the Emperors Wilhelm II of Germany and Franz Joseph of Austria-Hungary. This act promised the creation of the Kingdom of Poland out of territory of Congress Poland, envisioned by its authors as a puppet state controlled by the Central Powers. The origin of that document was the dire need to draft new recruits from German-occupied Poland for the war with Russia. Following the Armistice of 11 November 1918 ending the World War I, in spite of the previous initial total dependence of the kingdom on its sponsors, it ultimately served against their intentions as the cornerstone proto state of the nascent Second Polish Republic, the latter composed also of territories never intended by the Central Powers to be ceded to Poland.

Aftermath of 1916

[edit]

By January 1917, the ranks of the Romanian army had been significantly thinned. Roughly 150,000 Romanian soldiers had been taken prisoner, 200,000 men were dead or wounded, and lost two thirds of their country, including the capital.[85] Importantly, the Ploiești oilfields, the only significant source of oil in Europe west of the Black Sea, had been destroyed before they were abandoned to the Central Powers.

1917

[edit]
Eastern Front as of 1917

The Russian Army in 1917

[edit]

Most modern people believe that the Russian army was destined to lose the war after 1916. However, Russian General Aleksei Brusilov held a different opinion and wrote in his memoirs: "People mistakenly believe that after the retreat of 1915, the Russian army could not fight, by the end of 1916 it was well trained and accomplished an incredible feat... She defeated the superior forces of the enemy, and in such numbers that no other army in the world could have won."[86] Russia's withdrawal from the war turned out to be a nightmare for the Western Allies. Even the entry of the United States into the war did not immediately help the Allies recover from the loss of strength and assistance that the Russian army had brought to the Allied war effort.[87]

Winston Churchill also confirms the strength of the Russian army: "History was not so merciless to any country as to Russia. Her ship was pulled when the harbor was already visible, the ship was wrecked when the storm passed. All the victims had already been transferred, the work was already over. Despair and change overcame the authorities when the task was already completed.”[88] These words are also supported by Russian monogrophist Sergei Oldenburg, who wrote one of the largest works about the time of Tsar Nicholas II.[89] Oldenburg believes that the Russian troops were in excellent condition by the beginning of 1917, he claims the army was well supplied and well fed, and there were 50 percent more Russians than Austro-Germans in terms of the number of armed men at the front, and the Russians had 10 percent more artillery in terms of the number of guns.[90] The supply of new guns was also significant, allegedly almost as much as the total of Britain and France combined.[91] In the army of the Central Powers, due to the war, there were declines in industrial opportunities, except for Austria, but the growth rate of Russian industry was still higher.[92][93]

Even the armies of the Central Powers assessed the condition of the Russians and their combat strength, more than 72 percent of all infantry divisions were characterized by the information committee of the Austrian General Staff as: "outstanding units" and "first-class troops".[94] However, all these material successes came to naught after the February Revolution, which killed the moral composition of the army, causing an incredible wave of deserters. Also worth noting is the Russian Expeditionary Force, which continued to maintain a presence on both the Western Front and the Macedonian front, even after the October Revolution, remaining on those fronts until the Armistice on 11 November 1918.[95][96] Even after the February Revolution, most of the Russian Army remained intact and the front, willing to fight defensively but ineffective on the offensive. The demands of the soldiers after the revolution were mainly about reducing certain powers that officers had, and many still supported fighting a defensive war. Units in the rear were most likely to demand immediate peace than front line units. Desertions on a significant scale only began after the October Revolution, and accelerated in February 1918 when peace negotiations between the Bolsheviks and Germans broke down.[32][97][98]

Russia – the February Revolution

[edit]

The Russian February Revolution aimed to topple the Russian monarchy and resulted in the creation of the Provisional Government. The revolution was a turning point in Russian history, and its significance and influence can still be felt in many countries today.[99] Although many Russians wanted a revolution, no one had expected it to happen when it did – let alone how it did.

On International Women's Day, Thursday, 23 February 1917/8 March 1917, as many as 90,000 female workers in the city of Petrograd left their factory jobs and marched through the streets, shouting "Bread", "Down with the autocracy!" and "Stop the War!" These women were tired, hungry, and angry,[100] after working long hours in miserable conditions to feed their families because their menfolk were fighting at the front. They were not alone in demanding change; more than 150,000 men and women took to the streets to protest the next day.

By Saturday, 25 February, the city of Petrograd was essentially shut down. No one was allowed to work or wanted to work.[101] Even though there were a few incidents of police and soldiers firing into the crowds, those groups soon mutinied and joined the protesters.[102] Tsar Nicholas II, who was not in Petrograd during the revolution, heard reports of the protests but chose not to take them seriously. By 1 March, it was obvious to everyone except the Tsar himself, that his rule was over. On 2 March it was made official.[103] From this point onwards Russia was administered by the Russian Provisional Government until the October Revolution.

Romania – the Summer Campaign

[edit]

In early July 1917, on a relatively small area of the Romanian front, there began one of the largest concentrations of combat forces and means known during the conflagration: nine armies, 80 infantry divisions with 974 battalions, 19 cavalry divisions with 550 squadrons and 923 artillery batteries; in total they numbered some 800,000 men, with about one million in their immediate reserve. Between late July and early September, the Romanian Army fought the battles of Mărăști, Mărășești and Oituz, managing to stop the German-Austro-Hungarian advance, inflicting heavy losses in the process and winning the most important Allied victories on the Eastern Front in 1917.[104] As a result of these operations, the remaining Romanian territories remained unoccupied, tying down nearly 1,000,000 Central Powers troops and prompting The Times to describe the Romanian front as "The only point of light in the East".

Kerensky offensive

[edit]

On 29 June 1917, Alexander Kerensky, the Minister of War in the Russian Provisional Government, launched the Kerensky offensive to end Austria-Hungary once and for all. The Russians made only 6 miles (9.7 km) of progress but the Austrians counterattacked and drove them almost entirely out of Austria-Hungary, and they retreated 150 miles (240 km), losing Tarnopol, Stanislau and Czernowitz. This defeat was accompanied by 60,000 casualties and contributed greatly to the October Revolution.

Russia – the October Revolution

[edit]

Although the February Revolution had overthrown the Tsar, the Bolsheviks still were not satisfied. In their view, the new Provisional Government was merely a more deceptive continuation of the previous government; they still refused to withdraw from the war despite how badly it was going. The upper class still wielded considerable influence in Russian economics and politics, so by September 1917, Lenin began advocating for a second revolution - one that would allow the workers and peasants to gain total control over the country. [105] The Central Committee of the Bolshevik Party convened on 10 October, and after much heated debate, agreed that it was time to begin planning for an armed insurrection. Troops who were loyal to the Bolsheviks took control of the telegraph stations, power stations, strategic bridges, post offices, train stations, and state banks.[106]

Petrograd was officially in the hands of the Bolsheviks, who greatly increased their organization in factory groups and in many barracks throughout Petrograd. They concentrated on devising a plan for overturning the Provisional Government, with a coup d'état.[107] On 24 October, Lenin emerged from hiding in a suburb, entered the city, set up his headquarters at the Smolny Institute and worked to complete his three-phase plan. With the main bridges and the main railways secured, only the Winter Palace, and with it the Provisional Government, remained to be taken. On the evening of 7 November, the troops that were loyal to the Bolsheviks infiltrated the Winter Palace. After an almost bloodless coup, the Bolsheviks were the new leaders of Russia.[107] Lenin announced that the new Bolshevik government would immediately be seeking an end to the war, implementing a system of worker's democracy, and establishing collective ownership of all farms and factories.

1918

[edit]
Territory lost by Russia under the 1918 Treaty of Brest-Litovsk

Lenin's new Bolshevik government tried to end the war, with a ceasefire being declared on 15 December 1917 along lines agreed in November. At the same time, the Bolsheviks launched a full-scale military offensive against its opponents: Ukraine and separatist governments in the Don region. During the peace negotiations between the Soviets and the Central Powers, the Germans demanded enormous concessions, eventually resulting in the failure of the long-drawn-out peace negotiations on 17 February 1918. At the same time, the Central Powers concluded a military treaty with Ukraine which was losing ground in the fight with invading Bolshevik forces. [108] The Russian Civil War, which started just after November 1917, would tear apart Russia for three years. As a result of the events in 1917, many groups opposed to Lenin's Bolsheviks had formed. With the fall of Nicholas II, many parts of the Russian Empire took the opportunity to declare their independence, one of which was Finland, which did so in December 1917; however, Finland too collapsed into a civil war. Finland declared itself independent on 6 December 1917, and this was accepted by Lenin a month later. The Finnish Parliament elected a German prince as King of Finland. However, the Socialists (The Reds) and the Whites in Finland fell into war with each other in January 1918. The Reds wanted Finland to be a Soviet republic and were aided by Russian forces still in Finland. The Whites of Finland were led by General C.G.E.Mannerheim, a Finnish baron who had been in the Tsar's service since he was 15 years old. The Whites were also offered help by a German Expeditionary Corps led by German General Goltz. Though Mannerheim never accepted the offer, the German corps landed in Finland in April 1918.

Formation of the Red Army

[edit]

Although the majority of the Russian army was still at the front lines in late 1917, the Council of People's Commissars headed by Leon Trotsky set about creating a new army controlled by the Bolsheviks. By a decree on 28 January 1918, the council created the Workers' and Peoples' Red Army; it began recruitment on a voluntary basis, but on 22 April, the Soviet government made serving in the army compulsory for anyone who did not employ hired labor. Several officers who had served in the Russian Imperial Army defected to the Red Army in support of the Bolshevik cause. Many of them were of an aristocratic background but became disillusioned with imperialism and monarchism, although the Red Army still mostly consisted of ordinary workers and peasants.[109]

Aftermath

[edit]

Treaty of Brest-Litovsk (March 1918)

[edit]

With the German Army just 85 miles (137 km) from the Russian capital Petrograd (St. Petersburg) on 3 March 1918, the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk was signed and the Eastern Front ceased to be a war zone. In the treaty, Soviet Russia ceded 34% of the former empire's population, 54% of its industrial land, 89% of its coalfields, and 26% of its railroads. The total losses in land amounted to 1 million square kilometers. Lenin bitterly called the settlement "that abyss of defeat, dismemberment, enslavement and humiliation."[110] While the treaty was practically obsolete before the end of the year, it did provide some relief to the Bolsheviks, who were embroiled in a civil war, and affirmed the independence of Ukraine. However, Estonia and Latvia were intended to become a United Baltic Duchy to be ruled by German princes and German nobility as fiefdoms under the German Kaiser. A rump Polish state was also foreseen on the formerly Russian territories. Finland's sovereignty had already been declared in December 1917, and accepted by most nations, including France and Russia, but not by the United Kingdom and the United States.

Treaty of Bucharest (May 1918)

[edit]
Romanian troops during the Battle of Mărășești, 1917

On 7 May 1918 Romania signed the Treaty of Bucharest with the Central Powers, which recognised Romanian sovereignty over Bessarabia in return for ceding control of passes in the Carpathian Mountains to Austria-Hungary and granting oil concessions to Germany.[111] Although approved by Parliament, Ferdinand I refused to sign the treaty, hoping for an Allied victory; Romania re-entered the war on 10 November 1918 on the side of the Allies and the Treaty of Bucharest was formally annulled by the Armistice of 11 November 1918.[112][d] Between 1914 and 1918, an estimated 400,000 to 600,000 ethnic Romanians served with the Austro-Hungarian army, of whom up to 150,000 were killed in action; total military and civilian deaths within contemporary Romanian borders are estimated at 748,000.[114]

The Germans were able to repair the oil fields around Ploiești and by the end of the war had pumped a million tons of oil. They also requisitioned two million tons of grain from Romanian farmers. These materials were vital in keeping Germany in the war to the end of 1918.[115]

End of war

[edit]

With the end of major combat on the Eastern Front, the Germans were able to transfer substantial forces to the west in order to mount an offensive in France in the spring of 1918.

This offensive on the Western Front failed to achieve a decisive breakthrough, and the arrival of more and more American units in Europe was sufficient to offset the German advantage. Even after the Russian collapse, about a million German soldiers remained tied up in the east until the end of the war, attempting to run a short-lived addition to the German Empire in Europe.

In the end, the Central Powers had to relinquish all of their captured lands on the eastern front, with Germany even being forced to cede territory they held before the war, under various treaties (such as the Treaty of Versailles) signed after the armistice in 1918.[citation needed] Although the Allied Powers' victory led to the Central Powers being forced to cancel the treaty signed with Russia, the victors were at the time intervening in the Russian Civil War, causing bad relations between Russia and the Allied Powers.

For Versailles Peace Brest Peace was canceled, as well as reserved the rights of Russia to demand reparations.[116]

New conflicts

[edit]

After the central powers capitulated, the countries in the east took advantage of the situation: Soviet Russia immediately cancelled the peace treaty and launched an offensive against the Baltic States, Belarus and Ukraine. Romania formally rejoined the war a day before its end in the West, soon followed by conflict with newly independent Hungary.

Role of women

[edit]
2nd Lt. Ecaterina Teodoroiu, killed in action at Mărășești in 1917, regarded as a national heroine in Romania

In comparison to the attention directed to the role played by women on the Western Front during the First World War, the role of women in the east has garnered limited scholarly focus. It is estimated that 20 percent of the Russian industrial working class was conscripted into the army; therefore, women's share of industrial jobs increased dramatically. There were percentage increases in every industry, but the most noticeable increase happened in industrial labour, which increased from 31.4 percent in 1913 to 45 percent in 1918.[117]

Women also fought on the Eastern Front. In the later stages of Russia's participation in the war, Russia began forming all-woman combat units, the Women's Battalions, in part to fight plummeting morale among male soldiers by demonstrating Russian women's willingness to fight. In Romania, Ecaterina Teodoroiu actively fought in the Romanian Army and is remembered today as a national hero.

British nursing efforts were not limited to the Western Front. Nicknamed the "Gray partridges" in reference to their dark gray overcoats, Scottish volunteer nurses arrived in Romania in 1916 under the leadership of Elsie Inglis. In addition to nursing injured personnel, Scottish nurses manned transport vehicles and acted as regimental cooks.[118] The "Gray Partridges" were well respected by Romanian, Serbian and Russian troops and as a result, the Romanian press went as far as to characterize them as "healthy, masculine, and tanned women." As a testament to her abilities, Elsie Inglis and her volunteers were entrusted to turn an abandoned building in the city of Galați into an operational hospital, which they did in a little more than a day.[119] Yvonne Fitzroy's published journal, "With the Scottish Nurses in Roumania," provides an excellent first hand account of Scottish nursing activities in the Eastern Front.[120]

Propaganda

[edit]
World War I caricature from Russia depicting Wilhelm II, Franz Joseph I and Mehmed V. Top: "If only we could get to the top – it would be ours!" Bottom: "Let me help you with that!"

Propaganda was a key component of the culture of World War I. It was often shown through state-controlled media, and helped to bolster nationalism and patriotism within countries. On the Eastern Front, propaganda took many forms such as opera, film, spy fiction, theater, spectacle, war novels and graphic art. Across the Eastern Front the amount of propaganda used in each country varied from state to state. Propaganda took many forms within each country and was distributed by many different groups. Most commonly the state produced propaganda, but other groups, such as anti-war organizations, also generated propaganda.[121]

In order for the Russians to legitimize their war efforts, the government constructed an image of the enemy through state-instituted propaganda. Their main aim was to help overcome the legend of the "invincible" German war machine, in order to boost the morale of civilians and soldiers. Russian propaganda often took the form of showing the Germans as a civilized nation, with barbaric "inhuman" traits. Russian propaganda also exploited the image of the Russian POWs who were in the German camps, again in order to boost the morale of their troops, serving as encouragement to defeat the enemy and to get their fellow soldiers out of German POW camps that were perceived as inhumane.[122]

An element of the Russian propaganda was the Investigate Commission formed in April 1915. It was led by Aleksei Krivtsov, and the study was tasked with the job of studying the legal violations committed by of the Central Powers and then getting this information to the Russian public. This commission published photographs of letters that were allegedly found on fallen German soldiers. These letters document the German correspondents saying to "take no prisoners." A museum was also set up in Petrograd, which displayed pictures that showed how "inhumanly" the Germans were treating prisoners of war.[122]

Also, the Russians chose to discard the name Saint Petersburg to remove the German-sounding "Saint" and "-burg", favouring the more Russian-sounding Petrograd.

Prisoners of war in Russia

[edit]

During World War I, approximately 200,000 German soldiers and 2.5 million soldiers from the Austro-Hungarian army entered Russian captivity. During the 1914 Russian campaign the Russians began taking thousands of Austrian prisoners. As a result, the Russian authorities made emergency facilities in Kiev, Penza, Kazan, and later Turkestan to hold the Austrian prisoners of war. As the war continued Russia began to detain soldiers from Germany as well as a growing number from the Austro-Hungarian army. The Tsarist state saw the large population of POWs as a workforce that could benefit the war economy in Russia. Many POWs were employed as farm laborers and miners in Donbas and Krivoi Rog. However, the majority of POWs were employed as laborers constructing canals and building railroads. The living and working environments for these POWs was bleak. There was a shortage of food, clean drinking water and proper medical care. During the summer months malaria was a major problem, and the malnutrition among the POWs led to many cases of scurvy. While working on the Murmansk rail building project over 25,000 POWs died. Information about the bleak conditions of the labor camps reached the German and Austro-Hungarian governments. They began to complain about the treatment of POWs. The Tsarist authorities initially refused to acknowledge the German and Habsburg governments. They rejected their claims because Russian POWs were working on railway construction in Serbia. However, they slowly agreed to stop using prison labor.[123] Life in the camps was extremely rough for the men who resided in them. The Tsarist government could not provide adequate supplies for the men living in their POW camps. The Russian government's inability to supply the POWs in their camps with supplies was due to inadequate resources and bureaucratic rivalries. However, the conditions in the POW camps varied; some were more bearable than others.[123] The attitude towards Russian prisoners from the Central Powers was even worse, in some camps the mattress was for 4 people, and in others people were starved on purpose. At the beginning of 1915, a case was recorded of three prisoners being forced to run around the camp without stopping, in parallel they were stabbed with bayonets and beaten.[124]

Disease

[edit]

Disease played a critical role in the loss of life on the Eastern Front. In the East, disease accounted for approximately four times the number of deaths caused by direct combat, in contrast to the three to one ratio in the West.[125] Malaria, cholera, and dysentery contributed to the epidemiological crisis on the Eastern Front; however, typhus fever, transmitted by pathogenic lice and previously unknown to German medical officers before the outbreak of the war, was the most deadly. There was a direct correlation between the environmental conditions of the East and the prevalence of disease. With cities excessively crowded by refugees fleeing their native countries, unsanitary medical conditions created a suitable environment for diseases to spread. Primitive hygienic conditions, along with general lack of knowledge about proper medical care was evident in the German-occupied Ober Ost.[126]

Ultimately, a large scale sanitation program was put into effect. This program, named Sanititätswesen (Medical Affairs), was responsible for ensuring proper hygienic procedures were being carried out in Latvia, Lithuania, and Poland. Quarantine centers were built, and diseased neighbourhoods were isolated from the rest of the population. Delousing stations were prevalent in the countryside and in cities to prevent the spread of typhus fever, with mass numbers of natives being forced to take part in this process at military bathhouses. A "sanitary police" was also introduced to confirm the cleanliness of homes, and any home deemed unfit would be boarded up with a warning sign.[126] Dogs and cats were also killed for fear of possible infection.

To avoid the spread of disease, prostitution became regulated. Prostitutes were required to register for a permit, and authorities demanded mandatory medical examinations for all prostitutes, estimating that seventy percent of prostitutes carried a venereal disease.[126] Military brothels were introduced to combat disease; the city of Kowno emphasized proper educational use of contraceptives such as condoms, encouraged proper cleansing of the genital area after intercourse, and gave instructions on treatment in the case of infection.[126]

Casualties

[edit]

Russian casualties

[edit]

The Russian casualties in the First World War are difficult to estimate, due to the poor quality of available statistics.

Cornish gives a total of 2,006,000 military dead (700,000 killed in action, 970,000 died of wounds, 155,000 died of disease and 181,000 died while POWs). This measure of Russian losses is similar to that of the British Empire, 5% of the male population in the 15 to 49 age group. He says civilian casualties were five to six hundred thousand in the first two years, and were then not kept, so a total of over 1,500,000 is not unlikely. He has over five million men passing into captivity, the majority during 1915.[127] However, these figures on the number of prisoners are very contradictory, since the extreme reports on prisoners issued by the official commission of the USSR called the figure at 3.3 million. These data have been criticized by Imperial Russian Army general and military historian Golovin, who conducted a study together with German veterans in the archives of the central powers, and named a figure of 2,410,000 people.[128]

When Russia withdrew from the war, ~2,500,000 Russian POWs were in German and Austrian hands. This by far exceeded the total number of prisoners of war (1,880,000) lost by the armies of Britain, France and Germany combined. Only the Austro-Hungarian Army, with 2,200,000 POWs, came even close.[129]

According to other data, the number of irretrievable losses in Russia ranges from 700,000[130] to 1,061,000.[131] Golovin wrote a huge work dedicated to the losses of Russians in World Wat I, he based on the documents of the headquarters and the documents of the German archive, working there together with German veterans, correlated the losses and came to the conclusion that the total losses are 7,917,000, including 1,300,000 dead, 4,200,000 wounded and 2,410,000 prisoners.[132] Later estimates have adjusted this number to 2,420,000 people.[133] Per Alexei Oleynikov total losses for the 1914–1917 campaigns look like this:

  • 1914: 1,000,000+
  • 1915: 3,000,000
  • 1916: 2,000,000
  • 1917: 400,000[16]

The death toll of a maximum of ~1,000,000+ people is also shared by other authors.[134][e] There is also an estimate by Krivosheev, according to him, the Russians lost 2,254,000 dead, but this estimate does not at all match the number of wounded - 2,844,500[according to whom?].[137] According to the Russian historian Kernosovsky [ru], Russia's losses amounted to 9,000,000.[138]

Central Powers casualties

[edit]

At that time, the losses of the Austro-German troops were as great. As General Günther Blumentritt wrote in his memoirs: «I will cite a little-known but significant fact, our losses on the eastern front were much higher than on the western.»[139] Historian Oleynikov estimated the total losses at 5,100,000 people,[4] The maximum estimate was up to 6,000,000 casualties, this ratio is much better than on the western front.[140]

Similarly, the losses of the central powers in the East in the period from 1914 to 1916 were greater than similar losses on all other fronts, the Russian army was able to inflict damage to the enemy, estimates range from 4,600,000[4] to 5,400,000[140] people from a total loss of 8,090,000. The Russians also took the most prisoners, as many as 2,130,000,[141] and according to other data 1,961,000.[75] There is also an estimate of 2,200,000 prisoners, but the general trend remains to estimate about 2,000,000 people, which is six times more than all those prisoners who were captured by all the Entente countries combined.[142]

Territorial changes

[edit]

Austria

[edit]

The empire of Austria lost approximately 60% of its territory as a result of the war, and evolved into a smaller state with a small homogeneous population of 6.5 million people. With the loss, Vienna was now an imperial capital without an empire to support it. The states that were formed around Austria feared the return of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and put measures into place to prevent it from re-forming.[143]

Czechoslovakia

[edit]

Czechoslovakia was created through the merging of the Czech provinces of Bohemia and Moravia, previously under Austrian rule, united with Slovakia and Ruthenia, which were part of Hungary. Although these groups had many differences between them, they believed that together they would create a stronger state. The new country was a multi-ethnic state. The population consisted of Czechs (51%), Slovaks (16%), Germans (22%), Hungarians (5%) and Rusyns (4%), with other ethnic groups making up 2%.[144] Many of the Germans, Hungarians, Ruthenians and Poles[145] and some Slovaks, felt oppressed because the political elite did not generally allow political autonomy for minority ethnic groups. The state proclaimed the official ideology that there are no Czechs and Slovaks, but only one nation of Czechoslovaks (see Czechoslovakism), to the disagreement of Slovaks and other ethnic groups. Once a unified Czechoslovakia was restored after World War II the conflict between the Czechs and the Slovaks surfaced again.

Hungary

[edit]

After the war Hungary was severely disrupted by the loss of 72% of its territory, 64% of its population and most of its natural resources. The loss of territory was similar to that of Austria after the breaking up the Austria-Hungary territory. They lost the territories of Transylvania, Slovakia, Croatia, Slavonia, Syrmia, and Banat.[143]

Italy

[edit]

Italy incorporated the regions of Trieste and South Tyrol from Austria.

Poland

[edit]

The creation of a free and Independent Poland was one of Wilson's fourteen points. At the end of the 18th century, the state of Poland was broken apart by Prussia, Russia, and Austria. During the Paris Peace Conference, 1919, the Commission on Polish Affairs was created which recommended there be a passageway across West Prussia and Posen, in order to give Poland access to the Baltic through the port of Danzig at the mouth of the Vistula River. The creation of the state of Poland would separate East Prussia from the rest of Germany, as it was before the Partitions of Poland. Poland also received Upper Silesia. British Foreign Secretary Lord Curzon proposed Poland's eastern border with Russia. Neither the Soviet Russians nor the Polish were happy with the demarcation of the border.[143]

Romania

[edit]

The state of Romania was enlarged greatly after the war. As a result of the Paris peace conference Romania kept the Dobrudja and Transylvania. Between the states of Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, and Romania an alliance named the Little Entente was formed. They worked together on matters of foreign policy in order to prevent a Habsburg restoration.[143]

Yugoslavia

[edit]

Initially Yugoslavia began as the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. The name was changed to Yugoslavia in 1929. The State secured its territory at the Paris peace conference after the end of the war. The state suffered from many internal problems because of the many diverse cultures and languages within the state. Yugoslavia was divided on national, linguistic, economic, and religious lines.[143]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Russian Empire during 1914–1917, Russian Provisional Government and Republic during 1917.
  2. ^ The data varies too much
  3. ^ Other names: German: Ostfront; Romanian: Frontul de răsărit), for Russia Second Patriotic War[21][22] (Russian: Вторая Отечественная Война)
  4. ^ Bessarabia remained part of Romania until 1940, when it was annexed by Joseph Stalin as the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic;[113] following the dissolution of the USSR in 1991, it became the independent Republic of Moldova
  5. ^ 1,700,000[135][136]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Pearson, Raymond (2014). The Longman Companion to European Nationalism 1789-1920. Routledge. p. 15. ISBN 9781317897774. Cheered by the Central Powers' victory on, then dissolution of, the eastern front, Germany finds herself fighting on one front for the first time.
  2. ^ Weinhauer, Klaus; McElligott, Anthony; Heinsohn, Kirsten (2015). Germany 1916-23: A Revolution in Context. transcript Verlag. p. 159. ISBN 9783839427347. The defeat of Russia gave Ludendorff only a small window of opportunity in order to concentrate military forces in France prior to an inevitable flood of fresh American troops.
  3. ^ Churchill, W. S. (1923–1931). The World Crisis (Odhams 1938 ed.). London: Thornton Butterworth. Page 558. Total German casualties for "Russia and all other fronts" (aside from the West) are given as 1,693,000 including 517,000 dead.
  4. ^ a b c Oleynikov 2016, p. 261.
  5. ^ a b c Sanitatsbericht uber das Deutsche Heer (Deutsches Feld- und Besatzungsheer) im Weltkrieg 1914-1918
  6. ^ Bodart, Gaston: "Erforschung der Menschenverluste Österreich-Ungarns im Weltkriege 1914–1918", Austrian State Archive, War Archive Vienna, Manuscripts, History of the First World War, in general, A 91. Reports that 60% of Austro-Hungarian killed/wounded were incurred on the Eastern Front (including 312,531 out of 521,146 fatalities). While the casualty records are incomplete (Bodart on the same page estimates the missing war losses and gets a total figure of 1,213,368 deaths rather than 521,146), the proportions are accurate. 60% of casualties equates to 726,000 dead and 2,172,000 wounded.
  7. ^ Россия в мировой войне 1914—1918 (в цифрах). — М.: ЦСУ, 1925. — Табл. 33. — С. 41.
  8. ^ Volgyes, Ivan. (1973). "Hungarian Prisoners of War in Russia 1916–1919". Cahiers du Monde Russe et Soviétique, 14(1/2). Page 54. Gives the figure of 1,479,289 prisoners captured in the East, from the Austro-Hungarian Ministry of Defence archives.
  9. ^ The most common data on Austrian prisoners vary from 1,800,000 to 1,950,000
  10. ^ Erickson, Edward J. Ordered to die : a history of the Ottoman army in the first World War, p. 147. Total casualties of 20,000 are given for the VI Army Corps in Romania.
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  38. ^ Stone 2015, p. 44.
  39. ^ Stone 2015, pp. 46–47.
  40. ^ a b Stone 2015, pp. 48–49.
  41. ^ a b Stone 2015, pp. 23–25.
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Further reading

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