What was the American experience like for those who participated in World War 1?
Explanation: I don’t know
Capitalism caused the Industrial Revolution because industrialization required significant work and investment from individuals and not necessarily the government.
1.The territorial changes of Germany include all changes in the borders and territory of Germany from its formation in 1871 to the present.
2.The Ottoman Empire was once a superpower, ruling the Middle East and much of northern Africa and eastern Europe. ... By the end of the 1800s, the empire was in decline, shrinking in size and subject to internal problems and instability.
3.The borders of many states were completely redrawn, and the new Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, later Yugoslavia, was created. Both Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire were formally dissolved. As a result, the balance of power, economic relations, and ethnic divisions were completely altered.
4.Nationalism in the Balkans For centuries, large empires controlled the Balkans. Leaders from the Ottoman Empire and Austria-Hungary held absolute power. They used military strength to keep these other ethnic groups under control.
5.Any true power or strength that the Ottomans had were not really from themselves but from those they conquered and weapons trade between the Ottomans and the farther east. The walls of Constantinople in 1453 were widely known to be the strongest and most fortified border in the world.
6.By prolonging hostilities further, however, Russia would have invited Austria to enter the war, causing considerable suspicion in Britain
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maintain social and political order
World War I had a devastating effect on German-Americans and their cultural heritage. Up until that point, German-Americans, as a group, had been spared much of the discrimination, abuse, rejection, and collective mistrust experienced by so many different racial and ethnic groups in the history of the United States. Indeed, over the years, they had been viewed as a well-integrated and esteemed part of American society. All of this changed with the outbreak of war. At once, German ancestry became a liability. As a result, German-Americans attempted to shed the vestiges of their heritage and become fully “American.” Among other outcomes, this process hastened their assimilation into American society and put an end to many German-language and cultural institutions in the United States.
Although German immigrants had begun settling in America during the colonial period, the vast majority of them (more than five million) arrived in the nineteenth century. In fact, as late as 1910, about nine percent of the American population had been born in Germany or was of German parentage – the highest percentage of any ethnic group.[1] Moreover, as most German-Americans lived on the East Coast or in the Midwest, there were numerous regions in which they made up as much as 35 percent of the populace. Most of the earlier German immigrants had been farmers or craftsmen and had usually settled near fellow countrymen in towns or on the countryside; most of those who arrived in the 1880s and thereafter moved to the ever growing cities in search of work. Soon enough there was hardly any large U.S. city without an ethnic German neighborhood. German-Americans wielded strong economic and cultural influence in cities such as New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Louis, and Cincinnati, with the latter three forming the so-called German triangle.