In the first year of World War One, the German army had pushed so deep into the territory of the Triple Entent and its allies that the Germans had overrun Belgium and most of Eastern France, pushing to within 20 miles of the heart of the French capital of Paris.
In the eyes of the world, a Central Powers victory on the Western Front seemed almost inevitable, and the German army (which had very quickly adapted to the new modern style of industrial warfare) seemed unbeatable. However this was changed by the First Battle of the Marne, wherein Six French Armies as well as an army of the British Expeditionary force repelled the German attackers. The German momentum was broken by the catastrophic defeat and the image of German invincibility was shattered, allowing the Triple Entente to push North East, driving the Germans away from the French capital.
Answer:
it's summer here is an easy search that explains it
I honestly have no clue what the answer is and I really would like to know as well
The idea of National unity and unification of the states
Explanation:
- Many European nations were awakened to national consciousness, and they wanted political freedoms and national rights.
- The centers of the revolutionary movements became Paris, Frankfurt, Prague, Vienna and Pest.
- The bearers were unsatisfied people from different societies, layers threatened by the old (feudal stale) system or modern capitalist development.
Learn more on Revolution of 1848 on
brainly.com/question/1309054
brainly.com/question/7288929
brainly.com/question/893419
#learnwithBrainly