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World War One

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French strike in World War One
French strike in World War One

World War One was a worldwide war set mostly in Europe, the Middle East, and in the African and Asian settlings, and was fought between the "Allied (Entente)" lands and the "Central" lands. The war began in 1914 when Austria-Hungary swore war against Serbia and was to last until 1918. Most of the war happened on two warsteads, the Western Warstead and the Eastern Warstead. More than 8 thousand-thousand warmen were killed, and thousand-thousands more of other folk were killed as well. Won by the Allies in the Bloodmonth of 1918, the war and its aftermath would come to shape much of the following fifty years in mootsmanship leading forthrightly to the the widespread drawing over of European lands and the making of the Land Fellowship, and unforthrightly to the end of 19th-Yearhundred overlordship and the setting that would endsomely lead to World War Two, which is in itself often believed to be an ongoing of WWI.

[edit] Overlook

By the year of the war's outbreak, 1914, European lands had made an unwieldy, sprawling network of hidden understandings amongst themselves so as to ward themselves from each other. This unwieldy network made it very hard for any one land to strike out at another without a backlash from other lands. In other words, the striking land would be struck by all the other lands in a hidden understanding with the stricken land, making the setting highly threatening.

The war began as Austria-Hungary swore war on and struck Serbia on Afterlithe 28th, 1914, after the shooting of Franz Ferdinand, the main man who was to be bequeathed the throne of Austria Hungary. Russia, to be true to her word, began to outfit and beweapon her landferd within a few months so as to strike Austria. Teutonland upheld Austria-Hungary's deeds and she also readied her landferd, and soon undertook a forestrike against Frankrike. However, Teutonland's strike would have to go through Belgland, a land that had not yet taken any side in the war. This would not have been worrisome had Belgland had no one to ward her, but the Banded Kingdom had already bound herself to do just this lest such a strike should befall Belgland. This meant that when Teutonland at last struck Frankrike through Belgland, the Banded Kingdom would therewith swear war on Teutonland.

"Central" Lands "Allied" (Entente) Lands
Dutch Kyserdom Frankrike
Austria-Hungary Banded Kingdom
Ottoman Kyserdom Russian Kyserdom
Bulgaria Italy
Banded Folkdoms of Americksland
Serbia

In the Eastern Front, Russia struck Teutonland in East Prussia at the Tannenburg and the Masurian Lakes, but both strikes were driven back by the landferd of Teutonland, under Hindenburg Lundendorff. Though Russia's warmen also at first went deep into the Austrian great shire of Galicia, the Teutonish win in East Prussia freed up enough Teutonish warmen to help the Austrian-Hungarian landferd overcome the Russian warmen. In the Balkans, the banded landferds of Bulgaria (who had sided with the "central" lands in 1915), Austria-Hungary, and Teutonland at last overwhelmed the Serbian warmen and took the land of Serbia. Also in 1915, the Ottoman Kyserdom banded with the "Central" lands, and began to fight against the British in Irak, the Holy Land, and in the land that today's Turkland lies. The most well-known struggle that happened in the Ottoman Kyserdom's land was the Struggle of Gallipoli.

Italy banded with the "Allied" lands in 1915, wanting to take back lands that she thought were rightfully hers. However, the war on the Italian Warstead was to be badly undertaken and there were many losses on both sides. The lack of land and winyields gained for Italy at the end of World War One would become a big spur towards its banding with Teutonland in World War Two.

On the Western Warstead, Teutonland overran Belgland and fared well into Frankrike until the river Marne, only 43 miles from the Frankish headtown of Paris, in the Sheddingmonth of 1914. However, in a mighty comeback, the Frankish and British warmen pushed back the Teutonlanders to the stead where the three ladnferds would fight for the next three years in bloody ditch warfare. Outstanding struggles and clashes that happened along this warstead inclose the Struggle of the Somme, the Struggle of Verdun, the Clashes of Ypres, the Second Struggle of the Aisne, the First Struggle of the Marne, and the Last Teutonish Spring Strike of 1918.

In 1917, the Banded Folkdoms of Americksland sided with the "Allied" lands, and gave them fresh warmen for the fight. John J. Pershing, the headman of the American warmen, landed in Frankrike at the end of 1917, and lead his men alongside the Frankish warhighheadmen Ferdinand Foch and the British Douglas Haig (headman of the British Outfare Dright.) The banded Landferds at last overcame the Teutonish Landferds and Teutonland yielded on the 11th of Bloodmonth, 1918.

[edit] Aftermath and Outcomes

After the besettling to end fighting in an ironroad wain, a endful frith was made by the all the leaders of the mightfullands in the war in the Hall of Mirrors in Versailles. The amongstandings for frith were heavy on Teutonland, putting the chide on her, lowering the scoreworth of warmen she could have, and making her pay in full for backbuilding. The Russian, Teutonish, Ottoman, and Austo-Hungarian Kyserdoms fell asunder after WW1, and were cleft into many another land by the winning lands. Also, the strength of European lands waned somewhat after the war, though the true ending of European overlord strength would be in the aftermath of World War Two.

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