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Germany's Aims in the First World War by Fritz Fischer
Germany's Aims in the First World War by Fritz Fischer












Germany Germany

Ferdinand was the prospective heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne. The war was directly triggered by the 28th June 1914, the assassination of Austria's Archduke Franz Ferdinand at Sarajevo in Bosnia by a Yugoslavian citizen called Gavrilo Princip (Mombauer, 2015). The Allied Powers were composed of nations such as Britain, France, Russians, and the United States while the Central Powers was made up of countries like Germany, Italy, and Austria-Hungary. The countries that participated in this war were divided into two main groups the Allied Powers and Central Powers. The First World War began on 28th July of the year 1914 and officially ended on 11th November 1918 after Germany which was facing internal revolutionary issues agreed to a cease-fire.

Germany

Scholars like the late Fritz Fischer are one of those individuals who are of the opinion that Germany was the chief instigator of the war. The participation of Germans in the war has raised various debates on whether or not the nation should be blamed for being the initiator of the war. The war also caused massive land destruction since most of the nations that participated in the war utilized powerful artilleries such as bombs and landmines in executing their attacks. The book that had caused such commotion was published in the United States as Germany’s Aims in the First World War (Norton, 1967).The First World War was one of the most vicious global conflicts that lead to the death of more than nine million military men and women, and over seven million civilians (Kramer, 2014). Fischer became Germany’s best-known living historian. Heated arguments continued for years, although younger German historians later agreed that many of his inferences from contemporary documents had some merit. Then the news magazine Der Spiegel reviewed his book and capsulized its conclusions in 1964. The controversy initially simmered in Hamburg. What nettled his critics even more was the moderate language and obvious scholarship with which he made his points. Fischer stirred a hornet’s nest in 1961 with the proposition that Germany’s ambition to spread its political and economic domination across Europe and to Africa caused the war. Fritz Fischer, the German historian who rankled his peers and Germans in general with the thesis that Imperial Germany was squarely responsible for World War I and its consequences, died on Dec.














Germany's Aims in the First World War by Fritz Fischer