The Treaty of Versailles, signed on June 28th, 1919, in the Hall of Mirrors of the Palace of Versailles in France, brought an end to World War I. The Treaty took effect on January 10th, 1920.
The Treaty of Versailles was signed between four major nations – France, Britain, Italy along with its allies, and Germany and other nations that were part of the Central Powers.
The treaty had 15 parts and 440 articles covering three main aspects:
Over 25,000 sq. miles of German territory was taken away and reallocated to other countries.
The key terms of the Treaty
Why was the Treaty of Versailles necessary?
World War I began in 1914 and ended in 1919. Germany, supported by Austria-Hungary, Turkey, and Bulgaria, was seen as the aggressor by France, Britain, Italy, and Japan, and supported at a later stage by the United States. The U.S. was reluctant to join the war in Europe and only after two and a half years of trying to negotiate peace among the warring nations, finally joined the war on April 6th, 1917.
Four years of active fighting took a heavy toll on all countries fighting the war. Most of Europe was devastated with both sides suffering major casualties on the civilian and military side.
The major leaders of the Allied Powers that negotiated the Treaty of Versailles
The genesis of World War I
It was the assassination of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria, heir presumptive to the Austro-Hungarian throne, and his wife Sophie, on their visit to Sarajevo on June 28th, 1914, that triggered political reactions at home and among other European nations leading to World War I.
In 1914, Germany was already a major economic and military power in Europe. When Austria-Hungary pronounced the ultimatum to the Kingdom of Serbia, Russia began mobilizing its troops. Germany opposed the Russian mobilization, and on August 1st, 1914, declared war on Russia.
Outnumbered by the Germans on the Eastern Front, Russia appealed to France to join the war being an ally of the Triple Entente agreement. France had its reasons for joining the war; in 1870, France was defeated in the Franco-Prussian War and had to cede Alsace-Lorraine region to Germany. France wanted it back and responded by joining the war.
Since France was strongly fortified on its borders, Germany invaded Belgium and Luxembourg on the way to France. Belgium was a neutral country, and its invasion drew the United Kingdom into the war. By November 1914, the Ottoman Empire joined the war in support of the Central Powers.
In 1915, despite being a member of the Triple Alliance with Germany and Austria-Hungary, Italy joined the war on the Allied side, and in 1916, Romania too joined the Allies.
In all this time, the allied powers led by France and Britain appealed to the United States to join the war, but the U.S. was reluctant to be drawn into a war that it considered to be a European problem. Besides, the United States was a major supplier to Germany, France, and Britain and was not keen to impact its commercial interests by joining either side.
German submarines were indiscriminately attacking merchant ships transporting goods across the Atlantic between the U.S. and Europe and caused concern and anger in America. But it was the sinking of the American ship RMS Lusitania along with 128 American sailors that finally drew the United States to declare war on Germany and Central Powers, on April 6th, 1917.
Casualties among the warring sides
Allied Powers
Central Powers
Why was Germany unhappy over signing the Treaty of Versailles?
Every nation that fought the war had its reasons and politics, and this had its impact on the final negotiations that led to the drafting of the Treaty. Germany’s main contention was that it agreed to hold peace talks on the basis of the fourteen points suggested by President Woodrow Wilson.
Germany was totally opposed to the final terms of the treaty that was presented to them only a few days before they were forced to sign. They opposed the War Guilt clause that demanded a compensation amount that was beyond Germany’s capacity to pay, the massive loss of territory, and severe curtailment of its forces. The German pride was dented.
The events leading up to the treaty
By 1918, Germany faced domestic discontent against the war. The German army suffered major losses and faced desertion. Back home, frequent industrial strikes and the Spanish flu, which killed thousands, took their toll on the German will to fight any further.
In October 1918, they appealed to President Woodrow Wilson to negotiate peace and were willing to accept his Fourteen Point Plan, as the basis for an armistice.
France, Britain, Italy, and Japan initiated the Paris Peace Conference to end the war. Russia was kept out as they had signed an independent treaty with Germany. Japan later withdrew from the negotiations.
Germany was not part of the negotiations and came to know the terms of the Treaty just before the signing. They strongly rejected the harsh terms that called upon them to pay for “War Guilt.” Under the Treaty, Germany was to part with major territory and pay compensation that was impossible for the country to raise. The Allied powers gave Germany an ultimatum – sign the Treaty, or the Allies would invade Germany. Germany had no choice but to sign the Treaty.
It would lay the ground for what became Nazi Germany in the 1930s and ultimately lead to World War II.
Highlights of 14 Points proposed by President Woodrow Wilson
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