World War I: 52 months of hell

British Prime Minister Lloyd George (left), Italian Council President Vittorio Orlando (second left ), French Council President Georges Clemenceau (second right), and US President Woodrow Wilson on the opening day of the Conference for Peace in Paris in 1919. PHOTO | AFP ARCHIVES

What you need to know:

  • The Great War changed the world as empires collapsed, new nations were created and powerful political figures emerged, going on to set the agenda for a new order.

PARIS

World War I's deadliest and most decisive battles were fought in Europe, on the Western Front slashing through the muddy fields of northern France and Belgium.

The front line stretched more than 700 kilometres, from the North Sea to the Vosges mountains near Switzerland.

But the Great War also raged on Russian, Balkan and Italian fronts, and spread rapidly to the Middle East, colonial Africa and Asia, where Japan sided with the Allies in seizing German islands in 1914.

The United States intervened late, but decisively, in 1917, drawing in several Latin American nations. Afterwards the Middle East was entirely redrawn as the Ottoman empire collapsed.

Just weeks after war was declared, German troops marched into Belgium on August 17, 1914, crushing Belgian defences and driving a flood of refugees before them as they advanced on Paris.

As France's government fled southwest to Bordeaux, the French were driven back and suffered heavy losses, with 27,000 soldiers killed on the single day of August 22, the deadliest in the history of the French army.

General Joseph Joffre regrouped his retreating armies to fight the First Battle of the Marne on September 5-12, which succeeded in halting the German advance.

But the extent of losses this early in the conflict, more than half a million already, ruled out any chance of compromise.

Troops burrowed down into their trenches to shield themselves from a hail of artillery fire.

From that point, the conflict became a three-year war of attrition that produced little tangible result despite repeated, bloody attempts by both sides to break the stalemate.

Fighting played out quite differently on the less populated Eastern Front where sprawling expanses made trench warfare impossible.

Immediately at the outbreak of war, the Ottoman empire, allied with Germany and Austria-Hungary, closed the Bosphorus Strait to isolate Russia, which was fighting alongside Britain and France.

Russia launched a major offensive into East Prussia on August 15 but its campaign ended the following month with two heavy defeats at Tannenberg and the Mazurian Lakes.

Russia, where the state was on the verge of collapse, began a shambolic eastward retreat which continued until the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 and the humiliating treaty of Brest-Litovsk in March 1918, which stripped Russia of its western territories and a third of its population.

On the Western Front, 1915 saw a string of bloody but indecisive offensives, marked by the large-scale use of modern weapons, including machine guns and heavy artillery. German forces made the first ever use of poison gas near Ypres, in Belgium.

In the spring, the Allies -- led on the British side by a young Winston Churchill -- launched a naval and ground campaign in the Dardanelles to prise open the Bosphorus Strait.

The battle, which ended in bitter defeat for the Allies, left an enduring mark in Australia and New Zealand whose young soldiers stood out for their courage.

Russia enjoyed more success against Ottoman forces, repelling them in the Caucasus and Armenia. But hundreds of thousands of Armenians were to die in mass killings between 1915 and 1917, accused of siding with the Russians in the fighting.

British and German naval forces meanwhile faced off in the North Sea and Atlantic Ocean. To counter a maritime blockade, Germany in 1915 launched a ruthless campaign of submarine warfare which came to a head in 1917.

As a strategic move this proved decisive, but not in Germany's favour: it would prompt the Americans, outraged by the torpedoing of neutral ships or ones carrying American citizens, to enter the war in 1917.

The year 1916 went down in history as that of Verdun, the defining battle of the war for the French, and the Somme, which holds the same place in British memory.

The Germans launched the initial offensive at Verdun in February but French forces managed to contain their advance, at a huge human cost with nearly 800,000 dead and wounded.

In July, to take the strain off Verdun, British forces launched the biggest battle of the war, near the Somme river, which left 1.2 million men dead, wounded or missing, for minimal territorial gains.

In the Middle East, British forces invaded Turkish territory from the south in 1914 and went on to encourage the Arab population to rise up against their Ottoman rulers.

In 1916, Britain and France struck the Sykes-Picot accord under which they began carving out the shape of the future Middle East.

In 1917, the British launched a huge offensive in Flanders in Belgium in July. The French did the same in April at the Chemin des Dames, a crushing failure that lead to mutinies in the French army.

In October, Italian forces suffered a disastrous defeat at Caporetto, leaving 300,000 prisoners in the hands of German and Austrian forces.

In December, meanwhile, British general Edmund Allenby entered Jerusalem, after the Balfour Declaration in which Britain backed a national homeland for the Jewish people despite promises of self-determination made to the Arab population.

Freed to focus on the Western Front following the Brest-Litovsk treaty that ended Russia's involvement, German forces launched an all-out attempt to break through Allied lines before the arrival of American troops, succeeding in the spring of 1918.

They were once more within reach of the French capital, shelling Paris, when they were stopped by Allied forces placed in April under the unified command of French General Ferdinand Foch.

The Germans, who had seemed poised for victory, collapsed over the summer as the Allies reclaimed northern France with a series of counter-offensives culminating in the Second Battle of the Marne in July.

At the same time the Austro-Hungarian empire, Bulgaria and the Ottoman empire suffered a string of crushing defeats that were to force them into surrender.

On November 9 German Kaiser Wilhelm II abdicated, two days before an armistice was signed that sealed the Allies' victory.

Delirious crowds welcomed news of the armistice in France and Britain, crippled by four years of all-consuming warfare.

But it took years more, with a string of peace treaties to end its various sub-conflicts, for the Great War to come to a final end.