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Allies of World War I

The Allies of World War I, Entente Powers, or Allied Powers were a coalition of countries led by France, the United Kingdom, Russia, Italy, Japan, and the United States against the Central Powers of Germany, Austria-Hungary, the Ottoman Empire, Bulgaria, and their colonies during the First World War (1914–1918).

Allies/Entente Powers
1914–1918
Allies in Green; Central Powers in Orange
Principal Allied Powers:

Associated Allies and co-belligerents:

StatusMilitary alliance
Historical eraWorld War I
• Established
1914
• Disestablished
1918
Major European diplomatic alignments shortly before the war

By the end of the first decade of the 20th century, the major European powers were divided between the Triple Entente and the Triple Alliance. The Triple Entente was made up of France, Britain, and Russia. The Triple Alliance was originally composed of Germany, Austria–Hungary, and Italy, but Italy remained neutral in 1914. As the war progressed, each coalition added new members. Japan joined the Entente in 1914 and after proclaiming its neutrality at the beginning of the war, Italy also joined the Entente in 1915. The term "Allies" became more widely used than "Entente", although France, Britain, Russia, and Italy were also referred to as the Quadruple Entente and, together with Japan, as the Quintuple Entente.[1][2] The colonies administered by the countries that fought for the allies were also part of the Entente Powers such as British India, French Indochina, and Japanese Korea.

The United States joined near the end of the war in 1917 (the same year in which Russia withdrew from the conflict) as an "associated power" rather than an official ally. Other "associated members" included Serbia, Belgium, Montenegro, Asir, Nejd and Hasa, Portugal, Romania, Hejaz, Panama, Cuba, Greece, China, Siam (now Thailand), Brazil, Armenia, Luxembourg, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Haiti, Liberia, Bolivia, Ecuador, Uruguay, and Honduras.[3] The treaties signed at the Paris Peace Conference recognised Great Britain, France, Italy, Japan and the United States as 'the Principal Allied and Associated Powers'.[4]

Background

 
1914 Russian poster depicting the Triple Entente

When the war began in 1914, the Central Powers were opposed by the Triple Entente, formed in 1907 when the agreement between Britain and the Russian Empire complemented existing agreements between Britain, Russia, and France.

Fighting commenced when Austria invaded Serbia on 28 July 1914, purportedly in response to the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to Emperor Franz Joseph; this brought Serbia's ally Montenegro into the war on 8 August and it attacked the Austrian naval base at Cattaro, modern Kotor.[5] At the same time, German troops carried out the Schlieffen Plan, entering neutral Belgium and Luxembourg; over 95% of Belgium was occupied but the Belgian Army held their lines on the Yser Front throughout the war. This allowed Belgium to be treated as an Ally, in contrast to Luxembourg which retained control over domestic affairs but was occupied by the German military.

In the East, between 7 and 9 August the Russians entered German East Prussia on 7 August, Austrian Eastern Galicia. Japan joined the Entente by declaring war on Germany on 23 August, then Austria on 25 August.[6] On 2 September, Japanese forces surrounded the German Treaty Port of Tsingtao (now Qingdao) in China and occupied German colonies in the Pacific, including the Mariana, Caroline, and Marshall Islands.

Despite its membership of the Triple Alliance, Italy remained neutral until 23 May 1915 when it joined the Entente, declaring war on Austria but not Germany. On 17 January 1916, Montenegro capitulated and left the Entente;[7] this was offset when Germany declared war on Portugal in March 1916, while Romania commenced hostilities against Austria on 27 August.[8]

On 6 April 1917, the United States entered the war as a co-belligerent, along with the associated allies of Liberia, Siam and Greece. After the 1917 October Revolution, Russia left the Entente and agreed to a separate peace with the Central Powers with the signing of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk on 3 March 1918. Romania was forced to do the same in the May 1918 Treaty of Bucharest but on 10 November, it repudiated the Treaty and once more declared war on the Central Powers.

These changes meant the Allies who negotiated the Treaty of Versailles in 1919 included France, Britain, Italy, Japan and the US; Part One of the Treaty agreed to the establishment of the League of Nations on 25 January 1919.[9] This came into being on 16 January 1920 with Britain, France, Italy and Japan as permanent members of the Executive Council; the US Senate voted against ratification of the treaty on 19 March, thus preventing the US from joining the League.

Statistics

Statistics of the Allied Powers (1913) and enlisted soldiers during the war[10]
Country Population (millions) Land (million km2) GDP ($ billion, 1990 prices) Mobilized personnel
First Wave: 1914
Russian Empire Russia (inc. Poland) 173.2 21.7 257.7 12,000,000[11]
Finland 3.2 0.4 6.6
Total 176.4 22.1 264.3
French Republic France 39.8 0.5 138.7 8,410,000[11]
French colonies 48.3 10.7 31.5
Total 88.1 11.2 170.2
British Empire United Kingdom 46.0 0.3 226.4 6,211,922[12]
British colonies 380.2 13.5 257 1,440,437[13][14]
British Dominions 19.9 19.5 77.8 1,307,000[13]
Total 446.1 33.3 561.2 8,689,000[15]
Empire of Japan Japan 55.1 0.4 76.5 800,000[11]
Japanese colonies[16] 19.1 0.3 16.3
Total 74.2 0.7 92.8
Serbia, Montenegro and Bosnia and Herzegovina 7.0 0.2 7.2 760,000[11]
Second Wave (1915–16)
Kingdom of Italy Italy 35.6 0.3 91.3 5,615,000[11]
Italian colonies 2.0 2.0 1.3
Total 37.6 2.3 92.6
Portuguese Republic Portugal 6.0 0.1 7.4 100,000[11]
Portuguese colonies 8.7 2.4 5.2
Total 14.7 2.5 12.6
Kingdom of Romania 7.7 0.1 11.7 750,000[11]
Third Wave (1917–18)
Latin America Latin America
United States of America United States 96.5 7.8 511.6 4,355,000[11]
overseas dependencies[17] 9.8 1.8 10.6
Total 106.3 9.6 522.2
Central American states[18] 9.0 0.6 10.6
Republic of the United States of Brazil 25.0 8.5 20.3 1,713[19]
Kingdom of Greece 4.8 0.1 7.7 230,000[11]
Kingdom of Siam 8.4 0.5 7.0 1,284[12]
Republic of China 441.0 11.1 243.7
Republic of Liberia 1.5 0.1 0.9
Aggregate statistics of the Allied Powers (in 1913)[20]
Group Population (millions) Territory (million km2) GDP ($ billion)
November 1914
Allies, total 793.3 67.5 1,096.5
UK, France and Russia only 259.0 22.6 622.8
November 1916
Allies, total 853.3 72.5 1,213.4
UK, France and Russia only 259.0 22.6 622.8
November 1918
Allies, total 1,271.7 80.8 1,760.5
Percentage of world 70% 61% 64%
UK, France and US only 182.3 8.7 876.6
Percentage of world 10% 7% 32%
Central Powers[21] 156.1 6.0 383.9
World, 1913 1,810.3 133.5 2,733.9
 
World map of main colonial empires at the start of the war in 1914

Principal powers

Britain and its Empire

 
The British Empire in 1914

For much of the 19th century, Britain sought to maintain the European balance of power without formal alliances, a policy known as splendid isolation. This left it dangerously exposed as Europe divided into opposing power blocs and the 1895–1905 Conservative government negotiated first the 1902 Anglo-Japanese Alliance, then the 1904 Entente Cordiale with France.[22] The first tangible result of this shift was British support for France against Germany in the 1905 Moroccan Crisis.

The 1905–1915 Liberal government continued this re-alignment with the 1907 Anglo-Russian Convention. Like the Anglo-Japanese and Entente agreements, it focused on settling colonial disputes but by doing so paved the way for wider co-operation and allowed Britain to refocus resources in response to German naval expansion.[23]

 
HMS Dreadnought; the 1902, 1904 and 1907 agreements with Japan, France and Russia allowed Britain to refocus resources during the Anglo-German naval arms race.

Since control of Belgium allowed an opponent to threaten invasion or blockade British trade, preventing it was a long-standing British strategic interest.[d][24] Under Article VII of the 1839 Treaty of London, Britain guaranteed Belgian neutrality against aggression by any other state, by force if required.[25] Chancellor Bethmann Hollweg later dismissed this as a 'scrap of paper,' but British law officers routinely confirmed it as a binding legal obligation and its importance was well understood by Germany.[26]

The 1911 Agadir Crisis led to secret discussions between France and Britain in case of war with Germany. These agreed that within two weeks of its outbreak, a British Expeditionary Force of 100,000 men would be landed in France; in addition, the Royal Navy would be responsible for the North Sea, the Channel and protecting Northern France, with the French navy concentrated in the Mediterranean.[27] Britain was committed to support France in a war against Germany but this was not widely understood outside government or the upper ranks of the military.

As late as 1 August, a clear majority of the Liberal government and its supporters wanted to stay out of the war.[28] While Liberal leaders H. H. Asquith and Edward Grey considered Britain legally and morally committed to support France regardless, waiting until Germany triggered the 1839 Treaty provided the best chance of preserving Liberal party unity.[29]

 
Canadian Army recruitment poster

The German high command was aware entering Belgium would lead to British intervention but decided the risk was acceptable; they expected a short war while their ambassador in London claimed troubles in Ireland would prevent Britain from assisting France.[30] On 3 August, Germany demanded unimpeded progress through any part of Belgium and when this was refused, invaded early on the morning of 4 August.

This changed the situation; the invasion of Belgium consolidated political and public support for the war by presenting what appeared to be a simple moral and strategic choice.[31] The Belgians asked for assistance under the 1839 Treaty and in response, Britain declared war on Germany on 4 August 1914.[32] Although Germany's violation of Belgium neutrality was not the only cause of British entry into the war, it was used extensively in government propaganda at home and abroad to make the case for British intervention.[33] This confusion arguably persists today.

The declaration of war automatically involved all dominions and colonies and protectorates of the British Empire, many of whom made significant contributions to the Allied war effort, both in the provision of troops and civilian labourers. It was split into Crown Colonies administered by the Colonial Office in London, such as Nigeria, [e] and the self-governing Dominions of Canada, Newfoundland, New Zealand, Australia and South Africa. These controlled their own domestic policies and military expenditure but not foreign policy.

 
Indian soldiers of the 2nd Rajput Light Infantry on the Western Front, winter of 1914–15

In terms of population, the largest component (after Britain herself) was the British Raj or British India, which included modern India, Pakistan, Myanmar and Bangladesh. Unlike other colonies which came under the Colonial Office, it was governed directly by the India Office or by princes loyal to the British; it also controlled British interests in the Persian Gulf, such as the Trucial States and Oman. Over one million soldiers of the British Indian Army served in different theatres of the war, primarily France and the Middle East.

From 1914 to 1916, overall Imperial diplomatic, political and military strategy was controlled by the British War Cabinet in London; in 1917 it was superseded by the Imperial War Cabinet, which included representatives from the Dominions.[34] Under the War Cabinet were the Chief of the Imperial General Staff or CIGS, responsible for all Imperial ground forces, and the Admiralty that did the same for the Royal Navy. Theatre commanders like Douglas Haig on the Western Front or Edmund Allenby in Palestine then reported to the CIGS.

After the Indian Army, the largest individual units were the Australian Corps and Canadian Corps in France, which by 1918 were commanded by their own generals, John Monash and Arthur Currie.[35] Contingents from South Africa, New Zealand and Newfoundland served in theatres including France, Gallipoli, German East Africa and the Middle East. Australian troops separately occupied German New Guinea, with the South Africans doing the same in German South West Africa; this resulted in the Maritz rebellion by former Boers, which was quickly suppressed. After the war, New Guinea and South-West Africa became Protectorates, held until 1975 and 1990 respectively.

Russian Empire

 
Russian troops marching to the front

Between 1873 and 1887, Russia was allied with Germany and Austria-Hungary in the League of the Three Emperors, then with Germany in the 1887–1890 Reinsurance Treaty; both collapsed due to the competing interests of Austria and Russia in the Balkans. While France took advantage of this to agree the 1894 Franco-Russian Alliance, Britain viewed Russia with deep suspicion; in 1800, over 3,000 kilometres separated the Russian Empire and British India, by 1902, it was 30 km in some areas.[36] This threatened to bring the two into direct conflict, as did the long-held Russian objective of gaining control of the Bosporus Straits and with it access to the British-dominated Mediterranean Sea.[37]

 
Russian recruiting poster; the caption reads 'World on fire; Second Patriotic War'

Defeat in the 1905 Russo-Japanese War and Britain's isolation during the 1899–1902 Second Boer War led both parties to seek allies. The Anglo-Russian Convention of 1907 settled disputes in Asia and allowed the establishment of the Triple Entente with France, which at this stage was largely informal. In 1908, Austria annexed the former Ottoman province of Bosnia and Herzegovina; Russia responded by creating the Balkan League in order to prevent further Austrian expansion.[38] In the 1912–1913 First Balkan War, Serbia, Bulgaria and Greece captured most of the remaining Ottoman possessions in Europe; disputes over the division of these resulted in the Second Balkan War, in which Bulgaria was comprehensively defeated by its former allies.

Russia's industrial base and railway network had significantly improved since 1905, although from a relatively low base; in 1913, Tsar Nicholas approved an increase in the Russian Army of over 500,000 men. Although there was no formal alliance between Russia and Serbia, their close bilateral links provided Russia with a route into the crumbling Ottoman Empire, where Germany also had significant interests. Combined with the increase in Russian military strength, both Austria and Germany felt threatened by Serbian expansion; when Austria invaded Serbia on 28 July 1914, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Sazonov viewed it as an Austro-German conspiracy to end Russian influence in the Balkans.[39]

In addition to its own territory, Russia viewed itself as the defender of its fellow Slavs and on 30 July, mobilised in support of Serbia. In response, Germany declared war on Russia on 1 August, followed by Austria-Hungary on 6th; after Ottoman warships bombarded Odessa in late October, the Entente declared war on the Ottoman Empire in November 1914.[40]

French Republic

 
French bayonet charge, 1914

French defeat in the 1870–1871 Franco-Prussian War led to the loss of the two provinces of Alsace-Lorraine and the establishment of the Third Republic. The suppression of the Paris Commune by the new regime caused deep political divisions and led to a series of bitter political struggles, such as the Dreyfus affair. As a result, aggressive nationalism or Revanchism was one of the few areas to unite the French.

The loss of Alsace-Lorraine deprived France of its natural defence line on the Rhine, while it was weaker demographically than Germany, whose 1911 population was 64.9 million to 39.6 in France, which had the lowest birthrate in Europe.[41] This meant that despite their very different political systems, when Germany allowed the Reinsurance Treaty to lapse, France seized the opportunity to agree the 1894 Franco-Russian Alliance. It also replaced Germany as the primary source of financing for Russian industry and the expansion of its railway network, particularly in border areas with Germany and Austria-Hungary.[42]

 
French Zouaves of the Army of Africa

However, Russian defeat in the 1904–1905 Russo-Japanese War damaged its credibility, while Britain's isolation during the Second Boer War meant both countries sought additional allies. This resulted in the 1904 Entente Cordiale with Britain; like the 1907 Anglo-Russian Convention, for domestic British consumption it focused on settling colonial disputes but led to informal co-operation in other areas. By 1914, both the British army and Royal Navy were committed to support France in the event of war with Germany but even in the British government, very few were aware of the extent of these commitments.[43]

 
French artillery in action near Gallipoli, 1915

In response to Germany's declaration of war on Russia, France issued a general mobilisation in expectation of war on 2 August and on 3 August, Germany also declared war on France.[44] Germany's ultimatum to Belgium brought Britain into the war on 4 August, although France did not declare war on Austria-Hungary until 12 August.

As with Britain, France's colonies also became part of the war; pre-1914, French soldiers and politicians advocated using French African recruits to help compensate for France's demographic weakness.[45] From August to December 1914, the French lost nearly 300,000 dead on the Western Front, more than Britain suffered in the whole of WWII and the gaps were partly filled by colonial troops, over 500,000 of whom served on the Western Front over the period 1914–1918.[46] Colonial troops also fought at Gallipoli, occupied Togo and Kamerun in West Africa and had a minor role in the Middle East, where France was the traditional protector of Christians in the Ottoman provinces of Syria, Palestine and Lebanon.[47]

Japanese Empire

Prior to the Meiji Restoration in 1868, Japan was a semi-feudal, largely agrarian state with few natural resources and limited technology. By 1914, it had transformed itself into a modern industrial state, with a powerful military; by defeating China in the First Sino-Japanese War during 1894–1895, it established itself as the primary power in East Asia and colonised the then-unified Korea and Formosa, now modern Taiwan.

Concerned by Russian expansion in Korea and Manchuria, Britain and Japan signed the Anglo-Japanese Alliance on 30 January 1902, agreeing if either were attacked by a third party, the other would remain neutral and if attacked by two or more opponents, the other would come to its aid. This meant Japan could rely on British support in a war with Russia, if either France or Germany, which also had interests in China, decided to join them.[48] This gave Japan the reassurance needed to take on Russia in the 1905 Russo-Japanese War; victory established Japan in the Chinese province of Manchuria.

 
The Japanese carrier Wakamiya conducted the first ship-launched aerial attack in 1914.

With Japan as an ally in the Far East, John Fisher, First Sea Lord from 1904 to 1910, was able to refocus British naval resources in the North Sea to counter the threat from the Imperial German Navy. The Alliance was renewed in 1911; in 1914, Japan joined the Entente in return for German territories in the Pacific, greatly annoying the Australian government which also wanted them.[49]

On 7 August, Britain officially asked for assistance in destroying German naval units in China and Japan formally declared war on Germany on 23 August, followed by Austria-Hungary on 25th.[50] On 2 September 1914, Japanese forces surrounded the German Treaty Port of Qingdao, then known as Tsingtao, which surrendered on 7 November. The Imperial Japanese Navy simultaneously occupied German colonies in the Mariana, Caroline, and Marshall Islands, while in 1917, a Japanese naval squadron was sent to support the Allies in the Mediterranean.[51]

Japan's primary interest was in China and in January 1915, the Chinese government was presented with a secret ultimatum of Twenty-One Demands, demanding extensive economic and political concessions. While these were eventually modified, the result was a surge of anti-Japanese nationalism in China and an economic boycott of Japanese goods.[52] In addition, the other Allies now saw Japan as a threat, rather than a partner, lead to tensions first with Russia, then the US after it entered the war in April 1917. Despite protests from the other Allies, after the war Japan refused to return Qingdao and the province of Shandong to China.[53]

Kingdom of Italy

 
Antonio Salandra, Italian PM March 1914 – June 1916
 
Alpini troops marching in the snow at 3,000 m altitude, 1917

The 1882 Triple Alliance between Germany, Austria-Hungary and Italy was renewed at regular intervals, but was compromised by conflicting objectives between Italy and Austria in the Adriatic and Aegean seas. Italian nationalists referred to Austrian-held Istria (including Trieste and Fiume) and Trento as 'the lost territories', making the Alliance so controversial that the terms were kept secret until it expired in 1915.[54]

Alberto Pollio, the pro-Austrian Chief of Staff of the Italian Army, died on 1 July 1914, taking many of the prospects for Italian support with him.[55] The Italian Prime Minister Antonio Salandra argued that as the Alliance was defensive in nature, Austria's aggression against Serbia and Italy's exclusion from the decision-making process meant it was not obliged to join them.[56]

His caution was understandable because France and Britain either supplied or controlled the import of most of Italy's raw materials, including 90% of its coal.[56] Salandra described the process of choosing a side as 'sacred egoism,' but as the war was expected to end before mid-1915 at the latest, making this decision became increasingly urgent.[57] In line with Italy's obligations under the Triple Alliance, the bulk of the army was concentrated on Italy's border with France; in October, Pollio's replacement, General Luigi Cadorna, was ordered to begin moving these troops to the North-Eastern one with Austria.[58]

Under the April 1915 Treaty of London, Italy agreed to join the Entente in return for Italian-populated territories of Austria-Hungary and other concessions; in return, it declared war on Austria-Hungary in May 1915 as required, although not on Germany until 1916.[59] Italian resentment at the difference between the promises of 1915 and the actual results of the 1919 Treaty of Versailles would be powerful factors in the rise of Benito Mussolini.[60]

Affiliated state combatants

Kingdom of Serbia

In 1817, the Principality of Serbia became an autonomous province within the Ottoman Empire; with Russian support, it gained full independence after the 1877–1878 Russo-Turkish War. Many Serbs viewed Russia as protector of the South Slavs in general but also specifically against Bulgaria, where Russian objectives increasingly collided with Bulgarian nationalism.[61]

When Austria annexed Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1908, Russia responded by creating the Balkan League to prevent further Austrian expansion.[38] Austria viewed Serbia with hostility partly due to its links with Russia, whose claim to be the protector of South Slavs extended to those within the Austro-Hungarian Empire, such as the Czechs and Slovaks. Serbia also potentially gave Russia the ability to achieve their long-held objective of capturing Constantinople and the Dardanelles.[37]

 
The Serbian Army in retreat, 1915

Austria backed the Albanian revolt of 1910 and the idea of a Greater Albania, since this would prevent Serbian access to the Austrian-controlled Adriatic Sea.[62] Another Albanian revolt in 1912 exposed the weakness of the Ottoman Empire and led to the 1912–1913 First Balkan War, with Serbia, Montenegro, Bulgaria and Greece capturing most of the remaining Ottoman possessions in Europe. Disputes over the division of these resulted in the Second Balkan War, in which Bulgaria was comprehensively defeated by its former allies.

As a result of the 1913 Treaty of Bucharest, Serbia increased its territory by 100% and its population by 64%.[63] However, it now faced a hostile Austria-Hungary, a resentful Bulgaria and opposition by Albanian nationalists. Germany too had ambitions in the Ottoman Empire, the centrepiece being the planned Berlin–Baghdad railway, with Serbia the only section not controlled by a pro-German state.

The exact role played by Serbian officials in the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand is still debated but despite complying with most of their demands, Austria-Hungary invaded on 28 July 1914. While Serbia successfully repulsed the Austro-Hungarian army in 1914, it was exhausted by the two Balkan Wars and unable to replace its losses of men and equipment. In 1915, Bulgaria joined the Central Powers and by the end of the year, a combined Bulgar-Austrian-German army occupied most of Serbia. Between 1914 and 1918, Serbia suffered the greatest proportional losses of any combatant, with over 25% of all those mobilised becoming casualties; including civilians and deaths from disease, over 1.2 million died, nearly 30% of the entire population.

Kingdom of Belgium

In 1830, the southern provinces of the Netherlands broke away to form the Kingdom of Belgium and their independence was confirmed by the 1839 Treaty of London. Article VII of the Treaty required Belgium to remain perpetually neutral and committed Austria, France, Germany and Russia to guarantee that against aggression by any other state, including the signatories.[64]

 
The Yser Front, 1917 by Belgian artist Georges-Émile Lebacq
 
Belgian Congolese Force Publique troops in German East Africa, 1916

While the French and German militaries accepted Germany would almost certainly violate Belgian neutrality in the event of war, the extent of that was unclear. The original Schlieffen Plan only required a limited incursion into the Belgian Ardennes, rather than a full-scale invasion; in September 1911, the Belgian Foreign Minister told a British Embassy official they would not call for assistance if the Germans limited themselves to that.[43] While neither Britain or France could allow Germany to occupy Belgium unopposed, a Belgian refusal to ask for help would complicate matters for the British Liberal government, which contained a significant isolationist element.

However, the key German objective was to avoid war on two fronts; France had to be defeated before Russia could fully mobilise and give time for German forces to be transferred to the East. The growth of the Russian railway network and increase in speed of mobilisation made rapid victory over France even more important; to accommodate the additional 170,000 troops approved by the 1913 Army Bill, the 'incursion' now became a full-scale invasion. The Germans accepted the risk of British intervention; in common with most of Europe, they expected it to be a short war while their London Ambassador claimed civil war in Ireland would prevent Britain from assisting its Entente partners.[65]

On 3 August, a German ultimatum demanded unimpeded progress through any part of Belgium, which was refused. Early on the morning of 4 August, the Germans invaded and the Belgian government called for British assistance under the 1839 Treaty; by the end of 1914, over 95% of the country was occupied but the Belgian Army held their lines on the Yser Front throughout the war.

In the Belgian Congo, 25,000 Congolese troops plus an estimated 260,000 porters joined British forces in the 1916 East African Campaign.[66] By 1917, they controlled the western part of German East Africa which would become the Belgian League of Nations Mandate of Ruanda-Urundi or modern-day Rwanda and Burundi.[67]

Kingdom of Greece

 
A unit of the National Defence Army Corps on its way to the front in 1918

Greece almost doubled in size as a result of the Balkan Wars of 1912 and 1913, but the success masked deep divisions within the political elite. In 1908, the island of Crete, formally part of the Ottoman Empire but administered by Greek officials, declared union with Greece, led by the charismatic nationalist Eleftherios Venizelos. A year later, young army officers formed the Military League to advocate for an aggressive and expansionist foreign policy; with their backing, Venizelos won a majority in the 1910 Parliamentary elections, followed by another in 1912.[68] He had effectively broken the power of the pre-1910 political class and his position was then further strengthened by success in the Balkan Wars.

In 1913, the Greek monarch George I was assassinated; he was succeeded by his son Constantine who had attended Heidelberg University, served in a Prussian regiment and married Sophia of Prussia, sister of Emperor William II. These links and a belief the Central Powers would win the war combined to make Constantine pro-German.[69] Venizelos himself favoured the Entente, partly due to their ability to block the maritime trade routes required for Greek imports.

 
Colonel Christodoulou of the National Defence Army Corps interrogates Bulgarian prisoners, September 1918

Other issues adding complexity to this decision included disputes with Bulgaria and Serbia over the regions of Thrace and Macedonia as well as control of the Aegean Islands. Greece captured most of the islands during the Balkan Wars but Italy occupied the Dodecanese in 1912 and was in no hurry to give them back, while the Ottomans demanded the return of many others.[70] In general, the Triple Entente favoured Greece, the Triple Alliance backed the Ottomans; Greece ultimately gained the vast majority but Italy did not cede the Dodecanese until 1947, while others remain disputed even today.

As a result, Greece initially remained neutral but in March 1915, the Entente offered concessions to join the Dardanelles campaign. Arguments over whether to accept led to the National Schism, with an Entente-backed administration under Venizelos in Crete, and a Royalist one led by Constantine in Athens that supported the Central Powers.[69]

In September 1915, Bulgaria joined the Central Powers; in October, Venizelos allowed Entente forces to land at Thessaloniki or Salonica to support the Serbs, although they were too late to prevent their defeat. In August 1916, Bulgarian troops advanced into Greek-held Macedonia and Constantine ordered the army not to resist; anger at this led to a coup and he was eventually forced into exile in June 1917. A new national government under Venizelos joined the Entente, while the Greek National Defence Army Corps fought with the Allies on the Macedonian front.

Kingdom of Montenegro

 
Nicholas accepts the surrender of Scutari, April 1913; Montenegro's major gain from the Balkan War, it was relinquished several months later.

Unlike Serbia, with whom it shared close cultural and political connections, the Kingdom of Montenegro gained little from its participation in the 1912–1913 Balkan Wars. The main Montenegrin offensive was in Ottoman-controlled Albania, where it suffered heavy losses during the seven month Siege of Scutari. Austria-Hungary opposed Serb or Montenegrin control of Albania, since it provided access to the Adriatic Sea; despite Scutari's surrender, Montenegro was forced to relinquish it by the 1913 Treaty of London and it became capital of the short-lived Principality of Albania.[71] This was largely an Austrian creation; the new ruler, William, Prince of Albania, was a German who was forced into exile in September, only seven months after taking up his new position and later served with the Imperial German Army.[72]

 
Montenegrin soldiers leaving for the front, October 1914

In addition to the lack of substantive gains from the Balkan Wars, there were long-running internal divisions between those who like Nicholas I preferred an independent Montenegro and those who advocated union with Serbia. In July 1914, Montenegro was not only militarily and economically exhausted, but also faced a multitude of political, economic and social issues.[73]

At meetings held in March 1914, Austria-Hungary and Germany agreed union with Serbia must be prevented; Montenegro could either remain independent or be divided, its coastal areas becoming part of Albania, while the rest could join Serbia.[73]

Nicholas seriously considered neutrality as a way to preserve his dynasty and on 31 July notified the Russian Ambassador Montenegro would only respond to an Austrian attack. He also held discussions with Austria, proposing neutrality or even active support in return for territorial concessions in Albania.[74]

However, close links between the Serbian and Montenegrin militaries as well as popular sentiment meant there was little support for remaining neutral, especially after Russia joined the war; on 1 August, the National Assembly declared war on Austria-Hungary in fulfilment of its obligations to Serbia. After some initial success, in January 1916, the Montenegrin Army was forced to surrender to an Austro-Hungarian force.

Beda Sultanate

The Beda Sultanate was invaded by Ottoman forces in February 1915 and March 1916.[75] Britain assisted the Beda Sultanate in defeating the Ottoman invasions by sending arms and ammunition.[76]

Idrisid Emirate of Asir

The Idrisid Emirate of Asir participated in the Arab Revolt. Its Emir, Muhammad ibn Ali al-Idrisi, signed an agreement with the British and joined the Allies in May 1915.

Emirate of Nejd and Hasa

The Emirate of Nejd and Hasa launched a failed offensive against the Ottoman aligned Emirate of Jabal Shammar in January 1915. It then agreed to enter the war as an ally of Britain in the Treaty of Darin on 26 December 1915.[77]

Kingdom of Romania

 
Romanian 250 mm Negrei Model 1916 mortar at the National Military Museum
 
Vlaicu III
 
Romanian troops at Mărășești

Equal status with the main Entente Powers was one of the primary conditions for Romania's entry into the War. The Powers officially recognised this status through the 1916 Treaty of Bucharest.[78] Romania fought on three of the four European Fronts: Eastern, Balkan and Italian, fielding in total over 1,200,000 troops.[79]

Romanian military industry was mainly focused on converting various fortification guns into field and anti-aircraft artillery. Up to 334 German 53 mm Fahrpanzer guns, 93 French 57 mm Hotchkiss guns, 66 Krupp 150 mm guns, and dozens more 210 mm guns were mounted on Romanian-built carriages and transformed into mobile field artillery, with 45 Krupp 75 mm guns and 132 Hotchkiss 57 mm guns being transformed into anti-aircraft artillery. The Romanians also upgraded 120 German Krupp 105 mm howitzers, the result being the most effective field howitzer in Europe at that time. Romania even managed to design and build from scratch its own model of mortar, the 250 mm Negrei Model 1916.[80]

Other Romanian technological assets include the building of Vlaicu III, the world's first aircraft made of metal.[81] The Romanian Navy possessed the largest warships on the Danube. They were a class of four river monitors, built locally at the Galați shipyard using parts manufactured in Austria-Hungary. The first one launched was Lascăr Catargiu, in 1907.[82][83] The Romanian monitors displaced almost 700 tons, were armed with three 120 mm naval guns in three turrets, two 120 mm naval howitzers, four 47 mm anti-aircraft guns and two 6.5 machine guns.[84] The monitors took part in the Battle of Turtucaia and the First Battle of Cobadin. The Romanian-designed Schneider 150 mm Model 1912 howitzer was considered one of the most modern field guns on the Western Front.[85]

Romania's entry into the War in August 1916 provoked major changes for the Germans. General Erich von Falkenhayn was dismissed and sent to command the Central Powers forces in Romania, which enabled Hindenburg's subsequent ascension to power.[8] Due to having to fight against all of the Central Powers on the longest front in Europe (1,600 km) and with little foreign help (only 50,000 Russians aided 650,000 Romanians in 1916),[86] the Romanian capital was conquered that December. Vlaicu III was also captured and shipped to Germany, being last seen in 1942.[87] The Romanian administration established a new capital at Iași and continued to fight on the Allied side in 1917.[88] Despite being relatively short, the Romanian campaign of 1916 provided considerable respite for the Western Allies, as the Germans ceased all their other offensive operations in order to deal with Romania.[89] After suffering a tactical defeat against the Romanians (aided by Russians) in July 1917 at Mărăști, the Central Powers launched two counterattacks, at Mărășești and Oituz. The German offensive at Mărășești was soundly defeated, with German prisoners later telling their Romanian captors that German casualties were extremely heavy, and that they "had not encountered such stiff resistance since the battles of Somme and Verdun".[90] The Austro-Hungarian offensive at Oituz also failed. On 22 September, the Austro-Hungarian Enns-class river monitor SMS Inn was sunk by a Romanian mine near Brăila.[91][92] After Russia signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk and dropped out of the War, Romania was left surrounded by the Central Powers and eventually signed a similar treaty on 7 May 1918. Despite being forced to cede land to Austria-Hungary and Bulgaria, Romania ended up with a net gain in territory due to the Union with Bessarabia. On 10 November, Romania re-entered the War and fought a war with Hungary that lasted until August 1919.

Republic of the United States of Brazil

 
Brazilian soldiers in World War I

Brazil entered the war in 1917 after the United States intervened on the basis of Germany's unrestricted submarine warfare sinking its merchant ships, which Brazil also cited as a reason to enter the war fighting against Germany and the Central Powers. The First Brazilian Republic sent the Naval Division in War Operations that joined the British fleet in Gibraltar and made the first Brazilian naval effort in international waters. In compliance with the commitments made at the Inter-American Conference, held in Paris from 20 November to 3 December 1917, the Brazilian Government sent a medical mission composed of civilian and military surgeons to work in field hospitals of the European theatre, a contingent of sergeants and officers to serve with the French army; Airmen from the Army and Navy to join the Royal Air Force, and the employment of part of the Fleet, primarily in the anti-submarine war.

Co-belligerents: the United States

The United States declared war on Germany in April 1917 on the grounds that Germany violated US neutrality by attacking international shipping with its unrestricted submarine warfare campaign.[93] The remotely connected Zimmermann Telegram of the same period, within which the Germans promised to help Mexico regain some of its territory lost to the U.S nearly seven decades before in the event of the United States entering the war, was also a contributing factor. The US entered the war as an "associated power", rather than a formal ally of France and the United Kingdom, in order to avoid "foreign entanglements".[94] Although the Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria severed relations with the United States, neither declared war,[95] nor did Austria-Hungary. Eventually, however, the United States also declared war on Austria-Hungary in December 1917, predominantly to help hard-pressed Italy.

Non-state combatants

Three non-state combatants, which voluntarily fought with the Allies and seceded from the constituent states of the Central Powers at the end of the war, were allowed to participate as winning nations to the peace treaties:[citation needed]

Additionally, there were also several Kurdish rebellions during World War I. Most of these, except for the uprisings of August 1917, were not supported by any of the Allied powers.[99]

Leaders

 
Military leaders of World War I: Alphonse Jacques de Dixmude (Belgium), Armando Diaz (Italy), Ferdinand Foch (France), John J. Pershing (United States), and David Beatty (United Kingdom)
 
Marshal Foch's Victory-Harmony Banner

Serbia

Montenegro

Russia (1914–1917)

 
Russian High Command

Belgium

France

 
President Raymond Poincaré and King George V, 1915

Britain and the British Empire

United Kingdom

 

Dominion of Canada

Commonwealth of Australia

British India

Union of South Africa

Dominion of New Zealand

Dominion of Newfoundland

Japan

Italy (1915–1918)

Romania (1916–1918)

Portugal (1916–1918)

Greece (1916/17–1918)

 
Greek war poster
  • Constantine I: King of Greece, he retired from the throne in June 1917, due to Allied pressure, without formally abdicating.
  • Alexander: King of Greece, he became King in 1917 after his father and brother retired from the throne
  • Eleftherios Venizelos: Prime minister of Greece after 13 June 1917
  • Panagiotis Danglis: Greek general of the Hellenic Army

United States (1916–1918)

 
USAAS recruiting poster, 1918
 
The use of naval convoys to transport US troops to France, 1917

Siam (Thailand) (1917–1918)

 
The Siamese Expeditionary Forces in Paris, 1919

Brazil (1917–1918)

 
Braziliian ship Cruzador Bahia

Armenia (1917–1918)

Czechoslovakia (1918)

Personnel and casualties

 
A pie-chart showing the military deaths of the Allied Powers

These are estimates of the cumulative number of different personnel in uniform 1914–1918, including army, navy and auxiliary forces. At any one time, the various forces were much smaller. Only a fraction of them were frontline combat troops. The numbers do not reflect the length of time each country was involved.

World War I personnel and casualties, by country
Allied power Mobilized personnel Military fatalities Wounded in action Casualties, Total Casualties, % of total mobilised
Australia 412,953[13] 61,928 (14.99%)[f] 152,171 214,099 52%
Belgium 267,000[11] 38,172 (14.29%)[g] 44,686 82,858 31%
Brazil 1,713[106][page needed] 100 (5.84%)[107] 0 100 5.84%
Canada 628,964[13] 64,944 (10.32%)[h] 149,732 214,676 34%
France 8,410,000[11] 1,397,800 (16.62%)[i] 4,266,000 5,663,800 67%
Greece 230,000[11] 26,000 (11.30%)[j] 21,000 47,000 20%
India 1,440,437[13] 74,187 (5.15%)[k] 69,214 143,401 10%
Italy 5,615,000[11] 651,010 (11.59%)[l] 953,886 1,604,896 29%
Japan 800,000[11] 415 (0.05%)[m] 907 1,322 <1%
Monaco 80[113] 8 (10.00%)[113] 0 8[113] 10%
Montenegro 50,000[11] 3,000 (6.00%) 10,000 13,000 26%
Nepal 200,000[114] 30,670 (15.33%) 21,009 49,823 25%
New Zealand 128,525[13] 18,050 (14.04%)[n] 41,317 59,367 46%
Portugal 100,000[11] 7,222 (7.22%)[o] 13,751 20,973 21%
Romania 750,000[11] 250,000 (33.33%)[p] 120,000 370,000 49%
Russia 12,000,000[11] 1,811,000 (15.09%)[q] 4,950,000 6,761,000 56%
Serbia 707,343[11] 275,000 (38.87%)[r] 133,148 408,148 58%
Siam 1,284[12][page needed] 19 (1.48%) 0 19 2%
South Africa 136,070[13] 9,463 (6.95%)[s] 12,029 21,492 16%
United Kingdom 6,211,922[12] 886,342 (14.26%)[t] 1,665,749 2,552,091 41%
United States 4,355,000[11] 53,402 (1.23%)[u] 205,690 259,092 5.9%
Total 42,244,409 5,741,389 12,925,833 18,744,547 49%

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ From April 1915
  2. ^ After the abdication of Emperor Nicholas II in the February Revolution of 1917, the new provisional Government kept Russia in the war, forming a Russian Republic in September. The October Revolution the same year led to Russia's surrender as signed by the Russian Soviet Republic, with the country degenerating into the Russian Civil War.
  3. ^ From 6 April 1917, as an Associated Power
  4. ^ The consequences were demonstrated when Germany controlled these areas during 1940–1944.
  5. ^ Others included Gibraltar, Cyprus, Malta, East Africa Protectorate, Nyasaland, Northern and Southern Rhodesia, the Uganda Protectorate, the Gold Coast, Nigeria, British Honduras, the Falkland Islands, British Guiana, the British West Indies, British Malaya, North Borneo, Ceylon and Hong Kong.
  6. ^ Australia casualties
    Included in total are 55,000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds[101]-.
    The Commonwealth War Graves Commission Annual Report 2005–2006 is the source of total military dead.[102]
    Totals include 2,005 military deaths during 1919–21[103]–. The 1922 War Office report listed 59,330 Army war dead.[104]
  7. ^ Belgium casualties
    Included in total are 35,000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds[101] Figures include 13,716 killed and 24,456 missing up until Nov.11, 1918. "These figures are approximate only, the records being incomplete." .[105]
  8. ^ Canada casualties
    Included in total are 53,000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds.[101]
    The Commonwealth War Graves Commission Annual Report 2005–2006 is the source of total military dead.[102]
    Totals include 3,789 military deaths during 1919–21 and 150 Merchant Navy deaths[103]–. The losses of Newfoundland are listed separately on this table. The 1922 War Office report listed 56,639 Army war dead.[104]
  9. ^ France casualties
    Included in total are 1,186,000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds.[101] Totals include the deaths of 71,100 French colonial troops. [108]-Figures include war related military deaths of 28,600 from 11/11/1918 to 6/1/1919.[108]
  10. ^ Greece casualties
    Jean Bujac in a campaign history of the Greek Army in World War One listed 8,365 combat related deaths and 3,255 missing,[109] The Soviet researcher Boris Urlanis estimated total dead of 26,000 including 15,000 military deaths due disease[110]
  11. ^ India casualties
    British India included present-day India, Pakistan and Bangladesh.
    Included in total are 27,000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds.[101]
    The Commonwealth War Graves Commission Annual Report 2005–2006 is the source of total military dead.[102]
    Totals include 15,069 military deaths during 1919–21 and 1,841 Canadian Merchant Navy dead.[103] The 1922 War Office report listed 64,454 Army war dead[104]
  12. ^ Italy casualties
    Included in total are 433,000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds[101]
    Figures of total military dead are from a 1925 Italian report using official data.[111][page needed]
  13. ^ War dead figure is from a 1991 history of the Japanese Army.[112]
  14. ^ New Zealand casualties
    Included in total are 14,000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds.[101]
    The Commonwealth War Graves Commission Annual Report 2005–2006 is the source of total military dead.[102]
    Totals include 702 military deaths during 1919–21.[103] The 1922 War Office report listed 16,711 Army war dead.[104]
  15. ^ Portugal casualties
    Figures include the following killed and died of other causes up until Jan.1, 1920; 1,689 in France and 5,332 in Africa. Figures do not include an additional 12,318 listed as missing and POW.[115]
  16. ^ Romania casualties
    Military dead is "The figure reported by the Rumanian Government in reply to a questionnaire from the International Labour Office".[116] Included in total are 177,000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds.[101]
  17. ^ Russia casualties
    Included in total are 1,451,000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds.[101] The estimate of total Russian military losses was made by the Soviet researcher Boris Urlanis.[117]
  18. ^ Serbia casualties
    Included in total are 165,000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds.[101] The estimate of total combined Serbian and Montenegrin military losses of 278,000 was made by the Soviet researcher Boris Urlanis[118]
  19. ^ South Africa casualties
    Included in total are 5,000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds[101]
    The Commonwealth War Graves Commission Annual Report 2005–2006 is the source of total military dead.[102]
    Totals include 380 military deaths during 1919–2115. The 1922 War Office report listed 7,121 Army war dead.[104]
  20. ^ UK and Crown Colonies casualties
    Included in total are 624,000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds.[101]
    The Commonwealth War Graves Commission Annual Report 2005–2006 is the source of total military dead.[102]
    Military dead total includes 34,663 deaths during 1919–21 and 13,632 British Merchant Navy deaths.[103] The 1922 War Office report listed 702,410 war dead for the UK,[104] 507 from "Other colonies"[104] and the Royal Navy (32,287).[119]
    The British Merchant Navy losses of 14,661 were listed separately;[119] The 1922 War Office report detailed the deaths of 310 military personnel due to air and sea bombardment of the UK.[120]
  21. ^ United States casualties
    Official military war deaths listed by the US Dept. of Defense for the period ending Dec. 31, 1918 are 116,516; which includes 53,402 battle deaths and 63,114 other deaths.[1] 25 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine, The US Coast Guard lost an additional 192 dead .[121]

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  93. ^ "First World War.com – Primary Documents – U.S. Declaration of War with Germany, 2 April 1917". from the original on 16 May 2008. Retrieved 12 May 2008.
  94. ^ Tucker&Roberts pp. 1232, 1264, 1559
  95. ^ Tucker&Roberts p. 1559
  96. ^ Malek, Yusuf (1935). The British Betrayal of the Assyrians. Assyrian International News Agency.
  97. ^ Paul Bartrop, Encountering Genocide: Personal Accounts from Victims, Perpetrators, and Witnesses, ABC-CLIO, 2014
  98. ^ Naayem, Shall This Nation Die?, p. 281
  99. ^ Eskander, Saad. "Britain's Policy Towards The Kurdish Question, 1915–1923" (PDF). etheses.lse.ac.uk. p. 45.
  100. ^ first Canadian to attain the rank of full general
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  102. ^ a b c d e f CWGC 2006.
  103. ^ a b c d e CWGC 2012.
  104. ^ a b c d e f g War Office Statistics 2006, p. 237.
  105. ^ War Office Statistics 2006, p. 352.
  106. ^ Donato 1987.
  107. ^ Francisco Verras; "D.N.O.G.: contribuicao da Marinha Brasileira na Grande Guerra" ("DNOG; the role of Brazilian Navy in the Great War") (in Portuguese) "A Noite" Ed. 1920
  108. ^ a b Huber 1931, p. 414.
  109. ^ Bujac 1930, p. 339.
  110. ^ Urlanis 2003, p. 160.
  111. ^ Mortara 1925.
  112. ^ Harries & Harries 1991, p. 111.
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  121. ^ Clodfelter 2002, p. 481.

Bibliography

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  • Esposito, Vincent J. The West Point Atlas of American Wars: 1900–1918 (1997); despite the title covers entire war;
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  • Gooch, G. P. Recent Revelations Of European Diplomacy (1940), 475pp; summarises memoirs of major participants
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  • Pope, Stephen and Wheal, Elizabeth-Anne, eds. The Macmillan Dictionary of the First World War (1995)
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allies, world, world, coalition, entente, powers, allied, powers, were, coalition, countries, france, united, kingdom, russia, italy, japan, united, states, against, central, powers, germany, austria, hungary, ottoman, empire, bulgaria, their, colonies, during. For the World War II coalition see Allies of World War II The Allies of World War I Entente Powers or Allied Powers were a coalition of countries led by France the United Kingdom Russia Italy Japan and the United States against the Central Powers of Germany Austria Hungary the Ottoman Empire Bulgaria and their colonies during the First World War 1914 1918 Allies Entente Powers1914 1918Allies in Green Central Powers in Orange Principal Allied Powers France Italy a Japan Russia b United Kingdom United States c Associated Allies and co belligerents 1914 Serbia India New Zealand Canada Newfoundland Australia Belgium Montenegro Luxembourg South Africa1915 AsirNejd and Hasa1916 Portugal Hejaz Romania1917 GreeceChinaSiam Brazil1918 Czechoslovakia ArmeniaStatusMilitary allianceHistorical eraWorld War I Established1914 Disestablished1918Preceded by Succeeded byAnglo Portuguese AllianceTreaty of London 1915 Franco Russian AllianceAnglo Japanese AllianceEntente CordialeAnglo Russian entente of 1907Franco Japanese Treaty of 1907 Anglo Portuguese AllianceAnglo Japanese AllianceEntente CordialeFranco Polish alliance 1921 Little EntenteMajor European diplomatic alignments shortly before the war By the end of the first decade of the 20th century the major European powers were divided between the Triple Entente and the Triple Alliance The Triple Entente was made up of France Britain and Russia The Triple Alliance was originally composed of Germany Austria Hungary and Italy but Italy remained neutral in 1914 As the war progressed each coalition added new members Japan joined the Entente in 1914 and after proclaiming its neutrality at the beginning of the war Italy also joined the Entente in 1915 The term Allies became more widely used than Entente although France Britain Russia and Italy were also referred to as the Quadruple Entente and together with Japan as the Quintuple Entente 1 2 The colonies administered by the countries that fought for the allies were also part of the Entente Powers such as British India French Indochina and Japanese Korea The United States joined near the end of the war in 1917 the same year in which Russia withdrew from the conflict as an associated power rather than an official ally Other associated members included Serbia Belgium Montenegro Asir Nejd and Hasa Portugal Romania Hejaz Panama Cuba Greece China Siam now Thailand Brazil Armenia Luxembourg Guatemala Nicaragua Costa Rica Haiti Liberia Bolivia Ecuador Uruguay and Honduras 3 The treaties signed at the Paris Peace Conference recognised Great Britain France Italy Japan and the United States as the Principal Allied and Associated Powers 4 Contents 1 Background 2 Statistics 3 Principal powers 3 1 Britain and its Empire 3 2 Russian Empire 3 3 French Republic 3 4 Japanese Empire 3 5 Kingdom of Italy 4 Affiliated state combatants 4 1 Kingdom of Serbia 4 2 Kingdom of Belgium 4 3 Kingdom of Greece 4 4 Kingdom of Montenegro 4 5 Beda Sultanate 4 6 Idrisid Emirate of Asir 4 7 Emirate of Nejd and Hasa 4 8 Kingdom of Romania 4 9 Republic of the United States of Brazil 5 Co belligerents the United States 6 Non state combatants 7 Leaders 7 1 Serbia 7 2 Montenegro 7 3 Russia 1914 1917 7 4 Belgium 7 5 France 7 6 Britain and the British Empire 7 6 1 United Kingdom 7 6 2 Dominion of Canada 7 6 3 Commonwealth of Australia 7 6 4 British India 7 6 5 Union of South Africa 7 6 6 Dominion of New Zealand 7 6 7 Dominion of Newfoundland 7 7 Japan 7 8 Italy 1915 1918 7 9 Romania 1916 1918 7 10 Portugal 1916 1918 7 11 Greece 1916 17 1918 7 12 United States 1916 1918 7 13 Siam Thailand 1917 1918 7 14 Brazil 1917 1918 7 15 Armenia 1917 1918 7 16 Czechoslovakia 1918 8 Personnel and casualties 9 See also 10 Footnotes 11 References 12 BibliographyBackground Edit 1914 Russian poster depicting the Triple Entente When the war began in 1914 the Central Powers were opposed by the Triple Entente formed in 1907 when the agreement between Britain and the Russian Empire complemented existing agreements between Britain Russia and France Fighting commenced when Austria invaded Serbia on 28 July 1914 purportedly in response to the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand heir to Emperor Franz Joseph this brought Serbia s ally Montenegro into the war on 8 August and it attacked the Austrian naval base at Cattaro modern Kotor 5 At the same time German troops carried out the Schlieffen Plan entering neutral Belgium and Luxembourg over 95 of Belgium was occupied but the Belgian Army held their lines on the Yser Front throughout the war This allowed Belgium to be treated as an Ally in contrast to Luxembourg which retained control over domestic affairs but was occupied by the German military The Council of Four from left to right David Lloyd George Vittorio Emanuele Orlando Georges Clemenceau and Woodrow Wilson in Versailles 1919 In the East between 7 and 9 August the Russians entered German East Prussia on 7 August Austrian Eastern Galicia Japan joined the Entente by declaring war on Germany on 23 August then Austria on 25 August 6 On 2 September Japanese forces surrounded the German Treaty Port of Tsingtao now Qingdao in China and occupied German colonies in the Pacific including the Mariana Caroline and Marshall Islands Despite its membership of the Triple Alliance Italy remained neutral until 23 May 1915 when it joined the Entente declaring war on Austria but not Germany On 17 January 1916 Montenegro capitulated and left the Entente 7 this was offset when Germany declared war on Portugal in March 1916 while Romania commenced hostilities against Austria on 27 August 8 On 6 April 1917 the United States entered the war as a co belligerent along with the associated allies of Liberia Siam and Greece After the 1917 October Revolution Russia left the Entente and agreed to a separate peace with the Central Powers with the signing of the Treaty of Brest Litovsk on 3 March 1918 Romania was forced to do the same in the May 1918 Treaty of Bucharest but on 10 November it repudiated the Treaty and once more declared war on the Central Powers These changes meant the Allies who negotiated the Treaty of Versailles in 1919 included France Britain Italy Japan and the US Part One of the Treaty agreed to the establishment of the League of Nations on 25 January 1919 9 This came into being on 16 January 1920 with Britain France Italy and Japan as permanent members of the Executive Council the US Senate voted against ratification of the treaty on 19 March thus preventing the US from joining the League Statistics EditStatistics of the Allied Powers 1913 and enlisted soldiers during the war 10 Country Population millions Land million km2 GDP billion 1990 prices Mobilized personnelFirst Wave 1914Russian Empire Russia inc Poland 173 2 21 7 257 7 12 000 000 11 Finland 3 2 0 4 6 6Total 176 4 22 1 264 3French Republic France 39 8 0 5 138 7 8 410 000 11 French colonies 48 3 10 7 31 5Total 88 1 11 2 170 2British Empire United Kingdom 46 0 0 3 226 4 6 211 922 12 British colonies 380 2 13 5 257 1 440 437 13 14 British Dominions 19 9 19 5 77 8 1 307 000 13 Total 446 1 33 3 561 2 8 689 000 15 Empire of Japan Japan 55 1 0 4 76 5 800 000 11 Japanese colonies 16 19 1 0 3 16 3Total 74 2 0 7 92 8Serbia Montenegro and Bosnia and Herzegovina 7 0 0 2 7 2 760 000 11 Second Wave 1915 16 Kingdom of Italy Italy 35 6 0 3 91 3 5 615 000 11 Italian colonies 2 0 2 0 1 3Total 37 6 2 3 92 6Portuguese Republic Portugal 6 0 0 1 7 4 100 000 11 Portuguese colonies 8 7 2 4 5 2Total 14 7 2 5 12 6Kingdom of Romania 7 7 0 1 11 7 750 000 11 Third Wave 1917 18 Latin America Latin AmericaUnited States of America United States 96 5 7 8 511 6 4 355 000 11 overseas dependencies 17 9 8 1 8 10 6Total 106 3 9 6 522 2Central American states 18 9 0 0 6 10 6Republic of the United States of Brazil 25 0 8 5 20 3 1 713 19 Kingdom of Greece 4 8 0 1 7 7 230 000 11 Kingdom of Siam 8 4 0 5 7 0 1 284 12 Republic of China 441 0 11 1 243 7Republic of Liberia 1 5 0 1 0 9Aggregate statistics of the Allied Powers in 1913 20 Group Population millions Territory million km2 GDP billion November 1914Allies total 793 3 67 5 1 096 5UK France and Russia only 259 0 22 6 622 8November 1916Allies total 853 3 72 5 1 213 4UK France and Russia only 259 0 22 6 622 8November 1918Allies total 1 271 7 80 8 1 760 5Percentage of world 70 61 64 UK France and US only 182 3 8 7 876 6Percentage of world 10 7 32 Central Powers 21 156 1 6 0 383 9World 1913 1 810 3 133 5 2 733 9 World map of main colonial empires at the start of the war in 1914Principal powers EditBritain and its Empire Edit Main articles British entry into World War I History of the United Kingdom during the First World War and Splendid isolation The British Empire in 1914 For much of the 19th century Britain sought to maintain the European balance of power without formal alliances a policy known as splendid isolation This left it dangerously exposed as Europe divided into opposing power blocs and the 1895 1905 Conservative government negotiated first the 1902 Anglo Japanese Alliance then the 1904 Entente Cordiale with France 22 The first tangible result of this shift was British support for France against Germany in the 1905 Moroccan Crisis The 1905 1915 Liberal government continued this re alignment with the 1907 Anglo Russian Convention Like the Anglo Japanese and Entente agreements it focused on settling colonial disputes but by doing so paved the way for wider co operation and allowed Britain to refocus resources in response to German naval expansion 23 HMS Dreadnought the 1902 1904 and 1907 agreements with Japan France and Russia allowed Britain to refocus resources during the Anglo German naval arms race Since control of Belgium allowed an opponent to threaten invasion or blockade British trade preventing it was a long standing British strategic interest d 24 Under Article VII of the 1839 Treaty of London Britain guaranteed Belgian neutrality against aggression by any other state by force if required 25 Chancellor Bethmann Hollweg later dismissed this as a scrap of paper but British law officers routinely confirmed it as a binding legal obligation and its importance was well understood by Germany 26 The 1911 Agadir Crisis led to secret discussions between France and Britain in case of war with Germany These agreed that within two weeks of its outbreak a British Expeditionary Force of 100 000 men would be landed in France in addition the Royal Navy would be responsible for the North Sea the Channel and protecting Northern France with the French navy concentrated in the Mediterranean 27 Britain was committed to support France in a war against Germany but this was not widely understood outside government or the upper ranks of the military As late as 1 August a clear majority of the Liberal government and its supporters wanted to stay out of the war 28 While Liberal leaders H H Asquith and Edward Grey considered Britain legally and morally committed to support France regardless waiting until Germany triggered the 1839 Treaty provided the best chance of preserving Liberal party unity 29 Canadian Army recruitment poster The German high command was aware entering Belgium would lead to British intervention but decided the risk was acceptable they expected a short war while their ambassador in London claimed troubles in Ireland would prevent Britain from assisting France 30 On 3 August Germany demanded unimpeded progress through any part of Belgium and when this was refused invaded early on the morning of 4 August This changed the situation the invasion of Belgium consolidated political and public support for the war by presenting what appeared to be a simple moral and strategic choice 31 The Belgians asked for assistance under the 1839 Treaty and in response Britain declared war on Germany on 4 August 1914 32 Although Germany s violation of Belgium neutrality was not the only cause of British entry into the war it was used extensively in government propaganda at home and abroad to make the case for British intervention 33 This confusion arguably persists today The declaration of war automatically involved all dominions and colonies and protectorates of the British Empire many of whom made significant contributions to the Allied war effort both in the provision of troops and civilian labourers It was split into Crown Colonies administered by the Colonial Office in London such as Nigeria e and the self governing Dominions of Canada Newfoundland New Zealand Australia and South Africa These controlled their own domestic policies and military expenditure but not foreign policy Indian soldiers of the 2nd Rajput Light Infantry on the Western Front winter of 1914 15 In terms of population the largest component after Britain herself was the British Raj or British India which included modern India Pakistan Myanmar and Bangladesh Unlike other colonies which came under the Colonial Office it was governed directly by the India Office or by princes loyal to the British it also controlled British interests in the Persian Gulf such as the Trucial States and Oman Over one million soldiers of the British Indian Army served in different theatres of the war primarily France and the Middle East From 1914 to 1916 overall Imperial diplomatic political and military strategy was controlled by the British War Cabinet in London in 1917 it was superseded by the Imperial War Cabinet which included representatives from the Dominions 34 Under the War Cabinet were the Chief of the Imperial General Staff or CIGS responsible for all Imperial ground forces and the Admiralty that did the same for the Royal Navy Theatre commanders like Douglas Haig on the Western Front or Edmund Allenby in Palestine then reported to the CIGS After the Indian Army the largest individual units were the Australian Corps and Canadian Corps in France which by 1918 were commanded by their own generals John Monash and Arthur Currie 35 Contingents from South Africa New Zealand and Newfoundland served in theatres including France Gallipoli German East Africa and the Middle East Australian troops separately occupied German New Guinea with the South Africans doing the same in German South West Africa this resulted in the Maritz rebellion by former Boers which was quickly suppressed After the war New Guinea and South West Africa became Protectorates held until 1975 and 1990 respectively Russian Empire Edit Main articles Russian entry into World War I and Russian Empire Russian troops marching to the front Between 1873 and 1887 Russia was allied with Germany and Austria Hungary in the League of the Three Emperors then with Germany in the 1887 1890 Reinsurance Treaty both collapsed due to the competing interests of Austria and Russia in the Balkans While France took advantage of this to agree the 1894 Franco Russian Alliance Britain viewed Russia with deep suspicion in 1800 over 3 000 kilometres separated the Russian Empire and British India by 1902 it was 30 km in some areas 36 This threatened to bring the two into direct conflict as did the long held Russian objective of gaining control of the Bosporus Straits and with it access to the British dominated Mediterranean Sea 37 Russian recruiting poster the caption reads World on fire Second Patriotic War Defeat in the 1905 Russo Japanese War and Britain s isolation during the 1899 1902 Second Boer War led both parties to seek allies The Anglo Russian Convention of 1907 settled disputes in Asia and allowed the establishment of the Triple Entente with France which at this stage was largely informal In 1908 Austria annexed the former Ottoman province of Bosnia and Herzegovina Russia responded by creating the Balkan League in order to prevent further Austrian expansion 38 In the 1912 1913 First Balkan War Serbia Bulgaria and Greece captured most of the remaining Ottoman possessions in Europe disputes over the division of these resulted in the Second Balkan War in which Bulgaria was comprehensively defeated by its former allies Russia s industrial base and railway network had significantly improved since 1905 although from a relatively low base in 1913 Tsar Nicholas approved an increase in the Russian Army of over 500 000 men Although there was no formal alliance between Russia and Serbia their close bilateral links provided Russia with a route into the crumbling Ottoman Empire where Germany also had significant interests Combined with the increase in Russian military strength both Austria and Germany felt threatened by Serbian expansion when Austria invaded Serbia on 28 July 1914 Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Sazonov viewed it as an Austro German conspiracy to end Russian influence in the Balkans 39 In addition to its own territory Russia viewed itself as the defender of its fellow Slavs and on 30 July mobilised in support of Serbia In response Germany declared war on Russia on 1 August followed by Austria Hungary on 6th after Ottoman warships bombarded Odessa in late October the Entente declared war on the Ottoman Empire in November 1914 40 French Republic Edit Main articles French entry into World War I and French Third Republic French bayonet charge 1914 French defeat in the 1870 1871 Franco Prussian War led to the loss of the two provinces of Alsace Lorraine and the establishment of the Third Republic The suppression of the Paris Commune by the new regime caused deep political divisions and led to a series of bitter political struggles such as the Dreyfus affair As a result aggressive nationalism or Revanchism was one of the few areas to unite the French The loss of Alsace Lorraine deprived France of its natural defence line on the Rhine while it was weaker demographically than Germany whose 1911 population was 64 9 million to 39 6 in France which had the lowest birthrate in Europe 41 This meant that despite their very different political systems when Germany allowed the Reinsurance Treaty to lapse France seized the opportunity to agree the 1894 Franco Russian Alliance It also replaced Germany as the primary source of financing for Russian industry and the expansion of its railway network particularly in border areas with Germany and Austria Hungary 42 French Zouaves of the Army of Africa However Russian defeat in the 1904 1905 Russo Japanese War damaged its credibility while Britain s isolation during the Second Boer War meant both countries sought additional allies This resulted in the 1904 Entente Cordiale with Britain like the 1907 Anglo Russian Convention for domestic British consumption it focused on settling colonial disputes but led to informal co operation in other areas By 1914 both the British army and Royal Navy were committed to support France in the event of war with Germany but even in the British government very few were aware of the extent of these commitments 43 French artillery in action near Gallipoli 1915 In response to Germany s declaration of war on Russia France issued a general mobilisation in expectation of war on 2 August and on 3 August Germany also declared war on France 44 Germany s ultimatum to Belgium brought Britain into the war on 4 August although France did not declare war on Austria Hungary until 12 August As with Britain France s colonies also became part of the war pre 1914 French soldiers and politicians advocated using French African recruits to help compensate for France s demographic weakness 45 From August to December 1914 the French lost nearly 300 000 dead on the Western Front more than Britain suffered in the whole of WWII and the gaps were partly filled by colonial troops over 500 000 of whom served on the Western Front over the period 1914 1918 46 Colonial troops also fought at Gallipoli occupied Togo and Kamerun in West Africa and had a minor role in the Middle East where France was the traditional protector of Christians in the Ottoman provinces of Syria Palestine and Lebanon 47 Japanese Empire Edit Main articles Japanese entry into World War I Japan during World War I Empire of Japan and Japanese colonial empire Prior to the Meiji Restoration in 1868 Japan was a semi feudal largely agrarian state with few natural resources and limited technology By 1914 it had transformed itself into a modern industrial state with a powerful military by defeating China in the First Sino Japanese War during 1894 1895 it established itself as the primary power in East Asia and colonised the then unified Korea and Formosa now modern Taiwan Concerned by Russian expansion in Korea and Manchuria Britain and Japan signed the Anglo Japanese Alliance on 30 January 1902 agreeing if either were attacked by a third party the other would remain neutral and if attacked by two or more opponents the other would come to its aid This meant Japan could rely on British support in a war with Russia if either France or Germany which also had interests in China decided to join them 48 This gave Japan the reassurance needed to take on Russia in the 1905 Russo Japanese War victory established Japan in the Chinese province of Manchuria The Japanese carrier Wakamiya conducted the first ship launched aerial attack in 1914 With Japan as an ally in the Far East John Fisher First Sea Lord from 1904 to 1910 was able to refocus British naval resources in the North Sea to counter the threat from the Imperial German Navy The Alliance was renewed in 1911 in 1914 Japan joined the Entente in return for German territories in the Pacific greatly annoying the Australian government which also wanted them 49 On 7 August Britain officially asked for assistance in destroying German naval units in China and Japan formally declared war on Germany on 23 August followed by Austria Hungary on 25th 50 On 2 September 1914 Japanese forces surrounded the German Treaty Port of Qingdao then known as Tsingtao which surrendered on 7 November The Imperial Japanese Navy simultaneously occupied German colonies in the Mariana Caroline and Marshall Islands while in 1917 a Japanese naval squadron was sent to support the Allies in the Mediterranean 51 Japan s primary interest was in China and in January 1915 the Chinese government was presented with a secret ultimatum of Twenty One Demands demanding extensive economic and political concessions While these were eventually modified the result was a surge of anti Japanese nationalism in China and an economic boycott of Japanese goods 52 In addition the other Allies now saw Japan as a threat rather than a partner lead to tensions first with Russia then the US after it entered the war in April 1917 Despite protests from the other Allies after the war Japan refused to return Qingdao and the province of Shandong to China 53 Kingdom of Italy Edit Main articles Kingdom of Italy and Italian Empire Antonio Salandra Italian PM March 1914 June 1916 Alpini troops marching in the snow at 3 000 m altitude 1917 The 1882 Triple Alliance between Germany Austria Hungary and Italy was renewed at regular intervals but was compromised by conflicting objectives between Italy and Austria in the Adriatic and Aegean seas Italian nationalists referred to Austrian held Istria including Trieste and Fiume and Trento as the lost territories making the Alliance so controversial that the terms were kept secret until it expired in 1915 54 Alberto Pollio the pro Austrian Chief of Staff of the Italian Army died on 1 July 1914 taking many of the prospects for Italian support with him 55 The Italian Prime Minister Antonio Salandra argued that as the Alliance was defensive in nature Austria s aggression against Serbia and Italy s exclusion from the decision making process meant it was not obliged to join them 56 His caution was understandable because France and Britain either supplied or controlled the import of most of Italy s raw materials including 90 of its coal 56 Salandra described the process of choosing a side as sacred egoism but as the war was expected to end before mid 1915 at the latest making this decision became increasingly urgent 57 In line with Italy s obligations under the Triple Alliance the bulk of the army was concentrated on Italy s border with France in October Pollio s replacement General Luigi Cadorna was ordered to begin moving these troops to the North Eastern one with Austria 58 Under the April 1915 Treaty of London Italy agreed to join the Entente in return for Italian populated territories of Austria Hungary and other concessions in return it declared war on Austria Hungary in May 1915 as required although not on Germany until 1916 59 Italian resentment at the difference between the promises of 1915 and the actual results of the 1919 Treaty of Versailles would be powerful factors in the rise of Benito Mussolini 60 Affiliated state combatants EditKingdom of Serbia Edit Main articles Kingdom of Serbia and Serbian Campaign of World War I In 1817 the Principality of Serbia became an autonomous province within the Ottoman Empire with Russian support it gained full independence after the 1877 1878 Russo Turkish War Many Serbs viewed Russia as protector of the South Slavs in general but also specifically against Bulgaria where Russian objectives increasingly collided with Bulgarian nationalism 61 When Austria annexed Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1908 Russia responded by creating the Balkan League to prevent further Austrian expansion 38 Austria viewed Serbia with hostility partly due to its links with Russia whose claim to be the protector of South Slavs extended to those within the Austro Hungarian Empire such as the Czechs and Slovaks Serbia also potentially gave Russia the ability to achieve their long held objective of capturing Constantinople and the Dardanelles 37 The Serbian Army in retreat 1915 Austria backed the Albanian revolt of 1910 and the idea of a Greater Albania since this would prevent Serbian access to the Austrian controlled Adriatic Sea 62 Another Albanian revolt in 1912 exposed the weakness of the Ottoman Empire and led to the 1912 1913 First Balkan War with Serbia Montenegro Bulgaria and Greece capturing most of the remaining Ottoman possessions in Europe Disputes over the division of these resulted in the Second Balkan War in which Bulgaria was comprehensively defeated by its former allies As a result of the 1913 Treaty of Bucharest Serbia increased its territory by 100 and its population by 64 63 However it now faced a hostile Austria Hungary a resentful Bulgaria and opposition by Albanian nationalists Germany too had ambitions in the Ottoman Empire the centrepiece being the planned Berlin Baghdad railway with Serbia the only section not controlled by a pro German state The exact role played by Serbian officials in the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand is still debated but despite complying with most of their demands Austria Hungary invaded on 28 July 1914 While Serbia successfully repulsed the Austro Hungarian army in 1914 it was exhausted by the two Balkan Wars and unable to replace its losses of men and equipment In 1915 Bulgaria joined the Central Powers and by the end of the year a combined Bulgar Austrian German army occupied most of Serbia Between 1914 and 1918 Serbia suffered the greatest proportional losses of any combatant with over 25 of all those mobilised becoming casualties including civilians and deaths from disease over 1 2 million died nearly 30 of the entire population Kingdom of Belgium Edit Main articles Belgium and Belgian colonial empire See also Belgian government at Sainte Adresse In 1830 the southern provinces of the Netherlands broke away to form the Kingdom of Belgium and their independence was confirmed by the 1839 Treaty of London Article VII of the Treaty required Belgium to remain perpetually neutral and committed Austria France Germany and Russia to guarantee that against aggression by any other state including the signatories 64 The Yser Front 1917 by Belgian artist Georges Emile Lebacq Belgian Congolese Force Publique troops in German East Africa 1916 While the French and German militaries accepted Germany would almost certainly violate Belgian neutrality in the event of war the extent of that was unclear The original Schlieffen Plan only required a limited incursion into the Belgian Ardennes rather than a full scale invasion in September 1911 the Belgian Foreign Minister told a British Embassy official they would not call for assistance if the Germans limited themselves to that 43 While neither Britain or France could allow Germany to occupy Belgium unopposed a Belgian refusal to ask for help would complicate matters for the British Liberal government which contained a significant isolationist element However the key German objective was to avoid war on two fronts France had to be defeated before Russia could fully mobilise and give time for German forces to be transferred to the East The growth of the Russian railway network and increase in speed of mobilisation made rapid victory over France even more important to accommodate the additional 170 000 troops approved by the 1913 Army Bill the incursion now became a full scale invasion The Germans accepted the risk of British intervention in common with most of Europe they expected it to be a short war while their London Ambassador claimed civil war in Ireland would prevent Britain from assisting its Entente partners 65 On 3 August a German ultimatum demanded unimpeded progress through any part of Belgium which was refused Early on the morning of 4 August the Germans invaded and the Belgian government called for British assistance under the 1839 Treaty by the end of 1914 over 95 of the country was occupied but the Belgian Army held their lines on the Yser Front throughout the war In the Belgian Congo 25 000 Congolese troops plus an estimated 260 000 porters joined British forces in the 1916 East African Campaign 66 By 1917 they controlled the western part of German East Africa which would become the Belgian League of Nations Mandate of Ruanda Urundi or modern day Rwanda and Burundi 67 Kingdom of Greece Edit Main articles Kingdom of Greece and Greece during World War I Eleftherios Venizelos with Constantine during the Balkan Wars A unit of the National Defence Army Corps on its way to the front in 1918 Greece almost doubled in size as a result of the Balkan Wars of 1912 and 1913 but the success masked deep divisions within the political elite In 1908 the island of Crete formally part of the Ottoman Empire but administered by Greek officials declared union with Greece led by the charismatic nationalist Eleftherios Venizelos A year later young army officers formed the Military League to advocate for an aggressive and expansionist foreign policy with their backing Venizelos won a majority in the 1910 Parliamentary elections followed by another in 1912 68 He had effectively broken the power of the pre 1910 political class and his position was then further strengthened by success in the Balkan Wars In 1913 the Greek monarch George I was assassinated he was succeeded by his son Constantine who had attended Heidelberg University served in a Prussian regiment and married Sophia of Prussia sister of Emperor William II These links and a belief the Central Powers would win the war combined to make Constantine pro German 69 Venizelos himself favoured the Entente partly due to their ability to block the maritime trade routes required for Greek imports Colonel Christodoulou of the National Defence Army Corps interrogates Bulgarian prisoners September 1918 Other issues adding complexity to this decision included disputes with Bulgaria and Serbia over the regions of Thrace and Macedonia as well as control of the Aegean Islands Greece captured most of the islands during the Balkan Wars but Italy occupied the Dodecanese in 1912 and was in no hurry to give them back while the Ottomans demanded the return of many others 70 In general the Triple Entente favoured Greece the Triple Alliance backed the Ottomans Greece ultimately gained the vast majority but Italy did not cede the Dodecanese until 1947 while others remain disputed even today As a result Greece initially remained neutral but in March 1915 the Entente offered concessions to join the Dardanelles campaign Arguments over whether to accept led to the National Schism with an Entente backed administration under Venizelos in Crete and a Royalist one led by Constantine in Athens that supported the Central Powers 69 In September 1915 Bulgaria joined the Central Powers in October Venizelos allowed Entente forces to land at Thessaloniki or Salonica to support the Serbs although they were too late to prevent their defeat In August 1916 Bulgarian troops advanced into Greek held Macedonia and Constantine ordered the army not to resist anger at this led to a coup and he was eventually forced into exile in June 1917 A new national government under Venizelos joined the Entente while the Greek National Defence Army Corps fought with the Allies on the Macedonian front Kingdom of Montenegro Edit Main article Kingdom of Montenegro Nicholas accepts the surrender of Scutari April 1913 Montenegro s major gain from the Balkan War it was relinquished several months later Unlike Serbia with whom it shared close cultural and political connections the Kingdom of Montenegro gained little from its participation in the 1912 1913 Balkan Wars The main Montenegrin offensive was in Ottoman controlled Albania where it suffered heavy losses during the seven month Siege of Scutari Austria Hungary opposed Serb or Montenegrin control of Albania since it provided access to the Adriatic Sea despite Scutari s surrender Montenegro was forced to relinquish it by the 1913 Treaty of London and it became capital of the short lived Principality of Albania 71 This was largely an Austrian creation the new ruler William Prince of Albania was a German who was forced into exile in September only seven months after taking up his new position and later served with the Imperial German Army 72 Montenegrin soldiers leaving for the front October 1914 In addition to the lack of substantive gains from the Balkan Wars there were long running internal divisions between those who like Nicholas I preferred an independent Montenegro and those who advocated union with Serbia In July 1914 Montenegro was not only militarily and economically exhausted but also faced a multitude of political economic and social issues 73 At meetings held in March 1914 Austria Hungary and Germany agreed union with Serbia must be prevented Montenegro could either remain independent or be divided its coastal areas becoming part of Albania while the rest could join Serbia 73 Nicholas seriously considered neutrality as a way to preserve his dynasty and on 31 July notified the Russian Ambassador Montenegro would only respond to an Austrian attack He also held discussions with Austria proposing neutrality or even active support in return for territorial concessions in Albania 74 However close links between the Serbian and Montenegrin militaries as well as popular sentiment meant there was little support for remaining neutral especially after Russia joined the war on 1 August the National Assembly declared war on Austria Hungary in fulfilment of its obligations to Serbia After some initial success in January 1916 the Montenegrin Army was forced to surrender to an Austro Hungarian force Beda Sultanate Edit The Beda Sultanate was invaded by Ottoman forces in February 1915 and March 1916 75 Britain assisted the Beda Sultanate in defeating the Ottoman invasions by sending arms and ammunition 76 Idrisid Emirate of Asir Edit The Idrisid Emirate of Asir participated in the Arab Revolt Its Emir Muhammad ibn Ali al Idrisi signed an agreement with the British and joined the Allies in May 1915 Emirate of Nejd and Hasa Edit The Emirate of Nejd and Hasa launched a failed offensive against the Ottoman aligned Emirate of Jabal Shammar in January 1915 It then agreed to enter the war as an ally of Britain in the Treaty of Darin on 26 December 1915 77 Kingdom of Romania Edit Main articles Kingdom of Romania Romanian Old Kingdom and Romania during World War I Romanian 250 mm Negrei Model 1916 mortar at the National Military Museum Vlaicu III Romanian troops at Mărășești Equal status with the main Entente Powers was one of the primary conditions for Romania s entry into the War The Powers officially recognised this status through the 1916 Treaty of Bucharest 78 Romania fought on three of the four European Fronts Eastern Balkan and Italian fielding in total over 1 200 000 troops 79 Romanian military industry was mainly focused on converting various fortification guns into field and anti aircraft artillery Up to 334 German 53 mm Fahrpanzer guns 93 French 57 mm Hotchkiss guns 66 Krupp 150 mm guns and dozens more 210 mm guns were mounted on Romanian built carriages and transformed into mobile field artillery with 45 Krupp 75 mm guns and 132 Hotchkiss 57 mm guns being transformed into anti aircraft artillery The Romanians also upgraded 120 German Krupp 105 mm howitzers the result being the most effective field howitzer in Europe at that time Romania even managed to design and build from scratch its own model of mortar the 250 mm Negrei Model 1916 80 Other Romanian technological assets include the building of Vlaicu III the world s first aircraft made of metal 81 The Romanian Navy possessed the largest warships on the Danube They were a class of four river monitors built locally at the Galați shipyard using parts manufactured in Austria Hungary The first one launched was Lascăr Catargiu in 1907 82 83 The Romanian monitors displaced almost 700 tons were armed with three 120 mm naval guns in three turrets two 120 mm naval howitzers four 47 mm anti aircraft guns and two 6 5 machine guns 84 The monitors took part in the Battle of Turtucaia and the First Battle of Cobadin The Romanian designed Schneider 150 mm Model 1912 howitzer was considered one of the most modern field guns on the Western Front 85 Romania s entry into the War in August 1916 provoked major changes for the Germans General Erich von Falkenhayn was dismissed and sent to command the Central Powers forces in Romania which enabled Hindenburg s subsequent ascension to power 8 Due to having to fight against all of the Central Powers on the longest front in Europe 1 600 km and with little foreign help only 50 000 Russians aided 650 000 Romanians in 1916 86 the Romanian capital was conquered that December Vlaicu III was also captured and shipped to Germany being last seen in 1942 87 The Romanian administration established a new capital at Iași and continued to fight on the Allied side in 1917 88 Despite being relatively short the Romanian campaign of 1916 provided considerable respite for the Western Allies as the Germans ceased all their other offensive operations in order to deal with Romania 89 After suffering a tactical defeat against the Romanians aided by Russians in July 1917 at Mărăști the Central Powers launched two counterattacks at Mărășești and Oituz The German offensive at Mărășești was soundly defeated with German prisoners later telling their Romanian captors that German casualties were extremely heavy and that they had not encountered such stiff resistance since the battles of Somme and Verdun 90 The Austro Hungarian offensive at Oituz also failed On 22 September the Austro Hungarian Enns class river monitor SMS Inn was sunk by a Romanian mine near Brăila 91 92 After Russia signed the Treaty of Brest Litovsk and dropped out of the War Romania was left surrounded by the Central Powers and eventually signed a similar treaty on 7 May 1918 Despite being forced to cede land to Austria Hungary and Bulgaria Romania ended up with a net gain in territory due to the Union with Bessarabia On 10 November Romania re entered the War and fought a war with Hungary that lasted until August 1919 Republic of the United States of Brazil Edit Main article Brazil during World War I Brazilian soldiers in World War I Brazil entered the war in 1917 after the United States intervened on the basis of Germany s unrestricted submarine warfare sinking its merchant ships which Brazil also cited as a reason to enter the war fighting against Germany and the Central Powers The First Brazilian Republic sent the Naval Division in War Operations that joined the British fleet in Gibraltar and made the first Brazilian naval effort in international waters In compliance with the commitments made at the Inter American Conference held in Paris from 20 November to 3 December 1917 the Brazilian Government sent a medical mission composed of civilian and military surgeons to work in field hospitals of the European theatre a contingent of sergeants and officers to serve with the French army Airmen from the Army and Navy to join the Royal Air Force and the employment of part of the Fleet primarily in the anti submarine war Co belligerents the United States EditMain article United States in World War I The United States declared war on Germany in April 1917 on the grounds that Germany violated US neutrality by attacking international shipping with its unrestricted submarine warfare campaign 93 The remotely connected Zimmermann Telegram of the same period within which the Germans promised to help Mexico regain some of its territory lost to the U S nearly seven decades before in the event of the United States entering the war was also a contributing factor The US entered the war as an associated power rather than a formal ally of France and the United Kingdom in order to avoid foreign entanglements 94 Although the Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria severed relations with the United States neither declared war 95 nor did Austria Hungary Eventually however the United States also declared war on Austria Hungary in December 1917 predominantly to help hard pressed Italy Non state combatants EditThree non state combatants which voluntarily fought with the Allies and seceded from the constituent states of the Central Powers at the end of the war were allowed to participate as winning nations to the peace treaties citation needed Armenian irregulars and volunteers seceded from the Russian Empire in the aftermath of the Russian Revolution and fought against the Ottoman Empire Assyrian volunteers under Mar Shimun XIX Benyamin and the Assyrian tribal chiefs decided to side with the Allies first with Russia and next with the British in the hope that they might secure after the victory self government for the Assyrians 96 The French also joined the alliance with the Assyrians offering them 20 000 rifles and the Assyrian army grew to 20 000 men co led by Agha Petros of the Bit Bazi tribe and Malik Khoshaba of the Bit Tiyari tribe 97 98 Polish Legions Czechoslovak Legions armed by France Italy and RussiaAdditionally there were also several Kurdish rebellions during World War I Most of these except for the uprisings of August 1917 were not supported by any of the Allied powers 99 Leaders EditMain article Allied leaders of World War I Military leaders of World War I Alphonse Jacques de Dixmude Belgium Armando Diaz Italy Ferdinand Foch France John J Pershing United States and David Beatty United Kingdom Marshal Foch s Victory Harmony Banner Serbia Edit Peter I King of Serbia Crown Prince Alexander Regent Commander in Chief Nikola Pasic Prime Minister of Serbia Field Marshal Radomir Putnik Chief of the General Staff of the Serbian Army 1914 1915 General Field Marshal Zivojin Misic Deputy Chief of General Staff 1914 Commander of First Army 1914 1915 1917 later Chief of General Staff 1918 General Field Marshal Petar Bojovic Commander of First Army 1914 Deputy Chief of General Staff 1915 1916 Chief of General Staff 1916 1917 later Commander of First Army 1918 General Field Marshal Stepa Stepanovic Commander of Second Army 1914 1918 General Pavle Jurisic Sturm Commander of Third Army 1914 1916 Colonel Dusan Stefanovic sr Minister of War 1914 Colonel Radivoje Bojovic sr Minister of War 1914 1915 Colonel General Bozidar Terzic sr Minister of War 1915 1918 General Mihailo Rasic Minister of War 1918 Colonel General Milos Vasic Commander of First Army 1916 1917 Commander of Third Army 1916 Montenegro Edit Nicholas I King of Montenegro Commander in Chief General Serdar Janko Vukotic Prime Minister Commander of 1st Montenegrin Army General Bozidar Jankovic Chief of the General Staff of the Montenegrin Army 1914 1915 Colonel Petar Pesic Deputy Chief of the General Staff of the Montenegrin Army 1914 1915 later Chief of the General Staff of the Montenegrin Army 1915 1916 Crown Prince Danilo II Petrovic Njegos In the staff of the 1st Montenegrin Army Brigadier Krsto Popovic In the staff of the 1st Montenegrin Army Aide de camp to Serdar Janko Vukotic General Anto Gvozdenovic King s Aide de camp General Mitar Martinovic Commander of several detachments in the Montenegrin army Drina and Herzegovina detachments together in 1914 1915 Kotor detachment in 1916 Russia 1914 1917 Edit Russian High Command Nicholas II Russian Emperor King of Poland and Grand Prince of Finland until 15 March 1917 Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich Commander in chief 1 August 1914 5 September 1916 and viceroy in the Caucasus Ivan Goremykin Chairmen of Council of Ministers of the Russian Empire 1 August 1914 2 February 1916 Boris Sturmer Chairmen of Council of Ministers of the Russian Empire 2 February 1916 23 November 1916 Alexander Trepov Chairmen of Council of Ministers of the Russian Empire 23 November 1916 27 December 1916 Nikolai Golitsyn Chairmen of Council of Ministers of the Russian Empire 27 December 1916 9 January 1917 General of the Cavalry Alexander Samsonov Commander of the Russian Second Army for the invasion of East Prussia 1 August 1914 29 August 1914 General of the Cavalry Paul von Rennenkampf Commander of the Russian First Army for the invasion of East Prussia 1 August 1914 November 1914 General of the Artillery Nikolay Ivanov Commander of the Russian army on the Southwestern Front 1 August 1914 March 1916 responsible for much of the action in Galicia Aleksei Brusilov in Rivne Volhynian Governorate 1915 General Adjutant Aleksei Brusilov Commander of the South West Front then provisional Commander in Chief after the Tsar s abdication February 1917 August 1917 General of the Infantry Lavr Georgievich Kornilov Commander of the South West Front then Commander in Chief August 1917 General of the Infantry Aleksey Kuropatkin Commander of the Northern Front October 1915 1917 General of the Infantry Nikolai Yudenich Commander of the Caucasus January 1915 May 1917 Admiral Andrei Eberhardt Commander of Black Sea Fleet 1914 16 Admiral Alexander Kolchak Commander of Black Sea Fleet 1916 17 Admiral Nikolai Essen Commander of Baltic Fleet 1913 May 1915 Belgium Edit Albert I of Belgium King of the Belgians 23 December 1909 17 February 1934 and Commander in chief of the Belgian army Charles de Broqueville Prime Minister 1912 1918 replaced by Gerard Cooreman in June 1918 shortly before the end of the war Felix Wielemans Chief of Staff of the Belgian Army Gerard Leman general commanding the defense of Liege Charles Tombeur commander of the colonial Force Publique in the East African theatreFrance Edit President Raymond Poincare and King George V 1915 Raymond Poincare President of France Rene Viviani Prime Minister of France 13 June 1914 29 October 1915 Aristide Briand Prime Minister of France 29 October 1915 20 March 1917 Alexandre Ribot Prime Minister of France 20 March 1917 12 September 1917 Paul Painleve Prime Minister of France 12 September 1917 16 November 1917 Georges Clemenceau Prime Minister of France from 16 November 1917 Divisional General Marshal Joseph Joffre Commander in Chief of the French Army 3 August 1914 13 December 1916 Divisional General Robert Nivelle Commander in Chief of the French Army 13 December 1916 April 1917 Divisional General Marshal Philippe Petain Commander in Chief of the French Army April 1917 11 November 1918 Divisional General Marshal Ferdinand Foch Supreme Allied Commander 26 March 1918 11 November 1918 Divisional General Maurice Sarrail Commander of the Allied armies at Salonika front 1915 1917 Army General Adolphe Guillaumat Commander of the Allied armies at Salonika front 1917 1918 Divisional General Marshal Louis Franchet d Esperey Commander of the Allied armies at Salonika front 1918 Brigadier General Milan Rastislav Stefanik General of French Army Commander of Czechoslovak LegionsBritain and the British Empire Edit United Kingdom Edit First Lord of the Admiralty Winston Churchill 1914 Douglas Haig and Ferdinand Foch inspecting the Gordon Highlanders 1918 George V King of the United Kingdom and the British Dominions Emperor of India H H Asquith Prime Minister of the United Kingdom until 5 December 1916 David Lloyd George Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 7 December 1916 Field Marshal Horatio Herbert Kitchener Secretary of State for War 5 August 1914 5 June 1916 Edward Stanley 17th Earl of Derby Secretary of State for War 1916 General William Robertson Chief of the Imperial General Staff 23 December 1915 February 1918 General Henry Wilson Chief of the Imperial General Staff February 1918 February 1922 Field Marshal John French Commander in Chief of the British Expeditionary Force 4 August 1914 15 December 1915 General Field Marshal Douglas Haig Commander in Chief of the British Expeditionary Force 15 December 1915 11 November 1918 General Sir David Henderson Director General of Military Aeronautics General Hugh Trenchard Commander of Royal Flying Corps August 1915 January 1918 and Chief of the Air Staff of the combined Royal Air Force 1 April 1918 13 April 1918 Brigadier General Sir Frederick Sykes Chief of the Air Staff 13 April 1918 through 11 November 1918 post war to 31 March 1919 Winston Churchill First Lord of the Admiralty 1911 May 1915 Arthur Balfour First Lord of the Admiralty May 1915 December 1916 Edward Carson First Lord of the Admiralty 10 December 1916 17 July 1917 Eric Geddes First Lord of the Admiralty July 1917 January 1919 Admiral of the Fleet John Jackie Fisher First Sea Lord 1914 May 1915 Admiral Henry Jackson First Sea Lord May 1915 November 1916 Admiral John Jellicoe Commander of the Grand Fleet August 1914 November 1916 First Sea Lord November 1916 December 1917 Admiral Rosslyn Wemyss First Sea Lord December 1917 November 1919 Admiral David Beatty Commander of the Grand Fleet November 1916 April 1919 General Archibald Murray Commander of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force January 1916 June 1917 General Edmund Allenby Commander of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force June 1917 November 1918 Eric John Eagles Swayne Commander of the British forces in the Somaliland Campaign William Peyton commander and military secretary to the British Expeditionary Force Colonel T E Lawrence A main leader of the Arab RevoltDominion of Canada Edit Robert Borden Prime Minister of Canada 1914 18 Sam Hughes Minister of Militia and Defence 1914 January 1915 Joseph Flavelle Chairman of Imperial Munitions Board 1915 19 Lieutenant General Edwin Alderson Commander of the unified Canadian Corps of the Canadian Expeditionary Force 26 January 1915 September 1915 General Julian Byng Commander of the unified Canadian Corps of the Canadian Expeditionary Force June 1916 June 1917 General Arthur Currie Commander of the unified Canadian Corps of the Canadian Expeditionary Force June 1917 August 1919 100 Commonwealth of Australia Edit Joseph Cook Prime Minister of Australia until 17 September 1914 Andrew Fisher Prime Minister of Australia 17 September 1914 27 October 1915 Billy Hughes Prime Minister of Australia from 27 October 1915 General William Birdwood Commander of the Australian Corps all five Australian infantry divisions serving on the Western Front November 1917 May 1918 Lieutenant General Sir John Monash Commander of the Australian Corps May 1918 Major General William Holmes Commander of the Australian Naval and Military Expeditionary Force August 1914 February 1915 Lieutenant General Sir Harry Chauvel Commander of Desert Mounted Corps Sinai and Palestine August 1917 British India Edit Charles Hardinge 1st Baron Hardinge of Penshurst Viceroy of India 1910 1916 Frederic Thesiger 1st Viscount Chelmsford Viceroy of India 1916 1921 Robert Crewe Milnes 1st Marquess of Crewe Secretary of State for India May 1911 May 1915 Austen Chamberlain Secretary of State for India May 1915 July 1917 Edwin Samuel Montagu Secretary of State for India July 1917 March 1922 Beauchamp Duff Commander in Chief India March 1914 October 1916 Charles Monro Commander in Chief India October 1916 November 1920 Lieutenant General John Nixon commander of the British Indian Army active in the Middle East Union of South Africa Edit General Louis Botha Prime Minister of South Africa General Jan Smuts Led forces in South West Africa Campaign and East African Campaign later member of the Imperial War CabinetDominion of New Zealand Edit William Massey Prime Minister of New Zealand General Sir Alexander Godley Commandant of New Zealand Military Forces to October 1914 Commander of the New Zealand Expeditionary Force Major General Sir Alfred William Robin Quartermaster General and Commandant of New Zealand Military Forces from October 1914 Major General Sir Andrew Hamilton Russell Commander of the New Zealand DivisionDominion of Newfoundland Edit Sir Edward Morris Prime Minister of Newfoundland 1909 1917 Sir John Crosbie Prime Minister of Newfoundland 1917 1918 Sir William Lloyd Prime Minister of Newfoundland 1918 1919 Japan Edit Emperor Taishō Emperor of Japan Ōkuma Shigenobu Prime Minister of Japan 16 April 1914 9 October 1916 Terauchi Masatake Prime minister of Japan 9 October 1916 29 September 1918 Hara Takashi Prime minister of Japan 29 September 1918 4 November 1921 Katō Sadakichi Commander in chief of the Second Fleet deployed to the Siege of Tsingtao Kōzō Satō Commander of the Second Special Task Fleet Kamio Mitsuomi Commander of Allied land forces at TsingtaoItaly 1915 1918 Edit Victor Emmanuel III King of Italy Antonio Salandra Prime Minister until 18 June 1916 Paolo Boselli Prime Minister 18 June 1916 29 October 1917 Vittorio Emanuele Orlando Prime Minister from 29 October 1917 Luigi Cadorna Commander in Chief of the Royal Italian Army Armando Diaz Chief of General Staff of the Royal Italian army Luigi Duke of Abruzzi Commander in Chief of the Adriatic Fleet of Italy 1914 17 Paolo Thaon di Revel Admiral of the Royal Italian NavyRomania 1916 1918 Edit Ferdinand I King of Romania General Constantin Prezan Chief of the General Staff of Romania Ion I C Brătianu Prime Minister of Romania Vintilă Brătianu Secretary of War Field Marshal Alexandru Averescu Commander of the 2nd Army 3rd Army then Army Group South General Eremia Grigorescu Commander of the 1st ArmyPortugal 1916 1918 Edit Bernardino Machado President of Portugal until 12 December 1917 Afonso Costa Prime Minister of Portugal until 15 March 1916 then again 25 April 1917 10 December 1917 Antonio Jose de Almeida Prime Minister of Portugal 15 March 1916 25 April 1917 Sidonio Pais Prime Minister of Portugal and War Minister 11 December 1917 9 May 1918 and President of Portugal from 9 May 1918 Jose Norton de Matos War Minister until 10 December 1917 Joao Tamagnini Barbosa Interim War Minister 9 May 1918 15 May 1918 Amilcar Mota Secretary of State for War 15 May 1918 8 October 1918 Alvaro de Mendonca Secretary of State for War from 8 October 1918 Fernando Tamagnini de Abreu Commander of the Portuguese Expeditionary Corps CEP Jose Augusto Alves Rocadas Commander of the Portuguese Forces in Southern Angola Jose Luis de Moura Mendes Commander of the Portuguese Forces in Eastern Africa until June 1916 Jose Cesar Ferreira Gil Commander of the Portuguese Forces in Eastern Africa from June 1916 Sousa Rosa Commander of the Portuguese Forces in Eastern Africa from 1917 Greece 1916 17 1918 Edit Greek war poster Constantine I King of Greece he retired from the throne in June 1917 due to Allied pressure without formally abdicating Alexander King of Greece he became King in 1917 after his father and brother retired from the throne Eleftherios Venizelos Prime minister of Greece after 13 June 1917 Panagiotis Danglis Greek general of the Hellenic ArmyUnited States 1916 1918 Edit USAAS recruiting poster 1918 The use of naval convoys to transport US troops to France 1917 Woodrow Wilson President of the United States Commander In Chief of the US armed forces Newton D Baker US Secretary of War Josephus Daniels United States Secretary of the Navy Major General General John J Pershing Commander of the American Expeditionary Force Rear Admiral Vice Admiral William Sims Commander of US Naval Forces in European Waters Brigadier General Mason Patrick Commander of the United States Army Air ServiceSiam Thailand 1917 1918 Edit Main articles Rattanakosin Kingdom 1782 1932 and Siam in World War I The Siamese Expeditionary Forces in Paris 1919 Rama VI King of Siam Field Marshal Chao Phraya Bodindechanuchit Minister of Defence Prince Chakrabongse Bhuvanath Supreme Commander of the Siamese Expeditionary Forces in World War I General Phraya Bijai Janriddhi Commander of the Siamese Expeditionary Forces in the Western FrontBrazil 1917 1918 Edit Main article Brazil during World War I Braziliian ship Cruzador Bahia Venceslau Bras President of Brazil Pedro Frontin Chief of the Divisao Naval em Operacoes de Guerra Naval Division in War Operations Jose Pessoa Cavalcanti de Albuquerque Lieutenant of the Brazilian Army in France Napoleao Felipe Ache Chief of Brazilian Military Mission in France 1918 1919 M D Nabuco Gouveia Chief of Brazilian Military Medical CommissionArmenia 1917 1918 Edit Hovhannes Kajaznuni first Prime Minister of the First Republic of Armenia General Andranik military commander and statesman of the Caucasus Campaign Aram Manukian Minister of Internal Affairs of the First Republic of Armenia Drastamat Kanayan Military commander and member of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation Tovmas Nazarbekian Commander in chief of the First Republic of Armenia Movses Silikyan Army general and National heroCzechoslovakia 1918 Edit Tomas Masaryk first President of Czechoslovakia Milan Rastislav Stefanik Commander of the Czechoslovak Legion Edvard Benes Minister of Foreign Affairs and the InteriorPersonnel and casualties EditSee also World War I casualties A pie chart showing the military deaths of the Allied Powers These are estimates of the cumulative number of different personnel in uniform 1914 1918 including army navy and auxiliary forces At any one time the various forces were much smaller Only a fraction of them were frontline combat troops The numbers do not reflect the length of time each country was involved World War I personnel and casualties by country Allied power Mobilized personnel Military fatalities Wounded in action Casualties Total Casualties of total mobilisedAustralia 412 953 13 61 928 14 99 f 152 171 214 099 52 Belgium 267 000 11 38 172 14 29 g 44 686 82 858 31 Brazil 1 713 106 page needed 100 5 84 107 0 100 5 84 Canada 628 964 13 64 944 10 32 h 149 732 214 676 34 France 8 410 000 11 1 397 800 16 62 i 4 266 000 5 663 800 67 Greece 230 000 11 26 000 11 30 j 21 000 47 000 20 India 1 440 437 13 74 187 5 15 k 69 214 143 401 10 Italy 5 615 000 11 651 010 11 59 l 953 886 1 604 896 29 Japan 800 000 11 415 0 05 m 907 1 322 lt 1 Monaco 80 113 8 10 00 113 0 8 113 10 Montenegro 50 000 11 3 000 6 00 10 000 13 000 26 Nepal 200 000 114 30 670 15 33 21 009 49 823 25 New Zealand 128 525 13 18 050 14 04 n 41 317 59 367 46 Portugal 100 000 11 7 222 7 22 o 13 751 20 973 21 Romania 750 000 11 250 000 33 33 p 120 000 370 000 49 Russia 12 000 000 11 1 811 000 15 09 q 4 950 000 6 761 000 56 Serbia 707 343 11 275 000 38 87 r 133 148 408 148 58 Siam 1 284 12 page needed 19 1 48 0 19 2 South Africa 136 070 13 9 463 6 95 s 12 029 21 492 16 United Kingdom 6 211 922 12 886 342 14 26 t 1 665 749 2 552 091 41 United States 4 355 000 11 53 402 1 23 u 205 690 259 092 5 9 Total 42 244 409 5 741 389 12 925 833 18 744 547 49 See also Edit World War I portalAllied intervention in the Russian Civil War Causes of World War I Color books transcripts of official documents released by each nation early in the war Diplomatic history of World War I British entry into World War I French entry into World War I Historiography of the causes of World War I Home front during World War I Belgium in World War I France in World War I Germany in World War I Italy in World War I Romania in World War I United Kingdom in World War I United States in World War I Japan in World War I International relations of the Great Powers 1814 1919 July CrisisFootnotes Edit From April 1915 After the abdication of Emperor Nicholas II in the February Revolution of 1917 the new provisional Government kept Russia in the war forming a Russian Republic in September The October Revolution the same year led to Russia s surrender as signed by the Russian Soviet Republic with the country degenerating into the Russian Civil War From 6 April 1917 as an Associated Power The consequences were demonstrated when Germany controlled these areas during 1940 1944 Others included Gibraltar Cyprus Malta East Africa Protectorate Nyasaland Northern and Southern Rhodesia the Uganda Protectorate the Gold Coast Nigeria British Honduras the Falkland Islands British Guiana the British West Indies British Malaya North Borneo Ceylon and Hong Kong Australia casualtiesIncluded in total are 55 000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds 101 The Commonwealth War Graves Commission Annual Report 2005 2006 is the source of total military dead 102 Totals include 2 005 military deaths during 1919 21 103 The 1922 War Office report listed 59 330 Army war dead 104 Belgium casualtiesIncluded in total are 35 000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds 101 Figures include 13 716 killed and 24 456 missing up until Nov 11 1918 These figures are approximate only the records being incomplete 105 Canada casualtiesIncluded in total are 53 000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds 101 The Commonwealth War Graves Commission Annual Report 2005 2006 is the source of total military dead 102 Totals include 3 789 military deaths during 1919 21 and 150 Merchant Navy deaths 103 The losses of Newfoundland are listed separately on this table The 1922 War Office report listed 56 639 Army war dead 104 France casualtiesIncluded in total are 1 186 000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds 101 Totals include the deaths of 71 100 French colonial troops 108 Figures include war related military deaths of 28 600 from 11 11 1918 to 6 1 1919 108 Greece casualtiesJean Bujac in a campaign history of the Greek Army in World War One listed 8 365 combat related deaths and 3 255 missing 109 The Soviet researcher Boris Urlanis estimated total dead of 26 000 including 15 000 military deaths due disease 110 India casualtiesBritish India included present day India Pakistan and Bangladesh Included in total are 27 000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds 101 The Commonwealth War Graves Commission Annual Report 2005 2006 is the source of total military dead 102 Totals include 15 069 military deaths during 1919 21 and 1 841 Canadian Merchant Navy dead 103 The 1922 War Office report listed 64 454 Army war dead 104 Italy casualtiesIncluded in total are 433 000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds 101 Figures of total military dead are from a 1925 Italian report using official data 111 page needed War dead figure is from a 1991 history of the Japanese Army 112 New Zealand casualtiesIncluded in total are 14 000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds 101 The Commonwealth War Graves Commission Annual Report 2005 2006 is the source of total military dead 102 Totals include 702 military deaths during 1919 21 103 The 1922 War Office report listed 16 711 Army war dead 104 Portugal casualtiesFigures include the following killed and died of other causes up until Jan 1 1920 1 689 in France and 5 332 in Africa Figures do not include an additional 12 318 listed as missing and POW 115 Romania casualtiesMilitary dead is The figure reported by the Rumanian Government in reply to a questionnaire from the International Labour Office 116 Included in total are 177 000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds 101 Russia casualtiesIncluded in total are 1 451 000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds 101 The estimate of total Russian military losses was made by the Soviet researcher Boris Urlanis 117 Serbia casualtiesIncluded in total are 165 000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds 101 The estimate of total combined Serbian and Montenegrin military losses of 278 000 was made by the Soviet researcher Boris Urlanis 118 South Africa casualtiesIncluded in total are 5 000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds 101 The Commonwealth War Graves Commission Annual Report 2005 2006 is the source of total military dead 102 Totals include 380 military deaths during 1919 2115 The 1922 War Office report listed 7 121 Army war dead 104 UK and Crown Colonies casualtiesIncluded in total are 624 000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds 101 The Commonwealth War Graves Commission Annual Report 2005 2006 is the source of total military dead 102 Military dead total includes 34 663 deaths during 1919 21 and 13 632 British Merchant Navy deaths 103 The 1922 War Office report listed 702 410 war dead for the UK 104 507 from Other colonies 104 and the Royal Navy 32 287 119 The British Merchant Navy losses of 14 661 were listed separately 119 The 1922 War Office report detailed the deaths of 310 military personnel due to air and sea bombardment of the UK 120 United States casualtiesOfficial military war deaths listed by the US Dept of Defense for the period ending Dec 31 1918 are 116 516 which includes 53 402 battle deaths and 63 114 other deaths 1 Archived 25 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine The US Coast Guard lost an additional 192 dead 121 References Edit Torkunov Anatoly V Martyn Boris F Wohlforth William C 8 January 2020 History of International Relations and Russian Foreign Policy in the 20th Century Volume I ISBN 9781527545021 Torkunov Anatoly V Wohlforth William C Martyn Boris F 8 January 2020 History of International Relations and Russian Foreign Policy in the 20th Century Volume I ISBN 978 1 5275 4502 1 Karel Schelle The First World War and the Paris Peace Agreement GRIN Verlag 2009 p 24 Preamble Treaty of Versailles Australian Treaty Series 1920 No 1 Gilbert 1995 p 44 Mizokami Kyle Japan s baptism of fire World War I put country on a collision course with West Archived 31 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine The Japan Times 27 July 2014 Gilbert 1995 p 225 a b Gilbert 1995 p 282 Magliveras Konstantin 1999 Exclusion from Participation in International Organisations The Law and Practice Behind Member States Expulsion and Suspension of Membership Brill pp 8 12 ISBN 978 90 411 1239 2 S N Broadberry Mark Harrison 2005 The Economics of World War I illustrated Cambridge University Press p 7 ISBN 978 1 139 44835 2 Retrieved 16 March 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Tucker Spencer C 1999 The European Powers in the First World War An Encyclopedia New York Garland p 172 ISBN 978 0 8153 3351 7 a b c d Gilbert Martin 1994 Atlas of World War I Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 521077 4 OCLC 233987354 a b c d e f g War Office Statistics 2006 p 756 Indian Army only Baker Chris Some British Army statistics of the Great War www 1914 1918 net Archived from the original on 18 July 2017 Retrieved 7 August 2017 Korea Formosa Kwantung and Sakhalin As Hawaii and Alaska were not yet US states they are included in the dependencies Costa Rica Cuba Guatemala Haiti Honduras Nicaragua and Panama Hernani Donato 1987 Dicionario das Batalhas Brasileiras Rio de Janeiro IBRASA ISBN 978 85 348 0034 1 S N Broadberry Mark Harrison 2005 The Economics of World War I illustrated Cambridge University Press p 8 ISBN 978 1 139 44835 2 Retrieved 16 March 2015 Germany and colonies Austria Hungary Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria Avner Cohen Joseph Chamberlain Lord Lansdowne and British foreign policy 1901 1903 From collaboration to confrontation Australian Journal of Politics amp History 43 2 1997 122 134 Massie Robert 2007 Dreadnought Britain Germany and the Coming of the Great War 2013 ed Vintage pp 466 468 ISBN 978 0 09 952402 1 Nilesh Preeta 2014 Belgian Neutrality and the First world War Some Insights Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 75 1014 JSTOR 44158486 Hull Isabel 2014 A Scrap of Paper Breaking and Making International Law during the Great War Cornell University Press p 17 ISBN 978 0 8014 5273 4 Schreuder Deryck Spring 1978 Gladstone as Troublemaker Liberal Foreign Policy and the German Annexation of Alsace Lorraine 1870 1871 Journal of British Studies 17 2 108 109 doi 10 1086 385724 JSTOR 175393 S2CID 145137541 Jenkins Roy 1964 Asquith 1988 Revised and Updated ed Harpers Collins pp 242 245 ISBN 978 0 00 217358 2 Catriona Pennell 2012 A Kingdom United Popular Responses to the Outbreak of the First World War in Britain and Ireland p 27 ISBN 978 0 19 959058 2 Cassar George 1994 Asquith as War Leader Bloomsbury pp 14 17 ISBN 978 1 85285 117 0 Brock Michael Brock Elinor eds 2014 Margot Asquith s Great War Diary 1914 1916 The View from Downing Street Kindle ed OUP Oxford Reprint edition pp 852 864 ISBN 978 0 19 873772 8 Gullace Nicoletta F June 1997 Sexual Violence and Family Honor British Propaganda and International Law during the First World War The American Historical Review 102 3 717 doi 10 2307 2171507 JSTOR 2171507 Tucker Spencer C A Global Chronology of Conflict From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East ABC CLIO 2009 P1562 Stephen J Lee 2005 Aspects of British Political History 1914 1995 pp 21 22 ISBN 978 1 134 79040 1 Schuyler Robert Livingston March 1920 The British Cabinet 1916 1919 Political Science Quarterly 35 1 77 93 doi 10 2307 2141500 JSTOR 2141500 Perry 2004 p xiii Hopkirk Peter 1990 The Great Game On Secret Service in High Asia 1991 ed OUP pp 4 5 ISBN 978 0 7195 6447 5 a b Dennis Alfred L P December 1922 The Freedom of the Straits The North American Review 216 805 728 729 JSTOR 25112888 a b Stowell Ellery Cory 1915 The Diplomacy of the War of 1914 The Beginnings of the War 2010 ed Kessinger Publishing p 94 ISBN 978 1 165 81956 0 Jelavich Barbara 2008 Russia s Balkan Entanglements Cambridge University Press p 262 ISBN 978 0 521 52250 2 Aksakal Mustafa 2012 War as a Saviour Hopes for War amp Peace in Ottoman Politics before 1914 In Afflerbach Holger Stevenson David eds An Improbable War the Outbreak of World War I and European Political Culture Before 1914 Berghahn Books p 293 ISBN 978 0 85745 310 5 Baux Jean Pierre 1914 A Demographically Weakened France Chemins de Memoire Archived from the original on 19 August 2018 Retrieved 18 August 2018 Starns Karl M 2012 The Russian Railways and Imperial Intersections in the Russian Empire PDF Master of Arts in International Studies Thesis for Washington University pp 47 49 Archived PDF from the original on 26 March 2017 Retrieved 19 August 2018 a b Brock Michael Brock Elinor eds 2014 Margot Asquith s Great War Diary 1914 1916 The View from Downing Street Kindle ed OUP Oxford Reprint edition pp 759 781 ISBN 978 0 19 873772 8 Tucker Spencer C A Global Chronology of Conflict From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East ABC CLIO 2009 P1556 Hargreaves John 1983 French West Africa in the First World War a review of L Appel a l Afrique Contributions et Reactions a l Effort de guerre en A O F 1914 1919 by Marc Michel The Journal of African History 24 2 285 288 doi 10 1017 S002185370002199X JSTOR 181646 S2CID 161424205 Koller Christian Colonial Military Participation in Europe 1914 1918 Online Archived from the original on 19 August 2018 Retrieved 19 August 2018 Tanenbaum Jan Karl 1978 France and the Arab Middle East 1914 1920 Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 68 7 5 doi 10 2307 1006273 JSTOR 1006273 Cavendish Richard January 2002 The 1902 Anglo Japanese Alliance History Today 52 1 Archived from the original on 16 August 2018 Retrieved 15 August 2018 Gilbert 1995 p 123 宣戦の詔書 Sensen no shōsho Imperial Rescript on Declaration of War Aug 23 1914 Kanpō Extra ed Aug 23 1914 PDF Library of Congress Archived PDF from the original on 1 September 2017 Gilbert 1995 p 329 Zhitian Luo National humiliation and national assertion The Chinese response to the twenty one demands Modern Asian Studies 1993 27 2 pp 297 319 Gilbert 1995 p 522 Thompson Mark 2008 The White War Faber pp 13 14 ISBN 978 0 571 22334 3 Thompson Mark 2008 The White War Faber p 22 ISBN 978 0 571 22334 3 a b Hamilton Richard F Herwig Holger H Decisions for War 1914 1917 P194 Clark Mark 2008 Modern Italy 1871 to the Present Longman History of Italy Routledge p 219 ISBN 978 1 4058 2352 4 Thompson Mark 2008 The White War Faber p 23 ISBN 978 0 571 22334 3 Hamilton Richard F Herwig Holger H Decisions for War 1914 1917 P194 198 Thompson Mark 2008 The White War Faber pp 378 382 ISBN 978 0 571 22334 3 Roudometof Victor 2001 Nationalism Globalization and Orthodoxy The Social Origins of Ethnic Conflict in the Balkans Praeger Publishing p 79 ISBN 978 0 313 31949 5 Clark Christopher 2013 The Sleepwalkers Harper pp 282 283 ISBN 978 0 06 114665 7 Clark Christopher 2013 The Sleepwalkers Harper p 285 ISBN 978 0 06 114665 7 Hull Isabel V 2014 A Scrap of Paper Breaking and Making International Law during the Great War Cornell University pp Chapter 2 Belgian Neutrality ISBN 978 0 8014 5273 4 Brock Michael Brock Elinor eds 2014 Margot Asquith s Great War Diary 1914 1916 The View from Downing Street Kindle ed OUP Oxford Reprint edition pp 852 864 ISBN 978 0 19 873772 8 van Reybrouck David 2014 Congo The Epic History of a People Harper Collins pp 132 passim ISBN 978 0 06 220012 9 Strachan Hew 2014 First World War a New History Simon amp Schuster UK p 70 ISBN 978 1 4711 3426 5 Mazower Mark December 1992 The Messiah and the Bourgeoisie Venizelos and Politics in Greece 1909 1912 The Historical Journal 35 4 886 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00026200 JSTOR 2639443 S2CID 154495315 a b Mitchell Dennis J 1996 Tucker Spencer C ed The European Powers in the First World War An Encyclopedia Routledge pp 195 196 ISBN 978 0 8153 0399 2 Archived from the original on 3 September 2018 Retrieved 2 September 2018 Kaldis William Peter June 1979 Background for Conflict Greece Turkey and the Aegean Islands 1912 1914 The Journal of Modern History 51 2 D1119 D1146 doi 10 1086 242039 JSTOR 1881125 S2CID 144142861 Treadway John 1983 The Falcon and the Eagle Montenegro and Austria Hungary 1908 14 Purdue Press pp 150 153 ISBN 978 0 911198 65 2 Elsie Robert 2010 Historical Dictionary of Albania Historical Dictionaries of Europe Vol 75 2 ed Scarecrow Press p 255 ISBN 978 0810861886 a b Raspopovic Radoslav Montenegro encyclopedia 1914 1918 online Archived from the original on 6 September 2018 Retrieved 5 September 2018 Treadway John 1983 The Falcon and the Eagle Montenegro and Austria Hungary 1908 14 Purdue Press pp 186 189 ISBN 978 0 911198 65 2 Mehra Ram Narain 1988 Aden amp Yemen 1905 1919 Agam Prakashan pp 125 159 Records of Yemen 1797 1960 1950 1954 Archive Editions 1993 p 397 ISBN 9781852073701 Abdullah I of Jordan Philip Perceval Graves 1950 Memoirs p 186 Clark Charles Upson 1971 United Roumania Arno Press p 135 ISBN 9780405027413 Spencer C Tucker Priscilla Mary Roberts Encyclopedia of World War I p 273 Adrian Storea Gheorghe Băjenaru Artileria romană in date și imagini Romanian artillery in data and pictures pp 40 49 50 54 59 61 63 65 and 66 in Romanian Jozef Wilczynski Technology in Comecon Acceleration of Technological Progress Through Economic Planning and the Market p 243 International Naval Research Organization Warship International Volume 21 p 160 Frederick Thomas Jane Jane s Fighting Ships p 343 full citation needed Robert Gardiner Conway s All the World Fighting Ships 1906 1921 p 422 Adrian Storea Gheorghe Băjenaru Artileria romană in date și imagini Romanian artillery in data and pictures p 53 in Romanian Torrey Glenn E 1998 Romania and World War I Center for Romanian Studies p 58 ISBN 9789739839167 Michael Hundertmark Holger Steinle Phoenix aus der Asche Die Deutsche Luftfahrt Sammlung Berlin pp 110 114 in German Romania in anii primului război mondial Romania in the years of the First World War Volume II p 830 in Romanian Gilbert 1995 p 287 King of Battle Artillery in World War I BRILL 2016 p 347 ISBN 9789004307285 Konstam Angus 2015 Gunboats of World War I Bloomsbury Publishing p 29 ISBN 9781472804990 Greger Rene 1976 Austro Hungarian warships of World War I Allan p 142 ISBN 978 0711006232 First World War com Primary Documents U S Declaration of War with Germany 2 April 1917 Archived from the original on 16 May 2008 Retrieved 12 May 2008 Tucker amp Roberts pp 1232 1264 1559 Tucker amp Roberts p 1559 Malek Yusuf 1935 The British Betrayal of the Assyrians Assyrian International News Agency Paul Bartrop Encountering Genocide Personal Accounts from Victims Perpetrators and Witnesses ABC CLIO 2014 Naayem Shall This Nation Die p 281 Eskander Saad Britain s Policy Towards The Kurdish Question 1915 1923 PDF etheses lse ac uk p 45 first Canadian to attain the rank of full general a b c d e f g h i j k l Urlanis 2003 p 85 a b c d e f CWGC 2006 a b c d e CWGC 2012 a b c d e f g War Office Statistics 2006 p 237 War Office Statistics 2006 p 352 Donato 1987 Francisco Verras D N O G contribuicao da Marinha Brasileira na Grande Guerra DNOG the role of Brazilian Navy in the Great War in Portuguese A Noite Ed 1920 a b Huber 1931 p 414 Bujac 1930 p 339 Urlanis 2003 p 160 Mortara 1925 Harries amp Harries 1991 p 111 a b c Monaco 11 Novembre ces Monegasques morts au champ d honneur Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 31 December 2012 Jain G 1954 India Meets China in Nepal Asia Publishing House Bombay P92 War Office Statistics 2006 p 354 Urlanis 2003 p 64 Urlanis 2003 p 46 57 Urlanis 2003 p 62 64 a b War Office Statistics 2006 p 339 War Office Statistics 2006 p 674 678 Clodfelter 2002 p 481 Bibliography EditFurther information List of World War I books Ellis John and Mike Cox The World War I Databook The Essential Facts and Figures for All the Combatants 2002 Esposito Vincent J The West Point Atlas of American Wars 1900 1918 1997 despite the title covers entire war online maps from this atlas Falls Cyril The Great War 1960 general military history Gilbert Martin 1995 First World War HarperCollins ISBN 9780006376668 OCLC 1244719073 Gooch G P Recent Revelations Of European Diplomacy 1940 475pp summarises memoirs of major participants Higham Robin and Dennis E Showalter eds Researching World War I A Handbook 2003 historiography stressing military themes Pope Stephen and Wheal Elizabeth Anne eds The Macmillan Dictionary of the First World War 1995 Strachan Hew The First World War Volume I To Arms 2004 Trask David F The United States in the Supreme War Council American War Aims and Inter Allied Strategy 1917 1918 1961 Tucker Spencer C 1999 The European Powers in the First World War An Encyclopedia New York Garland ISBN 978 0 8153 3351 7 Tucker Spencer ed The Encyclopedia of World War I A Political Social and Military History 5 volumes 2005 online at eBook com United States War Dept General Staff Strength and organisation of the armies of France Germany Austria Russia England Italy Mexico and Japan showing conditions in July 1914 1916 online The War Office 2006 1922 Statistics of the Military Effort of the British Empire During the Great War 1914 1920 Uckfield East Sussex Military and Naval Press ISBN 978 1 84734 681 0 OCLC 137236769 CWGC 2006 Annual Report 2005 2006 PDF archived from the original PDF on 16 June 2007 retrieved 28 January 2007 CWGC 2012 Debt of Honour Register archived from the original on 18 January 2012 Urlanis Boris 2003 1971 Moscow Wars and Population Honolulu University Press of the Pacific OCLC 123124938 Huber Michel 1931 La population de la France pendant la guerre avec un appendice sur Les revenus avant et apres la guerre in French Paris OCLC 4226464 Bujac Jean Leopold Emile 1930 Les campagnes de l armee Hellenique 1918 1922 in French Paris Charles Lavauzelle OCLC 10808602 Mortara Giorgio 1925 La Salute pubblica in Italia durante e dopo la Guerra in Italian New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press OCLC 2099099 Harries Merion Harries Susie 1991 Soldiers of the Sun The Rise and Fall of the Imperial Japanese Army Random House ISBN 978 0 679 75303 2 OCLC 32615324 Clodfelter Micheal 2002 Warfare and Armed Conflicts A Statistical Reference to Casualty and Other Figures 1500 2000 2nd ed London McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 1204 4 OCLC 48066096 Donato Hernani 1987 Dicionario das Batalhas Brasileiras Rio de Janeiro IBRASA ISBN 978 85 348 0034 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Allies of World War I amp oldid 1127150250, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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