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  1. #1
    SoonerFans.com Elite Member Okla-homey's Avatar
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    Good Morning...The Shot that Caused a World-Wide War

    June 28,1914 Archduke Franz Ferdinand assassinated



    96 years ago today, in an event that is widely acknowledged to have sparked the outbreak of World War I, Archduke Franz Ferdinand, nephew of Emperor Franz Josef and heir to the Austro-Hungarian Empire, is shot to death along with his wife by a Serbian nationalist in Sarajevo, Bosnia, on this day in 1914.

    The great Prussian statesman Otto von Bismarck, the man most responsible for the unification of Germany in 1871, was quoted as saying at the end of his life that “One day the great European War will come out of some damned foolish thing in the Balkans.” It went as he predicted.


    The murders were front page news in the US. Few expected this event would lead to US entrance in the ensuing war in 1917.

    The archduke traveled to Sarajevo in June 1914 to inspect the imperial armed forces in Bosnia and Herzegovina, former Ottoman territories in the turbulent Balkan region that were annexed by Austria-Hungary in 1908 to the indignation of Serbian nationalists, who believed they should become part of the newly independent and ambitious Serbian nation.


    The archduke and his wife on the day they died, June 28, 1914.

    The date scheduled for his visit, June 28, coincided with the anniversary of the First Battle of Kosovo in 1389, in which medieval Serbia was defeated by the Turks. Despite the fact that Serbia did not truly lose its independence until the Second Battle of Kosovo in 1448, June 28 was a day of great significance to Serbian nationalists, and one on which they could be expected to take exception to a demonstration of Austrian imperial strength in Bosnia.

    June 28 was also Franz Ferdinand’s wedding anniversary. His beloved wife, Sophie, a former lady-in-waiting, was denied royal status in Austria due to her birth as a poor Czech aristocrat, as were the couple’s children. In Bosnia, however, due to its limbo status as an annexed territory, Sophie could appear beside him at official proceedings.

    On June 28, 1914, then, Franz Ferdinand and Sophie were touring Sarajevo in an open car, with surprisingly little security, when Serbian nationalist Nedjelko Cabrinovic threw a bomb at their car; it rolled off the back of the vehicle and wounded an officer and some bystanders.

    Later that day, on the way to visit the injured officer, the archduke’s procession took a wrong turn at the junction of Appel quay and Franzjosefstrasse, where one of Cabrinovic’s cohorts, 19-year-old Gavrilo Princip, happened to be loitering.

    Seeing his opportunity, Princip fired into the car, shooting Franz Ferdinand and Sophie at point-blank range. Princip then turned the gun on himself, but was prevented from shooting it by a bystander who threw himself upon the young assassin.


    Gavrilo Princip and the bloody coat worn by the archduke.

    A mob of angry onlookers attacked Princip, who fought back and was subsequently wrestled away by the police. Meanwhile, Franz Ferdinand and Sophie lay fatally wounded in their limousine as it rushed to seek help; they both died within the hour.

    The assassination of Franz-Ferdinand and Sophie set off a rapid chain of events: Austria-Hungary, like many in countries around the world, blamed the Serbian government for the attack and hoped to use the incident as justification for settling the question of Slav nationalism once and for all.


    Princip enroute to trial by Austrian authorities.

    As Russia supported Serbia, an Austro-Hungarian declaration of war was delayed until its leaders received assurances from German leader Kaiser Wilhelm that Germany would support their cause in the event of a Russian intervention—which would likely involve Russia’s ally, France, and possibly Britain as well.

    It all very quickly snowballed into a vast conflict involving most of the world.

    On July 28, Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia, and the tenuous peace between Europe's great powers collapsed. Within a week, Russia, Belgium, France, Great Britain and Serbia had lined up against Austria-Hungary and Germany, and World War I had begun.

    By the time WWI ended in 1918 with the signing of the Treaty of Paris in 1919, also on this day, at least 15 million had been killed and 22 million had been wounded. By the time it ended, very few remembered it all started with the murder of a minor royal couple from Austria.

    "Discourage litigation. Persuade your neighbors to compromise whenever they can. Point out to them how the nominal winner is often a real loser; in fees, expenses and waste of time." -- Abraham Lincoln, (1809-1865) Lawyer and President who saved the United States.

    "Without opportunities on the part of the poor to obtain expert legal advice, it is idle to talk of equality before the law"-- Justice Chas. Evans Hughes

  2. #2
    SoonerFans.com Elite Member TUSooner's Avatar
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    Re: Good Morning...The Shot that Caused a World-Wide War

    Then was that other war that came a long as the result of the first one.
    Those Serbian hotheads are some bad ****.
    You tell me it's the institution. Well, you know, you'd better free your mind instead.
    (Shoo-bee doo-wah)

  3. #3
    Wild West Wench
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    Re: Good Morning...The Shot that Caused a World-Wide War

    My pawpaw was born in 1901, so he always said he was too young to fight in the first world war, and too old to fight in the second, and I'm not sure he thought that was a good thing, especially the second time around. He always followed the news very closely, though, and had many friends and family members who fought in those wars. He had some interesting stories about what it was like to be here in the US while the war raged in Europe. He said that a lot of people wanted to stay out of it until the sinking of the Lusitania, and then support for US involvement began to build. He had a little glass ship-in-a-bottle model Lusitania. He also had one for the Maine that said "Remember The Maine" on the side.

    He said the worst part about WWI, as a civilian, was when the Spanish Flu pandemic (which would eventually kill more than 50 million people worldwide, and close to 8,000 Okies) hit. Families that had lost sons to war were now losing parents, siblings, or other relatives to the flu. Dark days, indeed.

  4. #4
    Sooner All-Big XII-2-1+1-1+1 reevie's Avatar
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    Re: Good Morning...The Shot that Caused a World-Wide War

    Quote Originally Posted by Okla-homey View Post
    a poor Czech aristocrat
    I'm confused.

  5. #5

    Re: Good Morning...The Shot that Caused a World-Wide War

    I say you don't know
    You say you don't know
    I say... take me out!

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