The Great War by John Terraine traces the progress of World War One starting with the killing of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand to the Armistice at 11 a.m. on the eleventh day of the eleventh month of 1918. On June 28, 1914, the Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the Austrian throne, was visiting Sarajevo, capital of the recently annexed province of Bosnia. On his was to the town hall a bomb was thrown but missed him. On the way back, Gavrilo Princip threw a bomb and missed. He then pulled out a revolver and fired three shots; both the Archduke and his wife were killed instantly. The Austrian Government reacted quickly, blaming the neighboring kingdom of Serbia. Serbia had Russias support; therefore Austria invoked her ally, Germany. Russia turned to her ally France. Eventually the alliances formed were with Austria, Germany, and Italy and then with Great Britain, Russia and France.The hard military core of the Alliance was the French Army. This dictated the German war plans, which made the immediate crushing of France a necessity before all else must bow. The discrepancy of population made it impossible for France to match German numbers in the field. In August 1914 Germany possessed 384 military airplanes and a fleet of 30 airships.It was on the Western Front that the first fights took place; speed was an essential factor of the German plan, which allowed forty days to overthrow France. This was to be accomplished by a great wheel of three of their seven western armies, a mass of 34 infantry and 5 cavalry divisions, through Belgium and northwestern France, passing west of Paris and finally defeating the French armies. The whole point of the Schlieffen Plan, which had brought the right wing of the German Army from Aachen to Paris, was a vast flank march of nearly 200 miles as the crow flies, but actually much farther on the ground. When Germany invaded Belgium in August 1914, Great Britain honored her commitments to Belg...