The World Wars

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During the Industrial Revolution, Europe was comparatively peaceful for the most part. The 19th century started with the Napoleonic Wars when Industrialization was building up steam in England and afterwards there were a series of colonial conflicts and small to middling wars between the various industrial powers*. The Civil War was on the upper end of conflicts in this era but was limited to the US and saw about 600-750,000 people dead. The Franco Prussian war was won in six months. Things changed in 1914 when Arch Duke Ferdinand was assassinated, starting the Great War, also known as the First World War. This would be followed up by the Second World War in 1939-45. The World Wars Conflicts which would spread across the world and saw conflict and destruction.

There are two important factors in the World Wars: Technology and Nationalism. Technology is the easier of the two to understand, in the Napoleonic War the average soldier had a flintlock musket that could shoot 2-4 bullets a minute with an effective range of 100 meters, was supported by muzzle loading cannons that could shoot accurately to about 1km was supported by and steam engines were just beginning to propel boats and move loads of coal around mines. In 1914 the average soldier had a rifle that could shoot 15-30 bullets a minute (which could go through three men and still be deadly) at ranges of over a kilometer and was backed up by cannons that could fire shells six kilometers or more on ballistic courses which exploded in the air raining a spray of balls over a wide area and machine guns which could shoot 450 bullets a minute and airplanes. By the end of the Great War tanks, Sub Machine Guns and Poison Gas had been added to the arsenal. Tactics devised based on 19th century ideas of fighting were useless on this new battlefield and the book needed to be re-written from page one. Other technologies such as mass production, mechanized farming, railways and automobiles, mass education, telecommunications and modern bureaucracies meant that an Industrial Nation could turn more of it's population into soldiers than any medieval nation could ever hope to do (Rome was hard pressed to keep up a standing army of about 1% of it's population, Germany mobilized nearly 20%).

Nationalism is more abstract but just as important. In the Middle Ages people generally identified themselves as being "a Christian Blacksmith from London" or "a Jewish Cobbler from Munich" and left it at that. If a Civil War happened and they ended up with a new noble house was put in charge, they would not care too much as long as the new lord upheld his feudal duties. There was a king and he ruled a bunch of land and tried to keep the peace, which was all good but it was not a fact which defined them. This began to change with the Protestant Reformation and had a bit of build up through the Age of Enlightenment as propaganda for the masses took form leading to the Birth of Nationalism with the French Revolution and Napoleonic Wars. People began to see their country as more than just where they lived and the guy in a funny hat they were ruled by, but rather as a community of people united by common ideas, languages, beliefs, customs, ideals and (often) ancestry. People that need to band together and set aside their differences and defend what's theirs against those stinking foreigners with their differentness. Public Education caught on during the Industrial Revolution, which made it possible to give these ideals to everyone from the richest businessman to the lowiest begger. When you have two nations which have nationalistic populations and governments and other groups fond of egging nationalism on together it does not take much to get them at each others throats.

  • The Taiping Rebellion in china killed some 20-30 million people, but neither side in it was industrialized beyond buying some foreign weapons to equip some of their troops.

Notes

The appeal of The World Wars

These are the biggest armed conflicts of world history, rolling across continents.

The Great War is largely seen as a great tragedy. Because of some damn fool thing in the Balkans millions of good people in Germany, France, Austria, and England get riled up by the news and propaganda campagins that they were now at war. Men join the army one way or another, get cheered as they parade down the streets as being righteous heroes in the making going forth to defend hearth, home, family, friend and Nation and are shipped out to battlefields where they get torn apart by rifle fire, machine guns and artillery by the tens of thousands. The survivors dig in, make their trench lines, take pock shots at each other and live in dread of the hour when they'd be sent off on a suicidal charge across no mans land which will achieving nothing.

The Second World War is seen more in terms of Good vs Evil. The Nazis raised up an army and went about conquering Europe with plans on exterminating millions as a key objective while Imperial Japan was out conquering China and being really nasty themselves.

World War inspired Games, Factions and Settings

  • A lot of stuff from the Imperium of Man, especially the Death Korps of Krieg.
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Historical Time Periods
Deep Time: Prehistory
Premodern: Stone Age - Bronze Age - Classical Period - Dark Age - High Middle Ages - Renaissance
Modern: Age of Enlightenment - Industrial Revolution - The World Wars - The Cold War - Post-Cold War