World War 1: Assassination and Trouble on the Balkans
By The Outlaw, published Mar 24, 2006
Published Content: 404 Total Views: 419,380 Favorited By: 8 CPs
In the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century one of the most important areas of the world was the Balkan Peninsula which was controlled by the Ottoman Empire. The Balkan Peninsula had crucial trade routes to European countries as well as India and Africa and had many different and diverse people and cultures living in this region setting off conflicts and tensions.
In 1848 a Pan-Slav Congress was set up which wanted to unite all the people of Slavic heritage. This created problems because so many people of Slavic heritage lived in Austria-Hungary or the Ottoman Empire which controlled the Balkan Peninsula. The first tensions in this region came in 1877 during the Russo-Turkish War. In the war between Russia, Serbia, and the Ottoman Empire, the Ottoman Empire lost and was forced to give up a lot of its territory in the Balkans including Bulgaria, and Bosnia-Herzegovina, Montenegro, and Romania. In the treaty of San Stefano, Bulgaria and Bosnia-Herzegovina which were made into autonomous states. In addition the treaty gave more land and power to Russia and Serbia in the Balkan Peninsula.
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