Woodrow Wilson: Fourteen Points

A Student’s Guide to Essential Primary Sources
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Woodrow Wilson: Fourteen Points
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Abstract

Following the assassination of Archduke Francis Ferdinand in the summer of 1914, Europe’s major powers—linked into two rival alliances—mobilized their armed forces and plunged Europe into World War I. By the end of 1917, more than a million French soldiers lay dead. France’s British, Russian, and Italian allies had suffered similar losses, as had their German, Austro-Hungarian, and Ottoman enemies.

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