Videos | Photos

WWI Firsts (1:18)

WWI may have been the war to end all wars, but it was also the beginning of many military and civilian technologies.

Watch Similar Videos

  • This video can be viewed when you log in with your TV provider.

    Select your TV provider to log in to have full access to videos

    • Select your TV provider
    • See More Providers
    Don't see your TV provider? Learn more

Your Parental Control settings do not allow you to view thiscontent.

Videos (9)

  • WWI Firsts
    WWI Firsts

    Video Clip (1:18)

    WWI may have been the war to end all wars, but it was also the beginning of many military and civilian technologies.

    Video Clip (1:18)
  • Causes of World War I
    Causes of World War I

    Video Clip (2:17)

    By 1914, military tensions and a series of alliances have Europe on the edge of war. In August, the fuse is lit by an assassination in Sarajevo. By war's end, more than 100 countries would be involved in the conflict.

    Video Clip (2:17)
  • Trench Warfare
    Trench Warfare

    Video Clip (1:14)

    Although best known for its role in the long slog of World War I, trench warfare actually got its start on the battlefields of the American Civil War. Find out how new weapons and technology played a part in both its development and destruction.

    Video Clip (1:14)
  • Allies Launch Disastrous Attack at Gallipoli
    Allies Launch Disastrous Attack at Gallipoli

    Video Clip (1:39)

    An ill-fated assault on Turkish forces leads to 500,000 casualties in World War I.

    Video Clip (1:39)
  • Treaty of Versailles Ends World War I
    Treaty of Versailles Ends World War I

    Video Clip (1:56)

    German resentment over harsh peace terms leads to a rise in nationalist sentiment and the eventual rise to power of Adolf Hitler.

    Video Clip (1:56)
  • 1916 Battle of the Somme
    1916 Battle of the Somme

    Video Clip (1:36)

    After two years of trench warfare, the Allies attempt to break through German lines on the Western Front. The ensuing battle will last for months and result in more than one million casualties.

    Video Clip (1:36)
  • U-Boats Sink the Lusitania in 1915
    U-Boats Sink the Lusitania in 1915

    Video Clip (2:04)

    When Germany torpedoes a British passenger ship believed to be smuggling arms, anger at the resulting American deaths increases pressure on President Wilson to enter World War I.

    Video Clip (2:04)
  • Rasputin
    Rasputin

    Video Clip (1:59)

    Timothy Dickinson tells us about the life and death of the famous Russian mystic Rasputin.

    Video Clip (1:59)
  • World War I: Germans Attack U.S. Navy Boats
    World War I: Germans Attack U.S. Navy Boats

    Video Clip (2:31)

    In this History Rewind video clip, take a step back in time to the beginning of World War 1. The repeated sinking of American ships caused the President to declare war. Watch the historic black and white footage of some of the attacks.

    Video Clip (2:31)

Photo Galleries (3)

  • World War I Leaders
    World War I Leaders

    16 Photos

    World War I ravaged Europe from 1914 until an armistice was signed in November 1918. In all, more than 9 million soldiers would be killed, and nearly 21 million more wounded.

    (16 Photos)
  • World War I: Trench Warfare
    World War I: Trench Warfare

    11 Photos

    Trench warfare reached its highest development on the Western Front during World War I (1914–18), when armies of millions of men faced each other in a line of trenches extending from the Belgian coast through northeastern France to Switzerland.

    (11 Photos)
  • Veterans Day: Remembering the Armistice
    Veterans Day: Remembering the Armistice

    13 Photos

    Veterans Day falls on the anniversary of the signing of the armistice that ended World War I on November 11, 1918. Meet several World War I veterans and read their reflections on that momentous occasion.

    (13 Photos)

Read More about World War I Officially Ends

World War I officially came to an end on October 3, 2010, more than 90 years after an armistice ended the fighting, when Germany finally submitted the final payment of reparations that were required by the terms of the Versailles Treaty.

Go

Shop HISTORY