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World War I: The Complete History

World War I: The Complete History

By: YesOui
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World War I: The Complete History is the definitive podcast series tracing every dimension of the Great War — from the tangled alliances and imperial rivalries that ignited Europe in 1914 to the armistice that reshaped the modern world. Beginning with the long fuse of the powder keg — the nationalist tensions, colonial competition, and political miscalculations simmering since 1870 — this show leaves nothing unexplored. Each episode delivers meticulously researched narrative history, bringing to life the statesmen, soldiers, diplomats, and ordinary people swept up in the twentieth century's first catastrophe. Whether you're a lifelong history enthusiast, a student, or simply curious about how the world we live in was forged in the trenches of the Western Front and the collapsed empires of the East, this podcast is built for you.© 2026 YesOui.ai Social Sciences World
Episodes
  • The Blank Check: Five Weeks That Started a World War
    May 9 2026
    Five weeks. That's all it took to turn a gunshot in Sarajevo into the deadliest conflict the world had ever seen. In this episode, we go inside the July Crisis of 1914 — the five weeks of ultimatums, back-channel guarantees, and racing mobilisation timetables that slammed every exit shut and delivered Europe into war.

    We begin in Vienna, where Count Berchtold and Conrad von Hötzendorf weighed their options after Franz Ferdinand's assassination. We follow the Austrian envoys to Berlin and the fateful meeting on July 5th, where Kaiser Wilhelm II handed Austria-Hungary what became known as the blank check — unconditional German backing for whatever Vienna chose to do. We examine the deliberately provocative ultimatum delivered to Belgrade on July 23rd, designed not to be accepted, and Serbia's startlingly conciliatory response — which Vienna rejected anyway.

    Then we turn to the machinery that made peace impossible. European military planning in 1914 was a locked, self-accelerating system. Germany's Schlieffen Plan demanded speed. Russia's mobilisation triggered Germany's. Germany's triggered France's. Diplomacy moved slowly; the railways moved fast. In that gap, the war took hold.

    This episode explains not just what happened, but why men who understood the risks still let it happen — a failure of imagination so complete it reshaped the entire twentieth century. Essential listening for anyone trying to understand how the modern world was made.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    13 mins
  • Schlieffen, the Marne, and the War Nobody Planned For
    May 9 2026
    (00:00:00) Schlieffen, the Marne, and the War Nobody Planned For
    (00:01:30) The Violation of Belgium
    (00:02:56) The German Advance and the Fall of France's Plan
    (00:04:11) The Miracle of the Marne
    (00:05:58) The Race to the Sea
    (00:07:22) Why the Trenches?
    (00:08:42) What the Opening Campaign Cost
    (00:10:08) The End of Movement, The Start of Attrition

    In August 1914, German boots crossed the Belgian border and set in motion a military plan decades in the making. The Schlieffen Plan promised a swift knockout blow against France — a sweeping arc through neutral Belgium, the encirclement of Paris, and a surrender within six weeks — before pivoting east to face Russia. It was a strategy that demanded perfection and allowed for nothing less.

    This episode follows the plan's collision with reality. The Belgian fortress of Liège, expected to fall within days, held for nearly two weeks — exposing how little margin for error the plan contained. Britain, bound by an 1839 treaty to guarantee Belgian neutrality, entered the war. The continental crisis became a world war.

    On the other side, France launched its own offensive gamble. Plan XVII sent French infantry charging into the frontier regions of Alsace and Lorraine with élan and aggression — and directly into concentrated machine-gun fire and artillery. The Battle of the Frontiers cost France roughly 300,000 casualties in weeks. The offensive spirit met industrial killing power and was annihilated.

    With Paris seemingly within reach, German commander Alexander von Kluck made a pivotal error — turning his army east of the capital instead of encircling it, exposing his flank. French commander Joffre and military governor Gallieni seized the moment. The Battle of the Marne halted the German advance and forced a retreat to the Aisne.

    The Schlieffen Plan was dead. The armies dug in. And the war that was supposed to end by Christmas became something no strategist had imagined — or prepared for.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    12 mins
  • Mud, Wire, and Attrition: Life and Death on the Western Front
    May 9 2026
    (00:00:00) Mud, Wire, and Attrition: Life and Death on the Western Front
    (00:00:40) The Lines Are Drawn
    (00:01:57) What the Trench Actually Was
    (00:03:29) The Rhythm of Attrition
    (00:04:52) The Machinery of Killing
    (00:06:51) The Battles That Defined the Stalemate
    (00:08:48) Tactics Evolve, Slowly
    (00:10:15) What They Carried
    (00:11:41) The Front Holds, Then Breaks
    (00:12:50) What the Western Front Left Behind

    No theatre of the First World War left a deeper mark on the modern imagination than the Western Front. In Episode 5, we trace how four hundred and fifty miles of trenches — running from the English Channel to the Swiss border — became the defining landscape of industrial warfare, and why the conflict locked millions of men into four years of grinding attrition.

    We begin with the collapse of the Schlieffen Plan and the Race to the Sea in late 1914, examining how a war of movement hardened almost overnight into static defence. From there, we go inside the trench systems themselves: the difference between British and German construction philosophy, the strategic logic each reflected, and the lethal consequences for any attacking force.

    The episode charts the daily rhythm of trench life — the stand-to at dawn, the morning hate, the nighttime working parties, and the long, grinding stretches of boredom punctuated by terror. We examine the physical and psychological toll: trench foot, lice, dysentery, and the condition then called shell shock, frequently dismissed as cowardice by commanders who had no framework for understanding it.

    Finally, we confront the machinery of killing that made the Western Front so catastrophic: artillery responsible for roughly sixty percent of all casualties, the machine gun that turned no man's land into a death zone, and the introduction of chemical warfare at Ypres in April 1915. Together, these technologies didn't just kill men — they dismantled centuries of military doctrine and forced armies to find entirely new ways to fight.

    This is the story of the ground, and the men who lived and died in it.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    15 mins
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