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Though their signi cance is often misunderstood or exaggerated, alliances are one of the best-known causes of World
War I. While alliances did not force nations to war in 1914, they nevertheless drew them into confrontation and
con ict with their neighbours.
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Contents
1 What is an alliance?
2 Origins of the alliance system
3 Anti-Napoleonic alliances
4 The late 19th century
5 The Treaty of London (1839)
6 The Three Emperors’ League (1873)
7 The Dual Alliance (1879)
8 The Triple Alliance (1882)
9 The Franco-Russian Alliance (1894)
10 The Entente Cordiale (1904)
11 The Anglo-Russian Entente (1907)
12 The Triple Entente (1907)
13 Secrecy and hidden clauses
14 Secret clauses
What is an alliance?
An alliance is a political, military or economic agreement, negotiated and signed by two or more nations. Military
alliances usually contain promises that in the event of war or aggression, signatory nations will support their allies.
The terms of this support are outlined in the alliance document. They can range from nancial or logistic backing, like
the supply of materials or weapons, to military mobilisation and a declaration of war against the aggressor.
Alliances may also contain economic elements, such as trade agreements, investment or loans.
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France and England were ancient antagonists whose rivalry erupted into open warfare several times between the
14th and early 19th centuries. Relations between the French and Germans were also troubled, while France and
Russia also had their differences.
Alliances provided European states with a measure of protection. They served as a means of guarding or advancing
national interests while acting as a deterrent to war. They were particularly important for Europe’s smaller or less
powerful states.
Anti-Napoleonic alliances
During the 1700s, kings and princes regularly formed or re-formed alliances, usually to protect their interests or to
isolate rivals. Many of these alliances and alliance blocs were short-lived. Some collapsed when new leaders emerged;
others were nulli ed or replaced by new alliances.
The rise of French dictator Napoleon Bonaparte in the early 1800s ushered in a brief period of ‘super alliances’.
European nations allied themselves either in support of Bonaparte or to defeat him. Between 1797 and 1815,
European leaders formed seven anti-Napoleonic coalitions. At various times these coalitions included Britain, Russia,
Holland, Austria, Prussia, Sweden, Spain and Portugal.
After Napoleon’s defeat at Waterloo in 1815, European leaders worked to restore normality and stability to the
continent. The Congress of Vienna (1815) established an informal system of diplomacy, de ned national boundaries
and sought to prevent wars and revolutions. The congress system worked for a time but started to weaken in the mid-
1800s.
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During the late 19th century, European leaders continued to form, annul and restructure alliances on a regular basis.
The alliance system during this period is often attributed to German chancellor Otto von Bismarck and his attitude of
realpolitik.
Belgium had earned statehood in the 1830s after separating from southern Holland. The Treaty of London was still in
effect in 1914, so when German troops invaded Belgium in August 1914, the British considered it a violation of the
treaty.
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Disorder in the Balkans undermined Russia’s commitment to the league, which collapsed in 1878. The Three
Emperors’ League, without Russia, came to form the basis of the Triple Alliance.
The Dual Alliance was welcomed by nationalists in Germany, who believed that German-speaking Austria should be
absorbed into greater Germany.
Each of the three signatories to the Triple Alliance was required to provide military support to the others, if one was
attacked by two other powers – or if Germany and Italy were attacked by France.
Italy, a newly formed nation that was weak militarily, was viewed as a minor partner in this alliance.
The signing of the Franco-Russian Alliance was an unexpected development that thwarted German plans for mainland
Europe. The alliance angered Berlin and triggered a more aggressive shift in its foreign policy.
The Franco-Russian Alliance also provided economic bene ts to both signatory nations. It gave Russia access to
French loans and provided French capitalists with access to Russian mining, industry and raw materials. This was an
important factor in the industrialisation of Russia over the next two decades.
The Entente ended a century of hostility between the two cross-channel neighbours. It also resolved some colonial
disagreements and other minor but lingering disputes.
The Entente was not a military alliance since neither signatory was obliged to provide military support for the other.
Nevertheless, it was seen as the rst step towards an Anglo-French military alliance.
The Anglo-Russian Entente resolved several points of disagreement, including the status of colonial possessions in the
Middle East and Asia. It did not involve any military commitment or support.
Again, The Triple Entente was not a military alliance – but the three Ententes of 1904-7 were important because they
marked the end of British neutrality and isolationism.
A Venn diagram depicting the network of alliances in 19th and 20th century Europe
Some governments even conducted negotiations without informing their other alliance partners. The German
chancellor Bismarck, for example, initiated alliance negotiations with Russia in 1887 without informing Germany’s
major ally, Austria-Hungary.
Some alliances also contained ‘secret clauses’ that were not publicly announced or placed on record. Several of
these secret clauses only became known to the public after the end of World War I. The secretive nature of
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alliances only heightened suspicion and continental tensions.
Secret clauses
An additional factor in the outbreak of war were changes to European alliances in the years prior to 1914. A clause
inserted into the Dual Alliance in 1910, for example, required Germany to directly intervene if Austro-Hungary was
ever attacked by Russia.
These modi cations were ostensibly small but they further strengthened and militarised alliances. It is debatable
whether these changes increased the chances of war or simply re ected the rising tensions of the period.
The impact of the alliance system as a cause of war is often overstated. Alliances did not, as is often suggested, make
war inevitable. These pacts and treaties did not disempower sovereign governments or drag nations into war against
their own will.
The authority and nal decision to mobilise or declare war still rested with national leaders. It was their moral
commitment to these alliances that was the telling factor. As historian Hew Strachan put it, the real problem was that
by 1914, “nobody was prepared to ght wholeheartedly for peace as an end in itself”.
A historian’s view:
“Models of the war’s causality have often expressed contemporary international relations. During the Cold War and
the division of the world into two, there was a tendency to view international relations before 1914 as bipolar, and
divided between two rigidly separated and rival blocs in which power, prestige and security were key determinants;
and in which emphasis was placed on the alliance system in the war’s causes… Analysis turned on how far war was
accidental (or ‘system generated’) and how far it was willed by governments.”
John Horne
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1. The alliance system was a network of treaties, agreements and ententes that were negotiated and signed prior to
1914.
2. National tensions and rivalries have made alliances a common feature of European politics, however, the alliance
system became particularly extensive in the late 1800s.
3. Many of these alliances were negotiated in secret or contained secret clauses, adding to the suspicion and tension
that existed in pre-war Europe.
4. The Triple Alliance (Germany, Austria-Hungary and Italy) formed the basis of the Central Powers, the dominant
alliance bloc in central Europe.
5. Britain, France and Russia overcame their historical con icts and tensions to form a three-way entente in the early
1900s.