The Life of Franz Ferdinand

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Franz Ferdinand was the archduke of Austria-Hungary. On June 28, 1914, Ferdinand and his wife, Sophie, were visiting Sarajevo when the two were assassinated by Gavrilo Princip, a member of the Serbian terrorist group, the Black Hand. After several failed attempts from members of the Black Hand that day, the members were running out of hope. However, due to a communication problem with the driver of Ferdinand and his wife’s car, they were forced to turn around in an alley that Princip was hidden in. Two shots later, the pair was dead within minutes and Austria-Hungary was ready to make Serbian’s pay for what they did. Archduke Franz Ferdinand’s assassination had different effects but the biggest one was the start of World War I.
Franz Ferdinand’s assassination had a few causes but the main one was that people in the empire were unhappy. The Serbians were upset about the way Franz Ferdinand was taking land and making poor decisions. The Serbians “were especially dissatisfied with the government’s acceptance of Austria-Hungary’s annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina” (Knežević). Bosnia and Herzegovina was Serbian land that the Serbian’s wanted for themselves but Franz Ferdinand took it and made it a part of the Austria-Hungary Empire. Franz Ferdinand wanted to keep the Balkan states under control in order to ease nationalists forces and “believed that the best way for this to occur was to expand the empire and create an equal role for the Slavs” (Archduke Franz Ferdinand: The Pawn). Serbian nationalists, however, wanted to be completely independent of Austria-Hungary and got worked up over the idea of becoming a part of the empire. Not only had Franz Ferdinand been stirring up Serbian’s feelings towards the empire, but the day he was ...

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... North Sea to the Baltic Sea” (Pendergast 5). France knew that Germany was already an enemy and that they had influence over many countries, so they allied with Russia. The two countries were in agreement that “they needed to protect the Slavic peoples living to the east of the Austro-Hungarian border” (Pendergast 6). France and Russia agreed that the Slavic people deserved their own separate state and were willing to go to war against the Dual Alliance in order for this to occur. These two alliances, the Dual Alliance and Triple Entente, were both called to fight each other in the First World War.
With the alliances all set, the only thing to do was to call on them in a time of need. Once Franz Ferdinand, the archduke of the Austria-Hungarian Empire was assassinated, the empire called on a war putting Serbia and their allies up against Austria-Hungary and Germany.

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