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War As The "First World War" The Essay

¶ … War as the "First World War" The Seven Years War from 1756 to 1763 was described by Winston Churchill as the "first world war," because each of the major European powers of the time played a part in the conflict -- "the first conflict in human history to be fought around the globe" ("Seven Years War"). This paper will discuss the aspects of the war, focusing on who fought and why, what the war's outcome was, and why it has been justly called the "first world war."

Even though the war was fought "in Europe, Africa, India and North America between England [and its] colonies, Prussia, Portugal and smaller German states [on one side] against Austria, France, Russia, Sweden and Saxony [on the other]," some scholars dispute the fact that it should be considered a World War, like David Reynolds in America, Empire of Liberty, who describes the Seven Years War as Total War, with fighting on land and sea leading to "atrocities,' such as the deportation of some 8,000 French-Canadian settlers from Nova Scotia to Louisiana" (44). However, the majority of opinion appears to generate the belief that the conflict was indeed the first world war, the argument mainly being that "after 1914 and even a lot more in the second world war, war became total, [no longer simply on the battlefield] the difference between soldier and normal worker faded." ("Seven Years War the First World War?").

While emphasis can be placed upon certain points, or "disconnected episodes," as Fred Anderson states, like "Braddock's defeat, the...

Modern Americans…know it as the French and Indian War. Neither name communicates the conflict's immensity and importance. Winston Churchill came closer when he called it "a world war -- the first in history," noting that unlike the previous Anglo-French wars, this time "the prize would be something more than a rearrangement of frontiers and a redistribution of fortresses and sugar islands." ("The Real First World War and the Making of America.")
Nonetheless, the Seven Years War conflict arose out of two arenas: First, trouble in Europe over Austrian succession, the province of Silesia, and the forming of alliances led Frederick II of Prussia to invade Saxony, which was aligned with Austria. Meanwhile, the British allies of Prussia were attacked in the Mediterranean by the French, who were on the side of Austria. Fighting between France and Britain also had an American element to it, which effected the other cause of the war in another arena: Britain and France were fighting over colonies in the New World. "The primary reason for the beginning of the American theatre of the war was a dispute over the Ohio River banks" ("Seven Years War").

In Europe, however, fighting did not seriously get underway until 1757 when Maria Theresa of Hapsburg, Empress of Austria, openly declared war on…

Sources used in this document:
Works Cited

Anderson, Fred. "The Real First World War and the Making of America." American

Heritage Magazine 56.6, 2005. Web. 29 Mar 2011.

Reynolds, David. America, Empire of Liberty. New York, NY: Basic Books, 2009.

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