WW1_Lakatos_Márton

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Across
  1. 4. It was the headquarters of the invading German army in the Franco-German War of 1870–71 and was occupied by the Germans again in World War I.
  2. 5. Russian general distinguished for the “Brusilov breakthrough” on the Eastern Front against Austria-Hungary (June–August 1916), which aided Russia’s Western allies at a crucial time during World War I.
  3. 6. any naval vessel that is capable of propelling itself beneath the water as well as on the water’s surface
  4. 8. British prime minister (1916–22) who dominated the British political scene in the latter part of World War I. He was raised to the peerage in the year of his death.
  5. 10. In World War I it became the main line of Italian defense after the Austrian breakthrough at Caporetto in 1917.
  6. 11. a heavily armed and armored combat vehicle
  7. 12. Germany's strategy to avoid a long war in the first phase of World War II in Europe. Germany's strategy was to defeat its opponents in a series of short campaigns
  8. 13. sealing off a place to prevent goods or people from entering or leaving
Down
  1. 1. A costly and largely unsuccessful Allied offensive on the Western Front during World War I. The horrific bloodshed on the first day of the battle became a metaphor for futile and indiscriminate slaughter.
  2. 2. an agreement for surrender
  3. 3. battle plan first proposed in 1905 by Alfred, Graf (count) von Schlieffen, chief of the German general staff, that was designed to allow Germany to wage a successful two-front war
  4. 7. A World War I engagement in which the French repulsed a major German offensive. It was one of the longest, bloodiest, and most-ferocious battles of the war. Some 300,000 were killed.
  5. 8. founder of the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks), inspirer and leader of the Bolshevik Revolution (1917), and the architect, builder, and first head (1917–24) of the Soviet state
  6. 9. British statesman, orator, and author who as prime minister rallied the British people during World War II and led his country from the brink of defeat to victory
  7. 11. By the terms of this treaty, Hungary was shorn of at least two-thirds of its former territory and two-thirds of its inhabitants