People have been fighting wars since the first
wooden spears were carved thousands of years
ago.
Estimates for the total number killed in war
throughout all of human history ranges from
150 million to 1 billion people, and according
to the New York Times, at least 108 million
have been killed in wars in the twentieth
century alone.
With the continuing advances we see in technology,
the way we fight wars is constantly changing.
Today we’ll be looking at how two of the
biggest wars in history compare, in this episode
of The Infographics Show: World War 1 vs World
War 2.
World War 1, also known as the First World
War, the Great War, or the War to End All
Wars, was a global war.
It started in Europe and lasted more than
4 years from 1914 to 1918.
The conflict was between the central powers
of Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Turkey up
against France, Britain, Russia, Italy, Japan,
and towards the end, in 1917, America.
It is one of the largest wars in history,
and though sources vary on exact numbers of
casualties, it is estimated there were 10
million military deaths, 7 million civilian
deaths, and 21 million wounded.
World War Two, also known as the Second World
War, was a global war that lasted for 6 years
from 1939 to 1945, though there were earlier
related conflicts, leading up to it.
It was the deadliest conflict in human history
and included The Axis Powers, which were Germany,
Italy, and Japan against the Allied Powers
of France, Britain, America, the Soviet Union,
and China.
There were 15 million military deaths, 45
million civilian deaths, and 25 million people
wounded.
These wars took place more than two decades
apart; let’s see how these brutal battles
compare side by side.
In World War 1, each soldier was given a rifle,
a bayonet, and 3 grenades.
The first grenades in 1914 were basic and
often hand-made, consisting of old cans filled
with nails and bits of metal and packed with
gunpowder.
The British were the first to introduce tanks
into warfare with the Mark 1, which was developed
in 1915 to break the stalemate of trench warfare.
And the Germans introduced machine guns with
each battalion having a minimum of 6.
The Russians had 8 machine guns while the
less fortunate British soldiers had only two.
Mortars were explosive bombs shot in a projectile
motion, and both sides of the battle had their
own versions.
Heavy artillery was one of the most significant
elements in the First World War, and for firing
from behind the lines there was a lighter,
more localized form known as field artillery.
Gases were commonly used to occupy enemy trenches,
barbed wire would be placed near enemy camps
to prevent enemy soldiers from entering, and
in 1915, the Germans even employed flamethrowers
against the French.
What about World War 2?
Well 25 years later, things had advanced.
There were lightweight machine guns, which
soldiers could use against low-flying aircraft,
as well as well equipped navy carriers that
had cannons to shoot down heavy aircraft.
The bazooka, which you may remember as Hollywood
character Rambo’s weapon of choice, is an
anti-tank, handheld, missile launcher, which
was used against the German Army.
The Germans themselves had the Fritz-X guided
bomb, to use against anti-aircraft guns, U-boats
to sink American ships, as well as The Panther
tank which formed the backbone of the German
Blitzkrieg tactic.
But the biggest advancement and probably the
most famous weapon of the Second World War,
was the atom bomb that was used by the Americans,
to wipe out the Japanese cities of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki and end the conflict.
With all the injuries that come with war,
one of the most important aspects of fighting
a long drawn out battle is medical support.
When World War 1 broke out in France in 1914,
horse-drawn wagons with baskets on either
side, were used to get a wounded soldier from
the battlefield to a hospital.
That often meant first being taken to the
nearest train station and put in the straw
of a cattle-car, and sent towards the nearest
city that had a hospital.
No bandages, no food, and no water.
“One of those trains had dumped about 500
badly wounded men and left them lying between
the tracks in the rain, with no cover whatsoever,”
recounted Harvey Cushing, the head of the
Harvard Unit of volunteer doctors at the American
Ambulance Hospital of Paris.
But with all these injured soldiers to deal
with, doctors actually learned enough to vastly
improve a soldier’s chances of survival.
At the beginning of the war, they only had
amputation as a solution, but they learned
to disinfect wounds, to operate on the injured
soldiers and repair the damage from enemy
artillery.
Ambulances, antiseptic, and anesthesia, all
emerged from the medical community having
to deal with millions of deaths in the First
World War.
When The Second World War arrived, every country
was far better prepared, but again having
to deal with an extraordinary number of injuries
also changed the medical landscape.
Most notably, with the role of nurses, of
which many came from America.
Not only did the number of female nurses increase
significantly during the war, but the responsibility
they carried became more critical.
In 1941, the Army Nursing Corps had a mass
shortage of nurses with fewer than seven thousand
available, leading to the need for nurses
to volunteer to serve.
In order to join the Nursing Corps, a woman
had to meet certain criteria.
Naturally, she had to be a citizen of the
United States and to be a registered nurse.
From 1943, Army nurses were required to undergo
additional training such as field sanitation,
psychiatry and anesthetics, and physical training
to help build up their endurance.
They worked closer to battle lines than they
did in World War 1 or any war before.
The nurses often worked and served under harsh
conditions and had to make emergency decisions
on the spot.
What about the results of these two devastating
conflicts?
Following World War 1, communism spread among
the Soviet Union resulting in the Russian
revolution of 1917.
The Treaty of Versailles resulted in the German
Army being forced to pay $31.5 billion dollars
as reparation for the war.
The empire of Austria-Hungary split their
union and formed independent countries of
Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia.
And there was a Great Depression in America.
After World War 2 ended with the victory of
the Allies against Germany and Japan in 1945,
the European economy had collapsed, with 70%
of the industrial infrastructure destroyed
from the war.
Germany split into two, with East Germany
adopting a communist policy.
Hitler and his closest associates committed
suicide, but many other associates; especially
Hermann Göring was sentenced to life imprisonment
for hate crimes.
And The United Nations was formed on October
24th, 1945, promising to uphold the peace.
Both of these wars had a devastating impact
that was felt for many years after.
So, can you envision a thrid world war, and
if so, how do you think it will compare to
the first two?
Let us know in the commets!
Also be sure to check out our other video,
Australia vs the United States (Who Would
Win?
Military Comparison).
Thanks for watching, and, as always, don’t
forget to like, share, and subscribe.
See you next time!
