The narrative begins with the assassination of the Austro-Hungarian heir and the swift plunge of Europe into continental war, then traces political, social, and military roots across the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It surveys diplomatic tensions, rival alliances, and national ambitions that converted a regional crisis into a general conflict, compares the military and economic resources of the belligerents, and examines naval and land strategies and the costs of modern warfare. Chapters recount the legacy of Napoleonic upheavals, movements for national unification and competing pan-national ideologies, and the war’s global effects on commerce, finance, and the weakening of autocratic rule.