Central Powers

European military alliances in 1915. The Central Powers are depicted in red and the Entente Powers in green. Note: The borders of the Balkans are incorrect. This map shows the borders of 1911.
European military alliances in 1915. The Central Powers are depicted in red and the Entente Powers in green. Note: The borders of the Balkans are incorrect. This map shows the borders of 1911.
Map of the World with the Participants in World War I. The Allies and their colonies are depicted in green, the Central Powers and their colonies in yellow, and neutral countries in gray.
Map of the World with the Participants in World War I. The Allies and their colonies are depicted in green, the Central Powers and their colonies in yellow, and neutral countries in gray.

The Central Powers (German: Mittelmächte) were the nations of Germany, Austria-Hungary, the Ottoman Empire, and Bulgaria, which fought against the Allies during World War I. They are called this because they all were located between Russia in the east and France and the United Kingdom in the west.

Germany and Austria-Hungary became allies on 7 October 1879, being joined subsequently (20 May 1882) (see Triple Alliance) by Italy, which however undertook secretly in 1902 not to honour its alliance commitments against Germany's principal adversary France. Italy entered World War I on May 23, 1915 — in alliance with Britain. After World War I, however, the fascist regime in Italy would go back to its old agreement and, instead, ally itself with Nazi Germany.

Following the outbreak of European war in August 1914, the Ottoman Empire intervened at the end of October against Russia, provoking declarations of war by the Triple Entente powers--Russia, France and Britain.

Bulgaria, still resentful after its defeat in July 1913 at the hands of Serbia, Greece, Romania and the Ottoman Empire, was the last nation to enter the war against the Entente, invading Serbia in conjunction with German and Austro-Hungarian forces in October 1915.

Bulgaria signed an armistice with the Allies on 29 September 1918, following a successful Allied advance in Macedonia. The Ottoman Empire followed suit on 30 October in the face of British and Arab gains in Palestine and Syria. Austria and Hungary concluded ceasefires separately during the first week of November following the disintegration of the Habsburg Empire, and Germany signed the armistice ending the war on the morning of 11 November after a succession of advances by Belgian, British, French and US forces in north-eastern France and Belgium.

See also


World War I - navigate through History:
Theaters Main events Specific articles Participants See also

Prelude:

Main Theaters:

1914:
• Battle of Liège
• Battle of Tannenberg
• First Battle of the Marne
• Battle of Tsingtao
1915:
• First Battle of Arras
• Battle of Gallipoli
• Italian Campaign
1916:
• Battle of Verdun
• Battle of the Somme
• Battle of Jutland
• Brusilov Offensive
1917:
• Second Battle of Arras (Vimy Ridge)
• Battle of Passchendaele
• Russian Revolution
1918:
• Hundred Days Offensive
• Meuse-Argonne Offensive
• Armistice with Germany

Civilian impact & atrocities:

Aftermath:

Participants

Entente Powers
•  Russian Empire
•  France
•  British Empire
 •  Australia
 •  Canada
 •  India
 •  Newfoundland
 •  New Zealand
 •  South Africa
 •  United Kingdom
•  Italy
•  Romania
•  USA
•  Serbia
•  Portugal
•  Japan
•  Belgium
•  Montenegro
•  Greece
• more...

Central Powers
•  German Empire
•  Austria-Hungary
•  Ottoman Empire
•  Bulgaria

• Category: World War I
• A war to end all wars
• Female roles
• Literature
• Total war
• Spanish flu
• Veterans

Contemporary conflicts:
• First Balkan War
• Second Balkan War
• Maritz Rebellion
• Easter Rising
• Russian Revolution
• Russian Civil War
• North Russia Campaign
• Polish-Soviet War
• Greco-Turkish War

More information on World War I:

 World War I from Wiktionary
 WWI Textbooks from Wikibooks
 WWI Quotations from Wikiquote
 WWI Source texts from Wikisource
 WWI Images and media from Commons
 WWI News stories from Wikinews