| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| Time the Armistice went into effect | 11:00 AM | 75%
|
| Worldwide pandemic that had weakened the armies and would kill tens of millions of young adults through 1920. | Spanish Flu | 75%
|
| Recently defeated German ally led by The Three Pashas. The central remnants of this empire would soon be led by another man named Pasha, a.k.a. Atatürk. | The Ottoman Empire | 75%
|
| Document that formalized Germany's surrender, signed 5 years to the day after the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, the Treaty Of __________ | Versailles | 75%
|
| President of The United States | Woodrow Wilson | 75%
|
| Recently defeated German ally on the Black Sea | Bulgaria | 63%
|
| German Emperor who had ended his 30-year reign by announcing his abdication 2 days prior, having fled to The Netherlands. | Kaiser Wilhelm II | 63%
|
| German ports in which sailors had mutinied in the days before the armistice | Kiel | 63%
|
| German city where the constituent assembly established a new government the same day the Emperor abdicated. Hitler derisively named this interwar government after the city, the ______ Republic. | Weimar | 63%
|
| Collective name for Germany and her allies, all of whom except Germany, had already surrendered | Central Powers | 50%
|
| Prime minister of The United Kingdom | David Lloyd George | 50%
|
| Collective name for the long standing, heavily entrenched defensive positions to which the Germans had recently returned, named for the supreme military commander of Germany and her allies: The __________ Line | Hindenburg (OR Siegfried Line) | 50%
|
| Recently defeated German ally headed by the Habsburg Dynasty | The Austro-Hungarian Empire | 50%
|
| Collective name of the allies fighting Germany | The Entente | 50%
|
| ...which would lead to this precursor of The United Nations | The League Of Nations | 38%
|
| Percent of Germany held by the enemy when it surrendered | 0% | 25%
|
| King of Belgium | Albert I | 25%
|
| Nearby city traditionally cited as the signing location | Compiègne | 25%
|
| Prime minister of France | Georges Clemenceau | 25%
|
| General in charge of United States forces | John J. "Blackjack" Pershing | 25%
|
| Nickname for squads of German soldiers who adapted precursor Blitzkrieg tactics near the end of the war to finally break trench warfare and push toward Paris. | Stormtroopers | 25%
|
| General who had been head of the German armies until just before the armistice. | Erich Ludendorff | 13%
|
| French field marshal who was the Western allies' supreme commander and primary author of the terms of surrender | Ferdinand Foch | 13%
|
| U.S. President's set of proposed conditions for permanent peace | Fourteen Points | 13%
|
| President of France | Raymond Poincaré | 13%
|
| Treaty which had ended hostilities between Germany and the new Soviet government of Russia | Treaty Of Brest-Litovsk | 13%
|
| German ports in which sailors had mutinied in the days before the armistice | Wilhelmshaven | 13%
|
| Field marshal in charge of United Kingdom forces | Douglas Haig | 0%
|
| German paramilitary units that revolted against the government and would be a continuing source of strife for several years. | Freikorps | 0%
|
| American with a German last name and recently busted from sergeant down to private, who foolishly charged German machine gunners less than 1 minute before peace went into effect | Henry Gunther | 0%
|
| Chancellor of the German Empire | Maximilian von Baden | 0%
|