World War I started in the summer of 1914 when a local crisis in the Balkans—triggered by an assassination—spiraled into a continent‑wide war because of rival alliances, militarism, and miscalculation by Europe’s great powers.

The spark: June 28, 1914

  • On 28 June 1914, Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the Austro‑Hungarian throne, was assassinated in Sarajevo by Gavrilo Princip, a Bosnian Serb nationalist linked to a Serbian-backed group.
  • Austria‑Hungary saw this as an attack tied to Serbia and decided to use the crisis to crush Serbian influence in the Balkans.

From crisis to declarations of war

  • Backed by Germany’s so‑called “blank cheque” of support, Austria‑Hungary issued a very harsh ultimatum to Serbia, then declared war on 28 July 1914 after rejecting Serbia’s partial acceptance.
  • Russia, seeing itself as protector of Serbia and worried about Austro‑German power, began mobilizing; Germany then declared war on Russia (1 August) and France (3 August), and invaded neutral Belgium to reach France.

Why it became a world war

  • A pre‑existing alliance system turned a regional Austro‑Serbian conflict into a larger clash: Germany and Austria‑Hungary (later joined by the Ottoman Empire) versus France, Russia, and Britain, the so‑called Entente.
  • Britain entered the war after Germany violated Belgian neutrality and because British leaders feared German domination of Europe and the sea lanes.

Deeper causes behind the explosion

  • Long‑term factors often summed up as militarism, alliances, imperial rivalries, and nationalism had made Europe a powderkeg : rising German power, tension in the Balkans, and arms races all raised the risk that any crisis could turn into war.
  • Historians debate which state bears most responsibility, but there is broad agreement that leaders on all sides misjudged the danger, expecting a short, limited war instead of a prolonged global conflict.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.