WWI Assassination
WWI: Assassination Assassination: to murder a prominent person by surprise attach for political reasons. In 1914, Archduke Franz Ferdinand was the heir to the throne of the Austria-Hungary Empire. As Inspector General of the Army, Franz Ferdinand and his wife, Sophie, visited the capital of Bosnia, Sarajevo, to inspect army maneuvers. !On June 28, 1914, a nineteen-year-old Serbian assassin named Gavrilo Princip shot Archduke Franz Ferdinand, the heir to the Austrian throne. !The assassination was a disaster. To start with, it almost didn"t work. Six teenagers, none of them older than nineteen, had planned to throw a bomb in to the Archduke"s car as it passed by. But the boy given the job of throwing the bomb missed! The explosion went off behind the Archduke"s back fender. Immediately, police charged into the crowd and grabbed the bomb-thrower. He tried to swallow a capsule of cyanide to kill himself, but he couldn"t get it into his mouth properly. He was arrested at once and dragged off to jail. !At this, the other five boys fled. Gavrilo Princip went into a coffeehouse nearby to calm himself down by drinking a cup of coffee. When he finished his coffee, he stepped out onto the sidewalk and looked around. A car was coming towards him--the Archduke"s car, leaving the scene of the bombing to take the Archduke to safety. Princip, hardly able to believe his luck, drew his gun and shot into the car...killing both the Archduke and his wife. !The leaders of Austria insisted that the assassination attempt must have been planned by the Serbian government.
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