---
title: "Archduke Franz Ferdinand Assassinated in Sarajevo"
year: 1914
canonical: "https://recap.at/1914/franz-ferdinand-assassination"
slug: "franz-ferdinand-assassination"
recapType: "global_event"
startDate: "1914-01-01"
---

# Archduke Franz Ferdinand Assassinated in Sarajevo

> A teenager's bullets topple empires and launch total war.

On June 28, 1914, a 19-year-old man named Gavrilo Princip shot and killed Archduke Franz Ferdinand, the heir to the throne of Austria-Hungary, along with the Archduke's wife Sophie. The assassination took place in Sarajevo, a city in Bosnia that Austria-Hungary controlled. Within a month, this single shooting had triggered a chain reaction of military alliances and declarations of war that pulled the major powers of Europe into what became World War I, reshaping the continent for the next hundred years.

## Summary

On June 28, 1914, Gavrilo Princip fired two shots in Sarajevo that killed Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria and his wife Sophie, the heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne. Princip, 19, was one of several assassins positioned along the route of the Archduke's motorcade that day; an earlier bomb attack had failed to kill him. The assassination itself was the work of the Black Hand, a Serbian nationalist organization bent on undermining Austro-Hungarian rule in the Balkans. But what made this particular killing consequential wasn't Princip's aim-it was the diplomatic domino effect that followed.

Austria-Hungary, already rattled by Balkan instability and Serbian nationalist movements, interpreted the assassination as a Serbian act of war. On July 23, 1914, the empire issued a harsh ultimatum to Serbia, which Serbia rejected. Austria-Hungary declared war on July 28. Because of a tangle of pre-existing military alliances-Russia sided with Serbia, Germany backed Austria-Hungary, France supported Russia, and Germany's invasion of neutral Belgium brought Britain into the conflict-what might have remained a regional dispute exploded into a continental war. Within weeks, the major powers of Europe were mobilized.

Princip was arrested at the scene and died in prison in 1918, likely from tuberculosis exacerbated by harsh conditions. He never lived to see the war's end or the redrawing of Europe's map. The assassination became the symbolic moment historians point to when explaining how Europe slid into the First World War-not because the killing itself was unprecedented, but because the political machinery it set in motion had no off switch. Historians debate how much Princip's bullets caused the war versus how much they simply triggered an already-inevitable collapse, but the date June 28, 1914, remains the hinge on which the 20th century turned.

## Key facts

- **Date**: June 28, 1914
- **Location**: Sarajevo, Bosnia
- **Assassin**: Gavrilo Princip, age 19
- **Victims**: Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife Sophie
- **Organization behind attack**: Black Hand, a Serbian nationalist group
- **Austria-Hungary's ultimatum to Serbia**: Issued July 23, 1914
- **Austria-Hungary declares war on Serbia**: July 28, 1914
- **Days between assassination and Austria-Hungary's war declaration**: 30 days

## Timeline

- **1914-06-28** - Assassination in Sarajevo
  Gavrilo Princip shoots Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife Sophie in their motorcade. An earlier bomb attack on the same route had failed.
- **1914-06-28** - Princip arrested
  Princip is captured at the scene and taken into custody by Austro-Hungarian authorities.
- **1914-07-23** - Austria-Hungary issues ultimatum to Serbia
  Austria-Hungary demands Serbia suppress anti-Austro-Hungarian activities and accept Austro-Hungarian investigators on Serbian soil. Serbia rejects key terms.
- **1914-07-28** - Austria-Hungary declares war on Serbia
  Unable to resolve the crisis through diplomacy, Austria-Hungary formally declares war.
- **1914-07-30** - Russia mobilizes
  Russia begins military mobilization in support of its Serbian ally.
- **1914-08-01** - Germany declares war on Russia
  Germany, allied with Austria-Hungary, declares war on Russia.
- **1914-08-03** - Germany declares war on France
  Germany declares war on France, Russia's ally, and begins invasion of Belgium.
- **1914-08-04** - Britain declares war on Germany
  Britain, bound by treaty to defend Belgian neutrality, declares war on Germany. Continental conflict becomes continental war.
- **1918-04-28** - Gavrilo Princip dies
  Princip dies in an Austro-Hungarian prison, likely from tuberculosis. He is 23 years old.

## Relationships

- **caused**: treaty-of-versailles - The assassination triggered World War I, which ended with the Treaty of Versailles signed exactly five years later on June 28, 1919. The harsh treaty directly resulted from the Central Powers' defeat in a war initiated by Austria-Hungary's response to the killing.
- **caused**: hitler-rise-to-power - The assassination set off a chain of events-war, German military defeat, the Treaty of Versailles with its punitive reparations and humiliation-that created the economic and political conditions for Hitler's rise in 1930s Germany.
- **caused**: october-revolution-1917 - World War I, triggered by the assassination, brought Russia into a catastrophic war that killed millions. Military collapse and war exhaustion directly enabled Lenin and the Bolsheviks to seize power in October 1917.
- **caused**: league-of-nations-established - The First World War, initiated by the assassination's diplomatic cascade, killed millions and created the impetus for Woodrow Wilson's League of Nations (established 1920) as a mechanism to prevent future great-power conflicts.
- **happened during**: first-opium-war - The Opium Wars (1840s–1850s) were part of the imperial competition framework that dominated the 1914 European order. The assassination occurred within a century-long era of European imperial dominance that those wars had established in Asia.

## Consequences

- **1914 - Austria-Hungary declares war on Serbia**: Austria-Hungary issued an ultimatum to Serbia on July 23, 1914, and declared war on July 28, 1914, setting off the cascade of mobilizations that dragged all major European powers into conflict.
- **1914 - Russia mobilizes; Germany declares war**: Russia began full mobilization on July 30, 1914 in support of Serbia. Germany declared war on Russia on August 1 and on France on August 3, honoring its commitment to Austria-Hungary and executing the Schlieffen Plan.
- **1914 - Britain enters World War I**: Britain declared war on Germany on August 4, 1914, citing German violation of Belgian neutrality and its obligations under the Treaty of London. The British Empire and its dominions were now at war.
- **1914 - Ottoman Empire and Central Powers alliance**: The Ottoman Empire signed a secret alliance with Germany and Austria-Hungary in early August 1914, formalizing the Central Powers bloc that would oppose the Entente throughout the war.
- **1919 - Treaty of Versailles imposed on Germany**: The peace treaty signed on June 28, 1919-exactly five years after the assassination-imposed harsh reparations, territorial losses, and military restrictions on Germany, creating resentment that would fuel fascism.
- **1918 - Austro-Hungarian Empire dissolved**: Austria-Hungary collapsed in November 1918 after military defeat and nationalist uprisings. The empire that Franz Ferdinand was heir to ceased to exist, replaced by smaller successor states including Austria, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia.

## Then vs now

- **European great powers at peace**: 1914: 6 major powers (Britain, France, Russia, Germany, Austria-Hungary, Italy) → 2024: Multiple power centers (EU, NATO members, Russia as regional power) - The rigid alliance system of 1914 has been replaced by multilateral institutions and economic interdependence, though geopolitical tension remains.
- **Global deaths from conflict in the year**: 1914: ~900,000 (World War I alone) → 2023: ~200,000–300,000 across all active conflicts globally - The First World War introduced industrialized warfare; modern conflicts are more dispersed but less total in scale.
- **Empires controlling global territory**: 1914: British, French, German, Russian, Austro-Hungarian, Ottoman empires dominated → 2024: No formal imperial structures; former colonies are independent nation-states - The war accelerated the end of empire. The Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian empires fell by 1918; decolonization completed the process by 1970.

## Impact

On June 28, 1914, Gavrilo Princip's bullets in Sarajevo killed Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife Sophie, detonating the diplomatic powder keg of European great-power rivalries. Within weeks, alliance systems and imperial ambitions transformed a regional crisis into the First World War, reshaping the map, the monarchy, and the modern world.

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Canonical: https://recap.at/1914/franz-ferdinand-assassination