Ancient HistoryBefore Christ (B.C.) or Before the Common Era (B.C.E.)4.5 billion – 1B.C. World History
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1–999 (A.D.) World History
Roman AqueductMontpellier, France
Tina Diodati
Christ
Celtic Cross
Renée Scott
Mayan Pyramid at
Chichén Itzá Renée Scott
Japanese Pagoda
Erik Hjortshoj
Viking Ship (c. 900)
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- 1–49
- Birth of Jesus Christ (variously given from 4 B.C. to A.D. 7). After Augustus, Tiberius becomes emperor (dies, A.D. 37), succeeded by Caligula (assassinated, A.D. 41), who is followed by Claudius. Crucifixion of Jesus (probably A.D. 30). Han dynasty in China founded by Emperor Kuang Wu Ti. Buddhism introduced to China.
- 50–99
- Claudius poisoned (A.D. 54), succeeded by Nero (commits suicide, A.D. 68). Missionary journeys of Paul the Apostle (A.D. 34–60). Jews revolt against Rome; Jerusalem destroyed (A.D. 70). Roman persecutions of Christians begin (A.D. 64).Colosseum built in Rome (A.D. 71–80). Trajan (rules A.D. 98–116); Roman empire extends to Mesopotamia, Arabia, Balkans. First Gospels of St. Mark, St. John, St. Matthew.
- 100–149
- Hadrian rules Rome (A.D. 117–138); codifies Roman law, rebuilds Pantheon, establishes postal system, builds wall between England and Scotland. Jews revolt under Bar Kokhba (A.D. 122–135); final Diaspora (dispersion) of Jews begins.
- 150–199
- Marcus Aurelius rules Rome (A.D. 161–180). Oldest Mayan temples in Central America (c. A.D. 200).
- 200–249
- Goths invade Asia Minor (c. A.D. 220). Roman persecutions of Christians increase. Persian (Sassanid) empire re-established. End of Chinese Han dynasty.
- 250–299
- Increasing invasions of the Roman empire by Franks and Goths. Buddhism spreads in China. Classic period of Mayan civilization (A.D. 250–900); develop hieroglyphic writing, advances in art, architecture, science.
- 300–349
- Constantine the Great (rules A.D. 312–337) reunites eastern and western Roman empires, with new capital (Constantinople) on site of Byzantium (A.D. 330); issues Edict of Milan legalizing Christianity (A.D. 313); becomes a Christian on his deathbed(A.D. 337). Council of Nicaea (A.D. 325) defines orthodox Christian doctrine. First Gupta dynasty in India (c. A.D. 320).
- 350–399
- Huns (Mongols) invade Europe (c. A.D. 360). Theodosius the Great (rules A.D. 392–395)—last emperor of a united Roman empire. Roman empire permanently divided inA.D. 395: western empire ruled from Rome; eastern empire ruled from Constantinople.
- 400–449
- Western Roman empire disintegrates under weak emperors. Alaric, king of the Visigoths, sacks Rome (A.D. 410). Attila, Hun chieftain, attacks Roman provinces(A.D. 433). St. Patrick returns to Ireland (A.D. 432) and brings Christianity to the island. St. Augustine’s City of God (A.D. 411).
- 450–499
- Vandals destroy Rome (A.D. 455). Western Roman empire ends as Odoacer, German chieftain, overthrows last Roman emperor, Romulus Augustulus, and becomes king of Italy (A.D. 476). Ostrogothic kingdom of Italy established by Theodoric the Great (A.D.493). Clovis, ruler of the Franks, is converted to Christianity (A.D. 496). First schism between western and eastern churches (A.D. 484).
- 500–549
- Eastern and western churches reconciled (519). Justinian I, the Great (483–565),becomes Byzantine emperor (527), issues his first code of civil laws (529), conquers North Africa, Italy, and part of Spain. Plague spreads through Europe (542 et seq.). Arthur, semi-legendary king of the Britons (killed, c. 537). Boëthius, Roman scholar (executed, 524).
- 550–599
- Beginnings of European silk industry after Justinian’s missionaries smuggle silkworms out of China (553). Mohammed, founder of Islam (570–632). Buddhism in Japan (c. 560). St. Augustine of Canterbury brings Christianity to Britain (597). After killing about half the population, plague in Europe subsides (594).
- 600–649
- Mohammed flees from Mecca to Medina (the Hegira); first year of the Muslim calendar(622). Muslim empire grows (634). Arabs conquer Jerusalem (637), conquer Persians(641).
- 650–699
- Arabs attack North Africa (670), destroy Carthage (697). Venerable Bede, English monk (672–735).
- 700–749
- Arab empire extends from Lisbon to China (by 716). Charles Martel, Frankish leader, defeats Arabs at Tours/Poitiers, halting Arab advance in Europe (732). Charlemagne(742–814). Introduction of pagodas in Japan from China.
- 750–799
- Charlemagne becomes king of the Franks (771). Caliph Harun al-Rashid rules Arab empire (786–809): the “golden age” of Arab culture. Vikings begin attacks on Britain(790), land in Ireland (795). City of Machu Picchu flourishes in Peru.
- 800–849
- Charlemagne crowned first Holy Roman Emperor in Rome (800). Charlemagne dies(814), succeeded by his son, Louis the Pious, who divides France among his sons(817). Arabs conquer Crete, Sicily, and Sardinia (826–827).
- 850–899
- Norsemen attack as far south as the Mediterranean but are thwarted (859), discover Iceland (861). Alfred the Great becomes king of Britain (871), defeats Danish invaders(878). Russian nation founded by Vikings under Prince Rurik, establishing capital at Novgorod (855–879).
- 900–949
- Beginning of Mayan Post-Classical period (900–1519). Vikings discover Greenland(c. 900). Arab Spain under Abd ar-Rahman III becomes center of learning (912–961).Otto I becomes King of Germany (936).
- 950–999
- Mieczyslaw I becomes first ruler of Poland (960). Eric the Red establishes first Viking colony in Greenland (982). Hugh Capet elected King of France in 987; Capetian dynasty to rule until 1328. Musical notation systematized (c. 990). Vikings and Danes attack Britain (988–999). Otto I crowned Holy Roman Emperor by Pope John XII (962).
1000–1099 (A.D.) World History
Mesa VerdeCliff Dwellings(c. 1000–1300)
Pete Maio
Cathedral and Tower at Pisa
Tasha Vincent
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- c. 1000–1300
- Classic Pueblo period of Anasazi culture; cliff dwellings.
- c. 1000
- Hungary and Scandinavia converted to Christianity. Viking raider Leif Eriksson discovers North America, calls it Vinland. Beowulf, Old English epic.
- c. 1008
- Murasaki Shikibu finishes The Tale of Genji, the world’s first novel.
- 1009
- Muslims destroy Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem.
- 1013
- Danes control England. Canute takes throne (1016), conquers Norway (1028), dies(1035); kingdom divided among his sons: Harold Harefoot (England), Sweyn (Norway), Hardecanute (Denmark).
- 1040
- Macbeth murders Duncan, king of Scotland.
- 1053
- Robert Guiscard, Norman invader, establishes kingdom in Italy, conquers Sicily(1072).
- 1054
- Final separation between Eastern (Orthodox) and Western (Roman) churches.
- 1055
- Seljuk Turks, Asian nomads, move west, capture Baghdad, Armenia (1064), Syria, and Palestine (1075).
- 1066
- William of Normandy invades England, defeats last Saxon king, Harold II, at Battle of Hastings, crowned William I of England (“the Conqueror”).
- 1068
- Construction on the cathedral in Pisa, Italy, begins.
- 1073
- Emergence of strong papacy when Gregory VII is elected. Conflict with English and French kings and German emperors will continue throughout medieval period.
- 1095
- At Council of Clermont, Pope Urban II calls for a holy war to wrest control of Jerusalem from Muslims, which launches the First Crusade (1096), one of at least 8 European military campaigns between 1095 and 1291 to regain the Holy Land. (For detailed chronology, see The Crusades.)
1100–1199 (A.D.) World History
Chartres Cathedral
Tasha Vincent
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- 1100–1300
- Construction of Cathedral at Chartres, France.
- 1144
- Second Crusade begins.
- c. 1150
- Angkor Wat is completed.
- 1150–1167
- Universities of Paris and Oxford founded in France and England.
- 1162
- Thomas á Becket named Archbishop of Canterbury, murdered by Henry II’s men(1170). Troubadours (wandering minstrels) glorify romantic concepts of feudalism.
- 1169
- Ibn-Rushd begins translating Aristotle’s works.
- 1189
- Richard I (“the Lionhearted”) succeeds Henry II in England, killed in France (1199), succeeded by King John. Third Crusade.
1200–1299 (A.D.) World History
King John
(1167–1216) Thomas Aquinas
(1225–1274) |
- 1200–1204
- Fourth Crusade.
- 1211
- Genghis Khan invades China, captures Peking (1214), conquers Persia (1218),invades Russia (1223), dies (1227).
- 1212
- Children’s Crusade.
- 1215
- King John forced by barons to sign Magna Carta at Runneymede, limiting royal power.
- 1217
- Fifth Crusade.
- 1228
- Sixth Crusade.
- 1231
- The Inquisition begins as Pope Gregory IX assigns Dominicans responsibility for combating heresy. Torture used (1252). Ferdinand and Isabella establish Spanish Inquisition (1478). Tourquemada, Grand Inquisitor, forces conversion or expulsion of Spanish Jews (1492). Forced conversion of Moors (1499). Inquisition in Portugal(1531). First Protestants burned at the stake in Spain (1543). Spanish Inquisition abolished (1834).
- 1241
- Mongols defeat Germans in Silesia, invade Poland and Hungary, withdraw from Europe after Ughetai, Mongol leader, dies.
- 1248
- Seventh Crusade.
- 1251
- Kublai Khan governs China, becomes ruler of Mongols (1259), establishes Yuan dynasty in China (1280), invades Burma(1287), dies (1294).
- 1260
- Chartres cathedral consecrated.
- 1270
- Eighth Crusade.
- 1271
- Marco Polo of Venice travels to China, in court of Kublai Khan (1275–1292), returns to Genoa (1295) and writes Travels.
- 1273
- Thomas Aquinas stops work on Summa Theologica, the basis of all Catholic theological teaching; never completes it.
- 1295
- English King Edward I summons the Model Parliament.
1300–1399 (A.D.) World History
- 1312–1337
- Mali Empire reaches its height in Africa under King Mansa Musa.
- c. 1325
- The beginning of the Renaissance in Italy: writers Dante, Petrarch, Boccaccio; painter Giotto. Development of Noh drama in Japan. Aztecs establish Tenochtitlán on site of modern Mexico City. Peak of Muslim culture in Spain. Small cannon in use.
- 1337–1453
- Hundred Years’ War—English and French kings fight for control of France.
- 1347–1351
- At least 25 million people die in Europe’s “Black Death” (bubonic plague).
- 1368
- Ming Dynasty begins in China.
- 1376–1382
- John Wycliffe, pre-Reformation religious reformer, and followers translate Latin Bible into English.
- 1378
- The Great Schism (to 1417)—rival popes in Rome and Avignon, France, fight for control of Roman Catholic Church.
- c. 1387
- Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales.
- 1398
- Tamerlane, the Mongol conqueror, begins last great conquest—Delhi.
1400–1499 (A.D.) World History
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1500–1599 (A.D.) World History
Michelangelo’s David
(1504) Tasha Vincent
Martin Luther
(1483–1546)
Henry VIII(1491–1547)
Queen Elizabeth I
(1533–1603)
William Shakespeare
(1564–1616)
Rembrandt van Rijn
(1606–1669)
Catherine de Medici
(1519–1589) |
- 1501
- First black slaves in America brought to Spanish colony of Santo Domingo.
- c. 1503
- Leonardo da Vinci paints the Mona Lisa. Michelangelo sculpts the David(1504).
- 1506
- St. Peter’s Church started in Rome; designed and decorated by such artists and architects as Bramante, Michelangelo, da Vinci, Raphael, and Bernini before its completion in 1626.
- 1509
- Henry VIII ascends English throne. Michelangelo paints the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel.
- 1513
- Balboa becomes the first European to encounter the Pacific Ocean. Machiavelli writesThe Prince.
- 1517
- Turks conquer Egypt, control Arabia. Martin Luther posts his 95 theses denouncing church abuses on church door in Wittenberg—start of the Reformation in Germany.
- 1519
- Ulrich Zwingli begins Reformation in Switzerland. Hernando Cortes conquers Mexico for Spain. Charles I of Spain is chosen Holy Roman Emperor Charles V. Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan sets out to circumnavigate the globe.
- 1520
- Luther excommunicated by Pope Leo X. Suleiman I (“the Magnificent”) becomes Sultan of Turkey, invades Hungary (1521), Rhodes (1522), attacks Austria (1529),annexes Hungary (1541), Tripoli (1551), makes peace with Persia (1553), destroys Spanish fleet (1560), dies (1566). Magellan reaches the Pacific, is killed by Philippine natives (1521). One of his ships under Juan Sebastián del Cano continues around the world, reaches Spain (1522).
- 1524
- Verrazano, sailing under the French flag, explores the New England coast and New York Bay.
- 1527
- Troops of the Holy Roman Empire attack Rome, imprison Pope Clement VII—the end of the Italian Renaissance. Castiglione writes The Courtier. The Medici family expelled from Florence.
- 1532
- Pizarro marches from Panama to Peru, kills the Inca chieftain, Atahualpa, of Peru(1533). Machiavelli’s The Prince published posthumously.
- 1535
- Reformation begins as Henry VIII makes himself head of English Church after being excommunicated by Pope. Sir Thomas More executed as traitor for refusal to acknowledge king’s religious authority. Jacques Cartier sails up the St. Lawrence River, basis of French claims to Canada.
- 1536
- Henry VIII executes second wife, Anne Boleyn. John Calvin establishes Reformed and Presbyterian form of Protestantism in Switzerland, writes Institutes of the Christian Religion. Danish and Norwegian Reformations. Michelangelo’s Last Judgment.
- 1541
- John Knox leads Reformation in Scotland, establishes Presbyterian church there(1560).
- 1543
- Publication of On the Revolution of Heavenly Bodies by Polish scholar Nicolaus Copernicus—giving his theory that the earth revolves around the sun.
- 1545
- Council of Trent to meet intermittently until 1563 to define Catholic dogma and doctrine, reiterate papal authority.
- 1547
- Ivan IV (“the Terrible”) crowned as czar of Russia, begins conquest of Astrakhan and Kazan (1552), battles nobles (boyars) for power (1564), kills his son (1580), dies, and is succeeded by his weak and feeble-minded son, Fyodor I.
- 1553
- Roman Catholicism restored in England by Queen Mary I.
- 1556
- Akbar the Great becomes Mogul emperor of India, conquers Afghanistan (1581),continues wars of conquest (until 1605).
- 1558
- Queen Elizabeth I ascends the throne (rules to 1603). Restores Protestantism, establishes state Church of England (Anglicanism). Renaissance will reach height in England—Shakespeare, Marlowe, Spenser.
- 1561
- Persecution of Huguenots in France stopped by Edict of Orleans. French religious wars begin again with massacre of Huguenots at Vassy. St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre—thousands of Huguenots murdered (1572). Amnesty granted (1573).Persecution continues periodically until Edict of Nantes (1598) gives Huguenots religious freedom (until 1685).
- 1568
- Protestant Netherlands revolts against Catholic Spain; independence will be acknowledged by Spain in 1648.
- 1570
- Japan permits visits of foreign ships. Queen Elizabeth I excommunicated by Pope. Turks attack Cyprus and war on Venice. Turkish fleet defeated at Battle of Lepanto by Spanish and Italian fleets (1571). Peace of Constantinople (1572) ends Turkish attacks on Europe.
- 1580
- Francis Drake returns to England after circumnavigating the globe; knighted by Queen Elizabeth I (1581). Montaigne’s Essays published.
- 1582
- Pope Gregory XIII implements the Gregorian calendar.
- 1583
- William of Orange rules the Netherlands; assassinated on orders of Philip II of Spain(1584).
- 1587
- Mary, Queen of Scots, executed for treason by order of Queen Elizabeth I. Monteverdi’s First Book of Madrigals.
- 1588
- Defeat of the Spanish Armada by English. Henry, King of Navarre and Protestant leader, recognized as Henry IV, first Bourbon king of France. Converts to Roman Catholicism in 1593 in attempt to end religious wars.
- 1590
- Henry IV enters Paris, wars on Spain (1595), marries Marie de Medici (1600), assassinated (1610). Spenser’s The Faerie Queen. El Greco’s St. Jerome. Galileo’s experiments with falling objects.
- 1598
- Boris Godunov becomes Russian czar. Tycho Brahe describes his astronomical experiments.
1600–1699 (A.D.) World History
Pocahontas
(c. 1595–1617) The Library of Congress Picture Collection
Galileo
(1564–1642) Johannes Kepler
(1571–1630) Taj Mahal
The Library of Congress Picture Collection
John Milton
(1608–1674) |
- 1600
- Giordano Bruno burned as a heretic. English East India Company established.
- 1603
- Ieyasu rules Japan, moves capital to Edo (Tokyo). Shakespeare’s Hamlet.
- 1605
- Cervantes‘s Don Quixote de la Mancha, the first modern novel.
- 1607
- Jamestown, Virginia, established—first permanent English colony on American mainland. Pocahontas, daughter of Chief Powhatan, saves life of John Smith.
- 1609
- Samuel de Champlain establishes French colony of Quebec. The Relation, the first newspaper, debuts in Germany.
- 1610
- Galileo sees the moons of Jupiter through his telescope.
- 1611
- Gustavus Adolphus elected King of Sweden. King James Version of the Bible published in England. Rubens paints his Descent from the Cross.
- 1614
- John Napier discovers logarithms.
- 1618
- Start of the Thirty Years’ War > Protestants revolt against Catholic oppression; Denmark, Sweden, and France will invade Germany in later phases of war. Kepler proposes last of three laws of planetary motion.
- 1619
- A Dutch ship brings the first African slaves to British North America.
- 1620
- Pilgrims, after three-month voyage in Mayflower, land at Plymouth Rock. Francis Bacon’s Novum Organum.
- 1623
- New Netherland founded by Dutch West India Company.
- 1630
- Massachusetts Bay Colony.
- 1632
- Maryland founded by Lord Baltimore.
- 1633
- Inquisition forces Galileo (astronomer) to recant his belief in Copernican theory.
- 1642
- English Civil War. Cavaliers, supporters of Charles I, against Roundheads, parliamentary forces. Oliver Cromwell defeats Royalists (1646). Parliament demands reforms. Charles I offers concessions, brought to trial (1648), beheaded(1649). Cromwell becomes Lord Protector (1653). Rembrandt paints his Night Watch.
- 1643
- Taj Mahal completed.
- 1644
- End of Ming Dynasty in China—Manchus come to power. Descartes‘s Principles of Philosophy.
- 1648
- End of the Thirty Years’ War. German population about half of what it was in 1618because of war and pestilence.
- 1658
- Cromwell dies; son Richard resigns and Puritan government collapses.
- 1660
- English Parliament calls for the restoration of the monarchy; invites Charles II to return from France.
- 1661
- Charles II is crowned King of England. Louis XIV begins personal rule as absolute monarch; starts to build Versailles.
- 1664
- British take New Amsterdam from the Dutch. English limit “Nonconformity” with reestablished Anglican Church. Isaac Newton’s experiments with gravity.
- 1665
- Great Plague in London kills 75,000.
- 1666
- Great Fire of London. Molière’s Misanthrope.
- 1667
- Milton‘s Paradise Lost, widely considered the greatest epic poem in English.
- 1682
- Pennsylvania founded by William Penn.
- 1683
- War of European powers against the Turks (to 1699). Vienna withstands three-month Turkish siege; high point of Turkish advance in Europe.
- 1684
- Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz’s calculus published.
- 1685
- James II succeeds Charles II in England, calls for freedom of conscience (1687). Protestants fear restoration of Catholicism and demand “Glorious Revolution.” William of Orange invited to England and James II escapes to France (1688). William III and his wife, Mary, crowned. In France, Edict of Nantes of 1598, granting freedom of worship to Huguenots, is revoked by Louis XIV; thousands of Protestants flee.
- 1689
- Peter the Great becomes Czar of Russia—attempts to westernize nation and build Russia as a military power. Defeats Charles XII of Sweden at Poltava (1709). Beginning of the French and Indian Wars (to 1763), campaigns in America linked to a series of wars between France and England for domination of Europe.
- 1690
- William III of England defeats former king James II and Irish rebels at Battle of the Boyne in Ireland. John Locke‘s Human Understanding.
1700–1799 (A.D.) World History
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1800–1899 (A.D.) World History
Ludwig van Beethoven
(1770–1827) Richard Wagner
(1813–1883) Archive Photos
Edgar Allan Poe
(1809–1849) The Library of Congress Picture Collection
Frederick Douglass
(1817–1895) National Archives and Records Admin.
Harriet Tubman
(c. 1820–1913) The Library of Congress Picture Collection
Harriet Beecher Stowe
(1811–1896) National Archives and Records Admin.
Walt Whitman
(1819–1892) The Library of Congress Picture Collection
Dred Scott
(1795?–1858) The Library of Congress Picture Collection
Abraham Lincoln
(1809–1865) National Archives and Records Admin.
Charles Darwin
(1809–1882) Robert E. Lee
(1807–1870) National Archives and Records Admin.
William Tecumseh Sherman
(1820–1891) National Archives and Records Admin.
Chief Joseph
(c. 1840–1904) National Archives and Records Admin.
Statue of Liberty
Tasha Vincent
Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain)
(1835–1910) The Library of Congress Picture Collection
The Eiffel Tower
Tasha Vincent
Marie Curie
(1867–1934) AIP Niels Bohr Library
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- 1800
- Napoleon conquers Italy, firmly establishes himself as First Consul in France. In the U.S., federal government moves to Washington, D.C. Robert Owen’s social reforms in England. William Herschel discovers infrared rays. Alessandro Volta produces electricity.
- 1801
- Austria makes temporary peace with France. United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland established with one monarch and one parliament; Catholics excluded from voting.
- 1803
- U.S. negotiates Louisiana Purchase from France: for $15 million, U.S. doubles its domain, increasing its territory by 827,000 sq mi (2,144,500 sq km), from Mississippi River to Rockies and from Gulf of Mexico to British North America.
- 1804
- Haiti declares independence from France; first black nation to gain freedom from European colonial rule. Napoleon transforms the Consulate of France into an empire, proclaims himself emperor of France, systematizes French law under Code Napoleon. In the U.S., Alexander Hamilton is mortally wounded in duel with Aaron Burr. Lewis and Clark expedition begins exploration of what is now northwest U.S.
- 1805
- Lord Nelson defeats the French-Spanish fleets in the Battle of Trafalgar. Napoleon victorious over Austrian and Russian forces at the Battle of Austerlitz.
- 1807
- Robert Fulton makes first successful steamboat trip on Clermont between New York City and Albany.
- 1808
- French armies occupy Rome and Spain, extending Napoleon’s empire. Britain begins aiding Spanish guerrillas against Napoleon in Peninsular War. In the U.S., Congress bars importation of slaves. Beethoven’s Fifth and Sixth Symphoniesperformed.
- 1812
- Napoleon’s Grand Army invades Russia in June. Forced to retreat in winter, most of Napoleon’s 600,000 men are lost. In the U.S., war with Britain declared over freedom of the seas for U.S. vessels (War of 1812). USS Constitution (For detailed chronology, see War of 1812.) sinks British frigate.
- 1814
- French defeated by allies (Britain, Austria, Russia, Prussia, Sweden, and Portugal) in War of Liberation. Napoleon exiled to Elba, off Italian coast. Bourbon king Louis XVIII takes French throne. George Stephenson builds first practical steam locomotive.
- 1815
- Napoleon returns: “Hundred Days” begin. Napoleon defeated by Wellington at Waterloo, banished again to St. Helena in South Atlantic. Congress of Vienna: victorious allies change the map of Europe. War of 1812 ends with Treaty of Ghent.
- 1819
- Simón Bolívar liberates New Granada (now Colombia, Venezuela, and Ecuador) as Spain loses hold on South American countries; named president of Colombia.
- 1820
- Missouri Compromise > Missouri admitted as slave state but slavery barred in rest of Louisiana Purchase north of 36°30′ N.
- 1821
- Guatemala, Panama, and Santo Domingo proclaim independence from Spain.
- 1822
- Greeks proclaim a republic and independence from Turkey. Turks invade Greece. Russia declares war on Turkey (1828). Greece also aided by France and Britain. War ends and Turks recognize Greek independence (1829). Brazil becomes independent of Portugal. Schubert’s Eighth Symphony (“The Unfinished”).
- 1823
- U.S. Monroe Doctrine warns European nations not to interfere in Western Hemisphere.
- 1824
- Mexico becomes a republic, three years after declaring independence from Spain. Bolívar liberates Peru, becomes its president. Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony.
- 1825
- First passenger-carrying railroad in England.
- 1826
- Joseph-Nicéphore Niepce takes the world’s first photograph.
- 1830
- French invade Algeria. Louis Philippe becomes “Citizen King” as revolution forces Charles X to abdicate. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints formed in U.S. by Joseph Smith.
- 1831
- Polish revolt against Russia fails. Belgium separates from the Netherlands. In U.S.,Nat Turner leads unsuccessful slave rebellion.
- 1833
- Slavery abolished in British Empire.
- 1834
- Charles Babbage invents “analytical engine,” precursor of computer. McCormick patents reaper.
- 1836
- Boer farmers start “Great Trek”—Natal, Transvaal, and Orange Free State founded in South Africa. Mexican army besieges Texans in Alamo. Entire garrison, including Davy Crockett and Jim Bowie, wiped out. Texans gain independence from Mexico after winning Battle of San Jacinto. Dickens‘s Pickwick Papers.
- 1837
- Victoria becomes queen of Great Britain. Mob kills Elijah P. Lovejoy, Illinois abolitionist publisher.
- 1839
- First Opium War (to 1842) between Britain and China, over importation of drug into China.
- 1840
- Lower and Upper Canada united.
- 1841
- U.S. President Harrison dies (April 4) one month after inauguration; John Tyler becomes first vice president to succeed to presidency.
- 1842
- Crawford Long uses first anesthetic (ether).
- 1843
- Wagner‘s opera The Flying Dutchman.
- 1844
- Democratic convention calls for annexation of Texas and acquisition of Oregon (“Fifty-four-forty-or-fight”). Five Chinese ports opened to U.S. ships. Samuel F. B.Morse patents telegraph.
- 1845
- Congress adopts joint resolution for annexation of Texas. Edgar Allan Poepublishes The Raven and Other Poems.
- 1846
- U.S. declares war on Mexico. California and New Mexico annexed by U.S. Brigham Young leads Mormons to Great Salt Lake. W. T. Morton uses ether as anesthetic. Sewing machine patented by Elias Howe. Frederick Douglass launches abolitionist newspaper The North Star. Failure of potato crop causes famine in Ireland.
- 1848
- Revolt in Paris: Louis Philippe abdicates; Louis Napoleon elected president of French Republic. Revolutions in Vienna, Venice, Berlin, Milan, Rome, and Warsaw. Put down by royal troops in 1848–1849. U.S.-Mexico War ends; Mexico cedes claims to Texas, California, Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, Nevada. U.S. treaty with Britain sets Oregon Territory boundary at 49th parallel. Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels’s Communist Manifesto. Harriet Tubman escapes from slavery and joins theUnderground Railroad. Women’s Rights Convention in Seneca Falls, N.Y.
- 1849
- California gold rush begins.
- 1850
- Henry Clay opens great debate on slavery, warns South against secession.
- 1851
- Herman Melville‘s Moby-Dick.
- 1852
- South African Republic established. Louis Napoleon proclaims himself Napoleon III (“Second Empire”). Harriet Beecher Stowe‘s Uncle Tom’s Cabin.
- 1853
- Crimean War begins as Turkey declares war on Russia. Commodore Perryreaches Tokyo.
- 1854
- Britain and France join Turkey in war on Russia. In U.S., Kansas-Nebraska Actpermits local option on slavery; rioting and bloodshed. Japanese allow American trade. Antislavery men in Michigan form Republican Party. Tennyson‘s Charge of the Light Brigade. Thoreau‘s Walden.
- 1855
- Armed clashes in Kansas between pro- and anti-slavery forces. Florence Nightingale nurses wounded in Crimea. Walt Whitman‘s Leaves of Grass.
- 1856
- Flaubert‘s Madame Bovary.
- 1857
- Supreme Court, in Dred Scott decision, rules that a slave is not a citizen. Financial crisis in Europe and U.S. Great Mutiny (Sepoy Rebellion) begins in India. India placed under crown rule as a result.
- 1858
- Pro-slavery constitution rejected in Kansas. Abraham Lincoln makes strong antislavery speech in Springfield, Ill.: “This Government cannot endure permanently half slave and half free.” Lincoln-Douglas debates. First trans-Atlantic telegraph cable completed by Cyrus W. Field.
- 1859
- John Brown raids Harpers Ferry; is captured and hanged. Work begins on Suez Canal. Unification of Italy starts under leadership of Count Cavour, Sardinian premier. Joined by France in war against Austria. Jean-Joseph-Étienne Lenoir builds first practical internal-combustion engine. Edward Fitzgerald’s translation ofThe Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam. Charles Darwin‘s Origin of Species. J. S. Mill‘s On Liberty.
- 1860
- South Carolina secedes from the Union.
- 1861
- U.S. Civil War begins as attempts at compromise fail. Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas secede; with South Carolina, they form the Confederate States of America, with Jefferson Davis as president. Virginia, Arkansas, Tennessee, North Carolina secede and join Confederacy. First Battle of Bull Run (Manassas).(For detailed chronology, see The Civil War.) Congress creates Colorado, Dakota, and Nevada territories; adopts income tax; Lincoln inaugurated. Serfs emancipated in Russia. Pasteur‘s theory of germs. Independent Kingdom of Italy proclaimed under Sardinian king Victor Emmanuel II.
- 1862
- Several major Civil War battles: Battle of Shiloh, Second Battle of Bull Run (Manassas), Battle of Antietam. Salon des Refusés introduces impressionism.
- 1863
- French capture Mexico City; proclaim Archduke Maximilian of Austria emperor. Battle of Gettysburg.
- 1864
- Gen. Sherman’s Atlanta campaign and “march to the sea.”
- 1865
- Gen. Lee surrenders to Grant at Appomattox; the Civil War is over. Lincoln fatally shot at Ford’s Theater by John Wilkes Booth. Vice President Johnson sworn as successor. Booth caught and dies of gunshot wounds; four conspirators are hanged.Joseph Lister begins antiseptic surgery. Gregor Mendel‘s Law of Heredity. Lewis Carroll‘s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.
- 1866
- Alfred Nobel invents dynamite (patented in Britain, 1867). Seven Weeks’ War: Austria defeated by Prussia and Italy.
- 1867
- Austria-Hungary Dual Monarchy established. French leave Mexico; Maximilian executed. Dominion of Canada established. U.S. buys Alaska from Russia for $7,200,000. South African diamond field discovered. Japan ends 675–year shogun rule. Volume I of Marx’s Das Kapital. Strauss‘s Blue Danube.
- 1868
- Revolution in Spain; Queen Isabella deposed, flees to France. In U.S., Fourteenth Amendment giving civil rights to blacks is ratified. Georgia under military government after legislature expels blacks.
- 1869
- First U.S. transcontinental rail route completed. James Fisk and Jay Gould‘s attempt to control gold market causes Black Friday panic. Suez Canal opens.Mendeleev‘s periodic table of elements.
- 1870
- Franco-Prussian War (to 1871): Napoleon III capitulates at Sedan. Revolt in Paris; Third Republic proclaimed.
- 1871
- France surrenders Alsace-Lorraine to Germany; war ends. German Empire proclaimed with Prussian King as Kaiser Wilhelm I. Fighting with Apaches begins in American West. Boss Tweed corruption exposed in New York. The Chicago Fire, with 250 deaths and $196-million damage. Stanley meets Livingstone in Africa.
- 1872
- Congress gives amnesty to most Confederates. Jules Verne‘s Around the World in 80 Days.
- 1873
- Economic crisis in Europe. U.S. establishes gold standard.
- 1875
- First Kentucky Derby.
- 1876
- Sioux kill Gen. George A. Custer and 264 troopers at Little Big Horn River.Alexander Graham Bell patents the telephone.
- 1877
- After presidential election of 1876, electoral commission gives disputed electoral college votes to Rutherford B. Hayes despite Tilden’s popular majority. Russo-Turkish war (ends in 1878 with power of Turkey in Europe broken). Reconstructionends in the American South. Thomas Edison patents phonograph. The Nez Perce leader Chief Joseph is forced to surrender. Tchaikovsky‘s Swan Lake.
- 1878
- Congress of Berlin revises Treaty of San Stefano, ending Russo-Turkish War; makes extensive redivision of southeast Europe. First commercial telephone exchange opened in New Haven, Conn.
- 1879
- Thomas A. Edison invents practical electric light.
- 1880
- U.S.-China treaty allows U.S. to restrict immigration of Chinese labor.
- 1881
- President Garfield fatally shot by assassin; Vice President Arthur succeeds him. Charles J. Guiteau convicted and executed (1882).
- 1882
- Terrorism in Ireland after land evictions. Britain invades and conquers Egypt. Germany, Austria, and Italy form Triple Alliance. In U.S., Congress adopts Chinese Exclusion Act. Rockefeller‘s Standard Oil Trust is first industrial monopoly. In Berlin, Robert Koch announces discovery of tuberculosis germ.
- 1883
- Congress creates Civil Service Commission. Brooklyn Bridge and Metropolitan Opera House completed.
- 1884
- Berlin West Africa Conference held in Berlin (lasting until Feb. 1885), at which the major European nations discuss expansion in Africa.
- 1885
- British general Charles G. “Chinese” Gordon killed at Khartoum in Egyptian Sudan. World’s first skyscraper built in Chicago.
- 1886
- Bombing at Haymarket Square, Chicago, kills seven policemen and injures many others. Eight alleged anarchists accused—three imprisoned, one commits suicide, four hanged. (In 1893, Illinois governor Altgeld, critical of trial, pardons three survivors.) Statue of Liberty dedicated. Geronimo, Apache Indian chief, surrenders.
- 1887
- Queen Victoria’s Golden Jubilee. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle‘s first Sherlock Holmes story, A Study in Scarlet.
- 1888
- Historic March blizzard in northeast U.S.—many perish, property damage exceeds $25 million. George Eastman‘s box camera (the Kodak). J. B. Dunlop invents pneumatic tire. Jack the Ripper murders in London.
- 1889
- Second (Socialist) International founded in Paris. Indian Territory in Oklahoma opened to settlement. Thousands die in Johnstown, Pa. flood. Eiffel Tower built for the Paris exposition. Mark Twain‘s A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court.
- 1890
- Congress votes to pass Sherman Antitrust Act. Sioux chief Sitting Bull arrested and killed by police on Pine Ridge reservation; two weeks later, U.S. troops kill over 200 Sioux at Battle of Wounded Knee.
- 1892
- Battle between steel strikers and Pinkerton guards at Homestead, Pa.; union defeated after militia intervenes. Silver mine strikers in Idaho fight non-union workers; U.S. troops dispatched. Diesel engine patented.
- 1893
- New Zealand becomes first country in the world to grant women the vote.
- 1894
- Sino-Japanese War begins (ends in 1895 with China’s defeat). In France, Capt. Alfred Dreyfus convicted on false treason charge (pardoned in 1906). In U.S., Jacob S. Coxey of Ohio leads “Coxey’s Army” of unemployed on Washington. Eugene V. Debs calls general strike of rail workers to support Pullman Company strikers; strike broken, Debs jailed for six months.Edison‘s kinetoscope given first public showing in New York City.
- 1895
- X-rays discovered by German physicist Wilhelm Roentgen. Auguste and Louis Lumière premiere motion pictures at a café in Paris.
- 1896
- Supreme Court’s Plessy v. Ferguson decision—“separate but equal” doctrine. Alfred Nobel’s will establishes prizes for peace, science, and literature. Marconi receives first wireless patent in Britain. William Jennings Bryan delivers “Cross of Gold” speech at Democratic Convention in Chicago. First modern Olympic games held in Athens, Greece.
- 1897
- Theodor Herzl launches Zionist movement.
- 1898
- Chinese “Boxers,” anti-foreign organization, established. They stage uprisings against Europeans in 1900; U.S. and other Western troops relieve Peking legations. U.S. Battleship Maine is sunk in Havana Harbor. Spanish-American War begins. U.S. destroys Spanish fleet near Santiago, Cuba. (For detailed chronology, see Spanish-American War.) Pierre and MarieCurie discover radium and polonium.
- 1899
- Boer War (or South African War): conflict between British and Boers (descendants of Dutch settlers of South Africa). Causes rooted in longstanding territorial disputes and in friction over political rights for English and other “uitlanders” following 1886 discovery of vast gold deposits in Transvaal. (British victorious as war ends in 1902.) Casualties: 5,774 British dead, about 4,000 Boers. Union of South Africa established in 1908 as confederation of colonies; becomes British dominion in 1910.
1900 – 1909 World History
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1910 – 1919 World History
Albert Einstein
(1879–1955) AIP Niels Bohr Library
Vladimir Lenin
(1870–1924) Novosti Photos
Woodrow Wilson
(1856–1924) The Library of Congress Picture Collection
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- 1910
- Boy Scouts of America incorporated. Angel Island, in San Francisco Bay, becomes immigration center for Asians entering U.S.
- 1911
- First use of aircraft as offensive weapon in Turkish-Italian War. Italy defeats Turks and annexes Tripoli and Libya. Chinese Republic proclaimed after revolution overthrowsManchu dynasty. Sun Yat-sen named president. Mexican Revolution: Porfirio Diaz, president since 1877, replaced by Francisco Madero. Triangle Shirtwaist Company fire in New York; 146 killed. Amundsen reaches South Pole. Ernest Rutherford discovers the structure of the atom. Richard Strauss‘s Der Rosenkavalier.Irving Berlin‘s Alexander’s Ragtime Band.
- 1912
- Balkan Wars(1912–1913) resulting from territorial disputes: Turkey defeated by alliance of Bulgaria, Serbia, Greece, and Montenegro; London peace treaty (1913)partitions most of European Turkey among the victors. In second war (1913), Bulgaria attacks Serbia and Greece and is defeated after Romania intervenes and Turks recapture Adrianople. Titanic sinks on maiden voyage; over 1,500 drown. New Mexico and Arizona admitted as states.
- 1913
- Suffragists demonstrate in London. Garment workers strike in New York and Boston; win pay raise and shorter hours. Henry Ford develops first moving assembly line. 16th Amendment (income tax) and 17th (popular election of U.S. senators) adopted. Bill creating U.S. Federal Reserve System becomes law. Stravinsky‘s The Rite of Spring.Woodrow Wilson becomes 28th U.S. president. Armory Show introduces modern art to U.S.; Duchamp‘s Nude Descending a Staircase shocks public.
- 1914
- World War I begins: Austrian Archduke Francis Ferdinand and wife Sophie are assassinated; Austria declares war on Serbia, Germany on Russia and France, Britain on Germany. (For detailed chronology see, World War I.) Panama Canalofficially opened. Congress sets up Federal Trade Commission, passes Clayton Antitrust Act. U.S. Marines occupy Veracruz, Mexico, intervening in civil war to protect American interests.
- 1915
- Lusitania sunk by German submarine. Second Battle of Ypres. U.S. banks lend $500 million to France and Britain. Genocide of estimated 600,000 to 1 million Armenians by Turkish soldiers. D. W. Griffith‘s film Birth of a Nation.Albert Einstein‘s General Theory of Relativity.
- 1916
- Congress expands armed forces. Battle of Verdun. Battle of the Somme. Tom Mooney arrested for San Francisco bombing (pardoned in 1939). Pershing fails in raid into Mexico in quest of rebel Pancho Villa. U.S. buys Virgin Islands from Denmark for $25 million. President Wilson re-elected with “he kept us out of war” slogan. “Black Tom” explosion at munitions dock in Jersey City, N.J., $40,000,000 damages; traced to German saboteurs. Margaret Sanger opens first birth control clinic. Easter Rebellion in Ireland put down by British troops. Jeannette Rankinbecomes first woman elected to Congress.
- 1917
- First U.S. combat troops in France as U.S. declares war on Germany (April 6). Third Battle of Ypres. Russian Revolution of 1917—climax of long unrest under czars. February Revolution—Nicholas II forced to abdicate, liberal government created. Kerensky becomes prime minister and forms provisional government (July). In October Revolution, Bolsheviks seize power in armed coup d’état led by Lenin and Trotsky. Kerensky flees. Balfour Declaration promises Jewish homeland in Palestine. U.S. declares war on Austria-Hungary (Dec. 7). Armistice between new Russian Bolshevik government and Germans (Dec. 15).Sigmund Freud‘s Introduction to Psychoanalysis.
- 1918
- Russian revolutionaries execute the former czar and his family. Russian Civil War between Reds (Bolsheviks) and Whites (anti-Bolsheviks); Reds win in 1920. Allied troops (U.S., British, French) intervene (March); leave in 1919. Second Battle of the Marne (July–Aug.) German Kaiser abdicates (Nov.); hostilities cease on the Western Front. Japanese hold Vladivostokuntil 1922. Worldwide influenza epidemic strikes; by 1920, nearly 20 million are dead. In U.S. alone, 500,000 perish.
- 1919
- Third International (Comintern) establishes Soviet control over international Communist movements. Paris peace conference. Versailles Treaty, incorporating Woodrow Wilson’s draft Covenant of League of Nations, signed by Allies and Germany; rejected by U.S. Senate. Congress formally ends war in 1921. 18th (Prohibition) Amendment adopted. Alcock and Brown make first trans-Atlantic nonstop flight. Mahatma Gandhi initiates satyagraha (“truth force”) campaigns, beginning his nonviolent resistance movement against British rule in India.
1920 – 1929 World History
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1930 – 1939 World History
Amelia Earhart
(1897–1937) The Library of Congress Picture Collection
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
(1882–1945) National Archives and Records Admin.
Adolf Hitler
(1889–1945) National Archives and Records Admin.
Pablo Picasso
(1881–1973) Archive Photos
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- 1930
- Britain, U.S., Japan, France, and Italy sign naval disarmament treaty. Nazis gain in German elections. Cyclotron developed by Ernest O. Lawrence, U.S. physicist. Pluto discovered by astronomers.
- 1931
- Spain becomes a republic with overthrow of King Alfonso XIII. German industrialists finance 800,000-strong Nazi party. British parliament enacts statute of Westminster, legalizing dominion equality with Britain. Mukden Incident begins Japanese occupation of Manchuria. In U.S., Hoover proposes one-year moratorium of war debts. Harold C. Urey discovers heavy hydrogen. Gangster Al Capone sentenced to 11 years in prison for tax evasion (freed in 1939; dies in 1947). Notorious Scottsboro trial begins, exposing depth of Southern racism. “The Star Spangled Banner”officially becomes national anthem.
- 1932
- Nazis lead in German elections with 230 Reichstag seats. Famine in USSR. In U.S., Congress sets up Reconstruction Finance Corporation to stimulate economy. Veterans march on Washington—most leave after Senate rejects payment of cash bonuses; others removed by troops under Douglas MacArthur. U.S. protests Japanese aggression in Manchuria. Amelia Earhart is first woman to fly Atlantic solo.Charles A. Lindbergh‘s baby son kidnapped, killed. (Bruno Richard Hauptmannarrested in 1934, convicted in 1935, executed in 1936.)
- 1933
- Hitler appointed German chancellor, gets dictatorial powers. Reichstag fire in Berlin;Nazi terror begins. Germany and Japan withdraw from League of Nations. Giuseppe Zangara executed for attempted assassination of president-elect Roosevelt in which Chicago mayor Cermak is fatally shot. Roosevelt inaugurated (“the only thing we have to fear is fear itself”); launches New Deal. Prohibition repealed. USSRrecognized by U.S.
- 1934
- Chancellor Dollfuss of Austria assassinated by Nazis. Hitler becomes führer. USSR admitted to League of Nations. Dionne sisters, first quintuplets to survive beyond infancy, born in Canada. Mao Zedong begins the Long March north with 100,000 soldiers.
- 1935
- Saar incorporated into Germany after plebiscite. Nazis repudiate Versailles Treaty, introduce compulsory military service. Mussolini invades Ethiopia; League of Nations invokes sanctions. Roosevelt opens second phase of New Deal in U.S., calling for social security, better housing, equitable taxation, and farm assistance. Huey Longassassinated in Louisiana.
- 1936
- Germans occupy Rhineland. Italy annexes Ethiopia. Rome-Berlin Axis proclaimed (Japan to join in 1940). Trotsky exiled to Mexico. King George V dies; succeeded by son, Edward VIII, who soon abdicates to marry an American-born divorcée, and is succeeded by brother, George VI. Spanish civil war begins. Hundreds of Americans join the “Lincoln Brigades.” (Franco‘s fascist forces defeat Loyalist forces by 1939,when Madrid falls.) War between China and Japan begins, to continue through World War II. Japan and Germany sign anti-Comintern pact; joined by Italy in 1937.
- 1937
- Hitler repudiates war guilt clause of Versailles Treaty; continues to build German power. Italy withdraws from League of Nations. U.S. gunboat Panay sunk by Japanese in Yangtze River. Japan invades China, conquers most of coastal area.Amelia Earhart lost somewhere in Pacific on round-the-world flight. Picasso‘sGuernica mural.
- 1938
- Hitler marches into Austria; political and geographical union of Germany and Austria proclaimed. Munich Pact > Britain, France, and Italy agree to let Germany partition Czechoslovakia. Douglas “Wrong-Way” Corrigan flies from New York to Dublin. Fair Labor Standards Act establishes minimum wage. Orson Welles‘s radio broadcastWar of the Worlds.
- 1939
- Germany invades Poland; occupies Bohemia and Moravia; renounces pact with England and concludes 10-year non-aggression pact with USSR. Russo-Finnish War begins; Finns to lose one-tenth of territory in 1940 peace treaty. World War II begins.(For detailed chronology, see World War II.) In U.S., Roosevelt submits $1,319-million defense budget, proclaims U.S. neutrality, and declares limited emergency. Einstein writes FDR about feasibility of atomic bomb. New York World’s Fair opens. DAR refuses to allow Marian Anderson to perform. Gone with the Wind premieres.
1940 – 1949 World History
Winston Churchill
(1874–1965) National Archives and Records Admin.
Yalta Conference
U.S. Army Photos
Anne Frank
(1929–1945) Archive Photos
Harry S. Truman
(1884–1972) The Library of Congress Picture Collection
Woody Guthrie
(1912–1967) Archive Photos
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- 1940
- Hitler invades Norway, Denmark (April 9), the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg(May 10), and France (May 12). Churchill becomes Britain’s prime minister. Trotsky assassinated in Mexico (Aug. 20). Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania annexed by USSR. U.S. trades 50 destroyers for leases on British bases in Western Hemisphere.Selective Service Act signed. The first official network television broadcast is put out by NBC.
- 1941
- Germany attacks the Balkans and Russia. Japanese surprise attack on U.S. fleet atPearl Harbor brings U.S. into World War II; U.S. and Britain declare war on Japan.Manhattan Project (atomic bomb research) begins. Roosevelt enunciates “four freedoms,” signs Lend-Lease Act, declares national emergency, promises aid to USSR. Orson Welles‘s Citizen Kane.
- 1942
- Declaration of United Nations signed in Washington (Jan. 1). Nazi leaders attend Wannsee Conference to coordinate the “final solution to the Jewish question,” the systematic genocide of Jews known as the Holocaust. (For detailed chronology of the Holocaust, see The Holocaust.) Women’s military services established. Enrico Fermiachieves nuclear chain reaction. More than 120,000 Japanese and persons of Japanese ancestry living in western U.S. moved to “relocation centers,” some for the duration of the war (Executive Order 9066). Coconut Grove nightclub fire in Boston kills 492 (Nov. 28).
- 1943
- Churchill and Roosevelt hold Casablanca Conference (Jan. 14–23). Mussolinideposed. President freezes prices, salaries, and wages to prevent inflation. Income tax withholding introduced.
- 1944
- Allies invade Normandy on D-Day (June 6). G.I. Bill of Rights enacted. Bretton Woods Conference creates International Monetary Fund and World Bank (July 1–22). Dumbarton Oaks Conference—U.S., British Commonwealth, and USSR propose establishment of United Nations (Aug. 21–Oct. 7). Battle of the Bulge (Dec. 16).Woody Guthrie records “This Land is Your Land.” Gunnar Myrdal‘s An American Dilemma.
- 1945
- Yalta Conference (Roosevelt, Churchill, Stalin) plans final defeat of Germany (Feb. 4–11). FDR dies (April 12). Hitler commits suicide (April 30); Germany surrenders(May 7); May 8 is declared V-E Day. Potsdam Conference (Truman, Churchill, Stalin) establishes basis of German reconstruction (July–Aug.). U.S. drops atomic bombson Japanese cities of Hiroshima (Aug. 6) and Nagasaki (Aug. 9). Japan signs official surrender on V-J Day (Sept. 2). United Nations established (Oct. 24). First electronic computer, ENIAC, built.
- 1946
- First meeting of UN General Assembly opens in London (Jan. 10). Winston Churchill’s “Iron Curtain” speech warns of Soviet expansion (March 5). League of Nations dissolved (April). Italy abolishes monarchy (June). Verdict in Nuremberg war trial: 12Nazi leaders (including 1 tried in absentia) sentenced to hang; 7 imprisoned; 3 acquitted (Oct. 1). Goering commits suicide a few hours before 10 other Nazis are executed (Oct. 15). Juan Perón becomes president of Argentina. Benjamin Spock‘s childcare classic published.
- 1947
- Britain nationalizes coal mines (Jan. 1). Peace treaties for Italy, Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary, Finland signed in Paris (Feb. 10). Soviet Union rejects U.S. plan for UN atomic-energy control (March 4). Truman proposes Truman Doctrine, which was to aid Greece and Turkey in resisting communist expansion (March 12). Marshall Planfor European recovery proposed—a coordinated program to help European nations recover from ravages of war (June). (By the time it ended in 1951, this “European Recovery Program” had cost $13 billion.) India and Pakistan gain independence from Britain (Aug. 15). U.S. Air Force pilot Chuck Yeager becomes first person to break the sound barrier (Oct. 14). Jackie Robinson joins the Brooklyn Dodgers.Anne Frank‘s The Diary of a Young Girl published.
- 1948
- Gandhi assassinated in New Delhi by Hindu fanatic (Jan. 30). Burma (Jan. 4) andCeylon (Feb. 4) granted independence by Britain. Communists seize power in Czechoslovakia (Feb. 23–25). Organization of American States (OAS) Charter signed at Bogotá, Colombia (April 30). Nation of Israel proclaimed; British end mandate at midnight; Arab armies attack (May 14). Berlin blockade begins (June 24),prompting Allied airlift (June 26). (Blockade ends May 12, 1949; airlift continues untilSept. 30, 1949.) Stalin and Tito break (June 28). Independent Republic of Korea is proclaimed, following election supervised by UN (Aug. 15). Verdict in Japanese war trial: 18 imprisoned (Nov. 12); Tojo and six others hanged (Dec. 23). United States ofIndonesia established as Dutch and Indonesians settle conflict (Dec. 27). Alger Hiss, former U.S. State Department official, indicted on perjury charges after denying passing secret documents to communist spy ring; convicted in second trial (1950) and sentenced to five-year prison term. Truman ends racial segregation in military. Alfred Kinsey publishes Sexual Behavior in the American Male. Tennessee Williams‘s A Streetcar Named Desire wins Pulitzer.
- 1949
- Cease-fire in Palestine (Jan. 7). Truman proposes Point Four Program to help world’s less developed areas (Jan. 20). Israel signs armistice with Egypt (Feb. 24). Start of North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)—treaty signed by 12 nations (April 4). Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) established (May 23). First successful Soviet atomic test (July 14).Communist People’s Republic of China formally proclaimed by Chairman Mao Zedong (Oct. 1). German Democratic Republic (East Germany) established under Soviet rule (Oct. 7). South Africa institutionalizes apartheid.
1950 – 1959 World History
Atomic Bomb
National Archives and Records Admin.
Dwight D. Eisenhower
(1890–1969) National Archives and Records Admin.
Dag Hammarskjöld
(1905–1961) United Nations
Martin Luther King, Jr.
(1929–1968) N.A.R.A
Fidel Castro
(1926– ) United Nations
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- 1950
- Brink’s robbery in Boston; almost $3 million stolen (Jan. 17). Truman orders development of hydrogen bomb (Jan. 31). Robert Schuman proposes Schuman Plan to pool European coal and steel (May 9). Korean War begins when North Korean Communist forces invade South Korea (June 25). (For detailed chronology, seeKorean War.) Assassination attempt on President Truman by Puerto Rican nationalists (Nov. 1). McCarthyism begins.
- 1951
- Julius and Ethel Rosenberg sentenced to death for passing atomic secrets to Russians (March). Spurred by Schuman Plan, six nations form European Coal and Steel Community (April); effective 1952. Japanese peace treaty signed in San Francisco by 49 nations (Sept. 8). Color television introduced in U.S. Libya gains independence (Dec. 24).
- 1952
- George VI dies; his daughter becomes Elizabeth II (Feb. 6). AEC announces “satisfactory” experiments in hydrogen-weapons research; eyewitnesses tell of blasts near Enewetak (Nov.). Ralph Ellison‘s The Invisible Man.
- 1953
- Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower inaugurated president of United States (Jan. 20). Stalindies (March 5). Malenkov becomes Soviet premier; Beria, minister of interior;Molotov, foreign minister (March 6). Dag Hammarskjöld begins term as UN secretary-general (April 10). James Watson and Francis Crick publish their discovery of the molecular model of DNA (April–May). Edmund Hillary of New Zealand and Tenzing Norgay of Nepal reach top of Mt. Everest (May 29). East Berliners rise against Communist rule; quelled by tanks (June 17). Egypt becomes republic ruled by military junta (June 18). Julius and Ethel Rosenberg executed in Sing Sing prison (June 19). Korean armistice signed (July 27). Moscow announces explosion of hydrogen bomb (Aug. 20). Tito becomes president of Yugoslavia. James Watson, Francis Crick, and Rosalind Franklin discover structure of DNA. Ernest Hemingway wins Pulitzer for The Old Man and the Sea.
- 1954
- First atomic submarine Nautilus launched (Jan. 21). Five U.S. congressmen shot on floor of House as Puerto Rican nationalists fire from spectators’ gallery; all five recover(March 1). Soviet Union grants sovereignty to East Germany (March 23). Army v.McCarthy inquiry—Senate subcommittee report blames both sides (April 22–June 17). Dien Bien Phu, French military outpost in Vietnam, falls to Vietminh army (May 7). (For detailed chronology, see Vietnam War.) U.S. Supreme Court (in Brown v.Board of Education of Topeka) unanimously bans racial segregation in public schools (May 17). Eisenhower launches world atomic pool without Soviet Union(Sept. 6). Eight-nation Southeast Asia defense treaty (SEATO) signed at Manila(Sept. 8). Dr. Jonas Salk starts inoculating children against polio. Algerian War of Independence against France begins (Nov.); France struggles to maintain colonial rule until 1962 when it agrees to Algeria’s independence. William Faulkner‘s A Fablewins Pulitzer.
- 1955
- Nikolai A. Bulganin becomes Soviet premier, replacing Malenkov (Feb. 8). Churchillresigns; Anthony Eden succeeds him (April 6). West Germany becomes a sovereign state (May 5). Western European Union (WEU) comes into being (May 6). Warsaw Pact, east European mutual defense agreement, signed (May 14). Argentina oustsPerón (Sept. 19). President Eisenhower suffers coronary thrombosis in Denver (Sept. 24). Rosa Parks refuses to sit at the back of the bus. Martin Luther King, Jr., leads black boycott of Montgomery, Ala., bus system (Dec. 1); desegregated service beginsDec. 21, 1956. AFL and CIO become one organization—AFL-CIO (Dec. 5).Tennessee Williams‘s Cat on a Hot Tin Roof wins Pulitzer.
- 1956
- Nikita Khrushchev, First Secretary of USSR Communist Party, denounces Stalin’s excesses (Feb. 24). First aerial H-bomb tested over Namu islet, Bikini Atoll > 10 million tons TNT equivalent (May 21). Workers’ uprising against Communist rule inPoznan, Poland, is crushed (June 28–30); rebellion inspires Hungarian students to stage a protest against Communism in Budapest (Oct. 23). Egypt takes control ofSuez Canal (July 26). Hungarian rebellion forces Soviet troops to withdraw from Budapest (Oct.). Israel launches attack on Egypt’s Sinai peninsula and drives toward Suez Canal (Oct. 29). Imre Nagy announces Hungary’s withdrawal from Warsaw Pact(Nov. 1); Soviet troops enter and reclaim Budapest (Nov. 4). British and French invade Port Said on the Suez Canal (Nov. 5). Cease-fire forced by U.S. pressure stops British, French, and Israeli advance (Nov. 6). Morocco gains independence.Ingmar Bergman‘s The Seventh Seal. Allen Ginsberg‘s Howl.
- 1957
- Eisenhower Doctrine calls for aid to Mideast countries which resist armed aggression from Communist-controlled nations (Jan. 5). The “Little Rock Nine” integrate Arkansas high school. Eisenhower sends troops to quell mob and protect school integration(Sept. 24). Russians launch Sputnik I, first Earth-orbiting satellite—the Space Age begins (Oct. 4).
- 1958
- European Economic Community (Common Market) becomes effective (Jan. 1).Army’s Jupiter-C rocket fires first U.S. Earth satellite, Explorer I, into orbit (Jan. 31).Egypt and Syria merge into United Arab Republic (Feb. 1). Khrushchev becomes premier of Soviet Union as Bulganin resigns (Mar. 27). Gen. Charles de Gaulle becomes French premier (June 1),remaining in power until 1969. Eisenhower orders U.S. Marines into Lebanon at request of President Chamoun, who fears overthrow (July 15). New French constitution adopted (Sept. 28), de Gaulle elected president of 5th Republic (Dec. 21).
- 1959
- Cuban President Batista resigns and flees—Castro takes over (Jan. 1). Tibet’s Dalai Lama escapes to India (Mar. 31). St. Lawrence Seaway opens, allowing ocean ships to reach Midwest (April 25). Alaska and Hawaii become states. Leakeys discover hominid fossils.
1960 – 1969 World History
Robert Frost
(1874–1963) Archive Photos
John H. Glenn, Jr.
(1921– ) The Library of Congress Picture Collection
William Faulkner
(1897–1962) Archive Photos
Malcolm X
(1925–1965) Archive Photos
John F. Kennedy
(1917–1963) John Fitzgerald Kennedy Library, Boston
James H. Meredith
(1933–) The Library of Congress Picture Collection
Betty Friedan
(1921–2006) The Library of Congress Picture Collection
The Beatles
Archive Photos
Thurgood Marshall
(1908–1993) U.S. Supreme Court
1970 – 1979 World History
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