HUMAN HISTORY - 1600 CE - 1999 CE Flashcards

1
Q

King Henry declared he was the “Supreme Head on earth of the Church of England.”

Date?

A

1534 [Significance?]

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2
Q

NICOLAUS COPERNICUS

Publication

Date

A

“On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres”

1543

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3
Q

“THE BLACK SHIPS”

Date

Significance

A

The Black Ships (“kurofune”, Edo Period term) was the name given to Western vessels arriving in Japan in the 16th and 19th centuries.

In 1543 Portuguese initiated the first contacts, establishing a trade route linking Goa to Nagasaki. The large carracks engaged in this trade had the hull painted black with pitch, and the term came to represent all western vessels.

In 1639, after suppressing a rebellion blamed on the Christian influence, the ruling Tokugawa shogunate retreated into an isolationist policy, the Sakoku. During this “locked state”, contact with Japan by Westerners was restricted to Dejima island at Nagasaki.

In 1844, William II of the Netherlands urged Japan to open, but was rejected.

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4
Q

1618

Significances

Name

A

Significance: Start of the Thirty Years’ War

Significance: election of the new Holy Roman Emperor, Ferdinand II, who tried to impose religious uniformity on his domains, forcing Roman Catholicism on its peoples.

(A century after the publication of the Ninety-five Theses by Martin Luther.)

[Date?]

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5
Q

START OF THE THIRTY YEARS’ WAR

Date

Significance

Who started it?

A

Date: 1618

Significance: The new Holy Roman Emperor, Ferdinand II, who tried to impose religious uniformity on his domains, forcing Roman Catholicism on its peoples. (101 years after the 1517 publication of the Ninety-the five Theses by Martin Luther.)

[Ramifications?]

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6
Q

THIRTY YEARS WAR

Dates

Why did it start?

A

1618: The new Holy Roman Emperor, Ferdinand II, tried to impose religious uniformity on his domains, forcing Roman Catholicism on its peoples. (101 years after the 1517 publication of the Ninety-the five Theses by Martin Luther.)

Significance: Initially a war between various Protestant and Catholic states in the fragmented Holy Roman Empire, it gradually developed into a more general conflict involving most of the great powers. These states employed relatively large mercenary armies, and the war became less about religion and more about power and domination.

1618: Ended the Reformation

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7
Q

ENGLISH PURITANS

Date

Location

AKA

Why did they establish a colony in the New World?

A

Date: 1620

Location: Plymouth Bay, in modern-day Massachusetts.

(known as Pilgrims)

Religiously rigid, they sought separation from the Anglican Church and freedom to practice their religion as they saw fit.

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8
Q

GALILEO

Publication

Date

A

“Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems.”

1632

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9
Q

SAKOKU 鎖国 (LOCKED STATE)

Date

Reason

Name

Westerners allowed where

A

In 1639, after suppressing a rebellion blamed on the Christian influence, the ruling Tokugawa shogunate retreated into an isolationist policy, the Sakoku (鎖国, “closed country”). During this “locked state”, contact with Japan by Westerners was restricted to Dejima island at Nagasaki.

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10
Q

Who was born 25 December one or two hours after midnight?

(And his dates?)

A

Sir Isaac Newton 1642-1726 (birth?)

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11
Q

ISAAC NEWTON

Birth

Significance

Death

A

b.25 December 1642 one or two hours after midnight

Significance: An English mathematician, astronomer, theologian, author and physicist (described in his own day as a “natural philosopher”) who is widely recognised as one of the most influential scientists of all time and a key figure in the scientific revolution.

His 1687 book formulated the three laws of motion and universal gravitation that dominated scientists’ view of the physical universe for the next three centuries. {Filosohfiae natoorahlis prinkipiah mat-hematika} “Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy” (now called Physics)

d. 1726 (84)

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12
Q

Finish this quote:

“If I have seen further …

Author

A

… is by standing on the shoulders of giants.”

Sir Isaac Newton 1642-1726

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13
Q

Finish this quote:

“I do not know what I may appear to the world, but to myself I seem to have been only like …

Author

A

… a boy playing on the sea-shore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me.”

Sir Isaac Newton 1642-1726

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14
Q

QING DYNASTY

A

Qing: Taking advantage of some 200 years of internal Ming weakness, the Manchus conquered China in 1644. A nomadic tribe, the Manchus quickly adapted to internal Chinese ways, including adopting the Confucian bureaucracy, and established the Qing Empire. The Qing would rule China until 1911.

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15
Q

1648

Significances

A

Significance: end of the Reformation

Significance: end of the Thirty Years War [Date?]

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16
Q

END OF THE THIRTY YEARS’ WAR

Date

Significance

A

Date: 1648

Significance: End of the Reformation

[Other Significance?]

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17
Q

END OF THE REFORMATION

Date

Significance

A

1648

End of the Thirty Years’ War

[Other Significance?]

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18
Q

THE ENLIGHTENMENT

Dates

Why do we call it The Enlightenment?

A

1650-1790, the Enlightenment marked the first time a secular world view predominated among leading intellectuals in the Western world. Previously, Catholics and Protestants had controlled most knowledge and had contended that all true knowledge came from the Church. The “light” of the Enlightenment came from man’s own ability to reason outside of the Church.

If taken back to the mid-17th century, the Enlightenment would trace its origins to Descartes’ Discourse on the Method, published in 1637. It is argued by several historians and philosophers that the beginning of the Enlightenment is when Descartes shifted the epistemological basis from external authority to internal certainty by his cogito ergo sum published in 1637.

As to its end, most scholars use the last years of the century, often choosing the French Revolution of 1789 or the beginning of the Napoleonic Wars (1804–1815) as a convenient point in time with which to date the end of the Enlightenment.

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19
Q

ISAAC NEWTON

Invention dates

Personal life

A

In late 1668 he was able to produce the first reflecting telescope. It was about eight inches long and it gave a clearer and larger image than any before.

He never married, Voltaire said, nor had he any commerce with women.

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20
Q

Who was a fellow of Trinity College Cambridge in the late 1600s?

What years?

(And his dates?)

A

Sir Isaac Newton 1642-1726

1667 (25yo) till 1701

(Significance?)

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21
Q

Fellow of the Royal Society

Dates

A

Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1726)

1682-1726 [Dates?]

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22
Q

Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica

“Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy” (now called Physics)

Author

Year

Pronunciation

A

Sir Isaac Newton 1642-1726

Publication: 1687 (age 45) {Filosohfiae natoorahlis prinkipiah mat-hematika} [Significance?]

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23
Q

SCIENTIFIC REVOLUTION -

Beginning

End of the Scientific Renaissance

End of the Scientific Revolution

Dates; Reasons

A

While its dates are debated, the publication in 1543 of Nicolaus Copernicus’s De revolutionibus orbium coelestium (On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres) is often cited as marking the beginning of the scientific revolution.

The first half of the scientific revolution, the Scientific Renaissance, was focused on the recovery of the knowledge of the ancients; this is generally considered to have ended in 1632 with publication of Galileo’s Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems.

The completion of the scientific revolution is attributed to the “grand synthesis” of Isaac Newton’s 1687 Principia, that formulated the laws of motion and universal gravitation, and completed the synthesis of a new cosmology. {Filosohfiae natoorahlis prinkipiah mat-hematika} “Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy” (now called Physics)

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24
Q

ISAAC NEWTON

Publication

Date

Significance

A

1687

Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica

{Filosohfiae natoorahlis prinkipiah mat-hematika}

Formulated the laws of motion and universal gravitation, and completed the synthesis of a new cosmology.

Completed the scientific revolution with its “grand synthesis.”

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25
Q

PRUSSIA

Which countries was it?

Capitals?

A

Modern-day Germany and Austria

Königsberg (1525–1701)
Berlin (1701–1947)

Prussia was a prominent historical German state originating out of the Duchy of Prussia and the Margraviate of Brandenburg, and centred on the region of Prussia. For centuries, the House of Hohenzollern ruled Prussia, successfully expanding its size by way of an unusually well-organised and effective army. Prussia, with its capital in Königsberg and from 1701 in Berlin, shaped the history of Germany.

In 1871, German states united to create the German Empire under Prussian leadership. In November 1918, the monarchies were abolished and the nobility lost its political power during the German Revolution of 1918–19. The Kingdom of Prussia was thus abolished in favour of a republic—the Free State of Prussia, a state of Germany from 1918 until 1933. From 1933, Prussia lost its independence as a result of the Prussian coup, when the Nazi regime was successfully establishing its Gleichschaltung laws in pursuit of a unitary state. With the end of the Nazi regime, the division of Germany into allied-occupation zones and the separation of its territories east of the Oder–Neisse line, which were incorporated into Poland and the Soviet Union, the State of Prussia ceased to exist de facto in 1945.[2][3] Prussia existed de jure until its formal liquidation by the Allied Control CouncilEnactment No. 46 of 25 February 1947.[4]

The name Prussia derives from the Old Prussians; in the 13th century, the Teutonic Knights—an organized Catholic medieval military order of German crusaders—conquered the lands inhabited by them. In 1308, the Teutonic Knights conquered the region of Pomerelia with Gdańsk (Danzig). Their monastic state was mostly Germanised through immigration from central and western Germany, and, in the south, it was Polonised by settlers from Masovia. The Second Peace of Thorn (1466) split Prussia into the western Royal Prussia, a province of Poland, and the eastern part, from 1525 called the Duchy of Prussia, a fief of the Crown of Poland up to 1657. The union of Brandenburg and the Duchy of Prussia in 1618 led to the proclamation of the Kingdom of Prussia in 1701.

Prussia entered the ranks of the great powers shortly after becoming a kingdom,[5][6][7][8] and exercised most influence in the 18th and 19th centuries. During the 18th century it had a major say in many international affairs under the reign of Frederick the Great. During the 19th century, Chancellor Otto von Bismarck united the German principalities into a “Lesser Germany”, which excluded the Austrian Empire.

At the Congress of Vienna (1814–15), which redrew the map of Europe following Napoleon’s defeat, Prussia acquired a large section of north western Germany, including the coal-rich Ruhr. The country then grew rapidly in influence economically and politically, and became the core of the North German Confederation in 1867, and then of the German Empire in 1871. The Kingdom of Prussia was now so large and so dominant in the new Germany that Junkers and other Prussian élites identified more and more as Germans and less as Prussians.

The Kingdom ended in 1918 along with other German monarchies that collapsed as a result of the post-World War I German Revolution. In the Weimar Republic, the Free State of Prussia lost nearly all of its legal and political importance following the 1932 coup led by Franz von Papen. Subsequently, it was effectively dismantled into Nazi German Gaue in 1935. Nevertheless, some Prussian ministries were kept and Hermann Göringremained in his role as Minister President of Prussia until the end of World War II. Former eastern territories of Germany that made up a significant part of Prussia lost the majority of their German population after 1945 as the People’s Republic of Poland and the Soviet Union both absorbed these territories and had most of its German inhabitants expelled by 1950. Prussia, deemed a bearer of militarism and reaction by the Allies was officially abolished by an Allied declaration in 1947. The international status of the former eastern territories of Germany was disputed until the Treaty on the Final Settlement with Respect to Germany in 1990, while its return to Germany remains a topic among far right politicians, the Federation of Expellees and various political revisionists.

The term Prussian has often been used, especially outside Germany, to emphasise professionalism, aggressiveness, militarism and conservatism of the Junker class of landed aristocrats in the East who dominated first Prussia and then the German Empire.

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26
Q

Who, as Master, of the Royal Mint, disguised himself as a habitué of bars and taverns at age 56, gathered evidence and successfully prosecuted counterfeit coiners?

When was he Master of the Royal Mint? (And his dates?)

A

Sir Isaac Newton (1642-1726)

1701-1726 [Significance?]

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27
Q

THE SEVEN YEARS’ WAR

Dates

Defenders

Attackers

A

(1756-1763)

Prussia (modern-day Germany and Austria) With the financial aid of Great Britain, Frederick the Great of Prussia was able to defeat the combined armies of France, Russia, and Sweden.

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28
Q

THE SEVEN YEARS’ WAR

Dates

Combatants

A

1756-1763:

Prussia (modern-day Germany and Austria) With the financial aid of Great Britain, Frederick the Great of Prussia was able to defeat the combined armies of France, Russia, and Sweden.

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29
Q

Start of the French Revolution

Date

Incident

A

The Bastille, which was a large fortress in the heart of Paris. The Bastille was a highly visible symbol of royal authority. On the morning of July 14, 1789, some 1000 Parisians gathered at the Bastille’s gates and demanded that the guns inside be turned over to them. When the officer in charge of the Bastille refused, fighting broke out and more than 90 attackers died before the officer surrendered. The “Storming of the Bastille” is widely regarded as the start of the French Revolution.

30
Q

“Left-Right” in politics origin story

A

In the French National Assembly called by Louis XVI in 1789, those who supported the King sat on the right, moderates sat in the center, and those who distrusted the King sat on the left. To this day, conservatives are generally indicated as “the right” and liberals as “the left.”

31
Q

NAPOLEON

First Five Years after the Revolution

His role

Conquests

A

1794-1799 Although on the domestic front the Directory was unpopular, during its reign the French Army under Napoleon won a number of military victories enabling the Directory to maintain power. The French Army conquered the Austrian Netherlands, much of Northern Italy, and crossed the Rhine into Germany. After defeating the Austrians in Italy in 1797, Napoleon attempted to conquer Egypt, where he met with less success.

32
Q

NAPOLEON

Coup

A

Abbé Sieyès and Napoleon Bonaparte led the coup which deposed the Directory on the 18th Brumaire, 1799. They quickly wrote a new constitution which gave executive authority into the hands of three “Consuls.” Sieyès gave the resulting government the credibility of the Revolution, and Napoleon provided the popular support of a successful general. Napoleon was named the First Consul in the new government, giving him near absolute authority over the state.

33
Q

NAPOLEON

Napoleon’s first acts as First Consul

A

Bonaparte established free, universal public education under the guidance of the state. Each school taught an identical curriculum, such that a student in Rouen and a student in Marseilles learned the same thing on the same day. Napoleon also established schools devoted to math and science and the University of France.

34
Q

NAPOLEON

After First Consul then what?

Date

A

In 1804, Napoleon did away with all pretense and named himself the Emperor of France.

35
Q

NAPOLEON

Napoleon’s first five years as Emperor

Conquests?

A

Between 1805-1808, Napoleon had defeated Prussia and Austria, made a treaty with Russia, and had subjected the Netherlands, much of Italy, and many of the German states to French rule. Only Britain remained a threat. The Continental Blockade was a French embargo on British trade, designed to wreck the British economy. Napoleon’s efforts failed; Britain shifted its trade to the Americas and the European economy plunged into a recession.

36
Q

MEXICO’S WAR FOR INDEPENDENCE

Dates

From whom?

Significance

A

1810-1821, Mexico fought a successful war of independence from Spain. Mexico’s war for independence was the first of a number of conflicts that saw much of Latin America freed from Spanish control in the ensuing decades.

37
Q

NAPOLEON - ATTACK ON RUSSIA

Date

Why was it so catastrophic? (5-6 points)

A

1812:

  1. Russian Army continually retreated, leaving Scorched Earth.
  2. Took Moscow but there were no supplies.
  3. Russians disinformation campaign delayed him in Moscow.
  4. Had to retreat during the winter.
  5. Russian guerrilla warfare continued.
  6. Lost 80% of the French Army.

As the Russian army fell back, Cossacks were given the task of burning villages, towns and crops. This was intended to deny the invaders the option of living off the land. These scorched-earth tactics surprised the French and forced them to rely on a supply system that was incapable of feeding the large army in the field. Starvation and privation compelled French soldiers to leave their camps at night in search of food. These men were frequently confronted by parties of Cossacks, who captured or killed them. The Russian army retreated slowly into Russia for almost three months. Russian army dug itself in on hillsides before a small town called Borodino, seventy miles west of Moscow. The battle that followed was the bloodiest single-day action of the Napoleonic Wars until that point. The French gained a tactical victory, but the Russian army was still able to extricate itself and withdrew the following day. Napoleon entered Moscow a week later. The Russians had evacuated the city, and the city’s governor ordered several strategic points in Moscow set ablaze. Both sides were aware that Napoleon’s position grew worse with each passing day, but Napoleon stayed on in Moscow looking to negotiate a peace, his hopes fed in part by a disinformation campaign informing the Emperor of supposed discontent and fading morale in the Russian camp. His troops exhausted, with few rations, no winter clothing, and his remaining horses in poor condition, Napoleon was forced to retreat. He hoped to reach supplies at Smolensk and later at Vilnius. In the weeks that followed the Grande Armée starved and suffered from the onset of the Russian Winter. Lack of food and fodder for the horses, hypothermia from the bitter cold and persistent attacks upon isolated troops from Russian peasants and Cossacks led to great losses in men, and a general loss of discipline and cohesion in the army. The Grande Armée had lost some 380,000 men dead and 100,000 captured, leaving only 27,000 effective soldiers remaining, 5%.

38
Q

NAPOLEON - ATTACK ON RUSSIA

Date

Why did Napoleon attack?

A

Date: 1812

Why: Napoleon hoped to compel Tsar Alexander I of Russia to cease trading with British merchants through proxies in an effort to pressure the United Kingdom to sue for peace.

39
Q

BATTLE OF THE NATIONS

Date

Location

Countries involved

Significance

Outcome and Aftermath

A

Date: 1813

Location: Leipzig

Countries Involved: The coalition armies of Russia, Prussia, Austria, and Sweden, led by Tsar Alexander I of Russia VS the French army of Napoleon.

Significance: The battle was the culmination of the 1813 German campaign and involved nearly 600,000 soldiers, making it the largest battle in Europe prior to World War I.

Outcome: Napoleon was exiled to the island of Elba off Tuscany on the northwest Italian coast.

40
Q

THE BATTLE OF WATERLOO

Date

Location

Combatants

Outcome

A

Date: 1815,

Location: Waterloo in present-day Belgium, then part of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands.

Combatants: A French army under the command of Napoleon Bonaparte was defeated by two of the armies of the Seventh Coalition: a Prussian army and a British-led Allied army under the command of the Duke of Wellington.

Outcome: Napoleon was exiled to the island of St Helena off southern Africa

41
Q

US WAR OF INDEPENDENCE

A

1773 - Sons of Liberty destroy a shipment of tea in Boston Harbor.

Ends 1782 - British Parliament stops American offensives

42
Q

ZULU WARS OF CONQUEST

A

1818

1828

43
Q

FIRST OPIUM WAR

A

1839

1842

44
Q

JAPAN FIRST SEES STEAM WARSHIPS

Date

Significance

A

On July 8, 1853, the U.S. Navy steamed four warships into the bay at Edo and threatened to attack if Japan did not begin trade with the West.

Their arrival marked the reopening of the country to political dialogue after more than two hundred years of self-imposed isolation. Trade with Western nations would not come until the Treaty of Amity and Commerce more than five years later.

45
Q

THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR

Why did it start?

Dates

A

1861 - 1865 The American Civil War was a civil war that was fought in the United States. As a result of the long-standing controversy over slavery, war broke out in April 1861, when Confederate forces attacked Fort Sumter in South Carolina, shortly after U.S. President Abraham Lincoln was inaugurated.

46
Q

AMERICAN CIVIL WAR

Why does the war start?

A

1861 January 9 - Mississippi seceded from the Union.

January 10 - Florida seceded from the Union. J

anuary 11 Alabama seceded from the Union

January 19 Georgia seceded from the Union.

January 26 Louisiana seceded from the Union.

January 29 Kansas admitted to the Union.

February 1 Texas seceded from the Union

The South Creates a Government - the Confederate Constitution. Jefferson Davis was named provisional president.

March 4 Inauguration of Abraham Lincoln as 16th President

March 11 Confederate Constitution

April 17 Virginia seceded from the Union

April 20 Robert E. Lee declines command of the Union Army

May __ Arkansas, Tennessee, and North Carolina seceded from the Union

47
Q

AMERICAN CIVIL WAR

President Lincoln appoints General Grant to command all of the armies of the United States.

A

1864 March 9 - President Lincoln appoints General Grant to command all of the armies of the United States.

48
Q

AMERICAN CIVIL WAR

Congress approves the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution to abolish slavery.

A

1865 January 31: Congress approves the Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution to abolish slavery. The amendment is then submitted to the states for ratification.

49
Q

AMERICAN CIVIL WAR

General Robert E. Lee surrenders his Confederate Army to General Ulysses S. Grant

Abraham Lincoln and his wife Mary go to Ford’s Theater.

A

April 9: General Robert E. Lee surrenders his Confederate Army to General Ulysses S. Grant at the village of Appomattox Court House in Virginia

April 14: Abraham Lincoln and his wife Mary go to Ford’s Theater to see the play “Our American Cousin” . During the third act of the play John Wilkes Booth shoots the president in the head at approx 10:13 p.m.

50
Q

AMERICAN CIVIL WAR

Battle of Gettysburg

A

1863 July 3: Battle of Gettysburg - major Union victory but massive casualties

November 19: President Abraham Lincoln dedicates a portion of the Gettysburg battlefield as a national cemetery, and delivered the “Gettysburg Address.”

51
Q

AMERICAN INDIAN WARS

The Sioux Wars fought in ___ led by ___ and ___

A

1854 - 1890

The Sioux Wars in South Dakota, Minnesota and Wyoming were led by Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull in a fight to keep their homelands

52
Q

FRENCH VIETNAM

A

Traditionally dominated by China, Vietnam came under French influence between 1862 and 1954. After the Second World War the Vietminh defeated the French, who then withdrew. Vietnam was partitioned along the 17th parallel between Communist North Vietnam (capital, Hanoi) and non-Communist South Vietnam (capital, Saigon). The Vietnam War between the North and the US-backed South ended in the victory of the North in 1975 and the reunification of the country under a Communist regime in the following year

53
Q

AMERICAN INDIAN WARS

The Wounded Knee Massacre

A

1890 The Wounded Knee Massacre in South Dakota followed the killing of Chief Sitting Bull. Chief Big Foot led the last band of Lakota Sioux and were massacred by the US Army at Wounded Knee Creek.

54
Q

SECOND BOER WAR

A

1899

1902

55
Q

WWI

A

1914

1918

56
Q

WWII

A

1939

1945

57
Q

NATO

Dates

Reasons

A

1949

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization. In 1949, in partial response to the Berlin Airlift, the United States, Canada, Great Britain, France, and several other (European) nations created a mutual defense organization, NATO. The Soviets responded by creating their own alliance with the Eastern European Communist states, which was known as the Warsaw Pact. The formation of NATO and the Warsaw Pact formalized the Cold War, which would last until 1991. Several former Warsaw Pact countries are now members of NATO.

58
Q

KOREAN WAR

A

1950

1953

59
Q

SPUTNIK

Date?

Ramifications

A

1957

The Soviet Union launched Sputnik I in 1957. The launch of Sputnik triggered the Space Race between the United States and the Soviet Union, as each nation worked to send increasingly sophisticated systems into outer space. In response to the Soviet launch, Congress established the National Air and Space Agency (NASA), Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), and the National Defense and Education Act, which included massive funding for scientific research at the university level.

60
Q

CUBAN MISSILE CRISIS

“The Bay of Pigs” Invasion

A

1961 April 17: “The Bay of Pigs”

  • A group of Cuban exiles, backed by the US, invades Cuba at the Bay of Pigs in a failed attempt to trigger an anti-Castro rebellion
61
Q

CUBAN MISSILE CRISIS

Fidel Castro assumes power after the Cuban Revolution

A

1959 Jan 1

62
Q

CUBAN MISSILE CRISIS

Cuba openly aligns itself with the Soviet Union and their policies.

A

1960 Dec 19

63
Q

CUBAN MISSILE CRISIS

Soviet Missile Installations

A

1962 August 31: Senator Kenneth Keating tells the Senate that there is evidence of Soviet missile installations in Cuba

September 11: Soviet Foreign Minister, Andrei Gromyko, warns that an American attack on Cuba could mean war with the Soviet Union

October 14 : A U-2 flying over western Cuba obtains photographs of missile sites

64
Q

CUBAN MISSILE CRISIS US

Blockade of Cuba

A

October 22: U.S. military forces go to DEFCON 3

October 24: Soviet ships, en route to Cuba, reverse their course except for one. US Military forces go to DEFCON 2

65
Q

CUBAN MISSILE CRISIS

Diplomacy and Resolution

A

October 25: JFK sends a letter to Khrushchev placing the responsibility for the crisis on the Soviet Union

October 26: Khrushchev sends a letter to President Kennedy proposing to remove his missiles if Kennedy publicly announces never to invade Cuba

October 27: An American U-2 is shot down over Cuba killing the pilot, Major Rudolf Anderson

October 27: A U-2 strays into Soviet airspace, near Alaska, and is nearly intercepted by Soviet fighters

October 27: Kennedy sends Khrushchev a letter stating that he will make a statement that the U.S. will not invade Cuba if Khrushchev removes the missiles from Cuba

October 28: Khrushchev announces over Radio Moscow that he has agreed to remove the missiles from Cuba In return the US agrees to the withdrawal of US nuclear missiles from Turkey ending the Cuban Missile Crisis

66
Q

CUBAN MISSILE CRISIS

Timeline

Fidel Castro assumes power

Castro aligns with USSR

Bay of Pigs fails to start Revolution

U-2 photos Missile Sites

Blockade, DEFCON 2

Diplomatic Resolution

A

1959 Jan 1 - Fidel Castro in power

1960 Dec 19 - Castro aligns with USSR

1961 Apr 17 - Bay of Pigs failed Revoluti

1962 Oct 14 - U-2 photos Missile Sites

1962 Oct 24 - Blockade, DEFCON 2

1962 Oct 25-28 Diplomatic Resolution

67
Q

VIETNAM WAR

Partition of Vietnam

US Army, + S.Kor, Aus, NZ, Thai armies

Tet Offensive - US loses confidence

US leaves Vietnam

Fall of Saigon

A

1955 partition of Vietnam

1964 US, + S.Kor, Aus, NZ, Thai

1968 Tet Offensive - US loses confidence, begins withdrawal

1973 US leaves Vietnam

1975 Fall of Saigon

Since the partition of Vietnam in 1954 the Communist North had attempted to unite the country as a Communist state, fuelling US concern over the possible spread of Communism in SE Asia. After two US destroyers were reportedly fired on in the Gulf of Tonkin in 1964, a US army was sent to Vietnam, supported by contingents from South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, and Thailand, while American aircraft bombed North Vietnamese forces and areas of Cambodia. The Tet Offensive of 1968 damaged US confidence and US forces began to be withdrawn, finally leaving in 1973. The North Vietnamese captured the southern capital Saigon to end the war in 1975

68
Q

AFGHANISTAN WAR

Dates

Who involved

A

1979

USSR Intervenes in the Afghanistan War. With the rise of militant factions and violence, the Afghan government had asked for Soviet troops, and the United Nations protested the USSR’s intervention.

The Mujahideen, an alliance of insurgent groups, were supported by the USA, the UK, Saudi Arabia, China, Pakistan, and Iran The Soviet-Afghan War resulted in the deaths of up to 1.5 million civilians, and millions fled the country The Soviets withdrew in the late 80s, but civil war continued Ironically, many U.S.-trained Afghan soldiers later became leaders of al-Qaeda and remain enemies of the United States.

69
Q

SOVIET WAR IN AFGHANISTAN

A

1979

1989

70
Q

FALKLANDS WAR

A

1982

Six months

Argentina supporting Falkland Isle vs UK