Feb 21, 2013 · Q: What day most changed the course of history? Ken Burns, documentary filmmaker June 28, 1914. Franz Ferdinand’s carriage driver took a wrong turn and they ended up in a cul-de-sac, giving the...
These Professors do not have a clue as we all know it was April 5, AD 33. this day changed the course of history, more than any other day before or after, That singular event was the resurrection of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, what a glorious day for human kind.
But did it actually change the course of history that much? I don’t think so. Cold War would’ve happened in a similar way anyway, maybe with less tension though. There are better answers for this question, but this is of course the most upvoted because it’s related to America.
August 26, 1920—the day women gained the right to vote—allowed the U.S. to live up to its fundamental values of opportunity and equality. Who is this guy? Seriously, is he completely overlooking the U.S territories that still have less voting rights than mainlanders, or the minorities in the south that were prevented from equal living/voting under segregationist laws?
While so many events have altered the course of history, one seminal event in the recent past was the detonation of an atomic bomb over hiroshima (followed by a subsequent detonation over Nagasaki). This event facilitated the end to one war (World War II) and marked the beginning of a new war (the Cold War).
June 6. It should be a holiday, not just a national holiday, but a world wide holiday. June 6, 1944 is a day that saved the world as we know it.Jun 6, 2019
Why was 1900 a turning point in world history? Industrialization in the period circa 1750-1900 can be considered an economic turning point because it resulted in the disassociation with wealth and land.Nov 29, 2021
But for many people, the most pivotal years in humanity's history are those of destruction, from the Civil War and Reconstruction in 1865 to 1945, which saw the dropping of atomic bombs of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, as well as the end of the Second World War.May 31, 2015
This Day in History: March 2 The North African country of Morocco, situated directly across the Strait of Gibraltar from Spain, proclaimed independence from France this day in 1956, the sultan Muhammad V having formed its first government.
The 10 Most Important Events of MankindThe Discovery of Fire. Photo by chuttersnap on Unsplash. ... Domestication of Dogs. ... Invention of the Wheel. ... Invention of the Alphabet. ... Creation of Religion. ... Advent of Timekeeping. ... Invention of the Printing Press. ... The Renaissance.
The year 1919 was transformative around the world, including in the United States. On the global stage, troops returned home from World War I; the Treaty of Versailles was signed; and the idea of self-determination, fueled by U.S. President Woodrow Wilson's desire for a liberal international order, took hold.
April 18 – The 1906 San Francisco earthquake (estimated magnitude 7.8) on the San Andreas Fault destroys much of San Francisco, California, killing at least 3,000 people, with 225,000–300,000 left homeless, and $350,000,000 in damages.
September 6 – William McKinley assassination: American anarchist Leon Czolgosz shoots U.S. President William McKinley at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, New York. McKinley dies 8 days later. September 7 – The Boxer Rebellion in China officially ends, with the signing of the Boxer Protocol.
The 50 key dates of world history3000. Building of the Great Pyramid.776. First Olympiad in Greece.753. Foundation of Rome.490. Greeks defeated the Persians at the Battle of Marathon.360. The period of Aristotle and Plato.332. Egypt conquered by Alexander.323. Alexander dies at Babylon.214.More items...
People who changed the worldMuhammad (570 – 632) Founder of Islam.Martin Luther King (1929 – 1968) Civil Rights leader.Abraham Lincoln (1809 – 1865) American President during civil war, helped end slavery.Nelson Mandela (1918 – 2013) Anti-apartheid leader, first President of democratic South Africa in 1994.More items...
The 21st centuryThe 21st century is the most important century in human history. At least that's what a number of thinkers say. Their argument is pretty simple: Mostly, it's that there are huge challenges that we have to surmount this century to get any future at all, making this the most consequential of all centuries so far.Sep 26, 2019
A new study has found how the British Army held a vegetable show at the Base Camp in Le Havre during August 1917 and 1918 in which Belgian servicemen and French civilians also took part.
So, I recently learned about the popular topic of the Japanese philosophical idea of the "way of the warrior" (Japanese: "bushido").
I really want to know exactly and precisely what happened in the area in and around present day Mexico City after Spanish conquest, but so far all the sources available online for free only give a very murky picture that answer none of my biggest questions that I am looking for answers to.
Three years after its founding, the Virginia Colony was a failure. A few dozen starving settlers packed some meager possessions and sailed from Jamestown on June 7, headed back toward England. The next morning, to their surprise, they spotted a fleet coming toward them, carrying a new governor, Lord De La Warr, and a year's worth of supplies.
APRIL 19, 1802: Mosquitos Win the West. Events that change America don't always occur within our borders. Consider the spring of 1802. Napoleon had sent a formidable army under his brother-in-law, General Charles Leclerc, to quell the rebellion of former slaves in Haiti.
IT'S a badly kept secret among scholars of American history that nothing much really happened on Thursday, July 4, 1776. Although this date is emblazoned on the Declaration, the Colonies had actually voted for independence two days earlier; the document wasn't signed until a month later. When John Adams predicted that the "great anniversary ...
It should have been an easy shot: five rounds at 25 feet. But the gunman, Giuseppe Zangara, an anarchist, lost his balance atop a wobbly chair, and instead of hitting President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt, he fatally wounded the mayor of Chicago, who was shaking hands with F.D.R.
If one date should truly get credit for securing America's independence, it is when the British general John Burgoyne surrendered at Saratoga. The battle's significance was more diplomatic than military: shortly after news reached Paris, the French king decided to enter the war on the American side.
Claudette Colvin, 15 , seemed poised to become an icon of the struggle against segregation. But then, shortly after her March 2 arrest, she became pregnant. The movement's leaders decided that an unwed teenage mother would not make a suitable symbol, so they pursued a legal case with another volunteer: Rosa Parks.
On this evening, Thomas Jefferson invited Alexander Hamilton and James Madison to dinner at his rented house on Maiden Lane in Lower Manhattan. In the course of the night, Jefferson recalled, they brokered one of the great political deals in American history. Under the terms of the arrangement, the national capital would be situated on the Potomac, and the federal government would agree to take on the enormous war debts of the 13 states.
History is important: every day, we are reminded of the power of the past to shape our lives and the society we live in, be it a family, nation, culture, religion, or some other historically constituted community. The way we understand history shapes our present and how we view the world and affects how we understand reality and our own futures.
The printing press is perhaps the most important invention of the last 2,000 years. German printer Johannes Gutenberg’s invention of the printing press introduced movable type printing to Europe, revolutionizing literacy and acting as a catalyst for the spread of knowledge throughout the world.
Constantinople was not just any city; it was the preeminent city in the world and had been an imperial capital for sixteen centuries. It had been the capital of the Roman Empire since 330 A.D. The fall of the city was considered a massive boon to Islam and a blow to Christendom.
The Renaissance triggered the rebirth of civilization after the Black Death, pushing ignorance aside and giving birth to the development of mathematics and astronomy. Books were printed for the first time, giving the common man the ability to read at will (previously the domain of priests and monks). Science, art, and literature advanced to new heights. World maps were drawn up and new civilizations discovered, as we finally rejected the idea that the earth was the center of the universe.
There’s some debate about when the Second World War began, starting from the Italian invasion of Ethiopia in 1935 , the Spanish Civil War in 1936, the Japanese invasion of China in 1937, or when Britain and France declared war on Germany following the invasion of Poland in 1939.
Not only did it shape the entire modern world as we know it and pave the way for capitalism to conquer feudalism, it set the stage for revolutionary uprisings and changes in all parts of the globe. The period of radical social and political upheaval during the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars that followed had a lasting impact not just on France or Europe, but the entire planet. It will always be remembered as the event that ended feudalism and whose shockwaves led to a total transformation of social structures in every country.
The overthrow immediately resulted in the establishment of the world’s first self-proclaimed socialist state, the Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic, followed by the beginning of the Russian Civil War. After the socialist Red Army beat the monarchist and capitalist White Army, they established the government of what would become the U.S.S.R., or Soviet Union, in 1922.
The collapse of negotiations became known as the “October Surprise,” and the consensus among historians is that it played a key role in putting Nixon over the top in the next month’s election. In 1973, peace was agreed to by the parties on terms that were substantially identical to those proposed in 1968.
Starting as a government lawyer and rising to prominence during Johnson’s term, he became one of the few advisors to make the transition into the Nixon Administration. Unfortunately, the way he did that was by prolonging the war in Vietnam. Source: History Of PTSD.
As a twelve-year-old boy, the future Khan (then known as Temujin) lost his father, a tribal chieftain, when he was poisoned by Tartars. Things like that usually ended with the slain chieftain’s whole family being wiped out, but Temujin escaped into the wilderness with his mother and a few loyal supporters.
As the month of March comes to a close, so too does Women’s History Month — an annual celebration of women’s accomplishments and stories. The past month has seen important strides made toward equality for and by women everywhere. On March 8 — International Women’s Day — more than 5 million people took to the streets of major cities around ...
The first-ever female winner of the Nobel Prize, Marie Curie discovered the elements of polonium and radium, coined the term “radioactivity,” and was the winner of numerous academic and scientific distinctions over the course of her distinguished career .
Two women sit on a sidewalk holding posters with the portrait of environmental leader Berta Caceres, as they protest outside of the Secretary of Natural Resources and Environment (SERNA) to demand justice over the recent slaying of Caceres in the capital. #N#Image: Fernando Antonio/AP
Between 1990 and 2015, the gender wage gap between men and women in the United States decreased by more than 50% — from 36 cents to the dollar to 17 cents to the dollar. And while there is still work to be done to bring that gap all the way down to zero (by some estimates it could take more than 170 years globally to close the gender gap), women today can, at least in part, thank the activism of Lilly Ledbetter for the strides made in the past decades.
Image: AP Photo. Well before Venus and Serena Williams dominated the courts, there was Althea Neale Gibson. Gibson was the first African American to play tennis at Wimbledon, the world’s oldest tennis tournament, which she did in 1950.
While the controversy over where, when, and how Earhart disappeared when she attempted to circumnavigate the globe in 1937 is still a topic of conversation, Earhart’s feats as a pioneer for female pilots should not be forgotten.
The “notorious RBG” (Supreme Court justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg) might not be where she is today were it not for the groundwork laid by Sandra Day O’Connor, the first woman to serve as a justice on the US Supreme Court.
A meteor Is Responsible For The Spread Of Christianity. A Roman emperor named Constantine who ruled from 306 to 337 AD, was a significant figure in the history of Christianity, as he was the first person to claim conversion to Christianity in Roman empire. He also played an influential role for enabling tolerance of Christianity in that empire, ...
Napoleon was a French military and political leader, who rose to prominence during French revolution, and led several successful campaigns. Due to his remarkable achievements, courageous personality and invincible influence on the world, he remains to be one of the most celebrated and controversial figure in human history.
About 3 years later Osama bin Ladin plotted 9/11 and killed about 2,996 people, injured more than 6,000 others, and caused at least $10 billion worth of property and infrastructure damage.
History can be brutally boring as well as equally interesting, all depends on prospective. But did you know that some of the most important and disastrous events in human history were outcomes of unimaginably small mistakes and sometimes accidents?
Penicillin antibiotics were among the first and most important antibiotics to be effectively work against bacterial infections . However, the story of its discovery is also quite fascinating. Apparently a Scottish scientist named Alexander Fleming was experimenting with staphylococcus, but he went on a vacation lasted for two weeks. Interestingly he left staphylococcus in a Petri dish. When he returned, he witnessed one of the most astonishing event in the history of medicine.
Apparently, David Blair was given the job of second officer on the ship, but he was replaced, and when he left, he accidentally kept the keys to his locker with him, that believed to contain binoculars intended to be used by the crew’s nest lookout.
Osama Bin Laden Was Almost Dead Before 9/11. Bill Clinton the former president of U.S.A once had an option to kill Osama bin laden in 1998. But he decided not to kill him, to save 300 innocent civilians, that would also have died during the attack.
Captured by astronaut William Anders during the Apollo 8 voyage, Earthrise was, and still is, a shocking reminder of our lonely existence in the vast expanse of space. And yet, shocking as it is, great beauty lies in the marble-like swirl of blue and white cropping out from the monotonous blackness of our galaxy.
While Hine’s photography is considered a form of documentary photography, the photos he chose to showcase were carefully posed and selected to leave the greatest audience impact possible. Hine’s work is a series which showcases the fact that a photo doesn’t necessarily have to be a candid or unexpected shot for it to work as a political or social statement.
An iconic representation of the Great Depression, Dorothea Lange’s Migrant Mother features an impoverished woman alongside her away-facing children. The photograph was taken sometime during 1936 while the Great Depression was still in full swing and is an extremely famous example of documentary photography.
Vandanni is freelance writer and photographer from New York. An animal enthusiast, she is currently focused on developing her wildlife photography portfolio and can be found at her Instagram accounts Skythequaker_and_me and danni_shiv.
Taken by Alfred Eisenstaedt in New York on August 14, 1945, The Kiss (otherwise knowns as V-J Day in Times Square) captures the iconic moment a U.S. Navy sailor kissed a stranger on the streets of Times Square. Popularized by its publication in Life magazine, the photograph is a great example of the power of street photography in action.
Famously created through the use of a camera with a false lens, the photo Blind captures a woman gazing off to the side, seemingly unaware of the fact that she is being photographed.
Known for her intense stare and bold green eyes, Afghan Girl came to symbolize the struggles of refugee women to the Western world. Taken by National Geographic Society photographer Steve McCurry during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, Afghan Girl (whose real name is Sharbat Gula) managed to conceptualize everything about the struggles of refugee women all in the photo of one, tattered, gritty girl.