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Timeline of the Moderns

  • Quing Dynasty

    Quing Dynasty
    China's Qing Dynasty was slow to modernize and underestimated the nationalism sweeping China after the unsuccessful Boxer Rebellion against foreign interference in Chinese affairs. Sun Yixian and his revolutionary alliance threw out China's last emperor, and the country went through a prolonged period of political turmoil until the Communists achieved supremacy in 1949.
    The Quing Dynasty lasted from 1644 to 1911.
    The end of the Dynasty was known as the beginning of the republic of China.
  • Emmeline Pankhurst

    Emmeline Pankhurst
    Pankhurst's most important work began with this founding of the WSPU.She defied politicians by disrupting party rallies, marching and smashing store windows, and going on hunger strikes when jailed. During World War I Pankhurst's tactics changed, and she won support for her cause by helping the war effort.
    Her daughters were involved and her eldest daughter was a leading member of the WPSU.
  • Katherine Mansfield

    Katherine Mansfield
    With the publication of this book, Mansfield achieved front rank among British authors. Exclusively a writer of short stories, Mansfield had a style that was unique at the time, emphasizing subtlety and small but telling insights over broad plot developments. Mansfield suffered several personal tragedies in her short, 35-year life, and her death from tuberculosis in 1923 silenced a potentially masterful hand.
    Her short stories had themes relating to women's lives and social hierarchies.
  • War

    War
    Since recent wars had been small-scale conflicts, a generation of patriotic young British men eagerly enlisted to fight Germany when war broke out; however, trench warfare was a new reality, and by war's end 908,000 men from the British Empire had been killed.
    There were over 8.5 million deaths in WWI.
    The war lasted 4 years.
  • Sinn Fein

    Sinn Fein
    Members of Sinn Fein--a militant group begun in 1905 by Irish Catholics--proclaimed Ireland a republic with themselves as its head, and Sinn Fein supporters and other Irish nationalists waged a guerrilla war against British troops. The passage of the Home Rule Bill divided Ireland into two sections. The six Protestant counties of Ulster, designated Northern Ireland, remained part of the United Kingdom.
    Sinn Feinn was founded in 1905 and is still in effect today.
  • Ulysses

    Ulysses
    Initially judged obscene, early editions subjected to confiscation and book burning, long banned in England and the United States, Ulysses found its exalted stature confirmed in controversy in 1998 when it was chosen the best English-language novel of the 20th century by an editorial board of the Modern Library, a division of Random House publishers. The book was censored for 11 years because of obscenity.
    It is best know for its stream-of-consciousness style.
  • Empire State Building

    Empire State Building
    The term Art Deco derives from the name of a Paris exhibit: the Exposition Internatinale des Arts Decoratifs et Industriels Modernes. This style is marked by geometric shapes and smooth lines suggesting elegance and sophistication. New York City's Empire State Building is a famous example of Art Deco architecture. What year is this?
    The Empire State building was built in only 11 months.
    It gets struck my lightning on an average of 23 times a year.
  • Edward VIII

    Edward VIII
    Edward VIII became the subject of one of the most popular love stories of the 20th century. After becoming king in 1936, he announced his intention to marry an American divorcee. When the British government objected to this, Edward abdicated after only 325 days as king, the first person ever to voluntarily relinquish the British throne. With the woman he loved, Edward VIII (1894-1972) lived out his days known as the duke of Windsor.
    People didn't want a woman with two ex husbands to be Queen.
  • T.S Eliot

    T.S Eliot
    Eliot blurred his national identification by becoming a British citizen. However, the St. Louis-born, Harvard-educated poet early on "was English in everything but accent and citizenship" according to his college classmates. "He smoked a pipe, liked to be alone, carefully avoided slang, and dressed the studied carelessness of a dandy.
    His famous poem, The Waste Land, has been called one of the most important poems of the 20th century.
  • "Wage war, by sea, land, and air..."

    "Wage war, by sea, land, and air..."
    To combat despair brought on Britons almost daily German air attacks, prime minister Winston Churchill used stirring words to rally the people to stand defiant. He declared that Britain would "wage war, by sea, land, and air, with all our might and with all our strength that God can give us...against monstrous tyranny."
    That line came from his speech titled "Blood, Toil, Tears and Sweat.
  • Iron Curtain

    Iron Curtain
    In a speech delivered in the United States, Winston Churchill coined the phrase "iron curtain" as he warned of the threat posed by the Soviet Union, which a year earlier had been an ally in the defeat of Hitler. The United States quickly took the lead in containing communism's post-war expansion, and this Cold War became a fact of international life for the next 45 years.
    The iron curtain refers to the boundary that divided Europe politically & militarily from the end of WWII - end of Cold War.
  • Eric Blair/George Orwell

    Eric Blair/George Orwell
    George Orwell, the pen name of Eric Blair, carried a lifelong "horror of politics" and concern for human freedom. This was transferred in his writings into two landmark books, Animal Farm and 1984, the former bitterly predicting the downfall of communism and the latter warning of what he saw as a trend toward totalitarian dominance by governments. Eric's first word was "beastly", because if you're going to be a famous author, your first word can't be "mom".