1st Hour Timeline

By j_baine
  • 1453

    The Fall of Constantinople

    Constantinople's fall from the roman empire to the ottomans
  • 1455

    War of the Roses

    A series of English civil wars over control of the throne of England
  • 1455

    The printing press is established

    Johannes Gutenberg invented the printing press which allowed books to be printed more easily.
  • 1460

    Vasco da Gama becomes the first European to have reached India

  • 1492

    Columbus “discovers" the New World

    Columbus was hired by Spain to find a new way to India and instead he found a “new” continent
  • 1494

    Treaty of Tordesillas

    Divided the newly discovered lands outside of Europe between the Spanish and the Portuguese
  • 1500

    Triangle slave trade takes shape

    A slave trade between Africa, Central Amarica, and “New England.”
  • 1517

    The 95 Theses are nailed to a door by Martin Luther

  • 1519

    Calvinism introduced by John Calvin

  • 1521

    Diet of Worms

    A council that was to decide Martin Luther’s ‘fate’ (mystical, I know)
  • 1524

    The Peasant’s War

    Peasants demanding agrarian rights and freedom from oppression by nobles started a war against the aristocracy
  • 1529

    Marburg Colloquy

    A meeting between Martin Luther and Ulrich Zwingli that attempted to solve a dispute over the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist.
  • 1530

    Confession of Augsburg

    The primary confession of faith of the Lutheran church, and one of the most important documents of the Protestant Reformation
  • 1530

    Introduction of Mannerism

    A style of painting, sculpture and (to a lesser extent) architecture, that emerged in Rome and Florence between 1510 and 1520, during the later years of the High Renaissance
  • 1531

    Schmalkaldic League is formed

    It was an alliance between Protestant princes and delegates of free cities, and a response to the threat of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V to get rid of Lutheranism
  • 1534

    The creation of the Anglican English church

  • 1534

    Act of Supremacy

    An act that showed that Henry VIII was more powerful than the church
  • 1534

    Martin Luther translates the Bible to German

    Creates an increase in simple education
  • 1534

    Parmigianino paints “Madonna with Long Neck”

    Parmigianino paints “Madonna with Long Neck”
  • 1535

    King Henry VIII officially declared himself the head of the church of England, not the Pope

  • 1543

    Copernicus publishes On the Revolutions of Heavenly Spheres

    Basically denounces geocentrism
  • 1545

    Council of Trent

    A council that represented the counter protestant reformation
  • 1546

    Schmalkaldic War

    A relatively short, violent war between the forces of Emperor Charles V of the Holy Roman Empire and the Lutheran Schmalkaldic League.
  • 1550

    Introduction of Baroque Art

    A style of art marked by heavy and dramatic ornamentation and curved rather than straight lines
  • 1555

    Peace of Augsburg

    A treaty between Holy Roman Emperor Charles V and the Schmalkaldic League
  • 1562

    Beginning of wars of religion in France

  • 1571

    Birth of Baroque Artist Peter Paul Rubens

  • 1572

    St. Bartholomew's Day massacre

    A massacre against the Protestant Huguenots
  • 1582

    The Gregorian Calendar

    A new way to keep track of time
  • The Edict of Nantes

    Granted Protestants rights
  • Birth of Baroque Rembrandt van Rijn

  • Consumer Revolution

    There was a marked increase in the consumption and variety of luxury goods and products by individuals from different economic and social backgrounds.
  • Kepler publishes The New Astronomy

    Based on research by both him and Tycho Brahe; solved the problem of planetary motion and helped prove heliocentric theory
  • King James Bible is published

  • Beginning of the Thirty Years’s War

    One of the most destructive conflicts in human history; it began as a religious civil war between the Protestants and Roman Catholics in Germany; soon became a power struggle throughout all of Europe
  • The United States experienced successive waves of immigration

  • Francis Bacon promotes the empirical (“scientific”) method instead of scholasticism

  • René Descartes published his Discourse on Method

  • Louis the XIV created many challenges to absolutism that had to do with religious and territorial conflicts.

  • Beginning of the English Civil War

    A series of wars and political machinations between Parliamentarians and Royalists, principally over the manner of England’s governance
  • Descartes published Principles of Philosophy

  • Peace of Westphalia

    A series of treaties that largely ended the European wars of religion, including the Thirty Years’ War
  • End of the Thirty Years' War.

  • Charles I of England beheaded by Cromwell and the "Rump" Parliament

  • Restoration of the English Monarchy

  • Repeal of the Edict of Nantes

  • Isaac Newton founded Newtonian physics

  • English Bill of Rights

  • Neoclassicism

    Western cultural movement in the decorative and visual arts, literature, theatre, music, and architecture
  • Jethro Tull invents the seed drill

  • Spanish Succession

  • Four Year Crop Rotation is Introduced

  • The world saw a major increase in population

    Along with an increase in living standards, led to the depletion of natural resources. The use of chemicals and fuel in factories resulted in increased air and water pollution and an increased use of fossil fuels.
  • The First Industrial Revolution

    Over the next decade, manufacturing will move from hand production in the home to machine production in factories.
  • Population starting moving to cities

  • Invention of the Spinning Jenny

    James Hargreaves invents the spinning jenny allowing a worker to produce multiple spools of thread at the same time.
  • American colonies become independent from Great Britain.

    Decolonization, the process by which colonies become independent of the colonizing country.
  • James Watt patents an improved steam engine

    A power source in factories and other applications such as steam boats and trains.
  • Seperation of Power in United States

    Multiple distinct political parties, a separation of powers into different branches of government. Check and balances between the branches of government
  • Beginning of French Revolution

    A period of time in France when the people overthrew the monarchy and took control of the government.
  • Romanticism

    A movement in the arts and literature that originated in the late 18th century, emphasizing inspiration, subjectivity, and the primacy of the individual
  • The Concert of Europe

    A group of countries in Europe who worked together and agreed on policies to maintain a steady balance of power
  • Napoleon abdicates the throne

    Banished to the Mediterranean island of Elba.
  • Congress of Vienna

    After the downfall of Napoleon Bonaparte, this international conference was called to create a balance among the European powers.
  • Napoleon escapes from Elba and takes back the French throne during the period known as the “Hundred Days.”

  • Battle of Waterloo

    Napoleon's final army is decisively defeated.
  • Nationalism in Germany

    Communities of people started to identify themselves through institutions, common language and customs.Wanted to be unified as one German state and one central government.
  • The telegraph is invented by Samuel Morse.

    This changes the way people can communicate from long distances.
  • The Revolutions of 1848

    Known in some countries as the Springtime of the Peoples or the Spring of Nations, were a series of political upheavals throughout Europe in 1848.
  • Darwinism is introduced

    Darwinism is a theory of how species change and grow overtime. Social Darwinism is the theory of evolution in cultural groups.
  • Existentialism

    A philosophical theory or approach which emphasizes the existence of the individual person as a free and responsible agent determining their own development through acts of the will.
  • The Transcontinental Railroad is completed.

  • New Imperialism in Asia and Africa

    Beginning in the 1870s, European states established most empires in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East.
  • German Unification

    German Unification in the Hall of Mirrors at the Palace of Versailles in France.
  • Zionism

    A Jewish nationalist movement to create its own Jewish state.
  • Modernism is created

    Modernism is to step towards changing what the traditional beliefs are, due to new ideas coming into play. These changes affected beliefs on art, music, as well as the education of countries.
  • Bloody Sunday

    Troops and police open fire on a peaceful demonstration outside the Winter Palace
  • Balkan Wars

  • Archduke Franz Ferdinand is Assassinated

    This is the last straw that sparks the world war
  • Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia

  • February Revolution

    Results in abolition of the monarchy in Russia
  • July Days

    A series of spontaneous armed anti-government demonstrations of industrial workers and soldier
  • October Revolution

    The Bolsheviks take control of the Winter Palace
  • World War I occurred throughout Europe

  • Brest-Litovsk Treaty

    Russia ends its participation in the First World War
  • Treaty of Versailles

    Peace document signed at the end of World War I by the Allied and associated powers and by Germany in the Hall of Mirrors in the Palace of Versailles
  • League of Nations

    An international organization to promote world peace and cooperation that was created by the Treaty of Versailles
  • Fascism

    Fascist parties were created and means a political movement that exalts nation and often race above the individual and that stands for a government headed by a dictatorial leader
  • Totalitarianism

    The term is coined by Benito Mussolini and means a system of government that is centralized and dictatorial and requires complete subservience to the state
  • The Women’s Bureau was established

    A federal agency created to craft policy according to women workers’ needs
  • The Soviet Union is Created

  • Lenin dies and Stalin emerges as Party leader

  • The start of the Great Depression

  • The stock market crashed

  • Britain Abandoned the Gold Standard

    System by which the value of a currency was defined in terms of gold, for which the currency could be exchanged
  • ⅕ of the banks have failed

  • Adolf Hitler appointed Chancellor of Germany

  • The Dachau concentration camp was established

  • Jews barred from serving in the German armed forces

  • Germany send troops into the Rhineland

  • Germany joins with Austria

  • The end of the Great Depression

    The New Deal was signed into law with a series of relief programs
  • Hitler takes of Czechoslovakia

  • The Nazi-Soviet Nonaggression Pact is made

  • Germany invades Poland

  • Britain and France declare war on Germany

  • Germany invades Denmark, Norway, the Netherlands, and France

  • Postmodernism

    Style and concept in the arts, architecture, and criticism that represents a departure from modernism and has at its heart a general distrust of grand theories and ideologies as well as a problematical relationship with any notion of “art.”.
  • Pearl Harbor

    Surprise Attack on the US from Japanese forces
  • Stalingrad

    A brutal military campaign between Russian forces and those of Nazi Germany and the Axis powers
  • Liberation of Concentration Camps

    Liberation Soviet soldiers were the first to liberate concentration camp prisoners in the final stages of the war
  • D Day

    Allied forces invaded northern France by means of beach landings in Normandy
  • Germany Surrenders

  • Hiroshima

    An American airplane dropped the first atomic bomb ever used in warfare
  • Beginning of the Cold War

    Took place between USSR and the United States
  • Beginning of Baby Boom

  • Winston Churchill gives a speech

    He used the term “iron curtain” when saying “From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic, an iron curtain has descended across the Continent.”
  • The Marshall Plan

    Generated a resurgence of European industrialization and brought extensive investment into the region, stimulated the U.S. economy. Applied solely to Western Europe
  • The Iron Curtain is reduced following Joseph Stalin’s death

  • Brown v. Board of Education ruling

    Made “separate but equal” educational facilities illegal, provided an essential legal basis for activism against the institutionalized racism of Jim Crow laws
  • Berlin Wall Construction

    Restores the Iron Curtain
  • Civil Rights Act of 1964

    Prohibited sex discrimination for employment
  • Combahee River Collective

    one of the first black feminist organizations
  • Poland overthrows communism.

  • Berlin Wall demolished

  • The Iron Curtain Dissipates

    The communist’s abandoned one-party rule in easter Europe
  • Fall of Communism

    The fundamentals of communism allow people to gain ridiculous amounts of governmental power. The fall was due to political instability from the upset lower to middle class people, the lack of easily distributable money for the people, and the changing social climate of the 80s and 90s
  • USSR collapsed, Cold War ended

  • Formation of the European Union

    Following the end of the Cold War and the reunification of Germany, the European Union was created in 1992 by the Treaty of Maastricht