| The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition. 2002. |
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| World History since 1550 |
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| Historians often call the period from the middle of the sixteenth century to the outbreak of the French Revolution in 1789 the early modern era. This era includes the Renaissance and the Reformation, both of which extended from the fifteenth through the seventeenth centuries, and the Enlightenment, which extended through the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. | 1 |
| The American and French Revolutions mark the beginning of modern history. The French Revolution introduced a period of political upheaval in Europe that included the wars fought between the 1790s and 1815 by Napoleon Bonaparte, the Napoleonic wars. The Congress of Vienna in 1815 brought peace to Europe but did not extinguish the flames of democracy and nationalism that had flared up during the French Revolution. The twin forces of democracy and nationalism exploded again in the so-called Revolutions of 1848. Between 1850 and 1870, both Italy and Germany emerged as modern nation-states. | 2 |
| The period between 1870 and 1914 witnessed intensifying nationalistic and imperial rivalries in Europe, culminating with the assassination of the Archduke Francis Ferdinand and the outbreak of World War I in 1914. During the war, Great Britain, France, Italy, and Russia opposed Germany, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, and the Ottoman Empire. The United States entered the war in 1917 and contributed to the victory of Great Britain and France in 1918. Before the conclusion of the war, the Russian monarchy collapsed, and the Bolsheviks came to power in the Russian Revolution. | 3 |
| During the 1920s and 1930s, Joseph Stalin consolidated the power of communism in the Soviet Union, while nationalistic and militaristic governments arose in Germany (the Nazis under Adolf Hitler), Italy (the fascists under Mussolini), and Japan. World War II commenced with Hitlers invasion of Poland in 1939. In 1941, Hitler invaded the Soviet Union, and Japan attacked the United States at Pearl Harbor. By 1945, the Axis powers had surrendered; Japan capitulated after the United States dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. | 4 |
| New tensions developed after World War II between the United States and the Soviet Union. This conflict, which embraced political and economic competition but not direct military confrontation, is known as the cold war. During the late 1940s and 1950s, Europe divided into armed camps: the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), led by the United States, and the Warsaw Pact, led by the Soviet Union. Inevitably, the cold war affected Asia as well as Europe. Communists backed by the Soviet Union gained power in China in 1949 but soon broke with the Soviet Union in a great power rivalry. Communist and anticommunist forces clashed in the Korean War (19501953) and again in the Vietnam War (1950s1975). Despite these conflicts, the shared fear of nuclear war led the United States and Soviet Union to seek compromise and mutual understanding, called détente, during the 1970s and 1980s. | 5 |
| At the end of the 1980s, communism began to disintegrate, first in eastern Europe and then in the Soviet Union. Although ending the cold war, the collapse of communism created new sources of international instability by bringing long-suppressed nationalism to the surface in the former countries of the Soviet Union and in Yugoslavia. The 1990s also saw the intensification of militant Islamic fundamentalism throughout the Middle East and in parts of Asia. To a degree, conflicting religious ideals and the antagonism between religious fervor and secular values began to replace the older political ideologies as the basis of international strife. J.F.K. | 6 |
| Entries |
| |
| Allende, Salvador |
Allies |
ancien régime |
| Arafat, Yasir |
Armada, Spanish |
Armenian massacres |
| Assad, Hafez al- |
Ataturk, Kemal |
Auschwitz |
| Axis powers |
Bastille |
Ben-Gurion, David |
| Berlin airlift |
bin Laden, Osama |
Bismarck, Otto von |
| Black Hole of Calcutta |
blitzkrieg |
Boer War |
| Boers |
Bolívar, Simón |
Bolsheviks |
| Bourbons |
Brezhnev, Leonid |
Britain, Battle of |
| British Empire |
Bulge, Battle of the |
Burke, Edmund |
| Castro, Fidel |
Catherine the Great |
Central Powers |
| Chamberlain, Neville |
Chiang Kai-shek |
Churchill, Winston |
| Clemenceau, Georges |
collapse of communism |
Commonwealth |
| The Communist Manifesto |
concentration camp |
Congress party |
| Cook, Captain James |
Cossacks |
Counter Reformation |
| Crimean War |
Cromwell, Oliver |
Cuban missile crisis |
| Cultural Revolution, Great Proletarian |
czar |
Dachau |
| Danton, Georges |
D-Day |
De Gaulle, Charles |
| Deng Xiaoping |
de-Stalinization |
Dienbienphu |
| Disraeli, Benjamin |
divine right of kings |
Doctor Livingstone, I presume? |
| Drake, Sir Francis |
Dreyfus affair |
Dunkirk |
| East Germany |
Edwardian period |
Eichmann, Adolf |
| Elizabeth I |
Elizabeth II |
Engels, Friedrich |
| Enlightenment |
Falkland Islands |
fascism |
| fifth column |
fin de siècle |
Final Solution |
| France, fall of |
Francis Ferdinand, Archduke |
Franco, Francisco |
| French Revolution |
Führer, der |
Gandhi, Indira |
| Gandhi, Mahatma |
Gang of Four |
Garibaldi, Giuseppe |
| George III |
Gestapo |
Gladstone, William Ewart |
| Glorious Revolution |
Goebbels, Joseph |
Goering (or Göring), Hermann |
| goose step |
Gorbachev, Mikhail |
Great War |
| Guevara, Ernesto Che |
guillotine |
Hammarskjöld, Dag |
| Hanover, House of |
Hapsburgs |
Himmler, Heinrich |
| Hirohito |
Hiroshima |
Hitler, Adolf |
| Ho Chi Minh |
Holocaust |
Huguenots |
| Hussein, Saddam |
Industrial Revolution |
International |
| Iron Curtain |
Ivan the Terrible |
Jack the Ripper |
| Jacobins |
John XXIII, Pope |
John Paul II, Pope |
| Kaiser |
kamikaze |
Khmer Rouge |
| Khomeini, Ayatollah Ruhollah |
Khrushchev, Nikita |
Kidd, Captain William |
| Klondike gold rush |
Kuomintang |
Lawrence of Arabia |
| League of Nations |
Lenin |
Lloyd George, David |
| Long March |
lost generation |
Louis XIV |
| Louis XVI |
Luddites |
Luftwaffe |
| Lusitania |
Maginot line |
Manchu dynasty |
| Mandela, Nelson |
Mao Zedong |
Maoism |
| Marat, Jean-Paul |
Marie Antoinette |
Marshall Plan |
| Marx, Karl |
master race |
Mata Hari |
| Meiji Restoration |
Mein Kampf |
Meir, Golda |
| Metternich, Prince Clemens von |
Milosevic, Slobodan |
Moguls |
| Montessori, Maria |
Montgomery, Bernard |
Mother Teresa |
| Munich Pact |
Mussolini, Benito |
Napoleon Bonaparte |
| Nasser, Gamal Abdel |
Nationalist China |
Nazis |
| Nazism |
Nazi-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact |
Nehru, Jawaharlal |
| Nelson, Admiral Horatio |
New World |
Nightingale, Florence |
| 1914 to 1918 |
1939 to 1945 |
Nkrumah, Kwame |
| Normandy, invasion of |
nuclear testing |
Nuremberg trials |
| October Revolution |
Old World |
Ottoman Empire |
| Perón, Eva |
Perón, Juan |
Persian Gulf War |
| Peter the Great |
William Pitt, the Elder |
Poland, invasion of |
| potato famine, Irish |
Puritans |
Putin, Vladimir |
| Qaddafi, Muammar |
Quisling, Vidkun |
Rabin, Yitzhak |
| RAF |
Raleigh, Sir Walter |
Rasputin, Grigori |
| Reason, Age of |
Red Guards |
Reign of Terror |
| Resistance, Free French |
Restoration |
Revolutions of 1848 |
| Richelieu, Cardinal |
Robespierre |
Romanovs |
| Rommel, Erwin |
Rothschilds |
Royal Air Force |
| Royal Navy |
Russian Revolution |
Russo-Japanese War |
| Rwandan Genocide |
Sadat, Anwar |
Sakharov, Andrei |
| Sarajevo |
Schweitzer, Albert |
Seven Years War |
| shoguns |
Six-Day War |
Soviet Union |
| Spanish Civil War |
SS |
Stalin, Joseph |
| Stalingrad, Battle of |
Stalinism |
Stalins purge trials |
| Star Chamber |
Stuarts |
Suez Canal crisis |
| Suharto |
Sukarno |
Sun King |
| Thatcher, Margaret |
Third Reich |
Thirty Years War |
| Tiananmen Square |
Titanic |
Tito, Marshal |
| Trafalgar, Battle of |
trench warfare |
Trotsky, Leon |
| Trudeau, Pierre Elliott |
Tudors |
U-boats |
| Vatican II |
V-E Day |
Versailles, Treaty of |
| Vichy government |
Victoria, Queen |
Victorian period |
| Vienna, Congress of |
Viet Cong |
Villa, Pancho |
| V-J Day |
Walesa, Lech |
war crimes |
| Warsaw Pact |
Waterloo, Battle of |
Weimar Republic |
| Wellington, duke of |
West Germany |
white mans burden |
| Wilhelm II |
William and Mary |
Windsor, duke of |
| World War I |
World War II |
Yalta agreement |
| Yeltsin, Boris |
Zapata, Emiliano |
Zhou En-lai |
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| | | The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition. Edited by E.D. Hirsch, Jr., Joseph F. Kett, and James Trefil. Copyright © 2002 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. |
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