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Armenian Genocide
Campaign of extermination undertaken by the Ottomans against two million of this ethnic minority living in Ottoman territory during World War I.
Balfour Declaration
British policy from 1917 that supported the creation of a Jewish homeland in Palestine.
Black Hand
Pre-WWI secret Serbian society, a member of which assassinated Archduke Franz Ferdinand, sparking the outbreak of WWI.
Bolshevik
Russian communist party headed by Lenin.
Central Powers
WWI term for the alliance of Germany, Austria-Hungary, and the Ottoman empire.
Dreadnoughts
A class of British battleships whose heavy armaments made all other battleships obsolete overnight.
February Revolution
1917 uprising in Russia that led to the abdication of Tsar Nicholas II and the end of the Romanov dynasty, setting the stage for later Bolshevik control.
Fourteen Points
Idealistic post-WWI peace proposal by Woodrow Wilson that called for self-determination, open diplomacy, and the creation of an international peacekeeping organization.
Gallipoli
Failed Allied campaign during WWI to take control of the Dardanelles and open a supply route to Russia; resulted in heavy casualties, especially among Australian and New Zealand forces.
Home front
Term made popular in World War I and II for the civilian 'front' that was symbolic of the greater demands of total war.
League of Nations
Forerunner of the United Nations, project of Woodrow Wilson, although its effectiveness was limited by the United States refusal to join.
October Revolution
1917 seizure of power in Russia by the Bolsheviks, who overthrew the provisional government and established a communist regime.
Paris Peace Conference
1919 meeting of the victorious Allied powers to negotiate the terms of peace after WWI; led to several treaties, including the Treaty of Versailles.
Self-determination
Belief popular in World War I and after that every peoples should have the right to determine their own political destiny.
Sykes-Picot Treaty
Secret 1917 treaty between the British and French, with the agreement of Russia, to divide the modern Middle East between them after the end of WWI.
Treaty of Brest-Litovsk
1918 peace treaty between the new Bolshevik government of Russia and the Central Powers, ending Russia's involvement in WWI and ceding large territories to Germany.
Treaty of Versailles
1919 treaty between the victorious Entente powers and the defeated Germany at the end of WWI, which laid the blame for the war on Germany and exacted harsh reparations.
Triple Alliance
Pre-WWI alliance of Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy.
Triple Entente
Pre-WWI alliance of England, France, and Russia.
Twenty-one Demands
1915 list of demands issued by Japan to China seeking increased political and economic control; met with limited acceptance and international criticism.
Zimmerman Telegram
Secret communication from Germany to Mexico in 1917 proposing a military alliance against the United States; its interception helped bring the U.S. into WWI.
Black Thursday
October 24, 1929, the day the U.S. stock market crashed, marking the beginning of the Great Depression as panicked investors sold off massive amounts of stock, causing widespread financial chaos.
Collectivization of Agriculture
Process beginning in the late 1920s by which Stalin forced the Russian peasants off their own land and onto huge farms run by the state; millions dying in the process.
Economic nationalism
Economic policies pursued by many governments affected by the Great Depression in which the nation tries to become economically self-sufficient by imposing high tariffs on foreign goods.
Eugenics
Late 19th and early 20th century movement that sought to improve the gene pool of the human race by encouraging those deemed fit to have more children, and discourage those deemed unfit from reproducing.
Fascism
A far-right, anti-democratic political ideology and mass movement that was prominent in many parts of Europe between 1919 and 1945; characterized by extreme nationalism, suppression of opposition, and authoritarianism.
Five year plans
First implemented by Stalin in the Soviet Union in 1928, were a staple of communist regimes in which every aspect of production was determined in advance for a five year period.
Great Depression
Global economic crisis beginning in 1929 and lasting through the 1930s, triggered by the U.S. stock market crash and marked by massive unemployment, bank failures, and economic stagnation worldwide.
Great Purge
Stalin's campaign of political repression from 1936 to 1938 in the Soviet Union, during which millions were executed, imprisoned, or exiled as perceived threats to the regime.
Kristallnacht
Coordinated attack on Jewish homes, businesses, and synagogues throughout Nazi Germany on the night of November 9-10, 1938.
Kulaks
Land-owning Russian peasants who benefited under Lenin's New Economic Policy and suffered under Stalin's forced collectivization.
Lost Generation
Term for the group of American and European intellectuals, artists, and writers disillusioned by the brutality of WWI.
National Socialism
German far-right ideology associated with Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party, combining intense nationalism, militarism, racial purity, and totalitarian control.
New Deal
Series of economic and social reforms introduced by U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt in the 1930s to combat the Great Depression.
New Economic Policy
Plan implemented by Lenin that called for minor free-market reforms.
Nuremberg Laws
1935 racial laws passed in Nazi Germany that stripped Jews of citizenship and prohibited marriage or sexual relations between Jews and non-Jews.
Pogrom
Yiddish word meaning 'devastation' referring to an organized massacre of a particular ethnic group, especially Jews in Eastern Europe.
Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act
1930 U.S. legislation that raised tariffs on thousands of imported goods, worsening the global economic crisis by reducing international trade.
Xenophobia
Irrational fear or hatred of foreigners or people from different cultures, often leading to discriminatory policies and social exclusion.
Chinese Communist Party
Political party founded in 1921 that sought to organize China's working class and promote Marxist-Leninist ideas.
Dollar diplomacy
U.S. foreign policy in the early 20th century, especially under President Taft, that used economic investment and loans to extend American influence in Latin America and East Asia rather than direct military intervention.
Good Neighbor Policy
U.S. foreign policy under President Franklin D. Roosevelt aimed at improving relations with Latin America by renouncing armed intervention and promoting mutual respect and economic cooperation.
India Act
1935 British Act that transferred to India the institutions of a self-governing state.
Indian National Congress
Major Indian political party founded in the late 19th century to promote greater Indian participation in government; it became the principal leader of the Indian independence movement under figures like Gandhi and Nehru.
Long March
1934-1935 military retreat of the Chinese Communist forces to evade pursuit by the Nationalist army; the grueling journey across thousands of miles helped solidify Mao Zedong's leadership and became a symbol of revolutionary endurance.
May Fourth Movement
Chinese movement that began 4 May 1919 with a desire to eliminate imperialist influences and promote national unity.
Mukden Incident
1931 staged explosion by Japanese troops on a Japanese-owned railway in Manchuria, used as a pretext for invading and occupying the region in violation of international agreements.
Pan-Africanism
Ideological and political movement that emphasized the unity of all people of African descent around the world and sought to end colonial rule and promote cultural and political solidarity.
Satyagraha
"Truth and firmness" a term associated with Gandhi's policy of nonviolent resistance.
United Fruit Company
American corporation that controlled vast territories and infrastructure in Central America and the Caribbean during the 20th century; it exercised significant political and economic influence, often symbolizing U.S. imperialism in the region.
Allied Powers
Alliance during World War II consisting primarily of the United States, the Soviet Union, Great Britain, and China, which opposed the Axis Powers.
Anschluss
1938 union of Austria with Nazi Germany, achieved through pressure and intimidation rather than formal conquest; seen as an early act of German aggression before WWII.
Appeasement
British and French policy in the 1930's that tried to maintain peace in Europe in the face of German aggression by making concessions.
Auschwitz
Camp established by the Nazi regime in occupied Poland, which functioned both as a concentration camp and an extermination camp. Approximately one million Jews were killed there.
Axis Powers
Alliance of Germany, Italy, and Japan during World War II, which sought to expand their territories through military conquest.
Battle of Britain
Air campaign waged by the German Luftwaffe against the United Kingdom in 1940, which marked the first major defeat of Hitler's forces and prevented a German invasion of Britain.
Bay of Pigs
Failed 1961 U.S.-backed invasion of Cuba by Cuban exiles attempting to overthrow Fidel Castro; the event was a major embarrassment for the Kennedy administration.
Berlin Wall
Barrier built in 1961 by East Germany with Soviet support to prevent East Berliners from fleeing to West Berlin; it became a powerful symbol of Cold War division until its fall in 1989.
Blitzkrieg
German style of rapid attack through the use of armor and air power that was used in Poland, Norway, Denmark, Belgium, the Netherlands, and France, in 1939-1940.
Brezhnev Doctrine
Soviet policy that claimed the right to invade any socialist country faced with internal or external enemies.
Cold War
Period of geopolitical tension between the United States and the Soviet Union and their respective allies from the late 1940s to the early 1990s, marked by ideological conflict, arms races, and proxy wars.
Comfort women
Mainly Korean, Taiwanese, and Manchurian women who were forced into service by the Japanese army to serve as prostitutes to the Japanese troops during WWII.
Cuban missile crisis
1962 confrontation between the United States and the Soviet Union over the placement of Soviet nuclear missiles in Cuba; it brought the world to the brink of nuclear war before a negotiated withdrawal.
D-Day
June 6, 1944 Allied invasion of Nazi-occupied France at Normandy; it marked a turning point in World War II in Europe by opening a western front against Germany.
de-Stalinization
Reform process initiated by Nikita Khrushchev in the 1950s aimed at denouncing Stalin's abuses, reducing the use of terror, and relaxing censorship in the Soviet Union.
Detente
A reduction in cold war tension between the United States and Soviet Union from 1969 to 1975.
Domino theory
Cold War belief held by U.S. policymakers that if one nation fell to communism, neighboring countries would soon follow, justifying American intervention around the world.
Final solution
Nazi plan to systematically exterminate the Jewish population of Europe through the use of concentration camps, mass shootings, and gas chambers.
German-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact
1939 agreement between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union to not attack each other; included a secret protocol to divide Eastern Europe between them.
Hiroshima
Japanese city destroyed by the first atomic bomb on August 6, 1945; tens of thousands were killed instantly, with many more dying from radiation exposure in the aftermath.
Holocaust
German attempt in World War II to exterminate the Jews of Europe.
Iwo Jima
Fierce battle in 1945 between U.S. and Japanese forces on a small island near Japan; its capture allowed the U.S. to launch direct attacks on the Japanese mainland.
Kamikaze
A Japanese term meaning "divine wind" that is related to the storms that destroyed Mongol invasion fleets. The term is symbolic of Japanese isolation and was later taken by suicide pilots in WWII.
Lebensraum
German term meaning "living space" and associated with Hitler and his goal of carving out territory in the east for an expanding Germany.
Luftwaffe
German air force during World War II, responsible for carrying out aerial bombardments and supporting ground invasions.
Manchukuo
Puppet state established by Japan in northeastern China (Manchuria) after the 1931 invasion; it was ruled by a puppet government but controlled by the Japanese military.
Marshall Plan
US Plan that offered financial and other economic aid to all European states that had suffered from World War II, including Soviet bloc states.
Munich Conference
1938 meeting between Germany, Great Britain, Italy, and France in which attendees agreed to German expansion in Czechoslovakia. The conference is known for its concessions to Hitler.
Nagasaki
Second Japanese city destroyed by an atomic bomb, dropped by the U.S. on August 9, 1945; contributed to Japan's decision to surrender, ending WWII.
NATO
North Atlantic Treaty Organization, a military alliance formed in 1949 between the United States, Canada, and Western European nations to provide collective security against the Soviet Union.
Okinawa
Major battle in 1945 that resulted in one of the bloodiest confrontations of the Pacific War; the island was critical for launching an invasion of mainland Japan.
Operation Barbarossa
Code name for the German invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941; it marked a turning point in WWII when Germany opened a second front and faced fierce Soviet resistance.
Pearl Harbor
Surprise Japanese attack on the U.S. naval base in Hawaii on December 7, 1941, which led to the United States' entry into World War II.
Prague Spring
Period in 1968 in which the communist leader of Czechoslovakia launched a reform movement aimed at softening Soviet-style rule; the movement was crushed when Russian forces invaded.
Rape of Nanjing
Japanese conquest and destruction of the Chinese city of Nanjing in the 1930s.
Spanish Civil War
Conflict from 1936 to 1939 between the Republicans, who were supported by communists and democrats, and the Nationalists, led by Franco and supported by fascist regimes in Germany and Italy; resulted in a fascist dictatorship.
Stalingrad
Major Soviet victory over German forces in 1942-1943 during World War II; one of the bloodiest battles in history and a key turning point on the Eastern Front.
Sudetenland
German-speaking region of Czechoslovakia annexed by Nazi Germany in 1938 with the approval of Western powers during the Munich Conference.
Truman Doctrine
US policy instituted in 1947 in which the US would follow an interventionist foreign policy to contain communism.
United Nations
Successor to the League of Nations, an association of sovereign nations that attempts to find solutions to global problems.
Vichy
Collaborative regime established in southern France after the German occupation in 1940; nominally independent but aligned with and controlled by Nazi Germany.
Wannsee
1942 conference held by senior Nazi officials to coordinate the implementation of the Final Solution, the systematic extermination of the Jewish population.
Warsaw Pact
Military alliance formed by Soviet bloc nations in 1955 in response to rearmament of West Germany and its inclusion in NATO.
African National Congress
South African Political Party formed in 1912 that provided consistent opposition to the apartheid state, and eventually became the majority party at the end of the apartheid era in 1994.
Apartheid
South African system of 'separateness' that was implemented in 1948 and that maintained the black majority in a position of political, social, and economic subordination.
Decolonization
Process by which former colonies archived their independence, as with the newly emerging African nations in the 1950s and 1960s.
Geneva Conference
1954 meeting between major powers to resolve issues in Asia, particularly the future of Vietnam after the French defeat at Dien Bien Phu; it temporarily divided Vietnam at the 17th parallel, setting the stage for further conflict.
Great Leap Forward
1958-1961 Chinese campaign initiated by Mao Zedong to rapidly transform China from an agrarian society into a socialist society through collective farming and industrial projects; it led to widespread famine and the deaths of millions.
Cultural Revolution
1966-1976 movement launched by Mao Zedong to preserve Chinese communism by purging capitalist and traditional elements from society; led to widespread persecution, destruction of cultural heritage, and social upheaval.
Intifada
Palestinian mass movement against Israeli rule in the Gaza Strip and other occupied territories.