Cold War Conflicts: Key Events and Their Significance
EVENT | WHEN? | WHERE? | WHAT HAPPENED? | WHO VS WHO | FINISH | SIGNIFICANT |
Korean War | 1950-1953 | North and South Korea | Korea was divided after WW2. North Korea wanted a united Korea and invaded the south. | -North Korea (China and USSR) -South Korea (UN) | A stalemate, the border remains the same. | It is the only case of a Cold War conflict still continuing. North Korea makes threats with atomic bombs. |
The Greek Civil war | 1946-1949 | Greece | USA and UK wanted to support the Greek government against the communist insurgents who wanted |
Portuguese Court’s Transfer to Brazil: 1799-1808
From July 15, 1799, the Prince of Brazil, D. John, became Prince Regent of Portugal. The events in Europe, involving Napoleon Bonaparte, unfolded rapidly.
Since 1801, the idea of transferring the Portuguese Court to Brazil was considered. However, factions within the Portuguese government were divided:
- Anglophile faction: favored preserving the Portuguese colonial empire and the kingdom by sea, supported by the old Luso-British alliance.
- Francophile faction: believed neutrality could only be achieved
US History: From Early Settlement to the Progressive Era
Early American History
1- How did early inhabitants reach the American continent? It is not definitively known how or when the Native Americans first settled the Americas. The prevailing theory proposes that people migrated from Eurasia across Beringia, a land bridge that connected Siberia to present-day Alaska, and then spread southward throughout the Americas. This migration may have begun as early as 30,000 years ago. These early inhabitants, called Paleoamericans, soon diversified into many hundreds
Read MoreRussian Revolution: From Tsarist Rule to Soviet Union
The Russia of the Tsars
A Vast and Overdue Empire
In the mid-nineteenth century, Russia was the largest country in the world, spanning 22 million square kilometers and boasting 150 million inhabitants. It was one of the most backward countries in Europe, with a political, social, and economic system resembling feudalism. Economically, agriculture was backward and unproductive, lacking machinery and fertilizers. Eighty percent of the population were landless, miserable peasants, while the land was
Read MoreIndian Politics: Congress System, Coalition Era, and Electoral Process
Decline of the Congress System
Introduction: The Congress System refers to the political dominance of the Indian National Congress in India, which lasted from 1952 to 1967. During this period, the Congress Party maintained its dominance due to electoral victories, strong organization, effective leadership (Jawaharlal Nehru and Indira Gandhi), and socio-economic policies. However, the emergence of opposition parties in 1967 and internal conflicts within the Congress weakened the party’s position.
Read MoreFranco’s Spain: Autarky, Repression, and Transition (1939-1975)
Widespread Corruption and Autarky in Francoist Spain
Social life during Franco’s regime was based on “recommendations,” requiring connections with bureaucrats to navigate the hardships of the era. The economic hardship was addressed through a model inspired by Mussolini’s Italy and Hitler’s Germany: autarky. This economic policy, based on economic self-sufficiency and state intervention, could work if a country were rich in resources. However, Spain lacked meat, grain, fuel, rubber, and industrial
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