Difference between revisions of "1910s"

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1910 ('''MCMX''') was a common year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar (dominical letter B), the 1910th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 910th year of the 2nd millennium, the 10th year of the 20th century, and the 1st year of the 1910s decade between 1583 and 1929 and with Julian Value: 1910 is 13 calendar days difference, which continued to be used until the complete conversion of the Gregorian calendar was entirely done in 1929.
 
 
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| align="center" colspan=2 | <small>'''Decades:'''</small> <br>
 
| align="center" colspan=2 | <small>'''Decades:'''</small> <br>
[[1890s]] 1900s '''1910s''' - [[1920s]] - [[1930s]] 1940s 1950s
+
1880s [[1890s]] [[1900s]] - [[1910s]] - [[1920s]] [[1930s]] 1940s
 
|-  
 
|-  
 
| align="center" colspan=2 | <small>'''Years:'''</small><br>
 
| align="center" colspan=2 | <small>'''Years:'''</small><br>
[[1920]] [[1921]] [[1922]] [[1923]] [[1924]] [[1925]] [[1926]] [[1927]] [[1928]] [[1929]]
+
[[1910]] [[1911]] [[1912]] [[1913]] [[1914]] [[1915]] [[1916]] [[1917]] [[1918]] [[1919]]
 
|}
 
|}
  
 
----
 
----
===Events===
 
  
===January-February===
+
The 1910s (usually pronounced "nineteen-tens") was a decade that began on January 1, [[1910]], and ended on December 31, 1919. However most of its inhabitants called it the 1900s or the Edwardian era, like the previous decade, similar to how the first two eras of the 21st century are both called the 2000s. The 1910s represented the culmination of European militarism which had its beginnings during the second half of the 19th century. The conservative lifestyles during the first half of the decade, as well as the legacy of military alliances, was forever changed by the assassination, on June 28, 1914, of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, the heir presumptive to the Austro-Hungarian throne. The murder triggered a chain of events in which, within 33 days, World War I broke out in Europe on August 1, 1914. The conflict dragged on until a truce was declared on November 11, 1918, leading to the controversial, one-sided Treaty of Versailles, which was signed on June 28, 1919.
January 10–January 20 – The first aviation meeting to be held in the United States, the 1910 Los Angeles International Air Meet at Dominguez Field, is held near Los Angeles.
 
February 8 – William D. Boyce founds the Boy Scouts of America.
 
February 20 – Boutros Ghali, the first native-born prime minister of Egypt, is assassinated.
 
  
===March===
+
The war's end triggered the abdication of various monarchies and the collapse of the last modern empires of Russia, Germany, China, Ottoman Turkey and Austria-Hungary, with the latter splintered into Austria, Hungary, southern Poland (who acquired most of their land in a war with Soviet Russia), Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia, as well as the unification of Romania with Transylvania and Moldavia. However, each of these states (with the possible exception of Yugoslavia) had large German and Hungarian minorities, there creating some unexpected problems that would be brought to light in the next two decades. (See Dissolution of Austro-Hungarian Empire: Successor States for better description of composition of names of successor countries/states following the splinter.)
Main article: March 1910
 
March – An uprising against Ottoman rule breaks out in Albania.
 
March 8 – In France Raymonde de Laroche is awarded pilot's license #36 by the Federation Aeronautique Internationale, becoming the first woman authorized to fly an airplane.[1]
 
March 10 – Slavery in China, which has existed since the Shang dynasty, is now illegal.
 
March 18 – The first filmed version of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein comes out. Considered to be the first horror movie, it stars actor Charles Ogle as the monster.
 
March 27 – A fire during a barn-dance in Ököritófülpös, Hungary kills 312.
 
  
===April===
+
The decade was also a period of revolution in a number of countries. The Mexican Revolution spearheaded the trend in November 1910, which led to the ousting of dictator Porfirio Diaz, developing into a violent civil war that dragged on until mid-[[1920]], not long after a new Mexican Constitution was signed and ratified. Russia also had a similar fate, since World War I led to a collapse in morale as well as to economic chaos. This atmosphere encouraged the establishment of Bolshevism, which was later renamed as communism. Like the Mexican Revolution, the Russian Revolution of 1917, known as the October Revolution, immediately turned to Russian Civil War that dragged until approximately late [[1922]].
April 20 – Comet Halley is visible from Earth. It won't be seen again until 1986.
 
May[edit]
 
Main article: May 1910
 
  
===May===
+
Much of the music in these years was ballroom-themed. Many of the fashionable restaurants were equipped with dance floors. Prohibition in the United States began January 16, 1919, with the ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
May 6 – George V becomes King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland upon the death of his father, Edward VII.
 
May 12 – Second NAACP meeting is held in New York.
 
May 18 – The Earth passes through the tail of Halley's Comet.
 
May 31 – The Union of South Africa is created.
 
  
===June===
+
==Politics and wars==
Main article: June 1910
 
June 15 – The British Ship Terra Nova leaves London on its way toward an Antarctic expedition.
 
June 22 – The DELAG Zeppelin dirigible, Deutschland, makes the first commercial passenger flight from Friedrichshafen to Düsseldorf in Germany. The flight takes nine hours.
 
June 25 – The ballet The Firebird (L'Oiseau de feu), the first major work by Russian composer Igor Stravinsky, commissioned by Diaghilev's Ballets Russes, is premièred in Paris, bringing the composer international fame.[2]
 
  
===July===
+
===Wars===
July 4 – African-American boxer Jack Johnson defeats American boxer James J. Jeffries in a heavyweight boxing match, sparking race riots across the United States.
+
* World War I (1914–1918)
July 22 – A wireless telegraph sent from the SS Montrose results in the identification, arrest and execution of murderer Dr. Hawley Crippen.
+
* Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary in Sarajevo leads to the outbreak of the First World War
July 24 – Ottoman forces capture the city of Shkodër to put down the Albanian Revolt of 1910.
+
* Germany signs the Treaty of Versailles after losing the first world war.
 +
* Armenian Genocide during and just after World War I. It was characterised by the use of massacres and deportations involving forced marches under conditions designed to lead to the death of the deportees, with the total number of Armenian deaths generally held to have been between one and one-and-a-half million.
 +
* Wadai War (1909–1911)
 +
* First Balkan Wars (1912–1913) – two wars that took place in South-eastern Europe in 1912 and 1913.
 +
* Latvian War of Independence (1918-1920) - a military conflict in Latvia between the Republic of Latvia and the Russian SFSR.
  
===August===
+
===Internal conflicts===
August – Pan-American Union
+
* Leonid Perfetsky picture showing a conflict between the soldiers of Ukrainian Galician Army and Volunteer Army in the streets of Kiev during their joint operation against the Bolsheviks, under the command of General Denikin, Aug 1919.
August 14 – A fire at the Brussels International 1910 destroys exhibitions of Britain and France.
+
* October Revolution in Russia results in the overthrow of capitalism and the establishment of the world's first self-proclaimed socialist state; political upheaval in Russia culminating in the establishment of the Russian SFSR and the assassination of Emperor Nicholas II and the royal family.
August 22 – The Japan–Korea Annexation Treaty is signed. It becomes null and void in 1965.
+
* The Russian Revolution (1917) is the collective term for the series of revolutions in Russia in 1917, which destroyed the Tsarist autocracy and led to the creation of the Soviet Union.
August 28 – Montenegro is proclaimed an independent kingdom under Nicholas I.
+
* April 13, 1919 - The Jallianwala Bagh massacre, at Amritsar in the Punjab Province of British India, sows the seeds of discontent and leads to the birth of the Indian Independence Movement.
August 29 – Emperor Sunjong of Korea abdicates and the country's monarchy is abolished.
+
* Xinhai Revolution causes the overthrow of China's ruling Qing Dynasty, and the establishment of the Republic of China.
 +
* Mexican Revolution (1910–1920) Francisco I. Madero proclaims the elections of 1910 null and void, and calls for an armed revolution at 6 p.m. against the illegitimate presidency/dictatorship of Porfirio Díaz. The revolution lead to the ouster of Porfirio Díaz (who ruled from 1876 to 1880 and since 1884) six months later. The Revolution progressively becomes a civil war with multiple factions and phases, culminating with the Mexican Constitution of 1917, but combat would persist for three more years.
  
===September-October===
+
===Major political changes===
September 1 – The Vatican introduces a compulsory oath against modernism, to be taken by all priests upon ordination.
+
* Trotsky, Vladimir Lenin and Kamenev at the Second Party Congress of the Communist Party of Russia in 1919.
October – First publication of infrared photographs, by Professor Robert Williams Wood in the Royal Photographic Society's journal.
+
* Germany abolishes its monarchy and becomes under the rule of a new elected government called the Weimar Republic.
October 5 – 5 October 1910 revolution in Portugal leading to the flight of King Manuel II of Portugal to England and proclamation of the First Portuguese Republic.
+
* Federal Reserve Act is passed by United States Congress, establishing a Central Bank in the US.
October 20 – The hull of RMS Olympic is launched at the Harland and Wolff Shipyards in Belfast.
+
* George V becomes king in Britain.
October 23 – Vajiravudh (Rama VI) is crowned King of Siam, after the death of his father, King Chulalongkorn (Rama V).
+
* Dissolution of the German colonial empire, Austria-Hungary and the Russian Empire, reorganization of European states' territorial boundaries, and the creation of several new European states and territorial entities: Austria, Czechoslovakia, Estonia, Finland, Free City of Danzig, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Saar, briefly the Ukraine, and Yugoslavia.
 +
* Fourteen Points as designed by United States President Woodrow Wilson advocates the right of all nations to self-determination.
 +
* Rise to power of the Bolsheviks in Russia under Vladimir Lenin, creating the Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic, the first state committed to the establishment of communism.
  
===November===
+
===Decolonization and independence===
November 7 – The first air flight for the purpose of delivering commercial freight takes place in the United States. The flight, made by Wright brothers pilot Philip Parmalee, is between Dayton and Columbus, Ohio.
+
* Easter Rising against the British in Ireland; eventually leads to Irish independence.
November 14 – In the first takeoff from a ship by a fixed-wing aircraft, Eugene Ely takes off from a temporary platform erected over the bow of the light cruiser USS Birmingham in Hampton Roads, Virginia.
+
* Several nations in Eastern Europe get their own nation state, thereby replacing major multiethnic empires.
November 20 – Mexican Revolution: Begins when Francisco I. Madero proclaims the elections of 1910 null and void, and calls for an armed revolution at 6 p.m. against the illegitimate presidency/dictatorship of Porfirio Díaz.
+
* The Republic of China is established on 1 January 1912.
  
===December===
+
==Assassinations==
Late December – A form of pneumonic plague spreads through northeastern China, killing more than 40,000.[3][4][5]
+
The 1910s were marked by several notable assassinations:
Date unknown[edit]
 
The electric streetcars of Austria-Hungary, France, Germany and Great Britain are carrying 6.7 million riders per year.
 
Henry Ford sells 10,000 automobiles.
 
  
===Births===
+
* 18 March 1913: George I of Greece
===January–February===
+
* 11 June 1913: Mahmud Şevket Pasha, Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire
January 1 – Frank Bogert, American actor, professional rodeo announcer and politician. (d. 2009)
+
* 28 June 1914: Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary in Sarajevo leads to World War I
January 4 – Josephine McKim, American Olympic swimmer (d. 1992)
+
* 17 July 1918: Shooting of former Russian Emperor Nicholas II, his consort, their five children, and four retainers at the Ipatiev House in Yekaterinburg, Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic following the October Revolution of 1917, and the usurpation of power by the Bolsheviks.
January 5 – Jack Lovelock, New Zealand athlete (d. 1949)
+
* 10 April 1919 Emiliano Zapata
January 8 – Galina Ulanova, Russian dancer (d. 1998)
 
January 12 – Luise Rainer, German-born actress (d. 2014)
 
January 16 – Mario Tobino, Italian poet, writer and psychiatrist (d. 1991)
 
January 23 – Django Reinhardt, Belgian guitarist (d. 1953)
 
January 25 – Edgar V. Saks, Estonian statesman and historian (d. 1984)
 
January 27 – Edvard Kardelj, Yugoslav political leader and partisan (d. 1979)
 
January 28 – John Banner, Austrian film and television actor (d. 1973)
 
February 5 – Francisco Varallo, Argentine footballer (d. 2010)
 
February 6 – Irmgard Keun, German author (d. 1982)
 
February 9 – Jacques Monod, French biologist, Nobel laureate (d. 1976)
 
February 10
 
Georges Pire, Belgian monk, Nobel laureate (d. 1969)
 
Sofia Vembo, Greek singer and actress (d. 1978)
 
February 13 – William Shockley, American physicist, Nobel laureate (d. 1989)
 
February 15 – Irena Sendler, Polish humanitarian (d. 2008)
 
February 17 – Arthur Hunnicutt, American actor (d. 1979)
 
February 27
 
Joan Bennett, American actress (d. 1990)
 
Genrikh Kasparyan, Armenian chess player and composer (d. 1995)
 
  
===March–April===
+
==Disasters==
March 1
+
* The RMS Titanic, a British ocean liner which was the largest and most elegant ship at that time, strikes an iceberg and sinks in the North Atlantic during its maiden voyage on 15 April 1912. 1,517 people perished in the disaster.
Archer John Porter Martin, English chemist, Nobel laureate (d. 2002)
+
* On 7 May 1915, the British ocean liner RMS Lusitania is torpedoed by U-20, a German U-boat, off the Old Head of Kinsale in Ireland and sinks in 18 minutes. 1,198 lives are lost, including 128 Americans. The sinking proves to be a factor in the American decision to enter World War I two years later.
David Niven, English actor (d. 1983)
+
* From 1918 through 1920, the Spanish flu killed 20 to 100 million people worldwide.
March 5
+
* In 1916, the Netherlands is hit by a North Sea storm that floods the lowlands and kills 10,000 people.
Momofuku Ando, Japanese inventor and businessman (d. 2007)
+
* From July 1-July 12, 1916, a series of shark attacks, known as the Jersey Shore shark attacks of 1916 occurred along the Jersey Shore killing four and injuring one
Ennio Flaiano, Italian screenwriter, playwright, novelist, journalist and drama critic (d. 1972)
+
* 1914, Sakurajima erupted. 35 people died and the surrounding islands were consumed. Also an isthmus was created between Sakurajima and the main land.
March 8 – Claire Trevor, American actress (d. 2000)
 
March 9 – Samuel Barber, American composer (d. 1981)
 
March 11
 
Robert Havemann, German chemist (d. 1982)
 
Jacinta Marto, Portuguese, beatified (d. 1920)
 
March 13 – Karl Gustav Ahlefeldt, Danish actor (d. 1985)
 
March 23 – Akira Kurosawa, Japanese screenwriter, producer, and director (d. 1998)
 
March 25 – Magda Olivero, Italian soprano (d. 2014)
 
March 28 – Ingrid of Sweden, Danish queen (d. 2000)
 
April 1 – Harry Carney, American jazz musician (d. 1974)
 
April 2 – Chico Xavier, Brazilian medium (d. 2002)
 
April 9 – Nouhak Phoumsavanh, President of Laos (d. 2008)
 
April 10 – Paul Sweezy, American economist and editor (d. 2004)
 
April 23 – Simone Simon, French actress (d. 2005)
 
April 24 – Pupella Maggio, Italian actress (d. 1999)
 
April 26 – Tomoyuki Tanaka, Japanese film producer (d. 1997)
 
  
===May–June===
+
==Other significant international events==
May 6 – June Gittelson, American film actress (d. 1993)
+
* The Panama Canal is completed in 1914.
May 12
+
* World War I from 1914 until 1918 dominates the Western world.
Johan Ferrier, Suriname President (d. 2010)
+
* Hiram Bingham rediscovers Machu Picchu on July 24, 1911.
Giulietta Simionato, Italian mezzo-soprano (d. 2010)
 
Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin, British chemist, Nobel laureate (d. 1994)
 
May 23
 
Scatman Crothers, American actor and musician (d. 1986)
 
Artie Shaw, American clarinetist and bandleader (d. 2004)
 
May 25 – Edward Harrison, English cricketer and squash player (d. 2002)
 
May 28 – T-Bone Walker, American singer (d. 1976)
 
May 30
 
Ralph Metcalfe, American athlete (d. 1978)
 
Inge Meysel, German actress (d. 2004)
 
June 9 – Robert Cummings, American actor (d. 1990)
 
June 10
 
Armen Takhtajan, Soviet-Armenian botanist (d. 2009)
 
Howlin' Wolf, Blues Musician (d. 1976)
 
June 11 – Jacques-Yves Cousteau, French naval officer, explorer, ecologist, filmmaker, scientist, photographer and researcher (d. 1997)
 
June 13 – Mary Wickes, American actress (d. 1995)
 
June 14 – Rudolf Kempe, German conductor (d. 1976)
 
June 19 – Paul Flory, American chemist, Nobel laureate (d. 1985)
 
June 22
 
Peter Pears, English tenor (d. 1986)
 
Konrad Zuse, German engineer (d. 1995)
 
June 23
 
Jean Anouilh, French dramatist (d. 1987)
 
Gordon B. Hinckley, American religious leader (d. 2008)
 
  
===July–August===
+
==Science and technology==
July 4 – Gloria Stuart, American actress (d. 2010)
 
July 14 – William Hanna, American animator (d. 2001)
 
July 18 – Mamadou Dia, Senegal Prime Minister (d. 2009)
 
July 27
 
Julien Gracq, French author (d. 2007)
 
Lupita Tovar, Mexican silent film actress
 
August 4
 
Anita Page, American actress (d. 2008)
 
William Schuman, American composer (d. 1992)
 
August 7 – Lucien Hervé, Hungarian-born French photographer (d. 2007)
 
August 10 – Aldo Buzzi, Italian architect, director and screenwriter (d. 2009)
 
August 12
 
Yusof bin Ishak, first President of Singapore (d. 1970)
 
Jane Wyatt, American actress (d. 2006)
 
August 14 – Pierre Schaeffer, French composer (d. 1995)
 
August 25
 
George Cisar, American baseball player (d. 2010)
 
Ruby Keeler, American actress and dancer (d. 1993)
 
Dorothea Tanning, American artist (d. 2012)
 
August 26 – Mother Teresa, Albanian nun and humanitarian, Nobel laureate (d. 1997)
 
August 28 – Tjalling Koopmans, Dutch economist, Nobel laureate (d. 1985)
 
  
===September–October===
+
===Technology===
September 1 – Edda Mussolini, eldest child of Benito Mussolini (d. 1995)
+
* British World War I Mark V tank.
September 3 – Maurice Papon, French civil servant and collaborator (d. 2007)
+
* Gideon Sundback patented the first modern zipper.
September 14 – Jack Hawkins, British actor (d. 1973)
+
* Harry Brearley invented stainless steel.
September 16
+
* Charles Strite invented the first pop-up bread toaster.
Erich Kempka, German chauffeur and bodyguard of Adolf Hitler (d. 1975)
+
* The Model T Ford dominated the automobile market, selling more than all other makers combined in 1914.
Karl Kling, German race car driver (d. 2003)
+
* The army tank was invented. Tanks in World War I were used by the British Army, the French Army and the German Army.
September 19 – Margaret Lindsay, American film actress (d. 1981)
 
September 28
 
Diosdado Macapagal, 9th President of the Philippines (d. 1997)
 
Wenceslao Vinzons, Filipino politician and resistance leader (d. 1942)
 
September 29 – Virginia Bruce, American actress and singer (d. 1982)
 
September 30 – Jussi Kekkonen, Finnish major (d. 1962)
 
October 1 – Bonnie Parker, American outlaw (d. 1934)
 
October 8
 
Paulette Dubost, French actress (d. 2011)
 
Gus Hall, American Communist leader (d. 2000)
 
October 10
 
Sir Albert Margai, second Prime Minister of Sierra Leone (d. 1980)
 
Julius Shulman, American architectural photographer (d. 2009)
 
October 19
 
Farid al-Atrash, Arab composer, singer, and actor (d. 1974)
 
Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, Indian-born American physicist, Nobel laureate (d. 1995)
 
October 23
 
Richard Mortensen, Danish painter (d. 1993)
 
Hayden Rorke, American actor (d. 1987)
 
  
===November–December===
+
===Science===
November 10 – Tomás Blanco, Spanish film actor (d. 1990)
+
* Albert Einstein's theory of general relativity.
November 21 – Abd al-Aziz ibn Baz, Grand Mufti of Saudi Arabia (d. 1999)
+
* Max von Laue discovers the diffraction of x-rays by crystals.
November 26 – Cyril Cusack, South African–born actor (d. 1993)
+
* Alfred Wegener puts forward his theory of continental drift.
November 30 – Harry Bauler, American politician (d. 1962)
 
December 1 – Alicia Markova, English ballerina (d. 2004)
 
December 2 – Russell Lynes, American art historian, photographer and author (d. 1991)
 
December 4 – R. Venkataraman, Indian President (d. 2009)
 
December 7 – Edmundo Ros, Trinidadian musician (d. 2011)
 
December 11 – Noel Rosa, Brazilian songwriter (d. 1937)
 
December 15 – John Hammond, American record producer (d. 1987)
 
December 19 – Jean Genet, French writer (d. 1986)
 
December 29
 
Michel Aflaq, Syrian political theorist, founder of Ba'athism (d. 1989)
 
Ronald Coase, English-born economist, Nobel laureate (d. 2013)
 
December 30 – Paul Bowles, American author (d. 1999)
 
  
===Deaths===
+
==Economics==
===January–March===
+
* In the years 1910 and 1911, there was a minor economic depression known as the Panic of 1910-1911, which was followed by the enforcement of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act.
January 4 – Léon Delagrange, French pioneer aviator (b. 1873)
 
January 5 – Léon Walras, French economist (b. 1834)
 
January 13 – Andrew Jackson Davis, American spiritualist (b. 1826)
 
January 27 – Thomas Crapper, British plumber (b. 1836)
 
February 14 – Giovanni Passannante, Italian anarchist (b. 1849)
 
February 20 – Boutros Ghali, Prime Minister of Egypt (assassinated) (b. 1846)
 
February 23 – Vera Komissarzhevskaya, Russian actress (b. 1864)
 
March 4 – Knut Ångström, Swedish physicist (b. 1857)
 
March 10 – Karl Lueger, Austrian mayor (b. 1844)
 
March 18 – Julio Herrera y Reissig, Uruguayan poet and writer (b. 1875)
 
March 26 – An Jung-geun, Korean assassin (b. 1879)
 
March 27 – Alexander Emanuel Agassiz, American scientist (b. 1835)
 
  
===April–June===
+
==Popular culture==
April 21 – Mark Twain, American writer (b. 1835)
+
* Radio programming becomes popular.
April 26 – Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson, Norwegian writer, Nobel laureate (b. 1832)
+
* Flying Squadron of America promotes temperance movement in the United States
May 1 – Pierre Nord Alexis, President of Haiti (b. 1820)
+
* Edith Smith Davis edits the Temperance Educational Quarterly.
May 3 – Howard Taylor Ricketts, American pathologist (b. 1871)
+
* The first U.S. feature film, Oliver Twist, was released in 1912.
May 6 – King Edward VII of the United Kingdom (b. 1841)
+
* The first mob film, D. W. Griffith's The Musketeers of Pig Alley was released in 1912.
May 10 – Stanislao Cannizzaro, Italian chemist (b. 1826)
+
* Hollywood replaces the East Coast as the center of the movie industry.
May 12 – Sir William Huggins, British astronomer (b. 1824)
+
* Charlie Chaplin débuts his trademark mustached, baggy-pants 'Little Tramp' character in Kid Auto Races at Venice in 1914.
May 18 – Pauline Viardot, French mezzo-soprano and composer (b. 1821)
+
* The first African American owned studio, the Lincoln Motion Picture Company, was founded in 1917.
May 27 – Robert Koch, German physician, Nobel laureate (b. 1843)
+
* The four Warner brothers, (from older to younger) Harry, Albert, Samuel, and Jack opened their first West Coast studio in 1918.
May 28 – Kálmán Mikszáth, Hungarian novelist (b. 1847)
+
* First Crossword Puzzle.
May 29 – Mily Balakirev, Russian composer (b. 1837)
+
* The first Jazz music is recorded.
May 31 – Elizabeth Blackwell, British-born American physician (b. 1821)
+
* The Salvation Army has a new international leader, General Bramwell Booth who served from 1912 to 1929. He replaces his father and co-founder of the Christian Mission (the forerunner of the Salvation Army), William Booth.
June 5 – O. Henry, American novelist (b. 1862)
 
  
===July–September===
+
==Sports==
July 4 – Giovanni Schiaparelli, Italian astronomer (b. 1835)
+
* 1912 Summer Olympics were held in Stockholm, Sweden.
July 5 – Melville Fuller, American Chief Justice (b. 1833)
+
* 1916 Summer Olympics were cancelled because of World War I.
July 10 – Johann Gottfried Galle, German astronomer (b. 1812)
 
July 12 – Charles Stewart Rolls, British aviator and automobile manufacturer (b. 1877)
 
August 13 – Florence Nightingale, English nurse (b. 1820)
 
August 14 – Frank Podmore, British psychical researcher (b. 1856)
 
August 26 – William James, American psychologist and philosopher (b. 1842)
 
September 2 – Henri Rousseau, French painter (b. 1844)
 
September 7 – William Holman Hunt, English painter (b. 1827)
 
September 17 – Hormuzd Rassam, Iraqi archaeologist (b. 1826)
 
September 27 – Jorge Chávez, Peruvian aviator (b. 1887)
 
September 29 – Winslow Homer, American painter (b. 1836)
 
  
===October–December===
 
October 17 – Julia Ward Howe, American abolitionist and poet (b. 1819)
 
October 23 – King Chulalongkorn of Siam (b. 1853)
 
October 30 – Jean Henri Dunant, Swiss founder of the Red Cross, Nobel laureate (b. 1828)
 
November 6 – Giuseppe Cesare Abba, Italian patriot and writer (b. 1838)
 
November 15 – Wilhelm Raabe, German writer (b. 1831)
 
November 20 (N.S.) – Leo Tolstoy, Russian writer (b. 1828)
 
November 23
 
Hawley Harvey Crippen, American murderer (executed) (b. 1862)
 
Octave Chanute, French-American engineer and aviation pioneer (b. 1832)
 
December 3
 
Mary Baker Eddy, American religious leader (b. 1821)
 
Wesley Merritt, American general (b. 1836)
 
December 29 – Reggie Doherty, British tennis player (b. 1872)
 
  
===Nobel Prizes===
 
  
Chemistry – Otto Wallach
+
Original source: [http://wikipedia.com| wikipedia]
Literature – Paul Heyse
+
 
Medicine – Albrecht Kossel
+
[[Category:1910s]]
Peace – Permanent International Peace Bureau
 
Physics – Johannes Diderik van der Waals
 

Latest revision as of 08:22, 8 April 2023

Centuries:
19th century - 20th century - 21st century
Decades:

1880s 1890s 1900s - 1910s - 1920s 1930s 1940s

Years:

1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919


The 1910s (usually pronounced "nineteen-tens") was a decade that began on January 1, 1910, and ended on December 31, 1919. However most of its inhabitants called it the 1900s or the Edwardian era, like the previous decade, similar to how the first two eras of the 21st century are both called the 2000s. The 1910s represented the culmination of European militarism which had its beginnings during the second half of the 19th century. The conservative lifestyles during the first half of the decade, as well as the legacy of military alliances, was forever changed by the assassination, on June 28, 1914, of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, the heir presumptive to the Austro-Hungarian throne. The murder triggered a chain of events in which, within 33 days, World War I broke out in Europe on August 1, 1914. The conflict dragged on until a truce was declared on November 11, 1918, leading to the controversial, one-sided Treaty of Versailles, which was signed on June 28, 1919.

The war's end triggered the abdication of various monarchies and the collapse of the last modern empires of Russia, Germany, China, Ottoman Turkey and Austria-Hungary, with the latter splintered into Austria, Hungary, southern Poland (who acquired most of their land in a war with Soviet Russia), Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia, as well as the unification of Romania with Transylvania and Moldavia. However, each of these states (with the possible exception of Yugoslavia) had large German and Hungarian minorities, there creating some unexpected problems that would be brought to light in the next two decades. (See Dissolution of Austro-Hungarian Empire: Successor States for better description of composition of names of successor countries/states following the splinter.)

The decade was also a period of revolution in a number of countries. The Mexican Revolution spearheaded the trend in November 1910, which led to the ousting of dictator Porfirio Diaz, developing into a violent civil war that dragged on until mid-1920, not long after a new Mexican Constitution was signed and ratified. Russia also had a similar fate, since World War I led to a collapse in morale as well as to economic chaos. This atmosphere encouraged the establishment of Bolshevism, which was later renamed as communism. Like the Mexican Revolution, the Russian Revolution of 1917, known as the October Revolution, immediately turned to Russian Civil War that dragged until approximately late 1922.

Much of the music in these years was ballroom-themed. Many of the fashionable restaurants were equipped with dance floors. Prohibition in the United States began January 16, 1919, with the ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

Politics and wars

Wars

  • World War I (1914–1918)
  • Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary in Sarajevo leads to the outbreak of the First World War
  • Germany signs the Treaty of Versailles after losing the first world war.
  • Armenian Genocide during and just after World War I. It was characterised by the use of massacres and deportations involving forced marches under conditions designed to lead to the death of the deportees, with the total number of Armenian deaths generally held to have been between one and one-and-a-half million.
  • Wadai War (1909–1911)
  • First Balkan Wars (1912–1913) – two wars that took place in South-eastern Europe in 1912 and 1913.
  • Latvian War of Independence (1918-1920) - a military conflict in Latvia between the Republic of Latvia and the Russian SFSR.

Internal conflicts

  • Leonid Perfetsky picture showing a conflict between the soldiers of Ukrainian Galician Army and Volunteer Army in the streets of Kiev during their joint operation against the Bolsheviks, under the command of General Denikin, Aug 1919.
  • October Revolution in Russia results in the overthrow of capitalism and the establishment of the world's first self-proclaimed socialist state; political upheaval in Russia culminating in the establishment of the Russian SFSR and the assassination of Emperor Nicholas II and the royal family.
  • The Russian Revolution (1917) is the collective term for the series of revolutions in Russia in 1917, which destroyed the Tsarist autocracy and led to the creation of the Soviet Union.
  • April 13, 1919 - The Jallianwala Bagh massacre, at Amritsar in the Punjab Province of British India, sows the seeds of discontent and leads to the birth of the Indian Independence Movement.
  • Xinhai Revolution causes the overthrow of China's ruling Qing Dynasty, and the establishment of the Republic of China.
  • Mexican Revolution (1910–1920) Francisco I. Madero proclaims the elections of 1910 null and void, and calls for an armed revolution at 6 p.m. against the illegitimate presidency/dictatorship of Porfirio Díaz. The revolution lead to the ouster of Porfirio Díaz (who ruled from 1876 to 1880 and since 1884) six months later. The Revolution progressively becomes a civil war with multiple factions and phases, culminating with the Mexican Constitution of 1917, but combat would persist for three more years.

Major political changes

  • Trotsky, Vladimir Lenin and Kamenev at the Second Party Congress of the Communist Party of Russia in 1919.
  • Germany abolishes its monarchy and becomes under the rule of a new elected government called the Weimar Republic.
  • Federal Reserve Act is passed by United States Congress, establishing a Central Bank in the US.
  • George V becomes king in Britain.
  • Dissolution of the German colonial empire, Austria-Hungary and the Russian Empire, reorganization of European states' territorial boundaries, and the creation of several new European states and territorial entities: Austria, Czechoslovakia, Estonia, Finland, Free City of Danzig, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Saar, briefly the Ukraine, and Yugoslavia.
  • Fourteen Points as designed by United States President Woodrow Wilson advocates the right of all nations to self-determination.
  • Rise to power of the Bolsheviks in Russia under Vladimir Lenin, creating the Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic, the first state committed to the establishment of communism.

Decolonization and independence

  • Easter Rising against the British in Ireland; eventually leads to Irish independence.
  • Several nations in Eastern Europe get their own nation state, thereby replacing major multiethnic empires.
  • The Republic of China is established on 1 January 1912.

Assassinations

The 1910s were marked by several notable assassinations:

  • 18 March 1913: George I of Greece
  • 11 June 1913: Mahmud Şevket Pasha, Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire
  • 28 June 1914: Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary in Sarajevo leads to World War I
  • 17 July 1918: Shooting of former Russian Emperor Nicholas II, his consort, their five children, and four retainers at the Ipatiev House in Yekaterinburg, Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic following the October Revolution of 1917, and the usurpation of power by the Bolsheviks.
  • 10 April 1919 Emiliano Zapata

Disasters

  • The RMS Titanic, a British ocean liner which was the largest and most elegant ship at that time, strikes an iceberg and sinks in the North Atlantic during its maiden voyage on 15 April 1912. 1,517 people perished in the disaster.
  • On 7 May 1915, the British ocean liner RMS Lusitania is torpedoed by U-20, a German U-boat, off the Old Head of Kinsale in Ireland and sinks in 18 minutes. 1,198 lives are lost, including 128 Americans. The sinking proves to be a factor in the American decision to enter World War I two years later.
  • From 1918 through 1920, the Spanish flu killed 20 to 100 million people worldwide.
  • In 1916, the Netherlands is hit by a North Sea storm that floods the lowlands and kills 10,000 people.
  • From July 1-July 12, 1916, a series of shark attacks, known as the Jersey Shore shark attacks of 1916 occurred along the Jersey Shore killing four and injuring one
  • 1914, Sakurajima erupted. 35 people died and the surrounding islands were consumed. Also an isthmus was created between Sakurajima and the main land.

Other significant international events

  • The Panama Canal is completed in 1914.
  • World War I from 1914 until 1918 dominates the Western world.
  • Hiram Bingham rediscovers Machu Picchu on July 24, 1911.

Science and technology

Technology

  • British World War I Mark V tank.
  • Gideon Sundback patented the first modern zipper.
  • Harry Brearley invented stainless steel.
  • Charles Strite invented the first pop-up bread toaster.
  • The Model T Ford dominated the automobile market, selling more than all other makers combined in 1914.
  • The army tank was invented. Tanks in World War I were used by the British Army, the French Army and the German Army.

Science

  • Albert Einstein's theory of general relativity.
  • Max von Laue discovers the diffraction of x-rays by crystals.
  • Alfred Wegener puts forward his theory of continental drift.

Economics

  • In the years 1910 and 1911, there was a minor economic depression known as the Panic of 1910-1911, which was followed by the enforcement of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act.

Popular culture

  • Radio programming becomes popular.
  • Flying Squadron of America promotes temperance movement in the United States
  • Edith Smith Davis edits the Temperance Educational Quarterly.
  • The first U.S. feature film, Oliver Twist, was released in 1912.
  • The first mob film, D. W. Griffith's The Musketeers of Pig Alley was released in 1912.
  • Hollywood replaces the East Coast as the center of the movie industry.
  • Charlie Chaplin débuts his trademark mustached, baggy-pants 'Little Tramp' character in Kid Auto Races at Venice in 1914.
  • The first African American owned studio, the Lincoln Motion Picture Company, was founded in 1917.
  • The four Warner brothers, (from older to younger) Harry, Albert, Samuel, and Jack opened their first West Coast studio in 1918.
  • First Crossword Puzzle.
  • The first Jazz music is recorded.
  • The Salvation Army has a new international leader, General Bramwell Booth who served from 1912 to 1929. He replaces his father and co-founder of the Christian Mission (the forerunner of the Salvation Army), William Booth.

Sports

  • 1912 Summer Olympics were held in Stockholm, Sweden.
  • 1916 Summer Olympics were cancelled because of World War I.


Original source: wikipedia