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1 min read•june 18, 2024
📖 AMSCO p.493 - p.499
Term | Definition + Significance |
Decolonization | When countries that were once ruled by other nations gain independence and govern themselves. |
Mandate System | Post-World War I arrangement by the League of Nations granting some nations the authority to administer territories formerly controlled by the defeated Central Powers. |
Balfour Declaration | Statement made in 1917 by the British government that expressed support for the establishment of a “national home of the Jewish people” in Palestine. |
Civil Disobedience | Peacefully refusing to follow unfair rules or laws as a way of protesting. |
Big Three | Refers to the leaders of the major Allied powers during World War I and the Paris Peace Conference - David Lloyd George (UK), Woodrow Wilson (USA), and Georges Clemenceau (France). |
Mohandas Gandhi | Leader of Indian independence movement; advocated for nonviolent civil disobedience and played a crucial role in India’s struggle for freedom. |
Muhammad Ali Jinnah | Founder of Pakistan; key figure in Indian Independence movement (later became the first Governor-General of Pakistan). |
Jawaharlal Nehru | First Prime Minister of independent India. Prominent leader in Indian National Congress and an advocate for democracy/socialism. |
Mao Zedong | Leader of Chinese Communist Part, founder of People’s Republic of China, and a key figure in the Chinese Civil War. |
Chiang Kai-shek | Leader of the Chinese Nationalist Part and a key figure in Chinese politics. |
Pan-Arabism | Political and cultural unity of Arab nations in the Middle East. |
Indian National Congress | Political party in India that played a crucial role in the country’s struggle for independence. |
Satyagraha | Gandhi’s philosophy of nonviolence resistance or “essential truth”. |
Salt March | A nonviolent protest against British salt taxes in India, led by Gandhi in 1930. |
March First Movement | A 1919 mass protest in Korea against Japanese rule and for Korean independence. |
May Fourth Movement | A 1919 movement in China protesting foreign influence and demanding cultural and political reforms. |
Chinese Communist Party | The ruling party of the People's Republic of China, founded in 1921. |
Kuomintang | The Chinese Nationalist Party, a political party in China. |
Long March | A strategic military retreat by the Chinese Communists led by Mao Zedong during the Chinese Civil War. |
Palestine | A region in the Middle East which holds historical significance and is known for the Israeli-Palestininan Conflict. |
Pakistan | A country in South Asia founded in 1917; separate nation for Muslims after gaining independence from the British. |
Amritsar | The site of the 1919 massacre in British India, where British forces killed hundreds of unarmed Indian civilians. |
Manchukuo | A puppet state established by Japan in Manchuria in the early 1930s. |
Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere | Japan's imperialist concept during World War II, justifying its expansion and dominance in East Asia. |
Zionists | People who favored a Jewish national homeland in Palestine. |
Mahatma | A title meaning "the great soul," often used to refer to Mohandas Gandhi. |
Jomo Kenyatta | The first President of Kenya and a key figure in the country's struggle for independence. |
Léopold Sédar Senghor | First President of Senegal; advocated for African cultural identity and independence. |
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1 min read•june 18, 2024
📖 AMSCO p.493 - p.499
Term | Definition + Significance |
Decolonization | When countries that were once ruled by other nations gain independence and govern themselves. |
Mandate System | Post-World War I arrangement by the League of Nations granting some nations the authority to administer territories formerly controlled by the defeated Central Powers. |
Balfour Declaration | Statement made in 1917 by the British government that expressed support for the establishment of a “national home of the Jewish people” in Palestine. |
Civil Disobedience | Peacefully refusing to follow unfair rules or laws as a way of protesting. |
Big Three | Refers to the leaders of the major Allied powers during World War I and the Paris Peace Conference - David Lloyd George (UK), Woodrow Wilson (USA), and Georges Clemenceau (France). |
Mohandas Gandhi | Leader of Indian independence movement; advocated for nonviolent civil disobedience and played a crucial role in India’s struggle for freedom. |
Muhammad Ali Jinnah | Founder of Pakistan; key figure in Indian Independence movement (later became the first Governor-General of Pakistan). |
Jawaharlal Nehru | First Prime Minister of independent India. Prominent leader in Indian National Congress and an advocate for democracy/socialism. |
Mao Zedong | Leader of Chinese Communist Part, founder of People’s Republic of China, and a key figure in the Chinese Civil War. |
Chiang Kai-shek | Leader of the Chinese Nationalist Part and a key figure in Chinese politics. |
Pan-Arabism | Political and cultural unity of Arab nations in the Middle East. |
Indian National Congress | Political party in India that played a crucial role in the country’s struggle for independence. |
Satyagraha | Gandhi’s philosophy of nonviolence resistance or “essential truth”. |
Salt March | A nonviolent protest against British salt taxes in India, led by Gandhi in 1930. |
March First Movement | A 1919 mass protest in Korea against Japanese rule and for Korean independence. |
May Fourth Movement | A 1919 movement in China protesting foreign influence and demanding cultural and political reforms. |
Chinese Communist Party | The ruling party of the People's Republic of China, founded in 1921. |
Kuomintang | The Chinese Nationalist Party, a political party in China. |
Long March | A strategic military retreat by the Chinese Communists led by Mao Zedong during the Chinese Civil War. |
Palestine | A region in the Middle East which holds historical significance and is known for the Israeli-Palestininan Conflict. |
Pakistan | A country in South Asia founded in 1917; separate nation for Muslims after gaining independence from the British. |
Amritsar | The site of the 1919 massacre in British India, where British forces killed hundreds of unarmed Indian civilians. |
Manchukuo | A puppet state established by Japan in Manchuria in the early 1930s. |
Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere | Japan's imperialist concept during World War II, justifying its expansion and dominance in East Asia. |
Zionists | People who favored a Jewish national homeland in Palestine. |
Mahatma | A title meaning "the great soul," often used to refer to Mohandas Gandhi. |
Jomo Kenyatta | The first President of Kenya and a key figure in the country's struggle for independence. |
Léopold Sédar Senghor | First President of Senegal; advocated for African cultural identity and independence. |
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