Read A Short History of the World Online
Authors: H. G. Wells
1016 | Canute became King of England, Denmark and Norway. |
1043 | Russian fleet threatened Constantinople. |
1066 | Conquest of England by William, Duke of Normandy. |
1071 | Revival of Islam under the Seljuk Turks. Battle of Melasgird. |
1073 | Hildebrand became Pope (Gregory VII) to 1085. |
1084 | Robert Guiscard, the Norman, sacked Rome. |
1087â99 | Urban II Pope. |
1095 | Urban II at Clermont summoned the First Crusade. |
1096 | Massacre of the People's Crusade. |
1099 | Godfrey of Bouillon captured Jerusalem. |
1147 | The Second Crusade. |
1169 | Saladin Sultan of Egypt. |
1176 | Frederick Barbarossa acknowledged supremacy of the Pope (Alexander III) at Venice. |
1187 | Saladin captured Jerusalem. |
1189 | The Third Crusade. |
1198 | Innocent III Pope (to 1216). Frederick II (aged four), King of Sicily, became his ward. |
1202 | The Fourth Crusade attacked the Eastern Empire. |
1204 | Capture of Constantinople by the Latins. |
1214 | Jengis Khan took Pekin. |
1226 | St Francis of Assisi died. (The Franciscans.) |
1227 | Jengis Khan died, Khan from Caspian to the Pacific, and was succeeded by Ogdai Khan. |
1228 | Frederick II embarked upon the Sixth Crusade, and acquired Jerusalem. |
1240 | Mongols destroyed Kieff. Russia tributary to the Mongols. |
1241 | Mongol victory at Liegnitz in Silesia. |
1250 | Frederick II, the last Hohenstaufen Emperor, died. German interregnum until 1273. |
1251 | Mangu Khan became Great Khan. Kublai Khan governor of China. |
1258 | Hulagu Khan took and destroyed Bagdad. |
1260 | Kublai Khan became Great Khan. |
1261 | The Greeks recaptured Constantinople from the Latins. |
1273 | Rudolf of Habsburg elected Emperor. The Swiss formed their Everlasting League. |
1280 | Kublai Khan founded the Yuan Dynasty in China. |
1292 | Death of Kublai Khan. |
1293 | Roger Bacon, the prophet of experimental science, died. |
1348 | The Great Plague, the Black Death. |
1368 | In China the Mongol (Yuan) Dynasty fell, and was succeeded by the Ming Dynasty (to 1644). |
1377 | Pope Gregory XI returned to Rome. |
1378 | The Great Schism. Urban VI in Rome. Clement VII at Avignon. |
1398 | Huss preached Wycliffism at Prague. |
1414â18 | The Council of Constance. Huss burned (1415). |
1417 | The Great Schism ended. |
1453 | Ottoman Turks under Muhammad II took Constantinople. |
1480 | Ivan III, Grand Duke of Moscow, threw off the Mongol allegiance. |
1481 | Death of the Sultan Muhammad II while preparing for the conquest of Italy. |
1486 | Diaz rounded the Cape of Good Hope. |
1492 | Columbus crossed the Atlantic to America. |
1493 | Maximilian I became Emperor. |
1497 | Vasco da Gama sailed round the Cape to India. |
1499 | Switzerland became an independent republic. |
1500 | Charles V born. |
1509 | Henry VIII King of England. |
1513 | Leo X Pope. |
1515 | Francis I King of France. |
1520 | Suleiman the Magnificent, Sultan (to 1566), who ruled from Bagdad to Hungary. Charles V Emperor. |
1525 | Baber won the battle of Panipat, captured Delhi, and founded the Mogul Empire. |
1527 | The German troops in Italy, under the Constable of Bourbon, took and pillaged Rome. |
1529 | Suleiman besieged Vienna. |
1530 | Charles V crowned by the Pope. Henry VIII began his quarrel with the Papacy. |
1539 | The Society of Jesus founded. |
1546 | Martin Luther died. |
1547 | Ivan IV (the Terrible) took the title of Tzar of Russia. |
1556 | Charles V abdicated. Akbar, Great Mogul (to 1605). Ignatius of Loyola died. |
1558 | Death of Charles V. |
1566 | Suleiman the Magnificent died. |
1603 | James I King of England and Scotland. |
1620 | Mayflower |
1625 | Charles I of England. |
1626 | Sir Francis Bacon (Lord Verulam) died. |
1643 | Louis XIV began his reign of seventy-two years. |
1644 | The Manchus ended the Ming Dynasty. |
1648 | Treaty of Westphalia. Thereby Holland and Switzerland were recognized as free republics and Prussia became important. The treaty gave a complete victory neither to the Imperial Crown nor to the Princes. War of the Fronde; it ended in the complete victory of the French crown. |
1649 | Execution of Charles I of England. |
1658 | Aurungzeb Great Mogul. Cromwell died. |
1660 | Charles II of England. |
1674 | Nieuw Amsterdam finally became British by treaty and was renamed New York. |
1682 | Peter the Great of Russia (to 1725). |
1683 | The last Turkish attack on Vienna defeated by John II of Poland. |
1701 | Frederick I first King of Prussia. |
1707 | Death of Aurungzeb. The empire of the Great Mogul disintegrated. |
1713 | Frederick the Great of Prussia born. |
1715 | Louis XV of France. |
1755â63 | Britain and France struggle for America and India. France in alliance with Austria and Russia against Prussia and Britain (1756â63); the Seven Years War. |
1759 | The British general, Wolfe, took Quebec. |
1760 | George III of Britain. |
1763 | Peace of Paris; Canada ceded to Britain. British dominant in India. |
1769 | Napoleon Bonaparte born. |
1774 | Louis XVI began his reign. |
1776 | Declaration of Independence by the United States of America. |
1783 | Treaty of Peace between Britain and the new United States of America. |
1787 | The Constitutional Convention of Philadelphia set up the Federal Government of the United States. France discovered to be bankrupt. |
1788 | First Federal Congress of the United States at New York. |
1789 | The French States-General assembled. Storming of the Bastille. |
1791 | Flight to Varennes. |
1792 | France declared war on Austria; Prussia declared war on France. Battle of Valmy. France became a republic. |
1793 | Louis XVI beheaded. |
1794 | Execution of Robespierre and end of the Jacobin republic. |
1795 | The Directory. Bonaparte suppressed a revolt and went to Italy as commander-in-chief. |
1798 | Bonaparte went to Egypt. Battle of the Nile. |
1799 | Bonaparte returned to France. He became First Consul with enormous powers. |
1804 | Bonaparte became Emperor. Francis II took the title of Emperor of Austria in 1805, and in 1806 he dropped the title of Holy Roman Emperor. So the âHoly Roman Empire' came to an end. |
1806 | Prussia overthrown at Jena. |
1808 | Napoleon made his brother Joseph King of Spain. |
1810 | Spanish America became republican. |
1812 | Napoleon's retreat from Moscow. |
1814 | Abdication of Napoleon. Louis XVIII. |
1824 | Charles X of France. |
1825 | Nicholas I of Russia. First railway, Stockton to Darlington. |
1827 | Battle of Navarino. |
1829 | Greece independent. |
1830 | A year of disturbance. Louis Philippe ousted Charles X. Belgium broke away from Holland. Leopold of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha became king of this new country, Belgium. Russian Poland revolted ineffectually. |
1835 | The word âsocialism' first used. |
1837 | Queen Victoria. |
1840 | Queen Victoria married Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha. |
1852 | Napoleon III Emperor of the French. |
1854â56 | Crimean War. |
1856 | Alexander II of Russia. |
1861 | Victor Emmanuel first King of Italy. Abraham Lincoln became President, USA. The American Civil War began. |
1865 | Surrender of Appomattox Court House. Japan opened to the world. |
1870 | Napoleon III declared war against Prussia. |
1871 | Paris surrendered (January). The King of Prussia became âGerman Emperor'. The Peace of Frankfort. |
1878 | The Treaty of Berlin. The Armed Peace of thirty-six years began in western Europe. |
1888 | Frederick II (March), William II (June), German Emperors. |
1912 | China became a republic. |
1914 | The Great War in Europe began. |
1917 | The two Russian revolutions. Establishment of the Bolshevik regime in Russia. |
1918 | The Armistice. |
1920 | First meeting of the League of Nations, from which Germany, Austria, Russia and Turkey were excluded and at which the United States was not represented. |
1921 | The Greeks in complete disregard of the League of Nations made war upon the Turks. |
1922 | Great defeat of the Greeks in Asia Minor by the Turks. |
Although Wells used the most reliable sources of information which were available in his day and his work was thoroughly checked by authorities in several fields, the dates and figures given in the
Short History
will sometimes vary from those to be found in more recent history books, often because past calendar systems have been calculated slightly differently. These discrepancies are noted when they are clearly significant, or when Wells gives a piece of information particular prominence, but there has been no comprehensive revision or attempt to adjudicate on fine points of detail. It is unlikely that the general reader will be troubled, for example, over the exact date of the battle of Megiddo, the height of the largest pyramid at Gizeh or the precise day on which the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk can be said to have been fully ratified. Those who wish to pursue such matters will find a wealth of information readily accessible in reference books and on the internet.
1.
Outline of History
: Wells's earlier and longer version of the history of the world is discussed in the Note on the Text.
1.
millions of miles respectively
: The accurate figure for Neptune is 2,774 million miles. A ninth planet, Pluto, was discovered in 1930, with a mean distance from the sun of 3,672 million miles, and with an orbit so eccentric that it sometimes comes nearer to the sun than Neptune.
2.
six miles off
: The 1965 edition of the
Short History
rounds down Neptune's location to five miles off and adds Pluto at eight.
3.
far below that level
: Human beings have since reached the moon and sent probes deep into space, but have yet to find any definite evidence of life.
1.
much longer than that
: Estimates as of 2005 push back the age of the Earth more than twice as far, to 4,600 million years.
2.
spiral nebulae
: These spiral clouds are vastly larger and further away than was realized at the time Wells was writing. Many contain thousands of millions of stars.
3.
If we could go back
: It should be noted that Wells's descriptions in this chapter are extremely speculative.
1.
1,600 million years
: The current estimate is that the Record of the Rocks covers a length of time closer to 4,000 million years. The periods into which the record is divided continue to be revised in the light of new evidence. A modern consensus is given in the chart below.
Era | Period | Millions of years ago |
Cenozoic | Quaternary | â |
Tertiary | 2 | |
Mesozoic | Cretaceous | 65 |
Jurassic | 144 | |
Triassic | 213 | |
Palaeozoic | Permian | 248 |
Carboniferous | 286 | |
Devonian | 360 | |
Silurian | 408 | |
Ordovician | 438 | |
Cambrian | 505 | |
Precambrian | Proterozoic | 590 |
Azoic or Archaean | 2,500 |
2.
any living thing
: The earliest period is now classified as the Precambrian, divided into the Azoic (or Archaean) and the Proterozoic. Seaweed, algae and invertebrates were already in existence in the Proterozoic period.
3.
spicule
: A small, pointed structure which makes up the skeleton of a sponge.
1.
We now know that the genetic âplan' of every creature is carried by the chemical DNA, contained in each of its body cells. The cells contain two slightly different sets of instructions, one set from the mother, one from the father, recorded on spiral-shaped molecules called chromosomes.
2.
the first known Vertebrata
: The first vertebrates are now thought to have appeared in the Ordovician period, with larger vertebrates developing during the Silurian period.
1.
Life was still only in the sea
: More recent science has been able to detect leafless plants on land as early as the Silurian period. During the Devonian period, these were joined by leafy plants, insects and invertebrates.
2.
over this planet
: Periods of extreme cold and warmth are thought to arise from small changes in the Earth's orbit and axis, compounded by variations in the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and by the gradual movement of the continents, which changes the direction of warm water currents and can also provide a surface for snow and ice to accumulate.
3.
reproduce its kind
: During the Carboniferous period, some reptiles did breed on land.
1.
learns its most valuable lessons
: Through the metaphor of learning lessons, which personifies life as a pupil studying for an examination, Wells implies that biological evolution entails progress towards a goal, not just adaptation to changing conditions. At the end of the next paragraph, he takes the side of land life because he knows that it will one day produce the human race. Such literary devices, perhaps unscientific but necessary to engage
the reader's sympathy and supply an effective storyline, may be discovered throughout the book.
2.
still incalculable movements of the Earth's crust
: It is now known that continents are embedded in rigid, moving plates, driven by convection currents beneath the Earth's crust. During the Carboniferous and Permian periods, the continents moved together to form one great landmass, since dubbed Pangaea, which broke up during the Age of the Reptiles, then began to move towards the current, equally temporary distribution of continents.
3.
It came to an end some 80 million years ago
: The end of the Mesozoic period is today dated at 65 million years ago and divided into three periods, the Triassic, the Jurassic (when dinosaurs were dominant) and the Cretaceous.
4.
same limitation
: Scientists now believe that many dinosaurs were warm-blooded.
1.
selvas
: Rainforests.
2.
race
: Species.
3.
80 million years
: The Mesozoic Age is now thought to have lasted some 180 million years.
4.
The cold has killed them
: The causes of the dinosaurs' extinction remain controversial. Climate change is usually accepted as the major factor, many people believing it to have been accelerated by the consequences of an asteroid, meteor or comet striking the Earth. The death of the dinosaurs may, however, have been exaggerated, since some scientists now classify birds as their living descendants.
1.
to the present time
: The Cenozoic period is generally estimated to have begun 65 million years ago.
2.
it is now slowly emerging
: The last ice age ended about 20,000 years ago.
3.
we lack sufficient science
: The period during which human beings have dominated the Earth is now considered to be âinterglacial', a short era of comparative warmth within an overall ice age. This would suggest that we are headed for another âglacial age'. However, many people believe that in recent decades human
activity has caused significant global warming which might reverse this process. Climate change remains therefore a highly controversial topic.
4.
they keep together
: Scientists now believe that some dinosaurs lived in herds and showed parental care in raising their young.
1.
the first man-like beings lived upon our planet
: The âFirst Glacial Age' is now dated from around 5 million years ago. Within this period, at least 4,500,000 years ago, upright-walking apes appeared in Africa, having evolved into a distinct species between 6 and 8 million years ago. At what period the species made the transition from ape men to âtrue men' is a matter of judgement.
2.
not bones but implements
: Many âalmost human' fossils have now been discovered in East Africa, some of them 4 million years old.
3.
âeoliths' (dawn stones)
: These objects are now thought to have been chipped by natural forces, not by early humans.
4.
makers of the eoliths
: Pithecanthropus erectus has been tentatively dated to over 1 million years ago.
5.
bored holes in bones
: In the Outline of History, where he had greater space for discussion, Wells was more cautious about the nature of the Piltdown evidence. In fact there was no such creature as
Eoanthropus
. Scientific tests in 1953 showed the remains to comprise the jaw of an orang-utan and a human cranium, treated to simulate age.
1.
About fifty or sixty thousand years ago
: By more recent reckoning, Neanderthals arrived in Europe around 130,000 years ago and survived until around 30,000 years ago.
2.
it made and used
: By his choice of the pronoun âit', his exclusion of Neanderthals from the category of âtrue men' and his disparaging descriptions of them, Wells seeks to place our own ancestors in a comparatively flattering light and encourage solidarity between modern humans. By suggesting we wiped out rival species, however, he also warns us against our inherited disposition to bloodshed which, equipped with modern technology, can lead to world wars. Wells fictionalized the supposed competition between
Homo sapiens
and Neanderthals in a short story called
âThe Grisly Folk' (1921). William Golding's novel
The Inheritors
(1955) is a pro-Neanderthal riposte, artistically powerful but scientifically even more questionable than Wells's version.
3.
head down and forward
: Freshly discovered evidence has amended our view of the Neanderthals. They walked upright like modern people and were not especially hairy. They seem to have been quite skilful tool-makers and hunters, were the earliest known humans to bury their dead and could even speak.
4.
even thousands of years
: Neanderthals seem to have existed for over 250,000 years.
5.
their region of origin
: The generally accepted view today is that humans originated in Africa and migrated to other parts of the world, evolving into several different types along the way, including Neanderthals and ourselves. DNA research suggests that the modern type of human,
Homo sapiens
, originated about 200,000 years ago. The earliest known skulls of anatomically modern people come from Ethiopia and date from about 195,000 years ago. Having spread out from Africa about 150,000 years ago, our ancestors gradually replaced all other types of human. Some experts think
Homo sapiens
wiped out its rivals, but in some places our ancestors and Neanderthals lived side by side for 10,000 years, suggesting we may simply have been more efficient over the very long term, perhaps because we were better able to cope with the warming climate. There is even a minority theory (noted by Wells in the
Outline
) that the two types interbred.
6.
Broken Hill in South Africa
: The site is now known as Kabwe in Zambia. Several skulls have been found there and dated as about 150,000 years old.
1.
very high type indeed
: Few today would accept the value judgement of âhigh' or any simple correlation between brain size and intelligence. There is no dispute, however, that Cro-Magnons were anatomically identical to modern humans.
2.
de Mortillet
: Louis de Mortillet (1821â98) was a French anthropologist and politician. Wells took this quotation from
An Introduction to the Study of Prehistoric Art
(1915) by Ernest Albert Parkyn (1857â1930).
3.
the first True Men
: This account of the Tasmanians â inevitably based on the observations of the people who exterminated them â should probably be viewed with scepticism.
1.
such contemporary savages as still survive
: This chapter is, as Wells indicates, thought-provoking speculation rather than history. The sources he cites carry less weight today than they would have done in the 1920s, since few now would accept Freudian psychoanalysis as a science or endorse the implicit assumption that âcontemporary savages' preserve unchanged a culture 40,000 years old. Wells's novella âA Story of the Stone Age' (1897) is a related, fictional attempt to re-create the experiences and mentality of early humans.
2.
J. J. Atkinson: Primal Law
by James Jasper Atkinson (d. 1899) was published in 1903 in a joint volume with Andrew Lang's
Social Origins
.
3.
Old Man⦠gods and goddesses
: The highly speculative theory is that Palaeolithic humans lived in small groups, each one led by a dominant male, rather as gorillas live today. The so-called âOld Man' would drive away or even kill boy children as they grew to be his rivals until, once he had reached forty or so years of age and begun to physically deteriorate, some younger male would kill him in turn.
4.
always something of a child
: The once common analogy between âprimitive man' and modern child is regarded today with great scepticism.