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The table below depicts the major events throughout ancient and modern history that helped shaped the development and spread of democracy. From the Ten Commandments to the founding of the first university, Gutenberg's printing press and the creation of the Internet, all have served to further and strengthen the democratic system.

18th C, B.C.E

Hammurabi establishes first legal code

16th-13th C, B.C.E

The ten commandments are revealed to Moses on Mt. Sinai. They establish the Judeo-Christian ethic as the critical foundation of modern democratic thought

105 C.E

Paper is invented in China

212

"Civis Romanus sum" citizenship is given to freeborn subjects

221

Han Dynasty in China includes official, but diverse news circulation

600

Book Printing is invented in China

701

Codification of Japanese political law

790

Golden period of Arabic learning

802

Germanic tribal laws codified by order of Charlemagne

1020

Jaroslav the Wise codifies Russian law

970s

Fatimids build al-Azhar University in Cairo, the world's first university

1041

Invention of movable type in China

1119

Bologna University founded in Italy; Paris University, in France, is founded in 1150

1215

King John seals Magna Carta at Runymeade

1455

Gutenberg invents movable-type printing press

1492

Christopher Columbus lands on Bahama islands, Cuba, and Hispaniola (beginning of European expansion)

1517

Martin Luther, German scholar, publishes 95 theses, launching the Reformation in Europe

1619

First representative colonial assembly in America held at Jamestown, VA, under Governor Sir George Yeardley

1625

Hugo Grotius publishes De Jure Belli ac Pacis, which becomes the basis of international law

1646

Treaty of Westphalia: End of the Thirty Years’ War in Europe; Ushers in modern concept of the nation-state

1628

The Petition of Right provides freedom of speech and bans cruel or unusual punishment, further strengthening Parliament in England

1679

Habeas Corpus Act in England ensures no imprisonment without court appearance first

1689

Act of Toleration and Bill of Rights is passed in England

1690

English philosopher John Locke argues in his book, Two Treatises, that the government's job under the "social contract" is to protect "natural rights", including what he calls "the right to life, liberty, and the ownership of property"

18th Cent

Age of Enlightenment begins in Europe

1735

Libel trial of John Peter Zeuger in New York establishes freedom of the press in North America

1762

Jean Jacques Rousseau writes The Social Contract. He asserts that if a government fails to serve its subjects well, they should have the right to overthrow it and create a new one

1775

Beginning of the American Revolution

1776

Adam Smith writes Wealth of Nations

1776

The United States declares independence

1787

The American Constitution and Bill of Rights are established

The original U.S. Constitution permits the states to allow only white male property owners to vote or to hold an elected office. This is not changed until the 1820s.

Slavery is not abolished in the U.S. until the 13th Amendment to the constitution made slavery illegal in 1865

The 14th Amendment (1868) states that all citizens of the US have equal protection under the laws. The 15th (1870) gives the right to vote to all male citizens

The 19th Amendment (1920) gives all women the right to vote, 131 years after the U.S. Constitution is written

The Civil Rights Act of 1964 makes any discrimination on the basis of "race, religion, national origin, sex, or physical handicaps" illegal

The 26th Amendment (1971) gives anyone over 18 the right to vote

1789

The beginning of the French Revolution; French revolutionaries overthrow King Louis XVI and the aristocracy in a bloody civil war

The French "Declaration of the Rights of Man" assert that people have the right to "liberty, property, security, and resistance to oppression"

The new French government bans slavery in all territory under French control

1790s

A revolt in Haiti against French rule, led by Toussaint L'Ouverture, marks the first independence movement in Latin America

19th C

Apex of the Industrial Revolution

1816

Bolivar defeats Spanish in Venezuela; independence confirmed in 1821

1829

The practice of suttee (widow burning) made illegal in India

1833

Slavery is abolished in British empire

1838

Samuel Morse perfects an electrical telegraph system

1848

"Year of Revolution" throughout Europe

1859

John Stuart Mill publishes On Liberty

1876

Alexander Graham Bell sends speech through wires with the telephone

1885

Conference in Berlin initiates the "Scramble for Africa"

1885

Indian National Congress is founded, beginning the campaign for home rule

1893

New Zealand becomes the first nation to fully establish a system of universal suffrage

1901

Marconi invents wireless communication

1920

Beginning of commercial radio broadcasting

Inter-war Period

Extension of female vote;

Great emergence of mass parties in Europe

1922

Mussolini becomes Italian prime minister;

Becomes dictator in 1925

1927

Rise of Joseph Stalin in the Soviet Union

1933

Rise of Adolph Hitler in Germany

1944

First free presidential elections in Guatemala

1945

Defeat of the Axis Powers;

Ushers in the process of democratization in Europe and Japan

1947

India and Pakistan gain independence;

India becomes the worlds largest democracy

1948

The Marshal Plan helps rebuild war-torn Europe

1948

Creation of the state of Israel; The Jewish state becomes the first durable democracy in the Middle East

1948

The United Nations approves the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, guaranteeing all people in all countries their basic rights

1951

Libya declares independence (beginning of post-war decolonization of Africa)

1956

Hungarian Revolution

1964

US Civil Rights Act bans racial discrimination in federal funding and employment

1968

The Prague Spring

1972

U.S. Congress passes Equal Opportunity Act in response to growing women's movement

1976

Helsinki convention on human rights is adopted

1981

The popularization of the personal computer

1987

Mikhail Gorbachev introduces glasnost, oress, encouraging Soviet citizens to debate ways to bring about needed reform

1989

Fall of the Berlin Wall

1989

Popular student-led, pro-democracy protests take place in Beijing's Tiananmen Square, sparking brutal Chinese government crackdown

1991

The Soviet Union disintegrates as the Communist Party loses power; Democratic elections are held in Russia and throughout Eastern Europe

1990s

Use of the internet becomes widespread

1999

Nigeria and Indonesia elect democratic governments




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