Card 01 / 10factual history · verified anchors
1900–1910
The electric modern
Cities, cars, radio, airplanes, relativity, imperial confidence, and first cracks in the old order.
At 1900, much of humanity still lives rurally, but industrial cities are glowing with electricity, telephones, tramways, newspapers, photography, and new forms of mass work. Modernity is real, but uneven: the same century that brings electric light to one neighborhood leaves another under empire, debt, caste, racism, or famine risk.
In 1903 the Wright brothers prove powered flight. At first the airplane is fragile and easy to underestimate. Yet a boundary has moved: the sky becomes an engineering domain. Soon it will carry mail, passengers, surveillance, refugees, bombs, and planetary imagination.
Ford’s Model T appears in 1908 and points toward mass personal mobility. Assembly-line logic will make cars cheaper by reorganizing labor into repeatable motion. The car is not only transport; it becomes oil demand, roads, suburbs, police, dating, leisure, work, and pollution.
Science breaks old intuitions. Einstein’s 1905 special relativity unsettles common-sense ideas of space and time. Wireless telegraphy and radio shrink oceans. The invisible world—fields, waves, atoms, germs—becomes practical civilization.
But the decade’s confidence is imperial. European powers, Japan, and the United States expand or defend unequal systems. Industrial weapons and racial theories travel into colonial rule. The bright city depends on mines, plantations, ships, and invisible labor.
Good
Flight, electrification, radio, cheap transport, public health tools, modern physics, and mass literacy widen human capability.
Bad
Empire, racism, slums, labor discipline, colonial repression, mechanized extraction, and new weapons grow beside invention.
Deep pattern: The machine becomes social: it reorganizes time, labor, space, communication, and imagination.
Bridge: The next decade tests whether industrial civilization can govern its own power. It fails catastrophically.
Card 02 / 10factual history · verified anchors
1910–1920
World War and revolution
Industrial killing, trench warfare, state mobilization, influenza, revolution, and broken peace.
The 1910s reveal the violent face of industrial coordination. Railways, steel, chemistry, artillery, machine guns, barbed wire, telegraphs, mass newspapers, and bureaucratic conscription are pulled into war. The same systems that make modern production possible now make mass destruction sustainable for years.
World War I begins in 1914 and consumes Europe, colonial troops, global finance, food systems, the Middle East, oceans, and empires. Soldiers face artillery, gas, machine guns, mud, disease, and command systems that sacrifice thousands for meters.
Empires fracture under pressure. The Russian Revolution of 1917 overthrows the imperial government and brings the Bolsheviks to power. For some it promises land, bread, peace, and worker rule. For others it opens civil war, secret police, one-party power, and ideological conflict that will shape the century.
Then influenza crosses a war-weakened world. The 1918 pandemic spreads globally during 1918–1919. Hospitals fill, families vanish, cities close, and soldiers carry infection across oceans. Biology reminds civilization that it remains stronger than politics.
The war ends, but peace is unstable. Versailles redraws borders, punishes Germany, creates resentments, and builds the League of Nations. Humanity says it needs shared institutions, but those institutions lack enough trust, power, and inclusion to stop the next storm.
Good
Mass politics expands; empires weaken; women enter public labor and suffrage campaigns strengthen; international cooperation becomes explicit.
Bad
World war, genocide, famine, influenza, authoritarian revolution, broken veterans, displacement, and bitter peace mark the decade.
Deep pattern: Industrial society discovers total mobilization: bodies, factories, money, information, science, and emotion can become one machine.
Bridge: The 1920s try to forget the trenches through film, radio, credit, cars, jazz, revolution, and consumer dreams.
Card 03 / 10factual history · verified anchors
1920–1930
Mass culture, fragile prosperity
Radio, cinema, consumer credit, women’s suffrage, jazz, authoritarian seeds, colonial unrest, and the crash horizon.
The 1920s are a decade of surfaces and signals. Radio enters homes. Cinema becomes a dream factory. Advertising learns desire. Sports, celebrities, fashion, recorded music, cars, and urban nightlife create the feeling of a synchronized modern public. In some countries prosperity feels like proof that the machine has recovered.
The United States formally extends voting rights to women through the Nineteenth Amendment in 1920, though many poor women and women of color still face barriers. A pattern repeats across the century: law opens a door, but power decides how wide it opens.
The League of Nations begins its work. It is a serious diplomatic experiment, but structurally weak. Some powers distrust it, some never fully support it, and some later leave it. Institutions are not magic; they need legitimacy, memory, and enforcement.
The Soviet Union consolidates; fascist Italy becomes a warning; anti-colonial movements grow; Japan and other powers seek new positions. Under the consumer surface, ideological systems harden: liberal capitalism, communism, fascism, nationalism, and anti-colonialism compete for the future.
In 1929 the stock market crash breaks the illusion of endless ascent. Credit, speculation, fragile banks, inequality, and global interdependence reveal that modern prosperity can fail systemically. The Great Depression begins to open.
Good
Mass entertainment, voting rights, education, urban culture, consumer goods, and international ideals give millions new identities and hopes.
Bad
Financial fragility, racism, colonial domination, authoritarian politics, organized crime, inequality, and extremism deepen below the shine.
Deep pattern: Culture becomes mass-distributed. Desire, fear, ideology, and identity travel through radio, film, newspapers, advertising, and brands.
Bridge: The crash becomes a stress test. In the 1930s, societies ask whether democracy, capitalism, communism, or fascism can command the machine.
Card 04 / 10factual history · verified anchors
1930–1940
Depression and dictators
Economic collapse, New Deal, Stalinism, fascism, Spanish Civil War, rearmament, and the road back to world war.
The Great Depression becomes the deepest economic crisis of the industrial world. Work disappears, banks fail, farms collapse, and families move in search of food and wages. The crisis is not only economic; it is psychological and political. Millions lose faith that markets and parliamentary systems will automatically improve life.
Different societies answer the same wound differently. In the United States, the New Deal uses public works, regulation, relief, and reform to stabilize society and rebuild confidence in democratic government. It does not solve everything, but it shows the state can repair as well as command.
In the Soviet Union, Stalin’s power drives forced collectivization, rapid industrialization, terror, famine, purges, and camps. The promise of equality fuses with surveillance and coercion. Industrial acceleration is bought with immense human suffering.
In Germany, Hitler comes to power in 1933 and destroys democracy from within. Nazi rule fuses propaganda, racism, militarism, anti-Semitism, police power, and rearmament. Fascism offers wounded societies belonging and order in exchange for truth and human dignity.
Spain becomes rehearsal ground for wider catastrophe. The Spanish Civil War draws fascist, communist, anarchist, republican, conservative, and international forces into brutal conflict. In 1939 Germany invades Poland; World War II begins.
Good
Public welfare experiments, labor rights, anti-fascist solidarity, scientific advances, and democratic reform show another route through crisis.
Bad
Depression, famine, purge, dictatorship, anti-Semitism, militarization, propaganda, and civil war prepare humanity for disaster.
Deep pattern: When complex systems fail, people seek compression: one leader, one enemy, one ideology, one plan. The simpler story can become more dangerous than the crisis.
Bridge: The 1940s turn preparation into total war. The machine becomes planetary violence, then nuclear fire.
Card 05 / 10factual history · verified anchors
1940–1950
Total war, nuclear fire
World War II, Holocaust, atomic bombs, United Nations, decolonization pressure, Cold War start, and the transistor seed.
The 1940s are one of humanity’s most extreme decades. World War II spreads across Europe, Asia, Africa, oceans, skies, islands, factories, laboratories, and civilian cities. Entire economies become weapon systems. Food, fuel, rubber, aluminum, codebreaking, radar, medicine, shipyards, and propaganda all become strategic material.
The Holocaust is the decade’s moral abyss: the systematic, state-sponsored persecution and murder of six million European Jews by Nazi Germany and its collaborators, alongside the persecution and murder of millions of others. Modern bureaucracy, rail transport, records, industry, ideology, and obedience make murder administrative.
The war ends with fire on a scale previous humans had not imagined. The Manhattan Project produces atomic bombs; Hiroshima and Nagasaki are destroyed in August 1945. Humanity learns that physics can now kill cities in a flash and threaten civilization itself.
The United Nations Charter is signed in 1945 and comes into force later that year. The UN is born from failure: two world wars prove that sovereignty alone cannot protect humanity. It does not end war, but it creates a forum and language for diplomacy, rights, and legitimacy.
The imperial world cracks. India and Pakistan emerge from British India through independence and Partition. China’s civil war ends with the People’s Republic proclaimed in 1949. The Cold War begins, while the transistor quietly points toward the electronic century.
Good
Fascism is defeated; the UN is founded; antibiotics, radar, computing, aviation, nuclear physics, and decolonization pressure reshape the world.
Bad
World war, Holocaust, atomic bombing, firebombing, occupation, mass rape, famine, forced migration, Partition violence, and nuclear fear define the cost.
Deep pattern: Humanity gains the power to coordinate globally and annihilate globally. Governance becomes an existential technology.
Bridge: The 1950s live under the mushroom cloud while new nations, vaccines, consumer goods, television, and electronics build a new order.
Card 06 / 10factual history · verified anchors
1950–1960
Decolonization and containment
Cold War blocs, Korean War, nuclear fear, polio vaccine, consumer boom, DNA, Bandung, and new states.
The 1950s are disciplined by the Cold War. The United States and Soviet Union build rival alliances, economies, militaries, myths, and nuclear arsenals. Politics looks bipolar, but real life is multipolar: new states, old empires, religious communities, labor movements, scientists, artists, and ordinary families all push in their own directions.
The Korean War turns containment into open battle. Beginning in 1950, it kills millions and leaves Korea divided by armistice, not peace. The pattern is new: local wars can become global proxy conflicts, and nuclear powers can fight indirectly.
Household modernity expands in richer countries. Refrigerators, televisions, washing machines, cars, suburbs, plastics, supermarkets, mortgages, and advertising reshape family life. Comfort becomes a system made of energy, gender roles, factories, roads, and debt.
Medicine gives a hopeful signal. Polio begins to be controlled through vaccination. Molecular biology also opens a deep future: the 1953 DNA double-helix model suggests a copying mechanism for genetic material and prepares the way for biotechnology.
Decolonization accelerates. African and Asian leaders gather, negotiate, rebel, and build states. Bandung and nonalignment express refusal to be only pieces on the Cold War board, but new states inherit weak economies, imposed borders, and superpower pressure.
Good
Vaccines, antibiotics, molecular biology, public education, consumer comfort, civil reconstruction, and national independence improve millions of lives.
Bad
Nuclear terror, proxy war, authoritarian development, racial segregation, gender constraint, colonial wars, and ideological policing persist.
Deep pattern: The planet splits into operating systems: capitalism, communism, nonalignment, development, nationalism, and consumer modernity.
Bridge: The 1960s collide with youth, rights movements, nuclear brinkmanship, space ambition, and Vietnam.
Card 07 / 10factual history · verified anchors
1960–1970
Space, rights, revolt
Moon landing, civil rights, voting rights, Cuban Missile Crisis, Vietnam, youth revolt, feminism, and the first network seed.
The 1960s feel like acceleration made visible. Rockets leave Earth. Television carries war, protest, assassination, music, and moonwalks into homes. Students challenge authority. Civil rights movements confront law and custom. Anti-colonial struggles continue. The postwar order no longer feels stable from below.
The Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962 brings the United States and Soviet Union close to nuclear war over missiles in Cuba. A small island, intelligence photos, political pride, and minutes of decision threaten the whole species.
In the United States, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Voting Rights Act of 1965 become landmark legal victories against segregation and racial exclusion. They do not end racism, but they shift law and inspire rights struggles elsewhere.
The Vietnam War exposes the brutality and contradiction of Cold War policy. Villages, jungles, bombing campaigns, conscription, protest movements, and global media create a crisis of legitimacy. Many young people no longer accept that governments automatically know what civilization requires.
Apollo 11 reaches the Moon in 1969. Humanity sees Earth from outside and a human footprint on another world. That same era, ARPANET begins computer networking. One technology expands outward; another begins connecting minds inward through machines.
Good
Civil rights law, voting rights, decolonization, space exploration, youth creativity, feminism, environmental awareness, and early networking widen imagination.
Bad
Nuclear brinkmanship, assassinations, Vietnam, state repression, racial violence, coups, poverty, and Cold War paranoia scar the decade.
Deep pattern: The public becomes planetary. Television, satellites, rockets, and networks make humanity see itself as one species and many wounded societies at once.
Bridge: The 1970s ask whether industrial growth has limits. Oil, ecology, chips, inflation, and mistrust become the new teachers.
Card 08 / 10factual history · verified anchors
1970–1980
Oil, chips, limits
Energy shocks, environmentalism, microprocessors, détente, human rights, feminism, postcolonial struggles, and computerization.
The 1970s break the illusion that industrial growth is frictionless. The first Earth Day in 1970 gives environmental politics a new scale. Pollution, species loss, smog, nuclear risk, oil dependence, and fragile ecosystems enter mainstream politics. The machine discovers the planet as constraint.
The 1973 Arab oil embargo creates an energy crisis and forces industrial states to confront dependence on Middle Eastern oil. Prices, queues, inflation, recession, and foreign policy become entangled. Energy is revealed as the hidden blood of modern life.
The microprocessor changes the scale of computation. Intel’s 4004 appears in 1971 as a programmable logic microchip. It is tiny beside the decade’s political dramas, but its seed is enormous: computation can shrink, spread, cheapen, and enter ordinary objects.
The Vietnam War ends in 1975, but not with simple closure. Refugees flee, trauma remains, and global confidence in military technocracy is damaged. Dictatorships, coups, apartheid, and postcolonial conflicts continue.
The decade’s culture is contradiction: disco and punk, feminism and backlash, environmental law and corporate resistance, détente and arms buildup, liberation movements and new authoritarianisms. Progress must now be argued, regulated, measured, and fought for.
Good
Environmental politics, microprocessors, women’s rights, human-rights language, medical progress, and postcolonial voices reshape civilization’s self-image.
Bad
Oil shocks, stagflation, proxy wars, dictatorships, pollution, terrorism, state torture, and inequality show the fragility of the postwar dream.
Deep pattern: Limits become visible. Energy, ecology, legitimacy, and trust are now as important as production.
Bridge: The 1980s answer limits with markets, personal computers, debt, deregulation, activism, and the weakening of the Soviet system.
Card 09 / 10factual history · verified anchors
1980–1990
Networks before the web
Smallpox eradication, AIDS, personal computers, neoliberalism, Chernobyl, IPCC, and the fall of the Berlin Wall.
The 1980s are the decade when computers move from institutions toward homes and offices. The personal computer becomes a general-purpose tool. Spreadsheets, word processors, games, desktop publishing, databases, and early networks begin changing work and imagination. The digital nervous system is still primitive, but it is growing.
Public health achieves one of humanity’s cleanest victories: WHO declares smallpox eradicated in 1980. A disease that scarred, blinded, and killed across centuries is removed from natural circulation by vaccination, surveillance, logistics, and international cooperation.
AIDS emerges in the early 1980s and exposes fear, stigma, homophobia, racism, bureaucratic delay, and the gap between scientific urgency and political response. Activists force attention, speed research, and change medical politics.
Chornobyl explodes in 1986, releasing radiation and damaging trust in Soviet secrecy and technological control. In 1988 the IPCC is established, placing planetary atmosphere into institutional science-policy process. Modern risk becomes invisible, long-lived, and global.
In 1989 the Berlin Wall opens, and the Cold War map begins to collapse. The same year, Tim Berners-Lee invents the World Wide Web at CERN. One wall falls in Europe; another boundary falls in information.
Good
Smallpox eradication, personal computing, democratic movements, climate science institutions, and new information tools open major possibilities.
Bad
AIDS, Chornobyl, debt crises, inequality, crackdowns, proxy wars, neoliberal dislocation, and ecological warning signals define the decade’s pain.
Deep pattern: Risk becomes systemic and information becomes personal. Society shifts from broadcast culture toward interactive digital culture.
Bridge: The 1990s inherit victory language after the Cold War, but web, globalization, genocide, and market triumphalism make the new order unstable from birth.
Card 10 / 10factual history · verified anchors
1990–2000
The web opens
Soviet collapse, Gulf War, Rwanda, South Africa, WTO, Web, Human Genome Project, globalization, and new inequalities.
The 1990s begin with the Cold War ending and many leaders announcing a liberal global future. The Soviet Union dissolves by the end of 1991. Germany reunifies. Markets expand. International institutions, trade agreements, humanitarian language, peacekeeping, and democracy promotion seem to many like the new grammar of the world.
But the decade is not simple victory. The Gulf War displays high-tech televised war. Yugoslavia breaks violently. Rwanda’s 1994 genocide kills at horrifying speed while the international system hesitates. After the Cold War, humanity still has ethnic hatred, propaganda, weak institutions, arms, fear, and indifference.
South Africa’s all-race 1994 election marks the end of apartheid rule and the beginning of a new democratic order under Nelson Mandela. It is one of the decade’s great human victories: imperfect, incomplete, but real.
The World Wide Web expands from scientific tool to public infrastructure. CERN released Berners-Lee’s Web software in 1991, and the wider Internet grows through protocols, commercialization, browsers, and global connectivity. By decade’s end, email, search, sites, forums, and e-commerce are becoming normal.
The Human Genome Project begins in 1990, and globalization accelerates through the WTO in 1995 and expanding supply chains. The century closes with extraordinary possibility and hidden warning: networks connect knowledge, but also speculation, surveillance, inequality, panic, and manipulation.
Good
Cold War nuclear tension falls, apartheid ends, the web opens, genome science expands, poverty falls in some regions, and global civil society grows.
Bad
Genocide, ethnic war, sanctions, inequality, market shocks, ecological delay, surveillance capacity, and triumphal overconfidence remain unresolved.
Deep pattern: The world becomes networked. Power shifts from territory alone to flows: capital, code, genes, images, supply chains, migration, and attention.
Bridge: After 2000, the network becomes everyday life. Search, smartphones, platforms, war on terror, climate urgency, and AI compress history again.