Independence and Early US Relations
The Path to Revolution
Cold War and Global Conflict
Revolutionary Life and Reforms
The Special Period and Modern Cuba
100

Added to the Cuban constitution in 1901, this amendment gave the U.S. government the right to intervene in domestic affairs and lease naval bases

The Platt Amendment

100

This powerful colonel led a 1933 coup with U.S. support and later took power as a dictator in 1952

Fulgencio Batista

100

In April 1961, a CIA-trained group of Cuban exiles landed at this location in an unsuccessful attempt to spark a counter-revolution

The Bay of Pigs

100

This massive 1961 government project sent thousands of volunteers into the countryside to teach citizens how to read and write

literacy campaign

100

Fidel Castro used this phrase to describe the era of extreme economic hardship that followed the collapse of the Soviet Union.

The Special Period

200

This activist, poet, and journalist is celebrated as a national hero, leader of the independence movement, and was an inspiration for the 26th of July Movement

Jose Marti

200

On July 26, 1953, Fidel Castro led a failed but famous assault on this military post in Santiago de Cuba

Moncada Barracks

200

Cubans refer to the 1962 nuclear standoff between the U.S. and the Soviet Union by this name

The October Crisis (the Cuban Missile Crisis)

200

By 1975, 45% of all Cuban trade was conducted with this nation

The Soviet Union

200

In 1980, roughly 125,000 Cubans left the island for Florida in this mass migration event

Mariel Boatlift
300

This 1868–1878 conflict was the first widespread revolt to threaten Spanish rule, resulting in the eventual gradual emancipation of enslaved people

The Ten Years War

300

This 1959 law limited the size of individual landholdings and nationalized large estates, many of which were foreign-owned

Agrarian Reform Act

300

This 1962 CIA program aimed at overthrowing the Cuban government included hundreds of plots to assassinate Fidel Castro

Operation Mongoose

300

Although initially discouraged, this industry became a "necessary evil" and replaced sugar as Cuba's main source of income during the 1990s

Tourism

300

To aid foreign investment in 1993, the Cuban government reluctantly legalized the use of this foreign currency

The US Dollar

400

In 1823, this U.S. Secretary of State famously compared Cuba to an "apple" that would naturally fall toward the North American Union if severed from Spain

John Quincy Adams

400

After an initial ambush, the revolutionary rebels fled to this mountain range to launch their guerrilla warfare campaign

Sierra Maestra

400

This group opposed Cuba and the MPLA during the Angolan Civil War

UNITA (or FNLA)

400

These neighborhood-based organizations were established to monitor the local population and identify "enemies of the Revolution."

Committees for the Defense of the Revolution

400

This 1996 U.S. law dictated that the trade embargo could not be repealed until a transition government was in place that excluded both Castro brothers

The Libertad Act

500

Some Spanish-born Cubans wanted to be annexed by this country because they feared a slave revolt and thought it would better protect them than Spain.

United States of America
500

In 1956, Fidel Castro and 80 others sailed from Mexico to Cuba aboard this small, overloaded boat

Granma

500

In 1969, Cuba was elected chair of this organization, which was composed of countries that did not want to align with either the U.S. or the Soviet Union

The non-Aligned Movement

500

Che Guevara developed this concept, suggesting that Cuban citizens should be motivated by revolutionary love rather than financial incentives

The New Man

500

This long-serving member of the bureaucracy replaced Raúl Castro in 2018, becoming the first president not from the Castro family

Miguel Díaz-Canel

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