China
India/Persia
Germany
Italy/The Soviet Union
Japan
100

A leader of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and a central figure in the Chinese Civil War.

Mao Zedong

100

A leader of the Indian peaceful protest movement against British rule. 

Mahatma Gandhi  

100

A fascist leader who skillfully exploited postwar German grievances. 

Adolf Hitler

100
A system of government characterized by centralized control, suppression of opposition, and state-led economic and social transformation. 

Totalitarianism

100

The symbolic leader of Japan; he was allowed to keep his position after WWII. 

Emperor Hirohito 

200

A conflict that pitted Chiang Kai-shek's Chinese Nationalist Party against the CCP; the Nationalists initially held the upper hand thanks to their better-equipped military and control over urban centers. 

The Chinese Civil War

200

This brutal event took place in April 1919 after a large crowd gathered to peacefully protest British rule at the Jallianwala Bagh. 

The Amritsar Massacre 

200

In 1938, Hitler annexed this independent country. 

Austria

200

An Italian fascist leader who founded the National Fascist Party in 1919. 

Benito Mussolini 

200

The military leader of Japan during WWII whose rule was characterized by authoritarianism and discipline. 

Hideki Tojo

300

An uprising that culminated in the overthrow of the ruling Qing Dynasty (I need a year in your answer!), and laid the foundation for the establishment of the Chinese Republic. 

The Chinese Revolution of 1911

300

A pivotal moment in Persia's (Iran's?) history that led to the establishment of a modern Iranian nation. 

Reza Pahlavi's 1921 Coup

300

An event that Hitler capitalized on to consolidate his political power and dismantle German democracy. 

The Reichstag fire (Der Reichstagsbrand)

300

A 1922 mass demonstration and coup d'etat that resulted in fascism's seizure of power in Italy.

The March on Rome

300

In 1931, Japan invaded this region of China. 

Manchuria 

400

A student-led effort that sought to modernize China and resist foreign influence. Culminated in mass protests and a boycott of Japanese goods. 

The May Fourth Movement of 1919

400

A series of laws instituted in February 1919 allowing political actors to be tried without a jury. 

The Rowlatt Acts 

400

In 1936, German troops reoccupied this part of western Germany, a flagrant violation of the Versailles Treaty. 

The Rhineland 

400

During this conflict, fascist Italy conquered Ethiopia. This conquest embodied Mussolini's aggressive, imperialistic foreign policy. 

The Second Italo-Ethiopian War (1935-37)

400

Frustration over the perceived unequal treatment in the international arena, economic challenges, and political divisions fueled this ideology in interwar Japan. The authoritarian prime minister, Hideki Tojo, became a symbol of this philosophy.  

Japanese militarism 

500

During the Chinese Civil War, CCP forces embarked on this strategic retreat covering thousands of miles; became an important galvanizing symbol for Chinese Communists. 

The Long March of 1933-34
500

An act of nonviolent civil disobedience against British laws prohibiting Indians from collecting or selling their own salt. 

The 1930 Salt March 

500

In 1938, the European powers (led by Neville Chamberlain) agreed to grant Germany this largely German-speaking segment of Czechoslovakia. 

The Sudetenland 

500

This group was the primary target of Stalin's collectivization initiative in the countryside. 

Kulaks (wealthy, landowning peasants) 

500

The Japanese sought to expand its Empire primarily to secure more... 

Resources, particularly steel and oil. 

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