1895
Röntgen's X-rays
In his Würzburg laboratory, Wilhelm Röntgen noticed that a screen coated with barium platinocyanide glowed when he ran current through a Crookes tube across the room. Experiments with his wife's hand produced the most famous photograph in the history of physics. Within months hospitals were ordering the machines. The body had been made transparent.
Treaty of Shimonoseki
China ceded Taiwan, the Pescadores, and the Liaodong Peninsula to Japan and paid an enormous indemnity. Russia, Germany, and France immediately forced Japan to give back Liaodong - the "Triple Intervention" - and then grabbed the same real estate for themselves. Japan did not forget. The lessons of 1895 set the course for 1905.
Cuban War of Independence
Jose Marti and Maximo Gomez landed in eastern Cuba and raised the flag of a third rebellion against Spain. Marti was killed within weeks, but the war dragged on viciously, with Spanish general Weyler interning the rural population in reconcentrado camps. American newspapers howled. The war for Cuba Libre was setting the stage for US intervention.
Hamidian Massacres
Throughout 1894-96, Ottoman forces and Kurdish irregulars under Sultan Abdulhamid II killed tens of thousands of Armenian Christians in eastern Anatolia - perhaps 100,000 to 300,000 in all. European powers protested weakly and did nothing. The massacres, forgotten by much of the world, were a rehearsal for the genocide of 1915.
Jameson Raid
At Cecil Rhodes's instigation, Dr. Leander Starr Jameson led five hundred men on a botched raid into the Transvaal, hoping to spark an uitlander rising in Johannesburg against the Boers. It failed ignominiously; Jameson was captured in two days. The scandal forced Rhodes from the Cape premiership and made the Second Boer War almost inevitable.
First Cinema
In the basement of a Paris cafe, Louis and Auguste Lumiere projected ten short films - workers leaving their factory, a baby eating breakfast, a train arriving at La Ciotat - to a paying audience of thirty-three. Reports that spectators fled the train are exaggerated. The art and industry of cinema were, nonetheless, born in that room.
Queen Min Assassinated
In the royal palace at Seoul, Japanese agents broke into the queen's quarters, cut her down, and burned her body in a pine grove. Queen Min had tried to play Russia against Japan to preserve Korean independence. The assassination produced a bitterness that would outlast the empire of Japan. The killing remains one of the deepest wounds in Korean-Japanese relations, invoked in diplomatic disputes to this day.