1949
Mao proclaims the People's Republic
From the Gate of Heavenly Peace in Beijing, Mao Zedong announced to a cheering crowd that the Chinese people had stood up. Twenty-two years of revolution, civil war, and Japanese invasion had ended with the Communists in power over four hundred and fifty million people. Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalists fled to Taiwan.
Soviets test an atom bomb
At a remote Kazakh steppe site, Soviet physicists set off a copy of the Fat Man design, stolen and homegrown. The American nuclear monopoly had lasted four years. A new arms race began that would eventually stockpile enough weapons to end civilization several times over. The Cold War had acquired its most dangerous feature.
NATO founded
Twelve Western nations signed a treaty in Washington binding themselves to collective defense: an attack on one would be treated as an attack on all. It was the first peacetime military alliance the United States had ever joined, and the first time Americans had committed to defending Europe in advance of a war.
Orwell publishes Nineteen Eighty-Four
Dying of tuberculosis on a Scottish island, George Orwell finished a novel about a future where the Party watched, history was rewritten daily, and language itself was being pared down to make dissent unthinkable. The book named everything he feared about the century and gave generations the words to notice their own.
Arab-Israeli Armistice agreements
Israel signed armistice agreements with Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan, and Syria after nine months of fighting. The lines drawn were meant to be temporary but would define Israel's borders until 1967. Seven hundred thousand Palestinians had been displaced. The unresolved status of their right of return would poison regional politics indefinitely.
West Germany founded
The Federal Republic of Germany came into being out of the American, British, and French occupation zones, with its capital in the sleepy Rhine town of Bonn. Konrad Adenauer, a former mayor of Cologne the Nazis had jailed, became the first chancellor. The Soviet zone answered by creating the German Democratic Republic a month later.
First Emmy Awards
The Academy of Television Arts and Sciences held its first awards ceremony in Hollywood for the young medium of television. Only six awards were given. The prize was named Emmy after an image orthicon tube called Immy. Television was still small and largely local; in a decade it would be the dominant American medium.