1989

Same year, around the world
Featured events in 1989
1989·Europe·Technology

Berners-Lee proposes the Web

Tim Berners-Lee, a thirty-three-year-old British physicist at CERN, circulated a quiet proposal for a system of hypertext documents linked over the internet. His boss wrote vague but exciting in the margin. Within five years the World Wide Web would be open to the public and starting to swallow every other form of media.

March 12, 1989Modern Era
1989·East Asia·Politics

Tiananmen Square massacre

After weeks of student-led democracy protests on the square, People's Liberation Army tanks and troops cleared Tiananmen overnight with live ammunition. Hundreds, perhaps thousands, died in the surrounding streets. A man with shopping bags stood in front of a column of tanks. The Chinese Communist Party had chosen: economic reform, yes; political reform, no.

June 4, 1989Modern Era
1989·Central Asia·War

Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan

The last Soviet armored column rolled north across the Friendship Bridge at Termez, ending a nine-year war that had killed fifteen thousand Soviet soldiers and a million Afghans. General Boris Gromov was the last man over the bridge. It was a defeat, though nobody quite said so. Within three years the USSR itself would be gone.

February 15, 1989Modern Era
1989·Europe·Politics

Berlin Wall falls

At an East Berlin press conference, a flustered official misread a note and said travel restrictions were lifted, effective immediately. Crowds poured toward the checkpoints. Guards, bewildered, raised the barriers. Young Germans climbed atop the wall in the floodlights, chipping and dancing. The Cold War was ending before everyone's eyes.

November 9, 1989Modern Era
1989·East Asia·Politics

Beginning of Tiananmen protests

The death of reformist Communist Party leader Hu Yaobang brought students to Tiananmen Square to mourn. The mourning turned into demands for democracy and press freedom. Over seven weeks the protests swelled to a million people. The square became a kind of open-air university. On June fourth the tanks would come, and the hope would be crushed in a night.

April 15, 1989Modern Era
1989·Europe·Politics

Velvet Revolution begins in Prague

A student march in Prague was beaten by riot police, and Czechoslovakia erupted. Within ten days the Communist Party had given up its monopoly on power. A dissident playwright named Vaclav Havel, who had been in prison in the spring, was president by the end of December. The revolution earned its nickname for its bloodlessness.

November 17, 1989Modern Era
1989·Europe·Politics

Ceausescu executed

After a week of revolution in Romania, dictator Nicolae Ceausescu and his wife Elena were tried in an army barracks and shot by firing squad on Christmas Day. Television viewers around the world saw the bullet-riddled bodies. The last violent act of the East European revolutions of 1989 had taken place, and the year's work was done.

December 25, 1989Modern Era
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