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| | | World History timeline |
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| 1905 |
| | Matisse, Derain and others, exhibiting in Paris their shockingly colourful new works, are dubbed fauves ("wild beasts") by a critic | |
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| 1905 |
| | The first soviet ("council") of workers is set up in St Petersburg, introducing a word of great significance in Russian Communist history | |
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| 1905 |
| | The Dutch dancer Gertrud Zelle begins a career in Paris, using the stage name Mata Hari | |
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| 1905 |
| | Tsar Nicholas II reluctantly signs the October Manifesto, authorizing an elected duma or legislature | |
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| 1905 |
| | Percival Lowell predicts the existence of an unknown planet, almost exactly where Pluto is discovered 25 years later | |
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| 1905 |
| | Gustav Mahler's cycle of five songs, Kindertotenlieder, hs its first performance in Vienna | |
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| 1905 |
| | The monk Grigory Rasputin exercises a powerful influence over the Russian empress Alexandra | |
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| 1905 |
| | Bernard Shaw has two new plays opening in London in the same year, Major Barbara and Man and Superman | |
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| 1905 |
| | The designer Edward Gordon Craig publishes a theatrical manifesto, The Art of the Theatre | |
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| 1905 |
| | Conservative prime minister Balfour resigns and Henry Campbell-Bannerman forms an interim Liberal government in Britain | |
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| 1905 |
| | Richard Strauss's Salome, based on Oscar Wilde's play, has wide success in spite of censorship difficulties | |
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| 1905 |
| | Franz Lehár's operetta The Merry Widow opens in Vienna at the start of an immensely successful run | |
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| 1905 |
| | Sir Percy Blakeney rescues aristocrats from the guillotine in Baroness Orczy's The Scarlet Pimpernel | |
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| 1906 |
| | Henry Campbell-Bannerman leads the Liberals to a massive election victory in the UK on a promised programme of reform | |
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| 1906 |
| | Britain's Labour Party achieves its first electoral success, winning twenty-nine seats at Westminster | |
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| 1906 |
| | Britain launches HMS Dreadnought, the first of a massive new class of battleship | |
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| 1906 |
| | The first part of the Post Office Savings Bank in Vienna is completed, to the designs of Otto Wagner | |
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| 1906 |
| | Upton Sinclair publishes The Jungle, a hard-hitting novel about the Chicago meat-packing industry | |
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| 1906 |
| | More than 1200 French miners die in an underground explosion in the district of Calais | |
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| 1906 |
| | Cardiff's new Civic Centre is launched with the completion of the City Hall and Law Courts, designed by Lanchester, Stewart and Rickards | |
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| 1906 |
| | English biologist William Bateson uses the word 'genetics' to describe the phenomenon of heredity and variation | |
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| 1906 |
| | An international conference at Algeciras effectively gives France informal control of Morocco | |
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| 1906 |
| | The Grain Growers' Grain Company is established, soon becoming an important element in Canada's grain market | |
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| 1906 |
| | Frederick Soddy observes his first examples of chemically identical elements with differing atomic weights, to which he later gives the name isotopes | |
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| 1906 |
| | Fire destroys much of San Francisco following the most violent earthquake in the city's history | |
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| 1906 |
| | The Liberals win a majority in election for Russia's new duma and press ahead with proposals for land reform | |
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| 1906 |
| | Antoni Gaudí completes his radical rebuilding of the Casa Batlló in Barcelona | |
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| 1906 |
| | Istanbul cedes the Sinai Peninsula to British-controlled Egypt | |
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| 1906 |
| | 17-year-old Charlie Chaplin joins the Fred Karno company, touring slapstick comedy | |
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| 1906 |
| | Tsar Nicholas II issues a Fundamental Law emphasizing his own autocratic power | |
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| 1906 |
| | In Charles Ives' composition The Unanswered Question the trumpet repeatedly asks 'the perennial question of existence' | |
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| 1906 |
| | German immunologist August von Wasserman develops a diagnostic test to reveal the presence of the syphilis spirochaete in the blood | |
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