Daily Mirror

50 decisions that changed the world

Experts name moments that made history

- features@mirror.co.uk

From Hitler’s 1941 decision to invade Russia, to the partition of India, from Spain funding the voyages of Christophe­r Columbus to Decca records rejecting The Beatles.

These seismic events all had a momentous effect on the years to come.

They’re among the 50 decisions which changed the world, according to experts who put the list together to mark the 50th issue of History Revealed magazine.

Here they are, in no particular order... 1941: with Soviets Hitler sapped invades Nazis’ Russia. strength, Clash enabling 1066: Harold an Allied Godwinson fightback. sends his troops north King Harold beat an invading Viking army in the Battle of Stamford Bridge, 19 days before the Battle of Hastings. 1961: JFK pledges to put a man on the moon The US President said they’d do it within a decade and they did – in 1969. 1947: India is split in two The Partition of India and creation of Pakistan was the largest mass migration in human history, 15 million people displaced and one million killed. 1762: Catherine the Great refuses to flee Russia Instead, after husband Peter III became Tsar, she mobilised troops, had him arrested and spent the next 34 years expanding the Russian Empire. 1532: Atahualpa accepts an invitation to dinner The Inca Emperor and his 80,000 men felt no threat from Spanish conquistad­or Francisco Pizarro and his 180 troops. But at the feast he was captured and 7,000 of his men slaughtere­d. 1492: Spain funds the voyages of Christophe­r Columbus Explorer became the first European to discover the Caribbean and Americas. 1589: Richard Hakluyt publishes a book that changes how the world is viewed The huge Principal Navigation­s, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoverie­s of the English Nation urged exploratio­n of Africa and the New World. 1587: Elizabeth I has Mary, Queen of Scots executed It enraged Catholic Europe and led to the Spanish Armada the following year. 1945: The US drops the atom bomb on Hiroshima, Japan It killed 80,000 people instantly. Three days later, a second bomb was dropped on Nagasaki, Japan surrendere­d, and the Second World War came to an end. 1962: Decca turns down Beatles If the band had signed to Decca, they’d have had to record what they were ordered to and probably failed to become a musical phenomenon. 1945: Nation votes for Clement Attlee over Winston Churchill Setting up the welfare state and NHS, Attlee’s government transforme­d and rebuilt a war-torn country. 1744: Dutch choose not to colonise Australia British founded colony at Botany Bay 44 years later. 1439: Johannes Gutenberg reveals idea to clear his debts Printing press revolution­ised book production. 1963: Martin Luther King decides to “tell them about the dream” At the March On Washington, MLK improvised the most famous oratory of the civil rights movement. 1200s: Invention of the metalbacke­d mirror People as individual­s. gained awareness of themselves 1643: Royalist Sir Ingram Hopton spares Oliver Cromwell’s life at Battle of Winceby, Lincs Junior commander would become Lord Protector. 1803: France agrees to Louisiana Purchase Buying New Orleans and the state for $15million doubled size of the US. 1994: Tim BernersLee makes the internet open The British computer scientist created the World Wide Web and ensured open, free access for all. AD 313: Roman Emperor Constantin­e converts to Christiani­ty It would become dominant religion of the Roman Empire.

1914: Archduke Franz Ferdinand’s driver takes wrong turn Assassin Gavrilo Princip happened to be in the Sarajevo street and the heir to the Austro Hungarian empire was killed... igniting the First World War. 1955: Rosa Parks refuses to give up her bus seat to white passenger Trial gave momentum to a nationwide campaign to end segregatio­n on public facilities in the US. AD 991: Anglo-Saxons pay the first “Danegeld” to the Vikings Huge sums were paid to make the Danes go away but led to conquest in Britain in 1013 and 1016. 1879: Western Union hands a telephone monopoly to Alexander Graham Bell They lost a court case to the inventor of the telephone, and exited the phone business. 1944: General Eisenhower delays D-Day by 24 hours Decision to put his faith in his weather forecaster­s was rewarded.

31 BC: Cleopatra and Mark Antony make a disastrous decision to delay Ruler of Egypt and Roman husband Mark Antony waited too long to fight rival Octavian at Actium, and lost. Rome used Egypt’s wealth to shape the Western world. 1453: Henry VI decides to marry Margaret Beaufort to Edmund Tudor Four years later, 13-year-old Margaret would be crowned gave birth Henry to a VII. son who 9th Century: Gunpowder adopted as a deadly new weapon Discovered by Chinese alchemists attempting to create a substance that offered immortalit­y. 1947: UN agrees to create the state of Israel In the 70 years since, peace has been a near-total absentee in the region. 1620: English pilgrims settle in North America They laid down democratic principles that would underpin the republic a little over 150 years later. 1533: Henry VIII breaks from Rome When the Pope refused to annul his marriage he created the church of England and enacted the Dissolutio­n of the Monasterie­s. The monks and nuns could no longer look after the poor. That created more vagrancy and can be seen as the roots of the Poor Law Acts, the workhouse system and the Welfare State. 1918: Education for the masses Fisher Act raised school leaving age to 14 and made provision for tertiary education, school welfare and centres for pupils with special needs. 5th century: Vortigern invites Saxons to Britain To deal with aggression from the Picts and Scots, the Briton king turned to Saxony. But they gained the upper hand and more than 500 years of Anglo-Saxon rule ensued. 1860/1: Southern states secede from the Union Objecting to anti-slavery president Abraham Lincoln, they fought a four-year civil war against the North. 1578: Sebastian I of Portugal gets involved in a succession crisis in Morocco It led to the Battle of the Three Kings (where all three died), letting Philip II of Spain seize the Portuguese throne. 1494: The Treaty of Tordesilla­s is signed Pope Alexander VI divided the New World between Spain and Portugal, giving Portugal the coastline of Brazil – and subsequent­ly its vast interior. 49BC: Julius Caesar crosses the Rubicon Marching on Rome with the 13th Legion started a civil war, which Caesar won, ending the Republic and creating the Roman Empire. 1978: James Callaghan doesn’t call General Election Experts believe he’d have won, perhaps meaning we would never have had Thatcheris­m. 1899: Wright Brothers set sights on flight They wrote to Smithsonia­n Institutio­n for informatio­n on aeronautic­s. Their historic day, near Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, came just four years later. AD 664: King Oswiu sides with Rome The Northumber­land king opted for Roman christiani­ty over the Irish Celtic version – central was the calculatio­n of when Easter was. 1778: France joins American Revolution­ary And Prehistory: from swung hunting War conflict Neolithic to agricultur­e against people Britain. go The 323 fails beginning to BC: name Alexander of an the heir modern the world. Great When of war he ensued died at between the age rivals. of 32, 40 years 1794: switches Toussaint his allegiance L’Ouverture from Spain to France Leader in what would become Haiti, behind the only successful revolution of enslaved people in history. 1906: The suffragett­es swap Manchester for London Brought cause into the political heart of London and ensured their actions received much more exposure. 1485: Richard III charges at Bosworth Field It led to his death – and the beginning of Tudor England. 1635: The Japanese issue the Sakoku Edicts Designed to extinguish foreign influence. Isolationi­sm kept Japan off the world stage for more than 200 years. 1833: British Parliament votes to end slavery Move abolished slavery across the British Empire. 1859: Charles Darwin publishes Theory of Evolution Provoked backlash from the religious community but was the moment science stood on its own two feet. 1940: Churchill refuses to negotiate with Germany He said Hitler’s terms would reduce Britain to a “slave state” ruled by a puppet government.

The latest issue of History Revealed is on sale at £4.99. www.historyrev­ealed.com

 ??  ?? VISION Labour PM Clement Attlee AMBUSH Pizarro captures Atahualpa CARNAGE Atom bomb at Hiroshima RUBICON Julius Caesar goes to war
VISION Labour PM Clement Attlee AMBUSH Pizarro captures Atahualpa CARNAGE Atom bomb at Hiroshima RUBICON Julius Caesar goes to war
 ??  ?? SPEECH Luther King
SPEECH Luther King
 ??  ?? GIANT LEAP Buzz Aldrin walking on the Moon DOOMED German troops during invasion of Russia TAKING OFF Wright Brothers’ first flight FAB FOUR The Beatles at Decca audition
GIANT LEAP Buzz Aldrin walking on the Moon DOOMED German troops during invasion of Russia TAKING OFF Wright Brothers’ first flight FAB FOUR The Beatles at Decca audition
 ??  ?? REFORMS Henry VIII
REFORMS Henry VIII
 ??  ?? BRAVE Pilgrims settle in America
BRAVE Pilgrims settle in America
 ??  ?? FIRST CALL Bell
FIRST CALL Bell
 ??  ??

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