SHOP BY

Select Region

TIME PERIODS

SELECT ERA

  • BCE
  • CE

Showing 1–12 of 26 results

  • Central Europe 1815–70

    Central Europe 1815–70

    $3.95
    ADDGO TO MAP
    $3.95
    In March 1815, at the Congress of Vienna, Great Britain, Austria, Prussia, and Russia formed the ‘Seventh Coalition’ determined to end the European rule of Napoleon, whom they declared ‘an outlaw’. Upon his return from exile on the island of Elba, Napoleon reassembled an army and successfully fought various minor... More
  • Central Europe 1993

    Central Europe 1993

    $3.95
    ADDGO TO MAP
    $3.95
    The early 1990s saw a series of fundamental political changes in Europe as the both the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia dissolved and a number of new independent democracies came into being. On 1 January 1993 the federal state of Czechoslovakia split into two separate states, the Czech Republic and Slovakia.... More
  • Decolonization 1950–97

    Decolonization 1950–97

    $3.95
    ADDGO TO MAP
    $3.95
    A frequent catalyst for independence movements is the disruption to colonial rule occasioned by protracted conflict. The Napoleonic War was effectively the death-knell for the bulk of Spain’s South American empire; World War I completed Ottoman disintegration. Although France and Britain emerged on the winning side in World War II,... More
  • Decolonization 1951–75

    Decolonization 1951–75

    $3.95
    ADDGO TO MAP
    $3.95
    Following World War II, people across Europe and Africa began to question the morality of the European colonies created during the scramble for Africa in the latter 19th century. It had become increasingly obvious that the colonies were exploitative in nature. The Atlantic Charter, signed by the Allies in 1941,... More
  • Germany 1990

    Germany 1990

    $3.95
    ADDGO TO MAP
    $3.95
    Germany’s partition occurred through Allied negotiation at the end of World War II. The East came under Soviet control, with further partition of the city of Berlin into Western and Eastern Zones of occupation. From 1985, Mikhail Gorbachev introduced liberalizing policies of glasnost (openness) and perestroika (restructuring) designed to avert... More
  • Gran Colombia 1819-30

    Gran Colombia 1819-30

    $3.95
    ADDGO TO MAP
    $3.95
    Simón Bolívar, a soldier and statesman known as “The Liberator”, led the revolutions against Spanish rule in the northern regions of South America. His military career began in 1810, when he fought in support of Venezuelan independence. However, his efforts failed, and he fled abroad in 1815, returning to Venezuela... More
  • Irish Separation 1918–23

    Irish Separation 1918–23

    $3.95
    ADDGO TO MAP
    $3.95
    The General Election of December 1918 produced a landslide for the nationalist Sinn Féin party in Ireland. Many of their 73 elected MPs were in prison – without trial, though purported involvement in a ‘German Plot’. The election was heavily polarized: the second largest party was the Ulster Unionists with... More
  • New European Order 1993

    New European Order 1993

    $3.95
    ADDGO TO MAP
    $3.95
    On 1 November 1993 the Maastricht Treaty, signed on 7 February 1992, became effective, marking the transition of the European Economic Community into the European Union. A number of new economic and legal ties were established between member states under the three pillars of the European Union, reinforcing policy cooperation... More
  • New European States Emerge 1991–93

    New European States Emerge 1991–93

    $3.95
    ADDGO TO MAP
    $3.95
    Vladimir Putin described the break-up of the Soviet Union as ‘the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the century’. The secession of the subsidiary states of the Union was preceded by the collapse of Communist rule in eastern Europe. This was largely bloodless, accomplished by campaigns of mass civil resistance, excepting Romania,... More
  • Northeast Africa, 1977–1982

    Northeast Africa, 1977–1982

    $3.95
    ADDGO TO MAP
    $3.95
    Following severe famine between 1972–74, civil unrest began to mount against Emperor Haile Selassie. A group of military officers known as the Derg staged a coup in 1974 and instated Communist rule; meanwhile a number of opposition groups formed. This instability catalyzed widespread conflict in the region, beginning with the... More
  • Poland 1914

    Poland 1914

    $3.95
    ADDGO TO MAP
    $3.95
    Poland did not exist in 1914, having been carved up by Austria, Prussia and Russia during the partitions of the late 18th century. It was briefly resurrected during the Napoleonic Wars as the Duchy of Warsaw (1806–15), but after Napoleon’s defeat (1815) was absorbed into Russia and became Polish-Russia. The... More
  • Poland 1921

    Poland 1921

    $3.95
    ADDGO TO MAP
    $3.95
    Shortly after the 1918 armistice, the independent Second Polish Republic was created, with Józef Piłsudski its chief of state. Poland was granted access to the Baltic through the Danzig Corridor, which created the exclave of East Prussia, separated from mainland Germany. In 1919 an armed struggle ensued between Russian Bolsheviks... More