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1905

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As the second year of the massive Russo-Japanese War begins, more than 100,000 die in the largest world battles of that era, and the war chaos leads to the 1905 Russian Revolution against Nicholas II of Russia (Shostakovich's 11th Symphony is subtitled The Year 1905 to commemorate this) and the start of Revolution in the Kingdom of Poland. Canada and the U.S. expand west, with the Alberta and Saskatchewan provinces and the founding of Las Vegas. 1905 is also the year in which Albert Einstein, at this time resident in Bern, publishes his four Annus Mirabilis papers in Annalen der Physik (Leipzig) (March 18, May 11, June 30 and September 27), laying the foundations for more than a century's study of theoretical physics. Template:TOC limit

Events

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File:McCutcheonNY1905.jpg
"Baby New Year", a cartoon by John T. McCutcheon depicting the new year 1905 chasing the old 1904 into the history books
File:Einstein patentoffice.jpg
1905: Einstein's "miracle year"

January

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File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-S01260, St. Petersburg, Militär vor Winterpalast.jpg
January 22 (9 O.S.): The Bloody Sunday massacre of Russian demonstrators at the Winter Palace in Saint Petersburg
  • January 1 – In a major defeat in the Russo-Japanese War, Russian General Anatoly Stessel surrenders Port Arthur, located on mainland China, to the Japanese.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> On January 3, Japan formally repossesses the port, and renames it Ryojun, holding it for the next 40 years. The area will revert in 1945 to China, and become the Lushunkou District.<ref name=Jan05/>
  • January 4
    • Gheorghe Grigore Cantacuzino becomes Prime Minister of Romania for the second time, having previously served from 1899 to 1900, and remains in office for more than two years.<ref>"Cantacuzino, Gheorghe Grigore", in Biographical Dictionary of Central and Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century, ed. by Wojciech Roszkowski and Jan Kofman (Taylor & Francis, 2016) p. 1862</ref>
    • The city of Bend, Oregon, plotted out in 1900 by Alexander Drake, is incorporated as a town for local logging companies, and will have a population of 536 in 1910. By the year 2020, it will have almost 100,000 residents.<ref>Jon Abernathy, Bend Beer: A History of Brewing in Central Oregon (Arcadia Publishing, 2014)</ref>
  • January 5 – Baroness Emma Orczy's play The Scarlet Pimpernel, the forerunner of her novel, opens at the New Theatre in London, beginning a run of 122 performances and numerous revivals.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
  • January 6 – In the United States:
  • January 11 – Under the supervision of five editors, work begins on the comprehensive Catholic Encyclopedia, subtitled "An International Work of Reference on the Constitution, Doctrine, Discipline, and History of the Catholic Church" and published by the Robert Appleton Company, specifically set up in New York City for the purpose. The first volume will appear in 1907.
  • January 14Jens Christian Christensen takes office as the new Prime Minister of Denmark.<ref name=Jan05/>
  • January 15 – A series of three Template:Convert high tsunamis kill 61 people in Norway in the villages of Ytre Nesdal and Bødal after a rockslide sweeps down Mount Ramnefjell and crashes into Lake Lovatnet.<ref>"Loen Accidents in 1905 and 1936" Template:Webarchive, by Christer Hoel, Fjords.com</ref>
  • January 17 – In France, Prime Minister Émile Combes and his cabinet announce their resignations after being implicated in the Affair of the Cards (L'Affaire des Fiches), a system set up by the War Ministry to purge the French Army officers corps of Jesuits.<ref>Piers Paul Read, The Dreyfus Affair: The Scandal That Tore France in Two (Bloomsbury, 2012) p. 338</ref>
  • January 21 – The Dominican Republic signs an agreement with the United States to allow the U.S. to administer the collection of customs taxes for Santo Domingo for 50 years, with the U.S. to assume responsibility for payment of the Republic's debts to foreign nations from Dominican income. The agreement is done as an exercise of the "Roosevelt Corollary" to the Monroe Doctrine.<ref name=Feb05>The American Monthly Review of Reviews (March 1905) pp. 283-286</ref>
  • January 22 (January 9 O.S.) – The Bloody Sunday massacre of peaceful Russian demonstrators at the Winter Palace in Saint Petersburg takes place, leading to an unsuccessful uprising.
  • January 24Maurice Rouvier forms a government as the new Prime Minister of France.<ref name=Feb05/>
  • January 25 – Tsar Nicholas II appoints General Dmitri Trepov to be the Governor-General of Saint Petersburg, with absolute power to issue regulations to keep order.<ref name=Feb05/>
  • January 26 – (January 13 O.S. in Russia)
  • January 27 – The Nelson Act is passed into law in the United States, providing for racial segregation of schools in the Alaska Territory.<ref>David S. Case and David A. Voluck, eds. Alaska Natives and American Laws (University of Alaska Press, 2012) p. 203</ref>
  • January 29Rioting breaks out in Warsaw, at this time under Russian Imperial rule with a Russian Governor-General.<ref name=Feb05/>
  • January 30 – The U.S. Supreme Court renders its unanimous decision in the landmark case of Swift & Co. v. United States, allowing the federal government to regulate monopolies.<ref name=Feb05/>
  • January 31 – "The greatest ball of the Gilded Age"<ref>"Panic of 1907", in The 100 Most Significant Events in American Business: An Encyclopedia, by Quentin R. Skrabec (Greenwood Publishing, 2012) p. 134.</ref> is held by James Hazen Hyde, the 28-year-old heir to the fortune of the founder of the Equitable Life Assurance Association" at New York City's Sherry Hotel, spending $200,000 for a "Louis XV costume ball" for invited guests.<ref>Michael Lesy and Lisa Stoffer, Repast: Dining Out at the Dawn of the New American Century, 1900-1910 (W. W. Norton, 2013) pp. 195-197</ref>

February

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March

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April

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May

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June

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July

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August

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  • August 2 – The Ancient Order of Druids initiates neo-Druidic rituals at Stonehenge in England.
  • August 7King Oscar II of Sweden appoints Prince Gustaf to serve as his regent.<ref name=Aug05/>
  • August 8 – Fourteen employees of a department store in Albany, New York are killed when the building collapses suddenly.<ref name=Aug05/>
  • August 9 – The peace conference to end the Russo-Japanese War between Russia and Japan begins at Portsmouth, New Hampshire.<ref name=Aug05/>
  • August 11 – The Russian Council appointed by Tsar Nicholas II meets at Peterhoff and approves a plan for a national Duma, the first representative assembly in the Empire.<ref name=Aug05/>
  • August 12 – The first running takes place of the Shelsley Walsh Speed Hill Climb in England, the world's oldest motorsport event to be staged continuously on its original course.
  • August 13 – At a referendum in Norway, voters opt almost unanimously for dissolution of the union with Sweden.<ref name=Aug05/>
  • August 15 – Mexican-American prospector Pablo Valencia gets lost in the Sonoran Desert of Arizona with no water. Enduring almost eight days of dehydration, Valencia wanders until he is discovered on August 23 by anthropologist William J. McGee and McGee's Papago Indian assistant, Jose.<ref>"Surveyors to Campers: 1854 to the Present", by Bill Broyles and Gayle Harrison Hartmann, in Last Water on the Devil's Highway: A Cultural and Natural History of Tinajas Altas, ed. by Bill Broyles, et al. (University of Arizona Press, 2014) p. 141.</ref>
  • August 20 – Chinese revolutionary leader Sun Yat-sen forms the first chapter of Tongmenghui, a union of all secret societies determined to bringing down the Manchu dynasty.
  • August 21 – The Sequoyah Constitutional Convention takes place in Muskogee in the U.S. Indian Territory and approves a constitution for the proposed State of Sequoyah, seeking admission as the only Native American majority state in the U.S.<ref>"Sequoyah Convention" Template:Webarchive, by Richard Mize, in Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture online, Oklahoma Historical Society</ref> President Roosevelt will reject the idea in favor of joining the Indian Territory with the white-ruled Oklahoma Territory to create the 46th U.S. state.
  • August 22 – The sinking of the Japanese ferry Kinjo Maru kills 160 people after the British ship HMS Baralong collides with it in the Sea of Japan.<ref>Ian Collard, Ellerman Lines Remembering a Great British Company (The History Press, 2014) p. 199.</ref>
  • August 23A. Roy Knabenshue introduces the dirigible to the skies of New York City, piloting the lighter-than-air vehicle within view of hundreds of thousands of spectators.<ref name=Sep05>The American Monthly Review of Reviews (October 1905) pp. 410-413</ref>
  • August 24Frederick D. White becomes the first Commissioner of the Northwest Territories in Canada, and will serve until his death in 1918.
  • August 26 – Near Point Barrow, Alaska, the crew of the Norwegian ship Gjoa, led by Roald Amundsen, make the breakthrough of finding the long-sought "Northwest Passage" from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean.<ref>Marilyn Landis, Antarctica: Exploring the Extreme (Chicago Review Press, 2001) p.149</ref>
  • August 27 – Tsar Nicholas II issues a decree restoring to Russia's universities the autonomy that had been taken away from them in 1884.<ref>Sergei Pushkarev, Self-government and Freedom In Russia (Taylor & Francis, 2019)</ref>
  • August 30 – A solar eclipse takes place, with greatest visibility in North Africa.<ref name=Sep05/>

September

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October

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File:HMS Dreadnought 1906 H61017.jpg
October 2: HMS Dreadnought

November

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December

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Date unknown

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Births

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January – March

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File:Tex Ritter 1966.JPG
Tex Ritter
File:Takeo Fukuda 19761224.jpg
Takeo Fukuda
File:Stamps of Romania, 2005-002.jpg
Christian Dior
File:Shimura Takashi.JPG
Takashi Shimura
File:Bundesarchiv Bild 146-2008-0184, Berlin, Berthold Schenk Graf v. Stauffenberg.jpg
Berthold Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg
File:Bundesarchiv Bild 146II-277, Albert Speer.jpg
Albert Speer

April – June

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File:Serge Lifar 1961.jpg
Serge Lifar
File:George H. Hitchings 1988.jpg
George H. Hitchings
File:Gov. Pat Brown.jpg
Pat Brown
File:Raúl Leoni 1965.jpg
Raúl Leoni
File:Joseph Cotten 1957.JPG
Joseph Cotten
File:Henry Fonda in Warlock.jpg
Henry Fonda
File:Sartre 1967 crop.jpg
Jean-Paul Sartre

July – September

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File:Dag Hammarskjöld.jpg
Dag Hammarskjöld
File:Myrna Loy.jpg
Myrna Loy
File:Garbo in Inspiration.jpg
Greta Garbo
File:Max-schmeling.jpg
Max Schmeling
File:Felix Bloch, Stanford University.jpg
Felix Bloch

October – December

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File:Howard Hughes.jpg
Howard Hughes

Date unknown

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Deaths

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January–February

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File:Ernst Abbe.jpg
Ernst Abbe
File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-R30367, Adolph von Menzel.jpg
Adolph von Menzel

March–April

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File:Jules Verne by Étienne Carjat.jpg
Jules Verne

May–June

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File:Francisco Silvela, de Franzen.jpg
Francisco Silvela
File:Scalabrini.JPG
Giovanni Battista Scalabrini
File:MalgorzataLucjaSzewczyk.JPG
Małgorzata Szewczyk

July–August

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September–October

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File:René Goblet.jpg
Rene Goblet
File:Alfred Cluysenaer s painting of Isabelle Gatti de Gamond.jpg
Isabelle Gatti de Gamond

November–December

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Date unknown

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Nobel Prizes

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References

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Further reading

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  • Gilbert, Martin (1997). A History of the Twentieth Century: Volume 1 1900–1933. pp 105–22.

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