1949: The People's Republic Is Born
Mao Zedong declares
the founding of the People's Republic of China on Oct. 1 in Beijing's Tiananmen
Square.
JACQUET-FRANCILLON / AFP / Getty Images
1958: A "Great Leap Forward"
Employees of the Shin
Chiao Hotel in Beijing build a rudimentary smelting steel furnace in the hotel
courtyard in October. The Great Leap Forward, a scheme for mass industralization
and collectivized farming designed as a Five-Year Plan from 1958 to 1963, was
abandoned early after it led to widespread famine and the deaths of
millions.
1959: The Dalai Lama Flees Tibet
Tibetan leader the
Dalai Lama, sixth from left, rests with members of an escape party who protected
him during his flight across the Himalayas to exile. The Dalai Lama left the
Tibetan capital, Lhasa, on the night of March 17 after a failed Tibetan uprising
against Chinese rule.
1966: The Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution
Chinese
Red Guards publicly parade their victims, who wear dunce caps and signs
proclaiming their crimes, through the streets of Beijing. The Cultural
Revolution of 1966-1976 unleashed radicalized youth against so-called
antirevolutionary groups who protested Mao's policies. This photo's date is
unknown.
1969: A Cult of Personality
Red Guards parade through
street carrying red flags and a portrait of Mao Zedong. The Cultural Revolution
was launched by Mao in part to regain control of the party after the disasters
of the Great Leap Forward, but its extremities shaped up to be another
destructive period in modern China's history.
1972: President Nixon Pays a Visit
U.S. President
Richard Nixon watches Premier Zhou Enlai eat at a banquet in Shanghai on Feb.
28. Nixon was the first President to visit the People's Republic; his trip paved
the way for formal diplomatic relations between the two countries.
1981: Confronting Past Excesses
Jiang Qing, Mao
Zedong's widow, was sentenced to death on Jan. 25 for her role in the Cultural
Revolution. Jiang and three other top leaders who formed the Gang of Four were
arrested a month after Mao's death in 1976, marking what most consider the true
end of the Cultural Revolution era, despite Mao having declared it to be
officially over years before. Jiang's sentence was later commuted to life
imprisonment.
China Features / Sygma / Corbis
1984: "Socialism with Chinese Characteristics"
Paramount leader Deng Xiaoping visits Shenzhen, once a humble fishing
village in southern China until it was turned into the nation's first special
economic zone (SEZ) in 1980. Today Shenzhen is considered one of the megacities
of the world, with a population 32 times what it was before becoming an SEZ, and
is ranked as having the highest quality of life in China.
Jacques Langevin / Sygma / Corbis
1989: Massacre in Tiananmen Square
The People's
Liberation Army cracks down on peaceful pro-democracy demonstrators in June,
killing hundreds. In the months before, up to a million student protesters had
gathered in the heart of Beijing to demand greater freedom of speech and the
resignation of Deng Xiaoping, who declared martial law on May 19, sparking a
standoff that ended in the tragedy witnessed worldwide.
Kimimasa Mayama / AP
1997: The Handover of Hong Kong
Members of the
combined Chinese armed-forces color guard raise the Chinese flag at the Hong
Kong Convention Center on June 30, marking the moment Hong Kong returned to
China after 155 years of British rule. Macau,
Andrew Wong / Getty Images
1999: Popular Anti-Americanism
Chinese policemen
surround the U.S. embassy in Beijing on May 10 to prevent demonstrators from
storming the compound, following the accidental NATO bombing of the Chinese
embassy in Belgrade. Tens of thousands besieged the U.S. embassy for three days,
attacking it with chunks of concrete and glasses.a longtime colony of Portgual,
was handed over two years later.
2003: An Unwanted Export
Chinese paramedics tend to a
man suspected of suffering from Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) after
he collapsed in public in Wuhan, the capital of Hubei province, on April 29.
SARS spread from southern China around the world, causing massive economic
losses and eventually leading to a shake-up in the country's murky health
sector.
Wang Jianmin / Xinhua / AP
2003: The First Taikonaut
Staff members examine
the re-entry capsule of Shenzhou-5, China's first manned spacecraft, in
China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region on Oct. 16. Yang Liwei, China's first
astronaut, or taikonaut, emerged safely.
2008: Tibetans Mark Anniversary
Tibetans throw stones
at army vehicles on a street in the Tibetan capital of Lhasa after violent
protests broke out on March 14. Tibetans were commemorating the 1959 uprising
against the Chinese that led to the Dalai Lama's flight and exile.
2008: Disaster Response
Troops help a victim of the
earthquake in Sichuan province that killed an estimated 70,000 people on May 12.
Though faulty state-built infrastructure was partially responsible for the
magnitude of the disaster, Beijing was lauded for its fast and thorough
response.
2008: Olympic Dreams
Fireworks explode above the
stadium roof during the Opening Ceremony for the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics at
the National Stadium on Aug. 8. The Olympics were seen as a "coming out" party
for a more modern and growing China on the global stage, and preparation and
security for the event were extensive.
China Photos / Getty Images
2008: Public Shame
People holding babies who drank
tainted milk powders queue to receive Type B ultrasonic examination in a
hospital on Sept. 17 in Hubei province. At the time, three infants had already
died from melamine-contaminated milk and 6,244 had been sickened, causing a
outcry both within China and from countries around the world who rely on Chinese
food imports.
PETER PARKS / AFP / Getty Images
2009: Riots in Xinjiang
Ethnic Uighur women grab a
riot policeman as they protest in Urumqi in the far west province of Xinjiang on
July 7. Police fired tear gas to disperse thousands of Han Chinese protesters
armed with makeshift weapons. Clashes between the minority Muslim Uighurs and
majority Han Chinese claimed hundreds of lives, leading to a security lockdown
in the region that lasted for months.