Events[]
- By this year Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque are creating works so similar that even they claimed they couldn't tell them apart. Georges Braque introduces new innovations to bis art like stenciled lettering.[1]
- Henry Walton Jones, Senior and Anna Jones visit New Orleans with their son and have to drag the jazz aficionado away from Preservation Hall.[2]
- Since arriving to Charenton Academy, Charles Gorham hadn't seen eye to eye with Cerdic Sandyford's father on how to deal with the miners.[3]
- A 500 mile auto race is established.[4]
- British shift capital of British India from Calcutta to Delhi.[5]
- The first American transcontinental flight is made in 49 days.[6]
- Aircraft carriers introduced.[6]
- Turk-Italian war begins.[6]
- France and Germany struggle over claims to Morocco.[6]
- Germany gains the Congo from France.[6]
- The Mona Lisa is stolen.[6]
- February: Glenn Curtiss' flight occurs.[7]
- May: Porfidio Diaz is forced to resign and flee Mexico[8] and go to France. The Treaty of Ciudad Juárez is signed.[9]
- May 29: Francisco Madero becomes president of Mexico.[10]
- July 24: Hiram Bingham rediscovers the Inca city of Machu Picchu.[11]
- November: Zapata denounces Madero as president and decides he would be best suited for the position himself.[9]
- December 14: Roald Amundsen becomes first man to reach the South Pole.[11]
- Robert Scott's expedition in Antarctica ends in disaster as the entire group is engulfed by a blizzard.[6]
- An arrowhead resembling a pre-Columbian one is made in Japan.[12]
- Explosion in Wuhan reveals the identity of the Combined League Society. Rebellion follows and Sun Yat-Sen overthrows the Manchu Dynasty.[6]
- Chinese Revolution occours.[6] China becomes a republic.[13]
- Alfred Adler splits with Sigmund Freud.[14]
- Ethan Frome is published.[15]
- Tamar Rustava stops studying Azerbaijanian.[16]
Deaths[]
- Robert Scott in Antarctica.[6]
Behind the scenes[]
The Adventures of Young Indiana Jones: Revolution incorrectly states its setting as 1911,[17] when in reality it should be 1916 to reflect the Mexico segment of Young Indiana Jones and the Curse of the Jackal.[18]
Appearances[]
- Indiana Jones Jr et le Triangle des Bermudes (Mentioned only)
- Young Indiana Jones and the Ghostly Riders (Mentioned only)
- The Adventures of Young Indiana Jones: Revolution (Mentioned only)
- The Roaring Twenties (Mentioned only)
- Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis comic (Mentioned only)
Sources[]
- Who Are Those Guys? (Non-fiction source)
- Sigmund Freud (Non-fiction source)
- Indiana Jones Explores The Aztecs (Non-fiction source)
- Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom Sourcebook
- The World of Indiana Jones
- Indiana Jones Magic & Mysticism: The Dark Continent
- Nurhachi's Marshall College entry on IndianaJones.com (backup link on Archive.org)
- Mexican Revolution's Marshall College Entry on IndianaJones.com (backup link on Archive.org)
- Braque & Picasso - A Collaboration Cubed (Non-fiction source)
- The Secret Life of Edith Wharton (Non-fiction source)
- Indiana Jones: The Ultimate Guide
- The Indiana Jones Handbook
Notes and references[]
- ↑ Braque & Picasso - A Collaboration Cubed
- ↑ The Roaring Twenties
- ↑ Young Indiana Jones and the Ghostly Riders
- ↑ The Mata Hari Affair
- ↑ Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom Sourcebook
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 6.7 6.8 6.9 The World of Indiana Jones
- ↑ Indiana Jones Jr et le Triangle des Bermudes
- ↑ Who Are Those Guys?
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 Mexican Revolution's Marshall College Entry on IndianaJones.com (backup link on Archive.org)
- ↑ The Adventures of Young Indiana Jones: Revolution
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 Indiana Jones: The Ultimate Guide
- ↑ Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis comic
- ↑ Nurhachi's Marshall College entry on IndianaJones.com (backup link on Archive.org)
- ↑ Sigmund Freud
- ↑ The Secret Life of Edith Wharton
- ↑ Young Indiana Jones and the Princess of Peril
- ↑ The Adventures of Young Indiana Jones: Revolution
- ↑ The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles – "Young Indiana Jones and the Curse of the Jackal" → Spring Break Adventure