Southern Asia 1919: Amritsar Massacre
13 April 1919
13 Apr 1919
Anglo-French Overreach
1880–1914 Pax Britannica
1914–1917 The Great War in the Middle East
1917–1918 The Fall of the Ottoman Empire
1918–1923 Anglo-French Overreach
1923–1934 Rising Nationalism
1934–1940 Arrival of the New Order
1940–1941 World War II: The Middle Eastern Theater
1941–1945 World War II: The South-East Asian Theater
1945–pres Independence
Amritsar Massacre
13 Apr 1919 Amritsar Massacre
11 Jun 1919 Third Anglo-Afghan War
9 Aug 1919 Anglo-Persian Agreement
27 Dec 1919 Turkish War of Independence
18 May 1920 Soviet Victory in Central Asia
25 Jul 1920 Franco-Syrian War
10 Aug 1920 Treaty of Sèvres
28 Nov 1920 Turkish-Armenian War
5 Apr 1921 Rise of Reza Khan
27 Aug 1921 Greco-Turkish War
5 May 1922 Saudi Expansion
8 Sep 1922 Turkish Great Offensive
2 Dec 1922 Uqair Protocol
Despite the end of World War I, the British remained concerned about the threat of revolutionary activity in India and decided to extend the emergency powers they had enacted during the war. This only exacerbated tensions with the Indian population, peaking in April 1919 when British Indian Army troops opened fire on unarmed protesters at Amritsar, causing thousands of casualties.