Mystery The World's Fairs This Evidence Hidden History Chronological All World’s Fair's

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It claims that many of our most beautiful buildings are the work of a lost civilization called the Tartarian Empire. What makes it so special is that they’re not talking about really old stuff like the pyramids, but much more recent examples like the early skyscrapers of New York and the pavilions constructed for international expositions during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

World fairs during the late 19th century and early 20th centuries showcased the technological, industrial, and cultural achievements of nations around the world, sometimes displaying cultural superiority over colonized nations through human exhibits. A world’s fair, world fair, world exposition, or universal exposition (sometimes expo for short), is a large international exhibition designed to showcase achievements of nations. These exhibitions vary in character and are held in various parts of the world.

World fairs originated in the French tradition of national exhibitions that culminated with the French Industrial Exposition of 1844 held in Paris. This fair was followed by other national exhibitions in continental Europe and the United Kingdom.

The best-known “first World Expo” was held in The Crystal Palace in Hyde Park, London, United Kingdom, in 1851, under the title “Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of All Nations.” The Great Exhibition, as it is often called, was an idea of Prince Albert, Queen Victoria’s husband, and is usually considered to be the first international exhibition of manufactured products. It was arguably a response to the highly successful French Industrial Exposition of 1844; indeed, its prime motive was for Britain to display itself as an industrial leader. It influenced the development of several aspects of society, including art-and-design education, international trade and relations, and tourism. This expo was the most obvious precedent for the many international exhibitions considered world fairs.

Since their inception in 1851, the character of world expositions has evolved. Three eras can be distinguished: industrialization, cultural exchange, and nation branding.

The first era could be called the era of “industrialization” and covered roughly the period from 1800 to 1938. In these days, world expositions were especially focused on trade and were famous for the display of technological inventions and advancements. World expositions were the platforms where the state-of-the-art in science and technology from around the world were brought together. The world expositions of 1851 London, 1853 New York, 1862 London, 1876 Philadelphia, 1889 Paris, 1893 Chicago, 1897 Brussels, 1900 Paris, 1901 Buffalo, 1904 St. Louis, 1915 San Francisco, and 1933–34 Chicago were landmarks in this respect. Inventions such as the telephone were first presented during this era.

The 1939–40 New York World’s Fair diverged from the original focus of the world fair expositions. From then on, world fairs adopted specific cultural themes forecasting a better future for society. Technological innovations were no longer the primary exhibits at fairs.

Human zoos, also called ethnological expositions, were 19th-, 20th-, and 21st-century public exhibitions of humans, usually in a so-called natural or primitive state. The displays often emphasized the cultural differences between Europeans of Western civilization and non-European peoples or other Europeans with a lifestyle deemed primitive. Some of them placed indigenous Africans in a continuum somewhere between the great apes and the white man. Ethnological expositions have since been criticized as highly degrading and racist.

Human Zoos America's Forgotten History of Scientific Racism and The Worlds Fair's - https://rumble.com/v2fch6u-human-zoos-americas-forgotten-history-of-scientific-racism-and-the-worlds-f.html

The notion of human curiosity and exhibition has a history at least as long as colonialism. In the 1870s, exhibitions of exotic populations became popular in various countries. Human zoos could be found in Paris, Hamburg, Antwerp, Barcelona, London, Milan, and New York City. Carl Hagenbeck, a merchant in wild animals and future entrepreneur of many European zoos, decided in 1874 to exhibit Samoan and Sami people as “purely natural” populations. In 1876, he sent a collaborator to the Egyptian Sudan to bring back some wild beasts and Nubians. The Nubian exhibit was very successful in Europe and toured Paris, London, and Berlin.

Both the 1878 and the 1889 Parisian World’s Fair presented a Negro Village (village nègre). Visited by 28 million people, the 1889 World’s Fair displayed 400 indigenous people as the major attraction. The 1900 World’s Fair presented the famous diorama living in Madagascar, while the Colonial Exhibitions in Marseilles (1906 and 1922) and in Paris (1907 and 1931) also displayed humans in cages, often nude or semi-nude. The 1931 exhibition in Paris was so successful that 34 million people attended it in six months, while a smaller counter-exhibition entitled The Truth on the Colonies, organized by the Communist Party, attracted very few visitors—in the first room, it recalled Albert Londres and André Gide’s critiques of forced labor in the colonies. Nomadic Senegalese Villages were also presented.

In 1904, Apaches and Igorots (from the Philippines) were displayed at the Saint Louis World Fair in association with the 1904 Summer Olympics. The U.S. had just acquired, following the Spanish–American War, new territories such as Guam, the Philippines, and Puerto Rico, allowing them to “display” some of the native inhabitants. According to the Rev. Sequoyah Ade: To further illustrate the indignities heaped upon the Philippine people following their eventual loss to the Americans, the United States made the Philippine campaign the centrepoint of the 1904 World’s Fair held that year in St. Louis, MI [sic]. In what was enthusiastically termed a “parade of evolutionary progress,” visitors could inspect the “primitives” that represented the counterbalance to “Civilization” justifying Kipling’s poem “The White Man’s Burden.” Pygmies from New Guinea and Africa, who were later displayed in the Primate section of the Bronx Zoo, were paraded next to American Indians such as Apache warrior Geronimo, who sold his autograph. But the main draw was the Philippine exhibition complete with full size replicas of Indigenous living quarters erected to exhibit the inherent backwardness of the Philippine people. The purpose was to highlight both the “civilizing” influence of American rule and the economic potential of the island chains’ natural resources on the heels of the Philippine–American War. It was, reportedly, the largest specific Aboriginal exhibition displayed in the exposition. As one pleased visitor commented, the human zoo exhibition displayed “the race narrative of odd peoples who mark time while the world advances, and of savages made, by American methods, into civilized workers.”

Human Zoos tells the shocking story of how thousands of indigenous peoples were put on public display in America in the early decades of the twentieth century. The harmful exhibition and practices displaying humans that are known today as “Human Zoos” took place for centuries, and their impact can still be seen today. Colonial exhibitions and fairs, circuses, zoos, and museums all took part in exhibiting people from across the world that were deemed other and, thus, curious to observe by white masses that deemed themselves superior and more civilized. In some cases, entertainment was elevated through the incorporation of thrilling performances and the display of exotic animals, further animalizing and dehumanizing exhibited humans.

Mystery The World's Fairs​ Maybe the History we've been told is a lie! Were some ancient buildings built by a different race and their true history was covered up? Did ancient peoples have advanced forms of technology that have now been forgotten ? Was the massive kingdom of Tartaria visible on ancient maps much more advanced than we realize? This sub is an open forum for collaborative discussion of all topics "Tartaria" related, including Mud Flood, Tesla, AntiquiTech, Free Energy, Conspiracies, Hidden History, etc.
I wonder if this video has been posted here before? If yes, then i am not sorry for posting it again, because its just one helluva epic video. If not, I highly recommend watching it if you are interested in perhaps how Tartarian technology worked. I am still thinking about all the stuff he said and points out to us. As its a lot to deal with and can shake one up. I find it fascinating though.

Could it be that this civilization, split off from our official historical line of development, is behind many of the events of the 20th century?

And what of the World's Fairs? Were a large proportion of the World's Fair Buildings actually built from scratch, as the official historiography claims? There is much to suggest that the robber barons of the industrial age not only hid once widespread technological knowledge from us, but that they also hijacked some of the impressive architectural masterpieces in which parts of this knowledge was displayed.

Some of the buildings from the World's Fairs still exist today, and they are obviously not made of plaster or similar fragile materials. Were they subsequently rebuilt to be permanent structures? Is it even possible that the elaborately designed Expo sites were built with the technological capabilities of the time within just a few months, only to be destroyed again a few months later after the exhibitions had ended? Or is it plausible that after a great catastrophe the worldwide remains of the preceding high culture were not only systematically destroyed, but also pressed into an image of history imposed on us?

Some available information suggests that even after the worldwide, game-changing event we call the Reset or Mud Flood, there still remained countless complete and beautiful cities that were conquered by a new power elite and then repurposed as "World's Fairs".

Especially in America, the so-called New World, the many Greco-Roman cities would have been difficult to explain because in contrast to Europe, the Americas do not have an official greco-roman history.

The more carefully one investigates, the more difficult it becomes to find plausible explanations for the construction and destruction of these extraordinary and huge exhibition areas.

The official version about the World's Fairs can be summarized as follows: People in the 19th century loved Greco-Roman architecture for reasons unknown, so it was extremely important to the architects who organized the World's Fairs between 1850 and about 1914 to build in a classical style.

(Note: With World War I, classical architectural ambitions in Europe ended abruptly and many exhibitions also did not take place as planned. It was only in the wake of fascism that there was a return to ancient design principles, but these were often implemented superficially and were mainly applied to a few representative magnificent buildings. After the Second World War, on the other hand, classical architecture was deliberately replaced with new trends - e.g. Bauhaus and Brutalism. Officially the intention was to create an aesthetic distance to fascism, but in all likelihood its purpose was to cut the connection to the Old World through soulless, brutalistic architecture.)

No effort was spared for the world's fairs, enormous amounts of work went into creating complex statues, ornaments, columns, parks, buildings, and even the world's largest organs. No expenses were spared in the making of these massive structures. Made of plaster and linen or hemp fibers, they were only intended to last for the duration of the Expo. However the attention to detail was so great that purely visually there seemed to be no difference between the Expo buildings and the classical splendor-buildings of antiquity. The purpose of the World's Fairs was to make the supposedly "new" technologies discovered during the Industrial Revolution palatable to the masses, to create new markets. In the end, most of the buildings were torn down, with only meadows or empty parks remaining.

This Is A Chronological List Of 600+ International Or Colonial World's Fairs.

1790s
1791 – Prague, Bohemia – first industrial exhibition on the occasion of the coronation of Leopold II as king of Bohemia, took place in Clementinum, considerable sophistication of manufacturing methods. For this occasion, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart wrote his final opera La clemenza di Tito.
1798 – Paris, France – L'Exposition des produits de l'industrie française, Paris, 1798. This was the first public industrial exposition in France although earlier in 1798 the Marquis d'Avèze had held a private exposition of handicrafts and manufactured goods at the Maison d'Orsay in the Rue de Varenne and it was this that suggested the idea of a public exposition to Nicolas François de Neufchâteau, Minister of the Interior for the French Republic.
1800s
1801 – Paris, France – Second Exposition (1801). After the success of the exposition of 1798 a series of expositions for French manufacturing followed (1801, 1802, 1806, 1819, 1823, 1827, 1834, 1844 and 1849) until the first properly international (or universal) exposition in France in 1855.
1802 – Paris, France – Third Exposition (1802)
1806 – Paris, France – Fourth Exposition (1806)
1810s
1819 – Paris, France – Fifth Exposition (1819)
1820s
1823 – Paris, France – Sixth Exposition (1823)
1827 – Paris, France – Seventh Exposition (1827)
1829 – New York City, United States – American Institute Fair
1829 – Turin, Piedmont-Sardinia – Prima Triennale Pubblica Esposizione dell’anno 1829. In Turin, a second 'triennale' followed in 1832 before other national agricultural, industrial, commercial, and applied arts expositions there in 1838, 1844, 1850 and 1858.
1830s
1832 – Turin, Piedmont-Sardinia – Seconda Triennale Pubblica Esposizione dell’anno 1832.
1834 – Paris, France – French Industrial Exposition of 1834
1838 – Turin, Piedmont-Sardinia – Pubblica esposizione dell'anno 1838.
1839 – Paris, France – Ninth Exposition (1839)
1840s
1844 – Paris, France – French Industrial (Tenth) Exposition of 1844
1844 – Turin, Piedmont-Sardinia – Quarta Esposizione d'Industria et di Belle Arti.
1846 – Genoa, Piedmont-Sardinia – Esposizione dei Prodotti e delle Manufatture nazionali
1849 – Birmingham, United Kingdom – Exhibition of Industrial Arts and Manufacturers
1849 – London, United Kingdom – First Exhibition of British Manufacturers (1849)
1849 – Paris, France – Eleventh Exposition (1849)
1850s
1850 – Turin, Piedmont-Sardinia – Quinta Esposizione di Industria e di Belle Arti
1851 – London, United Kingdom – The Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of All Nations – The Crystal Palace (typically listed as the "first world's fair")
1852 – Cork, Ireland – Irish Industrial Exhibition
1853 – Naples, Two Sicilies – Solenne Pubblica Esposizione di Arti e Manifatture
1853–1854 – New York City, United States – Exhibition of the Industry of All Nations
1853 – Dublin, Ireland – Great Industrial Exhibition (1853)
1854 – Genoa, Piedmont-Sardinia – Esposizione Industriale
1854 – Munich, Bavaria – General German Industrial Exhibition (Allgemeine deutsche Industrie-Ausstellung)
1854 – Melbourne, Victoria – Melbourne Exhibition (in conjunction with Exposition Universelle (1855))
1855 – Paris, France – Exposition Universelle (1855)
1856 – Brussels, Belgium – International Exhibition
1857 – Manchester, United Kingdom – Art Treasures Exhibition at the Royal Botanical Gardens, Stretford
1857 – Lausanne, Switzerland – Lausanne Exhibition
1858 – Dijon, France – Dijon Exposition [fr]
1858 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States – Philadelphia Technological Exhibition
1858 – Turin, Piedmont-Sardinia – Sesta Esposizione Nazionale di Prodotti d'Industria
1860s
1860 – Montreal, Quebec, Canada - Grand Exhibition of the Industrial Products of United Canada at the Crystal Palace (Montreal)
1861 – Brisbane, Queensland – First Queensland Exhibition
1861 – Melbourne, Victoria – Second Victorian Exhibition
1861 – Metz, France – Exposition Universelle (1861)
1861 – Amsterdam, Netherlands – Fisheries Exposition
1862 – Geelong, Victoria - Exhibition of Art, Science and Industry
1862 – London, United Kingdom – 1862 International Exhibition
1864 – Bayonne, France – Franco-Spanish Exposition
1865 – Cologne, Prussia – International Agricultural Exhibition
1865 – Bergen, Norway – International Fisheries Exhibition
1865 – Batavia, Dutch East Indies – Industrial and Agricultural Exhibition
1865 – Dunedin, New Zealand – New Zealand Exhibition
1865 – Dublin, United Kingdom – International Exhibition of Arts and Manufactures
1865 – Freetown, Sierra Leone – Sierra Leone Exhibition
1865 – Porto, Portugal – 1865 International Exhibition
1866 – Ballarat, Victoria – National Industrial Exhibition
1866 – Melbourne, Victoria – Intercolonial Exhibition of Australasia
1866 – Boulogne-sur-Mer, France – International Fisheries Exposition
1866 – Arcachon, France – International Exposition of Fish and Water Products
1866 – Stockholm, Sweden – Scandinavian Industrial Exhibition
1867 – Paris, France – Exposition Universelle (1867)
1867 – The Hague, Netherlands – International Maritime Exhibition
1867 – Aarhaus, Denmark – International Maritime Exhibition
1867 – Vienna, Austria – International Maritime Exhibition
1867 – Gothenburg, Sweden – International Maritime Exhibition
1868 – Le Havre, France – International Maritime Exposition
1869 – Amsterdam, Netherlands – International Exhibition of Domestic Economy
1870s
1870 – Sydney, New South Wales – Intercolonial Exhibition (1870)
1871 – Córdoba, Argentina – Exposición Nacional
1871 – London, United Kingdom – First Annual International Exhibition (1871)
1871 – Naples, Italy – International Maritime Exposition
1872 – Hamilton, Bermuda – Industrial and Loan Exhibition
1872 – Copenhagen, Denmark – Second Scandinavian Exhibition of Arts and Industry
1872 – London, United Kingdom – Second Annual International Exhibition (1872)
1872 – Christchurch, New Zealand – New Zealand Interprovincial Exhibition
1872 – Lima, Peru – Lima International Exhibition
1872 – Lyon, France – Exposition Universelle et Internationale (1872)
1872 – Kyoto, Japan – Exhibition of Arts and Manufactures (1872)
1873 – London, United Kingdom – Third Annual International Exhibition (1873)
1873 – Vienna, Austria – Weltausstellung 1873 Wien
1873 – Sydney, New South Wales – Metropolitan Intercolonial Exhibition (1873)
1874 – London, United Kingdom – Fourth Annual International Exhibition (1874)
1874 – Dublin, United Kingdom – International Exhibition of Arts and Manufactures (1874)
1874 – Rome, Italy – Esposizione internazionale (1874) (never held)
1874 – Jamestown, Saint Helena – St. Helena Industrial Exhibition
1874 – Marseille, France – Exhibition of Modern Inventions and Discoveries
1874 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States – Franklin Institute Exhibition
1875 – Melbourne, Victoria – Victorian Intercolonial Exhibition
1875 – Nizhni Novgorod, Russia – Nizhni Novgorod Fair (1875)
1875 – Sydney, New South Wales – Intercolonial Exhibition (1875)
1875 – Santiago, Chile – Chilean International Exhibition
1876 – Brussels, Belgium – International Exposition of Hygiene and Life-saving Apparatus
1876 – Helsinki, Finland – Finnish General Exhibition
1876 – Adelaide, South Australia – Adelaide Industrial Exhibition
1876 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States – Centennial Exposition
1876 – Brisbane, Queensland – Intercolonial Exhibition (1876)
1876 – London, United Kingdom – London Loan Collection of Scientific Apparatus
1877 – Cape Town, Cape Colony – South African International Exhibition
1877 – Tokyo, Japan – First National Industrial Exhibition (1877) (Ueno Park)
1877 – Sydney, New South Wales – Sydney Metropolitan and Intercolonial Exhibition
1877 – Adelaide, South Australia – Adelaide Industrial Exhibition
1878 – Paris, France – Exposition Universelle (1878)
1878 – Ballarat, Victoria – Australian Juvenile Industrial Exhibition (1878)
1878 – London, United Kingdom – International Fisheries Exhibition
1879 – Bendigo, Victoria – Juvenile Industrial Exhibition
1879 – Geelong, Victoria – Geelong Juvenile and Industrial Exhibition
1879 – Sydney, New South Wales – Intercolonial Juvenile Industrial Exhibition
1879 – Sydney, New South Wales – Sydney International Exhibition
1879 – Melbourne, Victoria – Intercolonial Juvenile Industrial Exhibition (1879)
1879 – Kilburn, United Kingdom – International Agricultural Exhibition
1880s
1880 – Berlin, Germany – International Fisheries Exhibition
1880 – Christchurch, New Zealand – Christchurch Industrial Exhibition
1880 – Adelaide, South Australia – Industrial and Juvenile Exhibition
1880 – Glasgow, United Kingdom – Glasgow Electrical Exhibition
1880-1881 – Melbourne, Victoria – Melbourne International Exhibition
1881 – Adelaide, South Australia – Adelaide Exhibition.
1881 – Matanzas, Cuba – Exhibition of Matanzas
1881 – Milwaukee, Wisconsin – Milwaukee Industrial Exposition
1881 – Paris, France – International Exposition of Electricity, Paris
1881 – Dunedin, New Zealand – Dunedin Industrial Exhibition
1881 – Atlanta, Georgia, United States – International Cotton Exposition
1881 – Budapest, Austria-Hungary – Országos Nőipari Kiállitás
1881 – London, United Kingdom – International Medical and Sanitary Exhibition
1881 – Tokyo, Japan – Second National Industrial Exhibition
1881-1882 – Perth, Western Australia – Perth International Exhibition
1882 – Lille, France – International Exposition of Industrial Art
1882 – Munich, Germany – International Electrical Exposition
1882 – Christchurch, New Zealand – New Zealand International Exhibition
1882 – London, United Kingdom – Crystal Palace Electric Exhibition
1882 – Edinburgh, United Kingdom – International Fisheries Exhibition
1882 – Bordeaux, France – Exposition internationale des vins
1882 – Buenos Aires, Argentina – South American Continental Exhibition (Exposición Continental Sud-Americana)
1883 – London, United Kingdom – International Electric Exhibition
1883 – Vienna, Austria-Hungary – International Electrical Exposition
1883 – Cork, United Kingdom – Cork Industrial Exhibition
1883 – Amsterdam, Netherlands – International Colonial and Export Exhibition
1883 – Calcutta, India – Calcutta International Exhibition
1883 – Marseilles, France – International Maritime Exposition
1883 – Christchurch, New Zealand – All Colonial Exhibition
1883 – Madrid, Spain – Exposition of Mining and Metallurgy
1883 – South Kensington, United Kingdom – International Fisheries Exhibition
1883 – Parramatta, New South Wales – Intercolonial Juvenile Industrial Exhibition
1883 – Hobart, Tasmania – Tasmanian Juvenile and Industrial Exhibition
1883 – Launceston, Tasmania – Art and Industrial Exhibition
1883 – Louisville, Kentucky, United States – Southern Exposition
1883 – New York City, United States – World's Fair (1883) (never held)
1883 – Caracas, Venezuela – National Exposition of Venezuela
1883–1884 – Boston, Massachusetts, United States – The American Exhibition of the Products, Arts and Manufactures of Foreign Nations
1884 – Nice, France – International Exposition of Nice
1884 – Amsterdam, Netherlands – International Agricultural Exhibition
1884 – London, United Kingdom – London International Universal Exhibition
1884 – South Kensington, United Kingdom – International Health and Education Exhibition
1884 – Cape Town, Cape Colony – South African Industrial Exhibition
1884 – Durban, South Africa – Natal Agricultural, Horticultural, Industrial and Art Exhibition
1884 – New Orleans, Louisiana, United States – World Cotton Centennial
1884 – Melbourne, Victoria – Victorian International Exhibition 1884 of Wine, Fruit, Grain & other products of the soil of Australasia with machinery, plant and tools employed
1884 – Edinburgh, United Kingdom – First International Forestry Exhibition
1884 – Turin, Italy – Esposizione Generale Italiana
1884 – Adelaide, South Australia – Grand Industrial Exhibition
1885 – Melbourne, Victoria – Victorians' Jubilee Exhibition (1885) (Jubilee of Victoria Exhibition)
1885 – Port Elizabeth, Cape Colony (now South Africa) – South African Exhibition
1885 – Antwerp, Belgium – Exposition Universelle d'Anvers (1885)
1885 – Nuremberg, Germany – International Exposition of Metals and Metallurgy
1885 – Budapest, Hungary – Hungarian National Exhibition
1885 – Wellington, New Zealand – New Zealand Industrial Exhibition
1885 – Zaragoza, Spain – Aragonese Exposition
1885 – London, United Kingdom – International Inventions Exhibition
1886 – London, United Kingdom – Colonial and Indian Exhibition (1886)
1886 – Edinburgh, United Kingdom – International Exhibition of Industry, Science and Art
1886 – Liverpool, United Kingdom – International Exhibition of Navigation, Commerce and Industry (1886)
1886 – Bendigo, Victoria – Juvenile and Industrial Exhibition
1886 – Launceston, Tasmania – Launceston Industrial Exhibition
1886 – Perth, Western Australia – West Australian Exhibition
1887 – Le Havre, France – International Maritime Exposition
1887 – Atlanta, United States – Piedmont Exposition
1887 – Geelong, Victoria – Geelong Jubilee Juvenile and Industrial Exhibition (1887)
1887 – Manchester, United Kingdom – Royal Jubilee Exhibition
1887 – London, United Kingdom – American Exhibition
1887 – Newcastle, United Kingdom – Royal Mining Engineering Jubilee Exhibition
1887 – Rome, Italy – Esposizione mondiale (1887)
1887 – Madrid, Spain – Exposición General de las Islas Filipinas
1887–1888 – Adelaide, South Australia – Adelaide Jubilee International Exhibition (1887)
1888 – Glasgow, United Kingdom – International Exhibition (1888)
1888 – Brussels, Belgium – Grand Concours International des Sciences et de l'Industrie (1888)
1888 – Barcelona, Spain – Exposición Universal de Barcelona (1888)
1888 – Cincinnati, Ohio – Cincinnati Centennial Exposition (1888)
1888 – Lisbon, Portugal – Exposição Industrial Portugueza (1888)
1888 – Copenhagen, Denmark – The Nordic Exhibition of 1888 (Nordiske Industri-Landbrugs og Kunstudstilling)
1888–1889 – Melbourne, Victoria – Melbourne Centennial Exhibition
1888–1889 – Melbourne, Victoria – Victorian Juvenile Industrial Exhibition (1888)
1889 – Paris, France – Exposition Universelle (1889) – Eiffel Tower
1889 – Dunedin, New Zealand – New Zealand and South Seas Exhibition (1889)
1889 – Buffalo, New York, United States – International Industrial Fair (1889)
1890s
1890 – Buenos Aires, Argentina – Agricultural Exhibition
1890 – Vienna, Austria-Hungary – Agricultural and Forestry Exposition
1890 – Bremen, Germany – Nord-West-Deutsche Gewerbe und Industrie-Ausstellung
1890 – London, United Kingdom – International Exhibition of Mining and Metallurgy
1890 – Edinburgh, United Kingdom – International Exhibition of Science, Art & Industry
1890 – Ballarat, Victoria - Australian Juvenile Industrial Exhibition
1891 – Moscow, Russia – Exposition française
1891 – Frankfurt, Germany – International Electrotechnical Exhibition
1891 – Kingston, Jamaica – International Exhibition (1891)
1891 – Prague, Austria-Hungary – General Land Centennial Exhibition (1891) at the Prague Exhibition Grounds
1891 – Adelaide, South Australia – Industrial Exhibition of South Australian Industries, Products and Manufactures
1891 – Port of Spain – Trinidad and Tobago Exhibition
1891–1892 – Launceston, Tasmania – Tasmanian International Exhibition (1891)
1892 – Grenoble, France – International Alpine Exposition of Grenoble
1892 – Genoa, Italy – Esposizione Italo-Americana (1892)
1892 – Washington, D.C., United States – Exposition of the Three Americas (1892) (never held)
1892 – London, United Kingdom – Crystal Palace Electrical Exhibition
1892 – Kimberley, Cape of Good Hope – South African and International Exhibition
1892–1893 – Madrid, Spain – Historical American Exposition
1893 – Chicago, Illinois, United States – World's Columbian Exposition – Palace of Fine Arts and the World's Congress Auxiliary Building
1893 – New York City, United States – World's Fair Prize Winners' Exposition (1893)
1894 – San Francisco, California, United States – California Midwinter International Exposition of 1894
1894 – Antwerp, Belgium – Exposition Internationale d'Anvers (1894)
1894 – Santiago, Chile – International Mining and Metallurgical Exposition
1894 – Lyons, France – Exposition internationale et coloniale
1894 – Manchester, United Kingdom – British and Colonial Exhibition
1894 – Porto, Portugal – Exposição Insular e Colonial Portugueza (1894)
1894 – Fremantle, Western Australia – Fremantle Industrial Exhibition
1895 – Adelaide, South Australia – Exhibition of Art and Industry
1895 – Hobart, Tasmania – Tasmanian International Exhibition (1895)
1895 – Ballarat, Victoria – Australian Industrial Exhibition (1895)
1895 – Bordeaux, France – Bordeaux Exposition [fr]
1895 – Kyoto, Japan – National Japanese Exhibition
1895 – Christchurch, New Zealand – Art and Industrial Exhibition
1895 – Atlanta, Georgia, United States – Cotton States and International Exposition (1895) (Atlanta Exposition)
1895 – Montevideo, Uruguay - National Agricultural Exhibition
1896 – Rouen, France – National and Colonial Exposition
1896 – Kiel, Germany – International Shipping and Fishery Exposition
1896 – Budapest, Austria-Hungary – Hungarian Millenary Exhibition
1896 – Wellington, New Zealand – Wellington Industrial Exhibition
1896 – Nizhny Novgorod, Russia – Pan Russian Exhibition
1896 – Malmö, Sweden – Nordic Industrial and Handicraft Exhibition
1896 – Berlin, Germany – Great Industrial Exposition of Berlin
1896 – Mexico City, Mexico – International Exposition (1896) (never held)
1896 – Cardiff, United Kingdom – Cardiff Fine Arts, Industrial, and Maritime Exhibition
1896 – Geneva, Switzerland – Exposition National Suisse
1897 – Brussels, Belgium – Exposition Internationale de Bruxelles (1897)
1897 – Arcachon, France – Arcachon International Exposition
1897 – Guatemala City, Guatemala – Exposición Centroamericana
1897 – London, United Kingdom – Imperial Victorian Exhibition
1897 – Brisbane, Queensland – Queensland International Exhibition
1897 – Chicago, Illinois, United States – Irish Fair (1897)
1897 – Nashville, Tennessee, United States – Tennessee Centennial and International Exposition
1897 – Stockholm, Sweden – General Art and Industrial Exposition of Stockholm
1897 – Kiev, Russian Empire – Agricultural Exhibition
1898 – Buenos Aires, Argentina – National Exhibition
1898 – Jerusalem, Ottoman Empire – Universal Scientific and Philanthropic Exposition (1898)
1898 – Auckland, New Zealand – Auckland Industrial and Mining Exhibition
1898 – Dunedin, New Zealand – Otago Jubilee Industrial Exhibition (1898)
1898 – Omaha, Nebraska, United States – Trans-Mississippi Exposition
1898 – Bergen, Norway – International Fisheries Exposition (1898)
1898 – Munich, Germany – Kraft – und Arbeitsmaschinen-Ausstellung (1898)
1898 – San Francisco, California, United States – California's Golden Jubilee (1898)
1898 – Turin, Italy – Esposizione Generale Italiana
1898 – Vienna, Austria-Hungary – Jubiläums-Ausstellung
1898 – Launceston, Tasmania – Tasmanian Juvenile Industrial Exhibition
1898 – Grahamstown, South Africa – Industrial and Arts Exhibition
1899 – Coolgardie, Western Australia – Western Australian International Mining and Industrial Exhibition
1899 – Como, Italy – Como Electrical Exhibition
1899 – Omaha, Nebraska, United States – Greater America Exposition
1899 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States – National Export Exposition
1899 – London, United Kingdom – Greater Britain Exhibition
1900s
1900 – Paris, France – Exposition Universelle (1900) – Le Grand Palais
1900 – Adelaide, South Australia – Century Exhibition of Arts and Industries (1900)
1900 – Christchurch, New Zealand – Canterbury Jubilee Industrial Exhibition
1901 – Bendigo, Australia – Victorian Gold Jubilee Exhibition
1901 – Buffalo, New York, United States – Pan-American Exposition
1901 – Glasgow, United Kingdom – Glasgow International Exhibition (1901)
1901 – Vienna, Austria-Hungary – Bosnische Weihnachts-Ausstellung (1901)
1901 – Charleston, South Carolina, United States – South Carolina Inter-State and West Indian Exposition
1902 – Vienna, Austria-Hungary – International Fishery Exposition
1902 – Turin, Italy – Esposizione Internazionale d'Arte Decorativa Moderna
1902 – Hanoi, French Indochina – Hanoi exhibition (Indo China Exposition Française et Internationale)
1902 – Lille, France – International Exposition of Lille
1902 – Cork, United Kingdom – Cork International Exhibition
1902 – Wolverhampton, United Kingdom – Wolverhampton Art and Industrial Exhibition
1902 – St. Petersburg, Russia – International Fisheries Exhibition
1902 – New York City, United States – United States, Colonial and International Exposition (1902) (never held)
1902 – Toledo, Ohio, United States – Ohio Centennial and Northwest Territory Exposition (1902) – (never held)
1903 – Melbourne, Australia – Australian Federal International Exhibition
1903 – Osaka, Japan – Fifth National Industrial Exhibition
1904 – St. Louis, Missouri, United States – Louisiana Purchase Exposition (also called Louisiana Purchase International Exposition and Olympic Games ): 1904 Summer Olympics
1904 – Cape Town, South Africa – Cape Town Industrial Exhibition
1905 – Portland, Oregon, United States – Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition
1905 – Liège, Belgium – Exposition universelle et internationale de Liège (1905)
1905 – London, United Kingdom – Naval, Shipping and Fisheries Exhibition
1905 – New York City, United States – Irish Industrial Exposition (1905)
1906 – Vienna, Austria-Hungary – Hygiene Exhibition
1906 – Milan, Italy – Esposizione Internazionale del Sempione
1906 – London, United Kingdom – Imperial Austrian Exhibition
1906 – Marseille, France – Exposition coloniale (1906)
1906 – Bucharest, Romania – Romanian General Exposition
1906 – Tourcoing, France – International Exposition of Textile Industries
1906–1907 – Christchurch, New Zealand – International Exhibition (1906)
1907 – Bordeaux, France – International Maritime Exposition [fr]
1907 – Tokyo, Japan – Tokyo Industrial Exhibition
1907 – Bergen, Norway – Nordic Marine Motor Exhibition
1907 – Dublin, United Kingdom – Irish International Exhibition
1907 – Hampton Roads, Virginia, United States – Jamestown Exposition
1907 – Chicago, Illinois, United States – World's Pure Food Exposition (1907)
1907 – Mannheim, Germany – Internationale Kunst-Ausstellung (1907)
1908 – Marseille, France – Exposition of Electricity
1908 – Trondheim, Norway – Scandinavian Fisheries Exhibition
1908 – Zaragoza, Spain – Hispano-French Exposition of 1908
1908 – London, United Kingdom – Franco-British Exhibition (1908)
1908 – Edinburgh, United Kingdom – Scottish National Exhibition
1908 – New York City, United States – International Mining Exposition (1908)
1908 – Rio de Janeiro, Brazil – Exhibition of the centenary of the opening of the Ports of Brazil
1908 – Marseille, France – Exposition International de l'Electricite
1909 – London, United Kingdom – Imperial International Exhibition
1909 – Nancy, France – Exposition Internationale de l'Est de la France
1909 – Seattle, Washington, United States – Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition
1909 – New York City, United States – Hudson-Fulton Celebration
1909 – San Francisco, California, United States – Portolá Festival (1909)
1909 – Quito, Ecuador – National Ecuadorian Exposition
1910s
1910 – Vienna, Austria-Hungary – International Hunting Exposition
1910 – Santiago, Chile – International Agricultural and Industrial Exposition
1910 – Bogotá, Colombia – Exposición del Centenario de la independencia (1910)
1910 – Nanking, China – Nanyang Industrial Exposition
1910 – Brussels, Belgium – Brussels International 1910
1910 – Buenos Aires, Argentina – Exposición Internacional del Centenario
1910 – Nagoya, Japan – Nagoya Industrial Exhibition
1910 – London, United Kingdom – Japan–British Exhibition
1910 – San Francisco, California, United States – Admission Day Festival (1910) September 8, 9, 10
1910 – Vienna, Austria-Hungary – Internationale Jagd-Ausstellung (1910)
1911 – Charleroi, Belgium – Charleroi Exposition
1911 – Havana, Cuba – Cuban National Exposition
1911 – Roubaix, France – International Exposition of Northern France
1911 – Dresden, Germany – International Hygiene Exhibition
1911 – London, United Kingdom – Coronation Exhibition (1911)
1911 – London, United Kingdom – Festival of Empire
1911 – Rome, Italy – Esposizione internazionale d'arte (1911)
1911 – Wellington, New Zealand – Coronation Industrial Exhibition
1911 – Turin, Italy – Turin International
1911 – Omsk, Russia – Western Siberian Exhibition
1911 – Glasgow, United Kingdom – Scottish Exhibition of National History, Art and Industry
1911 – New York City, United States – International Mercantile Exposition (1911)
1912 – Manila, Philippines – Philippine Exposition (1912)
1912 – London, United Kingdom – Latin-British Exhibition
1912, 1917 – Tokyo, Japan – Grand Exhibition of Japan (planned for 1912, postponed to 1917 and then never held)
1913 – Melbourne, Australia - Great All-Australian Exhibition
1913 – Leipzig, Germany – International Building Trades Exposition
1913 – Auckland, New Zealand – Auckland Exhibition
1913 – Ghent, Belgium – Exposition universelle et internationale (1913)
1913 – Amsterdam, Netherlands – Tentoonstelling De Vrouw 1813–1913
1913 – Kiev, Russian Empire – All Russian Exhibition
1913 – Knoxville, Tennessee, United States – National Conservation Exposition
1914 – London, United Kingdom – Anglo-American Exhibition
1914 – Malmö, Sweden – Baltic Exhibition
1914 – Boulogne-sur-Mer, France – International Exposition of Sea Fishery Industries (1914)
1914 – Lyon, France – Exposition internationale urbaine de Lyon
1914 – Tokyo, Japan – Tokyo Taisho Exposition
1914 – Cologne, Germany – Werkbund Exhibition (1914)
1914 – Bristol, United Kingdom – International Exhibition (1914)
1914 – Nottingham, United Kingdom – Universal Exhibition (1914) (work begun on site 1913 but never held)
1914 – Semarang, Dutch East Indies – Colonial Exhibition of Semarang (Colonial Exposition)
1914 – Christiania, Norway – 1914 Jubilee Exhibition (Norges Jubilæumsutstilling)
1914 – Baltimore, United States – National Star-Spangled Banner Centennial Celebration
1914 – Genoa, Italy – International exhibition of marine and maritime hygiene
1915 – Casablanca, Morocco – Casablanca Fair of 1915
1915 – San Francisco, California, United States – Panama–Pacific International Exposition Palace of Fine Arts
1915 – Panama City, Panama – Exposición Nacional de Panama (1915)
1915 – Richmond, United States – Negro Historical and Industrial Exposition (1915)
1915 – Chicago, United States – Lincoln Jubilee and Exposition (1915)
1915–1916 – San Diego, California, United States – Panama–California Exposition
1916 – Wellington, New Zealand – British Commercial and Industrial Exhibition
1918 – New York City, United States – Bronx International Exposition of Science, Arts and Industries
1918 – Los Angeles, United States – California Liberty Fair (1918)
1920s
1920 – Adelaide, Australia – All-Australian Peace Exhibition
1920 – Shanghai, China – American-Chinese Exposition
1921 – Riga, Latvia – International Exhibition of Agriculture and Industry
1921 – Wellington, New Zealand – Exhibition of New Zealand Industries
1921 – London, United Kingdom – International Exhibition of Rubber and Other Tropical Products (1921)
1922 – Marseille, France – Exposition nationale coloniale (1922)
1922 – Tokyo, Japan – Peace Exhibition (1922)
1922 – Christchurch, New Zealand – Exhibition of New Zealand Industries
1922–1923 – Rio de Janeiro, Brazil – Exposição do Centenario do Brasil (1922)
1923 – Auckland, New Zealand – Dominion Industrial Exhibition
1923 – Los Angeles, United States – American Historical Review and Motion Picture Exposition (1923)
1923 – Calcutta, India – Calcutta Exhibition (1923) preparatory to British Empire Exhibition
1923 – Moscow, Soviet Union – All-Russian Agricultural and Domestic Industries Exhibition
1923 – Gothenburg, Sweden – Gothenburg Exhibition (1923) (Jubileumsutställningens i Göteborg) (Liseberg)
1923–1924 – Hokitika, New Zealand – British and Intercolonial Exhibition
1924 – Wembley, London, United Kingdom – British Empire Exhibition
1924 – New York City, United States – French Exposition (1924)
1924–1925 Buenos Aires, Argentina – Industrial Exposition
1925 – Adelaide, Australia – All-Australian Exhibition
1925 – Wellington, New Zealand – Dominion Industrial Exhibition
1925 – San Francisco, California, United States – California's Diamond Jubilee (1925)
1925 – Paris, France – International Exhibition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts
1925–1926 – Dunedin, New Zealand – New Zealand and South Seas International Exhibition
1926 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States – Sesquicentennial Exposition
1926 – Berlin, Germany – Internationale Polizeiausstellung (1926)
1927 – Lyon, France – Foire internationale (1925)
1927 – Stuttgart, Germany – Werkbund Exhibition
1928 – Cologne, Germany – International Press Exhibition
1928 – Long Beach, United States – Pacific Southwest Exposition (1928)
1929 – Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom – North East Coast Exhibition
1929 – Hangzhou, China – Westlake Exposition
1929–1930 – Seville, Spain – Ibero-American Exposition of 1929
1929–1930 – Barcelona, Spain, – 1929 Barcelona International Exposition
1930s
1930 – Adelaide, Australia – All-Australian Exhibition
1930 – Antwerp, Belgium – Exposition internationale coloniale, maritime et d'art flamand
1930 – Liège, Belgium – Exposition internationale de la grande industrie, sciences et applications, art wallon ancien
1930 – Oran, Algeria – Oran Exposition
1930 – Dresden, Germany – International Hygiene Exposition
1930 – Stockholm, Sweden – Stockholm Exhibition (1930) (Utställningen av konstindustri, konsthandverk och hemslöjd)
1930 – Trondheim, Norway – Trøndelag Exhibition
1931 – Paris, France – Paris Colonial Exposition
1931 – Berlin, Germany – International Building Exposition
1932 – Tel Aviv, Palestine – Levant Fair
1933 – Tokyo, Japan – Women's and Children International Exhibition
1933–1934 – Buenos Aires, Argentina – Industrial Exposition
1933–1934 – Chicago, Illinois, United States – Century of Progress International Exposition
1934 – Melbourne, Australia – Centenary All Australian Exhibition
1934 – Porto, Portugal – Portuguese colonial exhibition
1934 – Tel Aviv, Palestine – Levant Fair
1935 – Yokohama, Japan – Grand Yokohama Exposition
1935 – Moscow, Soviet Union – All-Union Agricultural Exhibition (VSKhV)
1935 – Brussels, Belgium – Brussels International Exposition (1935)
1935 – Porto Alegre, Brazil – Farroupilha Revolution centennial fair
1935 – Taipei. Taiwan – The Taiwan Exposition: In Commemoration of the First Forty Years of Colonial Rule
1935–1936 – San Diego, California United States – California Pacific International Exposition
1936 – Adelaide, Australia – Adelaide Centennial Exhibition
1936 – Stockholm, Sweden ILIS 1936
1936 – Tel Aviv, Palestine – Levant Fair
1936 – Cleveland, United States – Great Lakes Exposition
1936 – Dallas, Texas, United States – Texas Centennial Exposition
1936–1937 – Johannesburg, South Africa – Empire Exhibition, South Africa
1937 – Cleveland, Ohio, United States – Great Lakes Exposition
1937 – Dallas, United States – Greater Texas & Pan-American Exposition
1937 – Berlin, Germany – International Hunting Exposition
1937 – Düsseldorf, Germany – Reichsausstellung Schaffendes Volk
1937 – Miami, United States – Pan American Fair (1937)
1937 – Paris, France – Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne (1937)
1937 – Nagoya, Japan – Nagoya Pan-Pacific Peace Exposition
1938 – Berlin, Germany – International Handiworks Exposition
1938 – Glasgow, United Kingdom – Empire Exhibition, Scotland 1938
1938 – Helsinki, Finland Second International Aeronautic Exhibition
1939 – Wellington, New Zealand – New Zealand Centennial Exhibition
1939 – Liège, Belgium – Exposition internationale de l'eau (1939)
1939 – Zürich, Switzerland – Schweizerische Landesausstellung
1939 – Moscow, Soviet Union – All-Union Agricultural Exhibition
1939–1940 – New York City, United States – 1939 New York World's Fair (exhibits included The World of Tomorrow, Futurama, Trylon and Perisphere)
1939–1940 – San Francisco, California, United States – Golden Gate International Exposition
1940s
1940 – Lisbon, Portugal – Portuguese World Exhibition
1940 – Chicago, Illinois, United States – American Negro Exposition
1940 – Los Angeles, California, United States – Pacific Mercado (never held)
1940 – Naples, Italy – Mostra Triennale delle Terre Italiane d’Oltremare (Triennial Exhibition of Overseas Italian Territories)
1940 – Tokyo, Japan – Grand International Exposition of Japan (1940) (never held)
1942 – Los Angeles, California, United States – Cabrillo Fair (1942) (never held)
1942 – Rome, Italy – Esposizione universale (1942) (E42) (never held)
1943 – Stockholm, Sweden – Norwegian Exhibition
1947 – Paris, France – International Exhibition on Urbanism and Housing
1948 – Brussels, Belgium – Foire coloniale (1948)
1949 – Stockholm, Sweden – Universal Sport Exhibition
1949 – Lyon, France – International Exhibition on Urbanism and Housing
1949–1950 – Port-au-Prince, Haiti – Exposition internationale du bicentenaire de Port-au-Prince
1950s
1951 – Lille, France – The International Textile Exhibition
1951 – London, United Kingdom – Festival of Britain – Skylon
1952 – Colombo, Ceylon – Colombo Exhibition
1953 – St Louis, Missouri, United States – intended to commemorate the Louisiana Purchase's sesquicentennial, but never held
1953 – Manila, Philippines – the Philippines International Fair of 1953, 1 February – 30 April 1953, to show off the recovery of the Philippines from WW2 and as the first democracy in the Far East
1953 – Jerusalem, Israel – International Exhibition and Fair Jerusalem Israel Conquest of the desert
1953 – Rome, Italy – Agricultural Exposition of Rome EA 53 Rome
1954 – Naples, Italy – Oltremare Exhibition – Campi Flegrei
1954 – Bogota, Colombia – First International Industry and Commerce Fair of Bogota
1954–1955 – São Paulo, Brazil – Fourth Centenary Exhibition
1955 – Turin, Italy – International Expo of Sport Turin 1955
1955 – Helsingborg, Sweden Helsingborg Exhibition 1955
1955 – Ciudad Trujillo (Santo Domingo), Dominican Republic – Feria de la Paz y Confraternidad del Mundo Libre
1956 – Beit Dagan, Israel – Exhibition of citriculture
1957 – Berlin International Building Exposition
1958 – Brussels, Belgium – Expo '58 (Exposition Universelle et Internationale de Bruxelles) – Atomium
1959 – New Delhi, India – World Agricultural Fair
1959 – Moscow, Soviet Union – VDNKh
1960s
1960 – cancelled (planned site: Caracas, Venezuela)
1961 – Turin, Italy – Exposition International du Travail Expo 61
1962 – Seattle, United States – Century 21 Exposition – Space Needle
1964 – Lausanne, Switzerland – Expo 64 – Schweizerische Landesausstellung
1964–1965 – New York City, United States – 1964/1965 New York World's Fair (note: not sanctioned by the Bureau International des Expositions) – Unisphere
1965 – Munich, Germany – International Exhibition of Transport and Communication
1967 – Montreal, Quebec, Canada – Expo 67, (Universal and International Exhibition of 1967)
1968 – San Antonio, Texas, United States – HemisFair '68 – Tower of the Americas
1970s
1970 – Osaka, Japan – Expo '70 (Japan World Exposition)
1971 – Budapest, Hungary – Expo 71 (Exhibition World of Hunting)
1974 – Spokane, Washington, United States – Expo '74 (International Exposition on the Environment) – Riverfront Park
1975 – Okinawa, Japan – Expo '75 (International Ocean Exposition)
1980s
1981 – Plovdiv, Bulgaria – Expo 81
1982 – Knoxville, Tennessee, United States – 1982 World's Fair (International Energy Exposition) – Sunsphere
1984 – New Orleans, Louisiana, United States – 1984 Louisiana World Exposition [a.k.a., 1984 World's Fair] (Theme: "Fresh Water As A Source of Life")
1984 – Liverpool, United Kingdom International Garden Festival Liverpool'84
1985 – Plovdiv, Bulgaria – Expo 85
1985 – Tsukuba, Japan – Expo 85
1986 – Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada – Expo 86 (1986 World Exposition)
to date, the last World's Fair to be held in North America
1988 – Brisbane, Australia – Expo '88 (World Expo '88) – Skyneedle
1989 – Nagoya, Japan – World Design Exhibition 1989
1990s
1991 – Plovdiv, Bulgaria – Second World Exhibition of inventions of the young
1992 – three expositions (1 was cancelled) celebrating 500 years since Christopher Columbus reached the Americas
Seville, Spain – Seville Expo '92 Universal Exposition, port where Columbus started his voyage
Genoa, Italy – Genoa Expo '92 Specialized Exposition, city where Columbus was born
Columbus, Ohio, United States - AmeriFlora '92 Horticultural Exposition, city named in honor of Columbus
Chicago, Illinois, United States (Cancelled) – meant to generically represent the Americas-side of Columbus' voyage
1993 – Daejeon (Taejon), South Korea – Expo '93
1995 – Vienna, Austria which was proposed to be a joint exhibition with Budapest. This was never held
1996 – cancelled (planned site: Budapest, Hungary)
1998 – Lisbon, Portugal – Expo '98
1999 – Kunming, China – World Horticultural Exposition
2000s
2000 – Hanover, Germany – Expo 2000
2000 – Greenwich, London, United Kingdom – Millennium Dome
2002 – cancelled (planned site: Metro Manila, Philippines)
2002 – cancelled (planned site: Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia)
2002 – Biel, Murten, Neuchâtel and Yverdon-les-Bains in Switzerland – Expo.02
2004 – cancelled (planned site: Seine-Saint-Denis, France)
2004 – Barcelona, Spain – Universal Forum of World Cultures
2005 – Aichi, Japan – Expo 2005
2008 – Zaragoza, Spain – Expo 2008
2010s
2010 – Shanghai, China – Expo 2010
2012 – Yeosu, South Korea – Expo 2012
2015 – Milan, Italy – Expo 2015
2017 – Astana, Kazakhstan – Expo 2017
2020s
2021–2022 – Dubai, United Arab Emirates — Expo 2020
2023 – Buenos Aires, Argentina — Expo 2023 – Cancelled

Mystery The World's Fairs 00 This Evidence Hidden History Chronological All World’s Fair's - https://rumble.com/v49zfro-mystery-the-worlds-fairs-this-evidence-hidden-history-chronological-all-wor.html

Mystery The World's Fairs​ 01 London 1851 Crystal Palace Works Industry All Nations - https://rumble.com/v49xr6f-mystery-the-worlds-fairs-london-1851-crystal-palace-works-industry-all-nati.html

Mystery The World's Fairs​ 02 Paris 1855 World's Fair L'Exposition Universelle de Paris # 1 - https://rumble.com/v49wmff-mystery-the-worlds-fairs-paris-1855-worlds-fair-lexposition-universelle-de-.html

Mystery The World's Fairs 03​ Paris 1867 World's Fair L'Exposition Universelle de Paris # 2 - https://rumble.com/v49vttt-mystery-the-worlds-fairs-paris-1867-worlds-fair-lexposition-universelle-de-.html

Mystery The World's Fairs 04​ Philadelphia 1876 Fair Centennial International Exposition - https://rumble.com/v49us5z-mystery-the-worlds-fairs-philadelphia-1876-fair-centennial-international-ex.html

Mystery The World's Fairs​ 05 Paris 1878 World's Fair L'Exposition Universelle de Paris # 3 - https://rumble.com/v49soh6-mystery-the-worlds-fairs-paris-1878-worlds-fair-lexposition-universelle-de-.html

Mystery The World's Fairs 06 Paris 1889 World's Fair Exposition Universelle de Paris # 4 - https://rumble.com/v49pdu3-mystery-the-worlds-fairs-paris-1889-worlds-fair-exposition-universelle-de-p.html

Mystery The World's Fairs 07​ Chicago 1893 World's Fair World's Columbian Exposition - https://rumble.com/v49ryc5-mystery-the-worlds-fairs-chicago-1893-worlds-fair-worlds-columbian-expositi.html

Mystery The World's Fairs 08 Lyon 1894 Fair L'Exposition Internationale et Coloniale - https://rumble.com/v49qjd3-mystery-the-worlds-fairs-lyon-1894-fair-lexposition-internationale-et-colon.html

Mystery The World's Fairs 09​ Nashville Tennessee 1897 Centennial International Exposition - https://rumble.com/v49obhi-mystery-the-worlds-fairs-nashville-tennessee-1897-centennial-international-.html

Mystery The World's Fairs​ 10 Omaha 1898 Nebraska Trans-Mississippi Exposition Part 1 - https://rumble.com/v49kvne-mystery-the-worlds-fairs-omaha-1898-nebraska-trans-mississippi-exposition-p.html

Mystery The World's Fairs 11​ Omaha 1898 Nebraska Trans-Mississippi Exposition Part 2 - https://rumble.com/v49ls22-mystery-the-worlds-fairs-omaha-1898-nebraska-trans-mississippi-exposition-p.html

Mystery The World's Fairs​ 12 Buffalo 1901 New York World's Fair Pan American Exposition - https://rumble.com/v49dg39-mystery-the-worlds-fairs-buffalo-1901-new-york-worlds-fair-pan-american-exp.html

Mystery The World's Fairs 13 St. Louis 1904 World's Fair Louisiana Purchase Exposition - https://rumble.com/v49h2n9-mystery-the-worlds-fairs-st.-louis-1904-worlds-fair-louisiana-purchase-expo.html

Mystery The World's Fairs​ 14 Louisiana 1904 Purchase Exposition St. Louis World's Fair - https://rumble.com/v49bv7t-mystery-the-worlds-fairs-louisiana-1904-purchase-exposition-st.-louis-world.html

Mystery The World's Fairs 15​ Seattle 1909 World's Fair Alaska Yukon Pacific Exposition - https://rumble.com/v499353-mystery-the-worlds-fairs-seattle-1909-worlds-fair-alaska-yukon-pacific-expo.html

Mystery The World's Fairs 16​ San Francisco 1915 Panama-Pacific International Exposition - https://rumble.com/v49aa13-mystery-the-worlds-fairs-san-francisco-1915-panama-pacific-international-ex.html

Mystery The World's Fairs 17​ 1962 Seattle Chronological All International World’s Fair's - https://rumble.com/v49is0f-mystery-the-worlds-fairs-1962-seattle-chronological-all-international-world.html

Antiquitech Tartarian Empire Old World's Fairs 18 Before The World's Fair 1851 Thru 1974 - https://rumble.com/v4968hi-antiquitech-tartarian-empire-old-worlds-fairs-before-the-worlds-fair-1851-t.html

Chicago Old Museum Tell About 1,000 Year 19 Old World History Of 1893 World's Fair - https://rumble.com/v2cphwy-chicago-old-museum-tell-about-1000-year-old-world-history-of-1893-worlds-fa.html

Chilaga Where Chicago Is Now On Map 20 of America and 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition - https://rumble.com/v2cqmdc-chilaga-where-chicago-is-now-on-map-of-america-and-1893-worlds-columbian-ex.html

Antiquitech Tartarian Empire Greatest Story 21 Ever Un-told Rewriting Recorded History - https://rumble.com/v36porm-antiquitech-tartarian-empire-greatest-story-ever-un-told-rewriting-recorded.html

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