This ad appeared in Beijing, China, in 2004.
When Coca-Cola first came to China in 1927, it was a big hit. But in 1949, when communist leader Mao Zedong took over, Coke, along with other imported goods from the West, was banned.
It didn't return until 1979, and by then many Chinese people had never tried it. In time, the drink caught on, and today China is Coca-Cola's third-largest market, after the US and Mexico.
This South Korean ad dates back to 1986.
Coca-Cola began selling in South Korea in 1970 under the Doosan Beverage company, part of the larger Doosan conglomerate.
This 1994 billboard in Vietnam reads, "It's so nice to see you again."
Once a US trade embargo lifted in 1994, Vietnamese citizens saw the return of the soda brand within the year, around three decades after it had been pulled from the market due to the Vietnam War.
A giant Coke poster adorns a building in Bangkok, Thailand, in 2013.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThis Coca-Cola delivery van shows an ad in Indonesia from 1998.
This billboard went up in advance of the 2018 FIFA World Cup in Kaliningrad, Russia.
In 1979, Coca-Cola arrived in what was then the Soviet Union, in advance of the 1980 Moscow Olympics. The first bottling plant opened soon after the fall of the USSR in 1994.
This billboard in Warsaw, Poland, which measured 26,000 square feet, drew criticism from locals when it was put up in 2000 because it turned an office building into ad space.
Despite being within the Soviet bloc, Poland got its first taste of Coke long before the Russians, in 1957. It gained popularity throughout the '60s, until its first plant was opened in 1972.
A Coca-Cola ad in the Monastiraki neighborhood of Athens, Greece, in 2011.
A construction fence in Berlin, Germany, featured a large interactive Coke ad in 2013.
Germany got its first taste of Coke in 1929, where it soon proved very popular.
However, during World War II, Coca-Cola was unable to ship its proprietary syrup to Nazi Germany, so German Coca-Cola employees came up with Fanta, which was made from leftover fruit peels. Its famous citrus flavor wasn't added until the 1950s.
While Germany was split into West and East in the aftermath of the war, East Germans could only smuggle in the soft drink, until it was officially for sale a year after Germany's reunification.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip Ad One of the famous trams in Lisbon, Portugal, displays a Coca-Cola ad in 2006.
A three-dimensional Coca-Cola ad above a newsstand in Buenos Aires, Argentina, 2010.
Argentina had its first Coca-Cola bottling plant in 1942.
A Coke billboard hangs behind a Palestinian militant, who shoots rounds in the air during a rally in Ramallah, a Palestinian city just north of Jerusalem, Israel, in 2006.
A Coca-Cola billboard from 1977 in Israel.
Coke asked to open shop in Israel in 1949, but for reasons that remain unknown, the new government blocked its entrance. By the 1960s, Americans who sympathized with Israel thought it was strange that Coke was sold throughout the Middle East but not Israel. After some lobbying (and a change of heart by the Israeli government), the soft drink was introduced there in 1966.
This 2012 billboard from Dubai, in the United Arab Emirates, features a decidedly Western activity: a barbecue in the park.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdTwo women in burqas sit below a Coke billboard in Kabul, Afghanistan, in 2006.
A Coca-Cola ad in a cafe in Aswan, Egypt, in 1980.