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List of revolutions and rebellions

 
Wikipedia: List of revolutions and rebellions
The storming of the Bastille, 14 July 1789, during the French Revolution

This is a list of revolutions and rebellions. (For a list of coups d'état and coup attempts, see List of coups d'état and coup attempts).

Contents

BC

1–999 AD

1000–1499

The end of the unsuccessful Peasants' Revolt in England 1381. Rebel leader Wat Tyler is killed while Richard II watches. A second image within the painting shows Richard addressing the crowd.

1500–1699

Bolotnikov's Battle with the Tsar's Army at Nizhniye Kotly Near Moscow by a Russian painter Ernest Lissner.
Episode of the Fronde at the Faubourg Saint-Antoine by the Walls of the Bastille

1700–1799

Surrender of Cornwallis at Yorktown in 1781, during the American Revolutionary War.
Hanging of suspected United Irishmen by Government troops during the Irish Rebellion of 1798.

1800–1849

Battle at "Snake Gully" 1802, during the Haitian Revolution against French rule.
Siege of Saragossa (1809): The French assault on the San Engracia monastery.
A scene from the failed French-Canadian rebellion against British rule in 1837.

1850–1899

Prague barricades during the European Revolutions of 1848.
Boxers fighting Eight-Nation Alliance

1900–1909

Public demonstration in the Sultanahmet district of Istanbul, during the Young Turk Revolution of 1908.

1910–1919

Leaders of the 1910 revolt after the First Battle of Juárez. Seen are José María Pino Suárez, Venustiano Carranza, Francisco I. Madero (and his father), Pascual Orozco, Pancho Villa, Gustavo Madero, Raul Madero, Abraham Gonzalez, and Giuseppe Garibaldi Jr.
1917 - Execution at Verdun sometime in 1916
Vladimir Lenin leader of the Bolsheviks

1920–1929

1930–1939

Soldiers assembled in front of the Throne Hall, Siam, 24 June 1932

1940–1949

Patrol of Lieut. Stanisław Jankowski ("Agaton") from Batalion Pięść, 1 August 1944: "W-hour" (17:00)
The PLA enters Beijing in the Pingjin Campaign and control the later capital of PRC

1950–1959

Barricades in Algiers. "Long live Massu" (Vive Massu) is written on the banner. (January 1960)
Raul Castro (left), with his arm around second-in-command, Ernesto "Che" Guevara, in their Sierra de Cristal Mountain stronghold in Oriente Province Cuba, 1958.

1960–1969

Prague, 1968
  • 1961–1991: The Eritrean War of Independence led by Isaias Afewerki against Ethiopia.
  • 1961–1975: Angolan Marxists and other radicals grouped in the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA) begin guerrilla attacks on Portuguese infrastructure. With extensive military assistance from Cuba, the MPLA is able to outmaneuver two rival organizations and establish control of Luanda in time for independence on November 11, 1975. Civil war between the MPLA government and the anti-communist UNITA continued on-and-off until 2002, when UNITA leader Jonas Savimbi was killed.
  • 1962–1974: The leftist African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (PAIGC) wages a revolutionary war of independence in Portuguese Guinea. In 1973, the independent Republic of Guinea-Bissau is proclaimed, and the next year the republic's independence is recognized by the reformist military junta in Lisbon.
  • 1962: The military coup of 1962 in Burma, led by General Ne Win, who became the country's strongman.
  • 1962: A revolution in northern Yemen overthrew the imam and established the Yemen Arab Republic.
  • 1963–1967: The Aden Emergency: nationalists in British-ruled Aden, with an eye on recent events in North Yemen and in Palestine, declared war on the British under the umbrella of the National Liberation Front (NLF). The UK handed over control to an independent South Yemen in November 1967. In 1969, the moderate president Qahtan Muhammad al-Shaabi was edged out in favor of more radical socialists, who convoked a constituent assembly and began to develop the state along Marxist-Leninist lines. The result was the only Communist state in the Arab world, and the first in a Muslim country.
  • 1964: Following an American school's provocative decision to raise only the flag of the United States, Panamanian students marched into the Panama Canal Zone with the flag of Panama. After the latter flag was torn, thousands more become involved, starting huge riots that lasted three days. About 20 people were killed and hundreds more injured.
  • 1964: The Zanzibar Revolution overthrew the 157-year-old Arab monarchy, declared the People's Republic of Zanzibar, and began the process of unification with Julius Nyerere's Tanganyika.
  • 1964–1979: The Rhodesian Bush War, also known as the Second Chimurenga or the Liberation Struggle, was a guerrilla war which lasted from July 1964 to 1979 and led to universal suffrage, the end of white-rule in Zimbabwe Rhodesia, and the creation of the Republic of Zimbabwe.
  • 1964: The October Revolution in Sudan, driven by a general strike and rioting, forced President Ibrahim Abboud to transfer executive power to a transitional civilian government, and eventually to resign.
  • 1964–1975: The Mozambican Liberation Front (FRELIMO), formed in 1962, commenced a guerrilla war against Portuguese colonialism. Independence was granted on June 25, 1975; however, the Mozambican Civil War complicated the political situation and frustrated FRELIMO's attempts at radical change. The war continued into the early 1990s after the government dropped Marxism as the state ideology.
  • 1964–present: The Colombian Armed Conflict.
  • 1965: The March Intifada in Bahrain: a Leftist uprising demanding an end to the British presence in Bahrain.
  • 1966: Kwame Nkrumah is removed from power in Ghana by coup d'état.
  • 1966–1993: A guerrilla warfare was conducted against the repressive government of François Tombalbaye from the Sudan-based group FROLINAT. After the killing of field commander Ibrahim Abatcha in 1968, the movement jettisoned its socialist rhetoric and split into irreconcilable factions that often fought among themselves. Tombalbaye was brought down and executed in a 1975 military coup, and in 1979 the FROLINAT factions established the Transitional Government of National Unity (GUNT). This experiment lasted until 1982, when a FROLINAT splinter, led by Hissène Habré, took control of N'Djamena. Supporters of marginalized GUNT president Goukouni Oueddei held out for a few years at Bardaï, but the group eventually dissolved; but a new formation, the MPS, continued the civil war and brought to power in 1990 Idriss Déby.
  • 1966–1998: The Ulster Volunteer Force was recreated by militant Protestant British loyalists in Northern Ireland to wage war against the Irish Republican Army and the Roman Catholic community at large.
  • 1967–1968 Iraqi communists launched an insurgency in southern Iraq.[13]
  • 1967–1970: Biafra: The former eastern Nigeria unsuccessfully fought for a breakaway republic of Biafra, after the mainly Ibo people of the region suffered pogroms in northern Nigeria the previous year.
  • 1967: The Naxalite Movement begins in India, led by the AICCCR.
  • 1967: Anguillans resentful of Kittitian domination of the island expelled the Kittitian police and declared independence from the British colony of Saint Christopher-Nevis-Anguilla. British forces retook the island in 1969 and made Anguilla a separate dependency in 1980. There was no bloodshed in the entire episode.
  • 1968: The revolution in the Republic of Congo.
  • 1968: Student protests and riots in Egypt in the wake of the Six-Day War lead to the ratification of the March 30 Program to deepen democratic processes.
  • 1968: The May 1968 revolt: students' and workers' revolt against the government of Charles de Gaulle in France.
  • 1968: A coup by Juan Velasco Alvarado in Peru, followed by radical social and economic reforms.
  • 1968: A failed attempt by leader Alexander Dubček to liberalise Czechoslovakia in defiance of the Soviet-supported communist state culminates in the Prague Spring.
  • 1969–1998: The Troubles: the Provisional Irish Republican Army and other Republican Paramilitaries waged an armed campaign against British Security forces and Loyalist Paramilitaries in an attempt to bring about a United Ireland.
  • 1969: A mass movement of workers, students, and peasants in Pakistan forced the resignation of President Mohammad Ayub Khan.
  • 1969: The overthrow of the pro-Western monarchy by Arab nationalist military officers in Libya.
  • 1969: Somalia's multiparty system supplanted by a military socialist government under Siad Barre.

1970–1979

Khomeini returns to Iran after 14 years exile on February 1, 1979

1980–1989

1990–1999

Russian Mil Mi-8 helicopter downed by Chechens near Grozny, December 1994

2000–present

Cultural, intellectual, philosophical and technological revolutions

A Watt steam engine in Madrid. The development of the steam engine propelled the Industrial Revolution in Britain and the world. The steam engine was created to pump water from coal mines, enabling them to be deepened beyond groundwater levels.

The term revolution is also used to denote trends which have resulted in great social changes outside the political sphere, such as changes in mores, culture, philosophy or technology. Many have been global, while others have been limited to single countries. Such revolutions include, in alphabetical order:

References

See also


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