Bayonets were used as well as guns in the Eureka Stockade.
If you were caught without a gold licence during the gold rush you usually had to pay a fine. The fine increased every time you were caught. However, other punishments included being arrested and even being chained to a tree. The police on the gold fields were lower class and usually ex-convicts so they were quite harsh on the miners. This contributed to the miners' detest of the authorities which ultimately led to the Eureka Stockade in 1854.
chucky uses whatever weapon he finds. some weapons in child's play 1 are knives and a hammer.
Traditionally, people do not shake hands in India. Instead, they bow to each other.
well... you should read the book The Odyssey by Homer
You can charge them with harrasment. Or if they come at you with a weapon, like skateboard, rocks, knive, fistpacks, or any other object that can do harm to you, you can charge them with asult with a deadly weapon.
The eureka stockade was the wooden barricade around a large area where the miners were planning to protect themselves and each other from any other licence hunts.
The oath by which the diggers of the Eureka Stockade swore was:"We swear by the Southern Cross to stand truly by each other and fight to defend our rights and liberties."
During the Eureka Stockade, it is believed that 34 diggers and 6 troopers were killed in the battle against each other. Actual figures of the diggers were unconfirmed.
We swear by the Southern Cross to stand truly by each other, and fight to defend our rights and liberties.
Only the goldfields on the outskirts of Ballarat were affected by the Eureka Stockade. No other towns were affected by the actual events, but all goldmining towns benefitted from the changes that occurred after the rebellion.
During the Eureka Stockade, it is believed that 34 diggers and 6 troopers were killed in the battle against each other. Actual figures of the diggers were unconfirmed.
The oath by which the diggers of the Eureka Stockade swore was:"We swear by the Southern Cross to stand truly by each other and fight to defend our rights and liberties."
Australian troopers were fighting against the gold miners in the Eureka Stockade. These miners were from a range of countries, including Australia, Ireland, Germany, America and a variety of other countries.
The miners in the Eureka Stockade were primarily campaigning against the unexpected, unfair licence checks conducted by the troopers, or "traps" on a regular basis. Their other grievance was the high costs of licences, which had to paid whether or not the miners found gold.
It gave electoral representation in the Victorian parliament to people other than landowners.
we swear by the southern cross to stand truly by each other and fight to defend our right and liberties!
The Eureka Stockade was not about finding gold. The Eureka Stockade was an event which occurred in Ballarat, Victoria, during the early years of the Australian goldrush. In the event, the gold miners rebelled against the miner's licence, setting up a stockade from which they planned to make their stand against further licence arrests or other unreasonable displays of authority. Early in the morning on Sunday, 3 December 1854, 276 police and military personnel and several civilians stormed the stockade. It's unknown which side fired first, but ultimately 22 diggers and 5 troopers died in the battle that followed.