One side was known as the North or the Federal Union or the Yankees.
The other was known as the South or the Confederate States or the Rebs and consisted of the states that had seceded from the union of the United States.
You can choose between the Yanks and the Rebs, the North and the South or the USA and the CSA.
North, or Union and the South, or Confederates, were the two sides who fought in the Civil War.
If I'm not mistaken its not well trained.
The North and the South.
men were both black and white.
The two sides of the Irish Civil War were the "Republicans" and the "Free Staters".
The north and the south fought against each other
About 250,000 Confederates fought in the Civil War
The civil war was the North and south or the Union and Confederates
The battle of Perryville, fought October 8, 1862 was the bloodiest battle fought in Kentucky during the US Civil War. There were over 7000 men killed, wounded or missing from both sides. It was fought during the Confederate Overland Campaign of 1862.
parliament and royalists
Well first of all it was fought between the Union and Confederacy which were the two sides of the Civil War, and it was fought during the time period of the Civil War.
parliament and royalists
Union fought to free slaves, Confederate fought to stay slave states.
The royalist who fought for King Charles II while the marbleheads or parliamentarians fought for the English Parliament.
the royalsists and the parlementrists this wont be spelt right sorry =] Abz2011 <3
They fought in it on both sides. They were one reason why it was fought...
The Union (North) (Anti-Slavery) and the Confederates (South)(Pro-Slavery).
The two sides of the Irish Civil War were the "Republicans" and the "Free Staters".
he fought for both sides and he was in the confederate states of America
That would depend upon your parameters, two sides from the same country fought each other - that means a civil war therefore it must have been a sucess.
Kentucky was a border state. Individuals from Kentucky fought on both sides of the Civil War.