A: A; Adams, John; Adams, Samuel; Afghan Revolution (1978–1995); Albanian Anticommunist Revolution (1990–1992); Algerian Islamic Revolt (1992–); Algerian Revolution (1954–1962); American (U.S.) Revolution (1776–1789); Anabaptism; Anarchism; Angolan Revolution (1974–1996); Anthony, Susan B.; Arab “Great Revolt” (1916–1918); Armed Forces; Art and Representation; Atatürk, Kemal; B: B; Babi Revolts (1844–1852); Baltic Revolutions of 1991; Bangladeshi War of Independence (1971); Belgian Revolutions (1789–1830); Benin Revolutions (1963–1996); Biko, Stephen; Bohemian Revolt (1618–1648); Bolívar, Simón; Bolivian National Revolution (1952); Bourgeoisie; British Civil Wars and Revolution (1638–1660); British “Glorious Revolution” (1688–1689); British Jacobite Rebellions (1715–1745); British Reform and Emancipation Movement (1820–1833); Bulgarian Anticommunist Revolution (1989–1997); Buonarroti, Filippo Michele; Bureaucracy; Burke, Edmund; Burmese Democratization Movement (1988–); Burmese Independence Movement (1930S-1948); Burundi Civil Wars (1993–); C: C; Cabral, Amílcar; Cambodian Khmer Rouge Revolution (1967–1979); Capitalism; Castro, Fidel; Chiang Kai-Shek; Chilean Socialist Movement and Counterrevolution (1970–1978); Chinese Boxer Uprising (1898–1900); Chinese Communist Revolution (1921–1949); Chinese Cultural Revolution (1966–1969); Chinese Late Ming Revolts (1620–1644); Chinese May Fourth Movement (1919); Chinese May Thirtieth Movement (1925); Chinese Muslim Rebellions (1856–1878); Chinese Nationalist Revolution (1919–1927); Chinese Republican Revolution (1911); Chinese Sectarian and Secret Society Revolts (1644–); Chinese Taiping Rebellion (1851–1864); Chinese Tiananmen Uprising (1989); Chinese Triad Society Rebellions (18TH–20TH Centuries); Chinese White Lotus Rebellions (18th–20th Centuries); Civil Wars; Class; Colombia's “La Violencia” (1948–1964); Colonialism and Anticolonialism; Communism; Congolese/Zairian Upheavals (1960–); Constitutions; Costa Rican Revolution (1948); Counterrevolution; Coup D'État; Cromwell, Oliver; Cuban Revolution (1956–1970); Cycles, Waves, and Diffusion; Czechoslovak “Prague Spring” (1968); Czechoslovak “Velvet Revolution” and “Divorce” (1989–1993); D: D; Democracy; Deng Xiaoping; Dictatorship; Dutch Revolutions (1780–1800); E: E; East European Revolutions of 1989; East German Revolution and Unification (1989–1990); East Timorese Independence Movement (1975–); Economic Development; Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood Movement (1928–); Egyptian Revolts (1881–1919); Egyptian Revolution (1952); Elites; English Rett's Rebellion (1549); Eritrean Revolution (1962–1991); Ethiopian Revolution (1974–1991); Ethnic Conflict; European Revolutions of 1820; European Revolutions of 1830; European Revolutions of 1848; F: F; Fanon, Frantz Omar; Films and Video Documentaries; Franklin, Benjamin; French Frondes (1648–1653); French Peasant Revolts (1594–1648); French Revolution (1789–1815); French Student Revolt (1968); French Wars of Religion (1562–1598); G: G; Gandhi, Mahatma; Garibaldi, Giuseppe; Gender; German Nazi Revolution (1933–1945); German Peasant War (1524–1526); German Revolution (1918); Ghanaian Independence Movement (1946–1957); Gorbachev, Mikhail; Gramsci, Antonio; Greekwar of Liberation (1821–1832); Grenada “New Jewel” Revolution (1979–1983); Guatemalan Revolution (1944–1954); Guerrilla Warfare; Guevara, Ernesto “Che”; Guinea-Bissau Independence Revolt (1962–1974); Guinean Independence Movement (1958); H: H; Haitian Democratic Revolution (1986–1996); Haitian Revolution of Independence (1791–1804); Havel, Václav; Henry, Patrick; Hitler, Adolf; Ho Chi Minh; Hong Xiuquan; Hungarian Anticommunist Revolution (1989); Hungarian Revolutions (1918–1919); Hungarian Revolution (1956); I: I; Ideology; Indian “Great Mutiny” (1857–1859); Indian Independence Movement (1885–1947); Indian Regional Revolts (1947–); Indonesian National Revolution (1945–1950); Indonesian Upheaval (1965–1966); Inequality; Injustice; Intellectuals; Iranian Constitutional Revolution (1906); Iranian Islamic Revolution (1979); Iraqi Revolution (1958); Irish Revolt in Northern Ireland (1969–); Irish Revolts (1790S-1900); Irish Revolution (1916–1923); Islamic Anticolonial Revolts of the 19th Century; Islamic Fundamentalism; Islamic Precolonial Revolts of the 18th and 19th Centuries; Israeli Independence Revolt (1946–1948); Italian City-State Revolutions of the Renaissance (1494–1534); Italian Fascist Revolution (1919–1945); Italian Risorgimento (1789–1870); J: J; Japanese meiji restoration (1868); Japanese Tokugawa Shogun Ascendancy (1598–1615); Jefferson, Thomas; Jinnah, Mohammad Ali; Juarez, Benito; K: K; Kenyan Mau Mau Movement (1952–1960); Kenyatta, Jomo; Khomeini, Ayatollah Ruhollah; Kim Il Sung; King, Martin Luther, Jr.; Korean Civil War (1950–1953); Korean Democracy Movement (1960–1998); Korean Rebellions of 1812 and 1862; Korean Tonghak Rebellion (1894); Kurdish Revolts (1958–); L: L; Lafayette, Gilbert Du Motier De; Latin American and Caribbean Slave Revolts (1521–1888); Latin American Popular and Guerrilla Revolts (Independence to 1959); Latin American Popular and Guerrilla Revolts (1960–1996); Latin American Revolts Under Colonial Rule (1571–1898); Latin American Revolutions for Independence (1808–1898); Leadership; Lechín Oquendo, Juan; Lenin, Vladimir Ilyich; Liberalism; Liberation Theology; Libyan Revolution (1969); Literature; Locke, John; L'ouverture, François-Dominique Toussaint; Lumumba, Patrice; Luther, Martin; Luxemburg, Rosa; M: M; Madagascar (Malagasy) War of Independence(1947); Madison, James; Malayan Communist Insurgency (1948–1960); Mandela, Nelson Rolihlahla; Mao Zedong; Marat, Jean-Paul; Martí, José; Marx, Karl, and Friedrich Engels; Media and Communications; Menchú Tum, Rigoberta; Mexican Revolution (1910–1940); Millenarianism; Mosaddeq, Mohammad; Mozambican Revolution (1974–1994); Mugabe, Robert Gabriel; Music; Mussolini, Benito; N: N; Nasser, Gamal Abdel; Nationalism; Nehru, Jawaharlal; Netherlands Revolt (1566–1609); Nicaraguan Revolution (1979); Nigerian Civil War (1967–1970); Nkrumah, Kwame; Nyerere, Julius Kambarage; O: O; Omani Rebellions (1955–1975); Orwell, George; Ottoman Jelali and Janissary Revolts (1566–1826); Ottoman Revolts in the Near and Middle East (1803–1922); P: P; Paine, Thomas; Pakistani Independence Movement (1940–1947); Palestinian Anticolonial Revolt (1936–1939); Palestinian “Intifada” Revolt (1987–1996); Paris Commune (1871); Parties; Peasants; Peruvian “Revolution from above” (1968–1975); Peruvian “Shining Path” Revolt (1980-); Philippine Huk and New People's Army Rebellions; Philippine Independence Wars (1872–1910); Philippine “People Power” Revolution (1986); Polish Protest Movements and Solidarity Revolution (1956–1991); Population; Portuguese Revolution (1974); Propaganda; R: R; Race; Radicalism; Rationality; Rebellion and Revolt; Reform; Religion; Republics; Rights; Robespierre, Maximilien; Romanian Revolution (1989); Rousseau, Jean-Jacques; Russian Decembrist Revolt (1825); Russian Revolution of 1905; Russian Revolution of 1917; Russian-Ukrainian Cossack and Peasant Revolts (1606–1775); Rwandan Civil Wars (1959–1994); S: S; San Martín, José Francisco De; Sandino, Augusto CéSar; Saudi Arabian Wahhabi Movement (1744–); Scottish Revolution (1559–1568); Socialism; Sorel, Georges; South African Antiapartheid Revolts and Reform (1948–1994); Spanish Civil War (1936–1939); Spanish Comuneros Revolt (1520–1521); Spanish Conquest, Aztec and Inca Revolts in the Era of (1500–1571); Spanish Struggles Against Revolutionary Movements in Southern Europe (1640–1668); Spanish War of Independence (1808–1813); Sri Lankan (Tamil) Revolt and Civil War (1977–); Stalinjoseph; States; Student Protests and Youth Movements; Sudanese Civil War (1955–1972; 1982–); Sudanese Mahdiyya (1881–1898); Sukarno; Sunyat-Sen; Swedish Royal Revolution (1523); Symbolism, Ritualism, and Dress; Syrian Revolution (1963); T: T; Terrorism; Thai Revolution (1932); Tibetan Revolt (1959); Tito, Josip Broz; Tocqueville, Alexis De; Trotsky, Leon; Turkish Revolution (1908–1922); Tyranny; U: U; Ussr Collapse and Dissolution (1989–1991); Us. Civil Rights Movement (1954–1968); U.S. Civil War (1861–1865); U.S. Labor Revolts (1890–1932); U.S. Preindependence and Pre-Civil War Rebellions (1675–1850); U.S. Rural Post-Civil War Rebellions (1865–1940); U.S. Slave Revolts (1776–1865); V: V; Venezuelan Democratic Revolution (1945–1958); Vietnamese Revolution (1945–1975); Violence; W: W; Walesa, Lech; War; Washington, George; William of Orange (King William IlI of England); William the Silent; Woman's Rights Movement; Workers; Y: Y; Yemeni Revolutions (1962–1990); Yugoslav Communist Collapse and Dissolution (1987–1992); Yugoslav Partisans and Communist Revolution (1941–1948); Z: Z; Zanzibar Revolution (1964); Zapata, Emiliano; Zimbabwe Revolt and Reform (1966–1980)
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