Revolution
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A revolution is a drastic change that usually occurs relatively quickly. This may be a change in the social or political institutions over a relatively short period of time, or a major change in its culture or economy. Some revolutions are led by the majority of the populace of a nation, others by a small band of revolutionaries. Compare rebellion. A change in the status quo.
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Social and political revolutions
Political revolutions are often characterized by violence, and vast changes in power structures that can often result in further, institutionalised, violence, as in the Russian and French revolutions (with the "Purges" and "the Terror", respectively). A political revolution is the forcible replacement of one set of rulers with another (as happened in France and Russia), while a social revolution is the fundamental change in the social structure of a society, such as the Protestant Reformation or the Renaissance. However, blurring the line between these two categories, most political revolutions wish to carry out social revolutions, and they have basic philosophical or social underpinnings which drive them. The most common revolutions with such underpinnings in the modern world have been liberal revolutions and communist revolutions, with the occasional nationalist revolution. In contrast, a coup d'état often seeks to change nothing more than the current ruler.
Some political philosophers regard revolutions as the means of achieving their goals. Most anarchists advocate social revolution as the means of breaking down the structures of government and replacing them with non-hierarchal institutions.
Among Marxist communists, there is a split between those who supported the Soviet Union and other so-called 'communist states' and those who were/are critical of those states (some even rejecting them as non-communist, see state capitalism), for example trotskyists.
Social and political revolutions are often "institutionalised" when the ideas, slogans, and personalities of the revolution continue to play a prominent role in a country's political culture, long after the revolution's end. As mentioned, communist nations regularly institutionalise their revolutions to legitimise the actions of their governments. Some non-communist nations, like the United States, France or Mexico also have institutionalised revolutions, and continue to celebrate the memory of their revolutionary past through holidays, artwork, songs, and other venues.
Pre-modern revolutions
206 BCE | Fall of the Qin Dynasty in China. | |
66-70 AD | The Great Jewish Revolt | both against the Roman Empire. |
132-135 AD | Bar Kokhba's revolt | |
14th to 16th century AD | Popular revolt in late medieval Europe, a series of attempted revolutions against the nobility. |
Liberal revolutions
Known to Marxists as bourgeois revolutions. Some of these also known as Atlantic Revolutions.
1642-1653 | English Revolution | Commenced as a civil war between Parliament and King, culminating in the execution of Charles I and the establishment of a republican Protectorate. |
1688 | Glorious Revolution | The overthrow in England of King James II and establishment of a Whig-dominated Protestant constitutional monarchy. |
1774-1783 | American Revolution | Established independence of the thirteen North American colonies from Great Britain, creating the republic of the United States of America. A war of independence in that it created one nation from another, it was also a revolution in that it overthrew an existing societal and governmental order: the Colonial government in the Colonies. The American Revolution heavily influenced the French Revolution that followed it and lead to the creation of a Constitutional form of government (see U.S. Constitution) that has been emulated the world over. As such, the American Revolution has been the most important revolution in the history of the world and one of the most influential political events of all time. |
1789 | French Revolution | Regarded as one of the most influential of all socio-political revolutions, associated with the rise of the bourgeoisie and the downfall of the aristocracy. |
1798 | Irish Rebellion | Failed attempt to overthrow British rule in Ireland. |
1916-1923 | Irish Revolution | The period of nationalist rebellion, guerrilla warfare, political change and civil war which brought about the establishment of the Irish Free State. |
1804 | Haitian Revolution | Successful slave rebellion led by Toussaint Louverture. Established Haiti as the first free, black republic. |
1830 | July Revolution | The French Revolution of 1830 was a revolt by the middle class against Bourbon King Charles X which forced him out of office and replaced him with the Orleanist King Louis-Philippe (the "July Monarchy"). |
Belgian Revolution | The Belgian Revolution was a conflict in the United Kingdom of the Netherlands that began with a riot in Brussels in August 1830 and eventually led to the establishment of an independent, Catholic and neutral Belgium | |
1837-1838 | Rebellions of 1837 | Failed republican revolutions against British rule in Canada. |
1848 | Revolutions of 1848 | Wave of failed liberal and republican revolutions that swept Europe. |
1851 | Taiping Rebellion | Rebellion against the Qing Dynasty and Manchu domination. |
1857 | Indian rebellion | Failed rebellion against British imperialism, marking the end of Mughal rule in India. Also known as the 1857 War of Independence and, particularly in the West, the Sepoy Mutiny. |
1905 | Russian Revolution | Failed bourgeois-liberal revolution against Tsar Nicholas II in Russia. |
1908 | Young Turks | Forced the autocratic ruler Abdul Hamid II to restore parliament and constitution in the Ottoman Empire. |
1910 | Mexican Revolution | Overthrow of dictator Porfirio Díaz; seizure of power by Institutional Revolutionary Party. |
1911 | Xinhai Revolution | Overthrow of ruling Qing Dynasty and establishment of the Republic of China. |
1917 | February Revolution | Liberal revolution against Tsar Nicholas II in Russia. |
1918 | German Revolution | Overthrow of the Kaiser by a workers' revolution; establishment of the Weimar Republic. |
1936 | Febrerista Revolution | Oligarchic Liberal Party rule in Paraguay ended by Rafael Franco. |
1944 | Guatemalan Revolution | Overthrow of dictator Jorge Ubico by liberal military officers. |
1973 | Afghanistan | Mohammad Daud overthrows the monarchy and establishes a republic. |
Socialist and/or Communist revolutions
1871 | Paris Commune | |
1917 | Russian Revolution | The most famous and influential modern revolution, culminating in the Bolshevik seizure of power in Russia and the establishment of the Soviet Union. |
1919 | German Revolution | Failed revolution in Germany led by Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht. |
1919, 1949 | Hungarian Revolutions | |
1921 | Mongolia | |
1936 | Spanish Revolution | |
1948 | North Korea | |
1949 | Chinese Revolution | Victory of Communist-led peasant rebellion under Chairman Mao over the ruling Nationalist Party; establishment of the People's Republic of China. |
1954-1962 | Algerian Revolution | Revolutionary war of independence against French imperialism. |
1945-1975 | North Vietnam | |
1959 | Cuban Revolution | Revolution led by Fidel Castro against U.S.-backed dictator Fulgencio Batista; establishment by Castro of communist-style state. |
1964 | Zanzibar | [See http://home.globalfrontiers.com/Zanzibar/zanzibar_revolution.htm] |
1964, 1968 | Congo | |
1966-1976 | Cultural Revolution | Maoist-led sociological repression in the People's Republic of China. |
1967 | South Yemen | |
1968 | May 1968 revolt | Students' and workers' revolt against the government of Charles de Gaulle in France. |
1969 | Libya | Overthrow of the pro-Western monarchy by Arab nationalist military officers. |
Somalia | Multiparty system supplanted by a military socialist government under Siad Barre. | |
1972 | Benin | |
1974 | Ethiopia | |
Carnation Revolution | Popular Left-wing overthrow of right-wing dictatorship in Portugal | |
Guinea-Bissau | ||
1975 | Cambodia | |
South Vietnam | ||
Laos | Overthrow of the monarchy by guerrilla forces of the Pathet Lao. | |
Madagascar | ||
Cape Verde | ||
Mozambique | Culmination of the Mozambican War of Independence on June 25, 1975, followed by radical social and economic reform led by the Marxist FRELIMO. | |
Angola | Culmination of the Angolan War of Independence on November 11, 1975, followed by radical social and economic reform led by the Marxist MPLA. | |
1978 | Saur Revolution | President Mohammad Daud deposed and killed by the Khalq faction of the People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan. |
1979 | Grenada | Dictatorship of Eric Gairy overthrown by the New Jewel Movement. |
Nicaraguan Revolution | Popular overthrow of the Somoza dictatorship by progressive/Marxist peasant movement. | |
1983 | Upper Volta | Overthrow of the ruling Conseil de salut du peuple (CSP) by Marxist forces led by Thomas Sankara; the country is renamed Burkina Faso in 1984. |
1998 | Bolivarian Revolution | The election in Venezuela of socialist leader Hugo Chávez. |
Anarchist revolutions
In addition to the below, anarchists influenced many other revolutions, in particular the Mexican Revolution (1910), the Russian Revolution of 1917 and rebellions such as the May 1968 revolt.
1918-1921 | Ukrainian Revolution | |
1918-1922 | Third Russian Revolution | Failed anarchist revolution against both Bolshevism and the White movement. |
1936 | Spanish Revolution | Social upheaval that swept Spain in response to the anti-Republican insurgency of General Francisco Franco. |
Eastern European anti-Communist/anti-dictatorship revolutions
1956 | Hungarian Revolution | Failed workers' and peasants' revolution against the Soviet-supported communist state in Hungary. |
1968 | Prague Spring | Failed attempt by leader Alexander Dubček to liberalize Czechoslovakia in defiance of the Soviet-supported communist state. |
1988 | Singing Revolution | Bloodless overthrow of communist states in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. |
1989 | Romanian Revolution | Violent overthrow of communist state in Romania. |
Velvet Revolution | Bloodless overthrow of communist state in Czechoslovakia. | |
2000 | Bulldozer Revolution | Bloodless overthrow of Slobodan Milošević's régime in Yugoslavia. |
Color revolutions
After the precedent set by the Georgean Rose Revolution, later revolutions that challenged autoritarian regimes are referred to by a media convention as Color revolutions.
2003 | Rose Revolution in Georgia | |
2004 | Orange Revolution in Ukraine | |
Azerbaijan | Failed attempt at popular color-style revolution. | |
2005 | Cedar Revolution in Lebanon | |
Tulip Revolution (Yellow Revolution) in Kyrgyzstan |
Islamist revolutions
1979 | Iranian Revolution | Popular overthrow of U.S.-backed Shah, resulting in an Islamist cleric-led theocracy. |
1996 | Taliban | Islamist movement in Afghanistan. |
Cultural, intellectual and philosophical revolutions
- Renaissance
- Protestant Reformation
- Scientific revolution
- Sexual revolution
- Quiet Revolution
- Consciousness Revolution
Technological revolutions
These usually lead to transformations in society, culture and philosophy.
- Agricultural Revolution
- Digital Revolution
- Neolithic Revolution
- Price revolution
- Industrial Revolution
- Nintendo Revolution
- Second Industrial Revolution
See also
External links
- libcom.org libcom.org History section, containing histories of revolutionary movements throughout the world.
- United 4 Belarus Campaign, a British website drawing attention to the political crisis in Belarus, where a popular revolution is suspected after the 2006 presidential elections.ar:ثورة
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