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A rebellion is, in the most general sense, a refusal to accept authority. It may thus be seen as encompassing a range of behaviors from a mild flouting of social norms to a violent organized attempt to destroy established authority. It is often used to refer to armed resistance to an established government. Those who participate in rebellions are "rebels".
Throughout history many different groups that used violent methods were called rebels. In the U.S, the term was used for the Continentals by the British in the Revolutionary War and the Confederacy by the Union in the Civil War. It also includes members of paramilitary forces who take up arms against an established government.
For example, the Boxer rebellion was an uprising against Western commercial and political influence in China during the final years of the 19th century, and the Jacobite Risings which attempted to restore the deposed Stuart kings to the thrones of England and Scotland were called the Jacobite Rebellions by the government.
A violent rebellion is sometimes referred to as an insurgency while a larger one may escalate into a civil war. There are a number of terms that fall under the umbrella of "rebel", though they range from those with positive connotations to those that are considered pejorative. Examples, in rough order from complimentary to perjorative, are:
"Resistance" carried out by freedom fighters, often to an occupying invader
"Revolution" by revolutionaries, often meant to indicate a desired change in type in government
"Uprising"
"Insurrection" by insurrectionists
"Insurgency" by insurgents
"Revolt"
"Mutiny" by mutineers, normally of military or security forces to commanders
"Subversion" by subversives
"Terrorism" by terrorists, refers specifically to the method of avoiding pitched battle
The difference between rebel and terrorist is often subjective. While the term rebel can sometimes have positive connotations as an agent of change, "terrorist" implies destructive action and is always used pejoratively, often by an establishment opposed to rebellious activities.
Famous rebellions / uprisings in history
73-71 B.C: The Roman Slave rebellion
66-70 (A.D): Great Jewish Revolt
1378: Revolt of the Ciompi in Florence
1381: Peasants' Revolt in England
1519-1659: Jelali Revolts in Ottoman Empire
1524-26: Peasants' War in Germany
1637-1638: Shimabara Rebellion
1642-1649: The English civil wars, also known as the Great Rebellion
1676: Bacon's Rebellion
1689: Jacobite Rising
1715: the 'Fifteen Jacobite Rising
1745: the 'Forty-Five Jacobite Rising
1763-1766: Pontiac's Rebellion
1775-1783: American Revolutionary War
1786: Shays' Rebellion
1794: Whiskey Rebellion
1798: Irish Rebellion of 1798
1804-1807: First Serbian Uprising
1815: Second Serbian Uprising
1837: Rebellions of 1837 in Canada
1848: Fenian rebellion (also known as the Young Irelanders' Rebellion of 1848)
1851-1864: The Taiping rebellion
1853-1868: Nian Rebellion (捻軍起義)
1857-1858: Sepoy Rebellion
1899-1913: Moro Rebellion
1900: Boxer rebellion
1916: Easter Rebellion
1919-1921: Tambov rebellion
1921: Kronstadt rebellion
1932: Mäntsälä rebellion
1940-1945: French Resistance
1968: May 1968 revolt in France
1994-Present: Zapatista Rebellion
1992: Northern Alliance
Famous rebels
Bohdan Chmielnicki
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Che Guevara
Helgi Hóseasson
John O'Mahoney
Subcomandante Marcos
Francis Meagher
John Mitchel
William Smith O'Brien
Eric Raymond
Lucifer
Spartacus
Leon Trotsky
William Wordsworth
Jack Cade
Owen Glendower
See also
American Slave rebellions (Nat Turner's rebellion, Stono Rebellion, et cetera)
Polish uprisings
Rokosz, a legal rebellion in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth
The Open Source Movement has been called a "rebellion" against closed source software and intellectual capitalism.
Fictional rebellions
Maquis (Star Trek)
Rebel Alliance (Star Wars)
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