Explore
Subject: Social Movements X
Place: Eastern Europe X
Period: 1800-1899 X
-
Bakunin, Mikhail Alexandrovich (1814–1876)
Mikhail Bakunin is among the most significant anarchist activists and theorists of the nineteenth century. ...
From The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest
-
Bulgaria, independence movement, 1830–1835
Bulgarian nationalism emerged in the early nineteenth century as the Ottoman Empire was beset by pressures ...
From The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest
-
Victor Mikhailovich Chernov, co-founder and leader of the Russian Socialist Revolutionary (SR) Party ...
From The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest
-
Decembrists to the Rise of Russian Marxism
The Russian revolutionary tradition of the nineteenth century was always heavily influenced by western ...
From The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest
-
Hungary, women radicals, 1848–1849
It is difficult to exaggerate the importance of the 1848 Revolution for Hungary , which was at that ...
From The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest
-
Perovskaya, Sofya (1853–1881) and the Narodnaya Volya (“Will of the People”)
Sofya Perovskaya was a terrorist and organizer of the movement called Narodnaya Volya (Will of the ...
From The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest
-
A leader of Polish revolutionary activity against tsarist Russia in the late nineteenth and early twentieth ...
From The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest
-
Poland, Revolutions, 1846–1863
The failure of the November Uprising in Congress Poland (1830–1) was by no means the end of Polish ambitions ...
From The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest
-
Also known as the November Insurrection, or the Cadet Revolution, a conspiracy to depose an unpopular ...
From The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest
-
Romania, protests and revolts, 18th and 19th centuries
Romania's turbulent history of struggle and revolution dates back as far as the first century. The legacy ...
From The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest