Results 201 to 210 of about 551 (232)
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HISTORIES IN STONE: STELAE COMMEMORATING THE SUPPRESSION OF THE MUSIN REBELLION AND CONTESTED FACTIONAL HISTORIES

International Journal of Asian Studies, 2014
The 1728 Musin Rebellion was a failed attempt by factional members to overthrow militarily King Yŏngjo's government. Between 1736 and 1837, six stelae, dedicated to loyal subjects who resisted the rebels, were erected in three different provinces.
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The Union Defence Force and the suppression of the Bondelswarts Rebellion, 1922

Small Wars & Insurgencies, 2022
Evert Kleynhans, Antonio Garcia
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United States Responses to the Soviet Suppression of Rebellions in the German Democratic Republic, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia

Diplomacy & Statecraft, 2011
Under Presidents Dwight Eisenhower and Lyndon Johnson, the United States refrained from intervening during the three major Cold War crises in the Soviet bloc in 1953, 1956, and 1968. The uprisings in the German Democratic Republic and Hungary came at a contentious stage of the Cold War. In 1968 East–West relations were again groping towards detente and,
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The endgame of treason: Suppressing rebellion and usurpation in the late roman empire AD 397-411

2014
This thesis examines how rebellion, usurpation and conspiracy to usurp imperial power (all crimes of high treason) were suppressed by the state during the Late Empire, with a particular focus on the years 397-411, during the reign of the western Emperor Honorius. The thesis identifies four themes common to the endgame of treason: 1. Sanctuary: Although
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A Study on the Rebellion of the Balhae Remnant Dae Yeonrim and the Suppression Process by the Liao Dynasty

The Bukak History Academy
This study examines the process by which the Liao dynasty suppressed the rebellion led by Dae Yeonrim, which occurred from the eighth lunar month of 1029 to the eighth lunar month of 1030. The rebellion of Dae Yeonrim has garnered renewed attention in the 21st century, largely because numerous inscriptions from the Liao period have been discovered that
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How to suppress a rebellion: England 1173–74

2019
In March 1173, Henry II’s crowned, eldest son Henry surreptitiously left his father at Chinon and went to Paris, to the court of his father-in-law, Louis VII. Between then and September 1174, at the end of which peace terms were agreed, Henry II’s numerous dominions, with few exceptions, were convulsed by rebellion to one degree or another.1 Internal ...
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How to suppress a rebellion: England 1173M-V74

2018
In March 1173, Henry II's crowned, eldest son Henry surreptitiously left his father at Chinon and went to Paris, to the court of his father-in-law, Louis VII. Between then and September 1174, at the end of which peace terms were agreed, Henry II's numerous dominions, with few exceptions, were convulsed by rebellion to one degree or another.1Internal ...
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Suppressing rebels, managing bureaucrats: state-building during the Taiping Rebellion, 1850-1864

2007
This study uses the historical case of the Taiping Rebellion (1850-64) to examine the process of state-building in an early modern empire. I focus on the interactions between volatile battles the Qing state launched against the Taipings and the changing social relationships among state actors embedded in preexisting rules and established organizational
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The Silver Guardian Demon of the Jungle Modern Buddhism in the Suppression of the Shan Rebellion in Thailand, 1900s-1920s

2018
วารสารประวัติศาสตร์ ธรรมศาสตร์, 5, 2, 221 ...
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