List of wars: 1900–1944
This is a list of wars that began between 1900 and 1944. Other wars can be found in the historical lists of wars and the list of wars extended by diplomatic irregularity. Major global conflicts of this period are World War I and World War II, while major continental conflicts include the Chinese Civil War in Asia, the Banana Wars in North America, the Italo-Turkish War in Africa, the Spanish Civil War in Europe, and the Chaco War in South America.
1900–1919
Start | Finish | Name of Conflict | Belligerents | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Victorious party (if applicable) | Defeated party (if applicable) | |||
1900 | 1900 | War of the Golden Stool | ![]() |
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1900 | 1905 | 1900–1905 phase of the Mat Salleh Rebellion | ![]() |
Rebels |
1900 | 1905 | Zande resistance[1] | ![]() |
Sultan Yam-bio's rebel forces |
1900 | 1902 | Muhammad Umar Khan's rebellion[2] | ![]()
|
Forces loyal to Muhammad Umar Khan |
1900 | 1900 | Bastaard uprising of 1900[3] | ![]() |
Bastaards from Grootfontein tribe |
1900 | 1900 | 1900 Kurdish cross-border raid from Persia[4] | Haydaran Kurds under Tahir Khan | ![]() |
1900 | 1900 | Battle of Başkale[5] | ![]() |
Shekifti rebels |
1900 | 1900 | 1900 Hamawand revolt[6] | ![]() |
Hamawand rebels
Supported by: Sheikhs of Sulaymaniyah and Qaradāgh |
1900 | 1900 | 1900 Sudan revolt[7] | ![]() |
Sudanese rebels |
1900 | 1900 | French conquest of Borno[7] | ![]() |
Borno |
1900 | 1907 | Unrest in Java[8] | ![]() |
Peasant rebels |
1900 | 1903 | 1900–1903 uprising in southwest Madagascar[9] | ![]() |
Rebels |
1900 | 1900 | Shoubak revolt of 1900 | ![]() |
Shoubakis |
1900 | 1900 | Russian invasion of Manchuria | ![]() |
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1900 | 1900 | Sharjah conquest of Ras Al Khaimah | Emirate of Sharjah | Ras Al Khaimah |
1900 | 1920 | Somaliland Campaign | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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1900 | 1901 | Kuwaiti–Rashidi war | ![]() |
![]() Arab tribes
|
1900 | 1901 | Mahsud Waziri blockade | ![]() |
Mahsud rebels |
1900 | 1900 | Huizhou Uprising | ![]() |
Revolutionary army |
1901 | 1901 | Risings among the Agar Dinka[1] | ![]() |
Agar Dinka rebels |
1901 | 1901 | Bastaard uprising of 1901[10] | ![]() |
Bastaards from Grootfontein tribe |
1901 | 1907 | Subjugation of Jambi[8] | ![]() |
Jambi |
1901 | 1901 | French conquest of the Dendi Kingdom[11] | ![]() |
Dendi Kingdom |
1901 | 1903 | Revolución Libertadora | ![]() |
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1901 | 1902 | Anglo-Aro War | ![]() |
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1901 | 1901 | Battle of Holy Apostles Monastery | Armenian fedayi | ![]() |
1901 | 1903 | 1901 Mapondera Rebellion | ![]() |
Forces loyal to Kadungure Mapondera |
1901 | 1936 | Holy Man's Rebellion | ![]() ![]() |
Phu Mi Bun Movement |
1902 | 1902 | Kala-i-Mor railway worker's revolt[12] | ![]() |
Rebel railway workers |
1902 | 1902 | 1902 Sudan revolt[7] | ![]() |
Sudanese rebels |
1902 | 1902 | Kurdish–Nestorian ethnic clashes (1902)[4] | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels
Nestorian rebels |
1902 | 1902 | Merauke uprising[8] | ![]() |
Marind rebels |
1902 | 1904 | Kuanhama Rebellion of 1902-1904[13] | ![]() |
Kuanhama |
1902 | 1904 | Bailundo Revolt of 1902 | ![]() |
Ovimbundu Kingdoms Kisanji Luimbi |
1902 | 1903 | Venezuelan crisis of 1902–03 | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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1902 | 1902 | Kabul Khel expedition[14] | ![]() |
Kabul Khel rebels |
1902 | 1903 | Expeditions against the Bantin[8] (Location: Kalimantan) | ![]() |
Bantin |
1902 | 1906 | Korintji expeditions[8] (Location: Sumatra) | ![]() |
Korintji |
1902 | 1907 | Campaigns against Dayak[8] (Location: Kalimantan) | ![]() |
Dayak |
1902 | 1902 | Italian–Ottoman crisis of 1902[15] | ![]() |
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1903 | 1903 | Great Ming Uprising | ![]() |
Great Ming Heavenly Kingdom |
1903 | 1903 | 1903 Tegale uprising[1] | ![]() |
Muhammad al-Amin's rebel forces |
1903 | 1910 | Risings among the Atwot Dinka[1] | ![]() |
Atwot Dinka rebels |
1903 | 1905 | Rijal al-Ma rebellion[16] | ![]() |
Rijal al-Ma |
1903 | 1903 | Kavango uprising[10] | ![]() |
Kavango rebels |
1903 | 1903 | Actions on Yapen[8] | ![]() |
Tribes of Yapen |
1903 | 1909 | Resistance in Minangkabau[8] | ![]() |
Anti-coffee rebels |
1903 | 1910 | Mentawei islands campaign[8] | ![]() |
Anti-Dutch forces |
1903 | 1916
(Solor) 1940 (Flores) |
Military actions in Flores and Solor[8] | ![]() |
Anti-Dutch forces |
1903 | 1903 | Kerinci Expedition | ![]() |
Anti-Dutch forces |
1903 | 1903 | Battle of Jo-Laban[17][18] | ![]() Arab tribes
|
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1903 | 1903 | Theriso revolt | ![]() Supported By: |
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1903 | 1903 | May Coup (Serbia) | ![]() |
House of Obrenović |
1903 | 1903 | Ilinden–Preobrazhenie Uprising | ![]() |
![]() SMAC Kruševo Republic Strandzha Republic |
1903 | 1904 | British expedition to Tibet | ![]() |
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1903 | 1904 | British conquest of the Sokoto Caliphate[19] | ![]() |
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1903 | 1903 | British conquest of the Kano Emirate | ![]() |
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1903 | 1907 | Saudi–Rashidi War
Part of the Unification of Saudi Arabia |
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1903 | 1903 | Uprising of Namas in Maltahöhe[10] | ![]() |
Nama rebels |
1903 | 1904 | Bondelswarts uprising of 1904[10] | ![]() |
Bondelswarts |
1904 | 1904 | Adam Wad Muhammad's uprising[1] | ![]() |
Adam Wad Muhammad's rebel forces |
1904 | 1904 | Mahsud expedition of 1904[20] | ![]() |
Mahsud rebels |
1904 | 1904 | 1904 Ondonga uprising[10] | ![]() |
Ondonga rebels |
1904 | 1909 | 1904 Nama uprising[10] | ![]() |
Nama rebels |
1904 | 1904 | 1904 Sudan revolt[7] | ![]() |
Sudanese rebels |
1904 | 1904 | Campaign in the Gajo and Alas islands[8]Part of the Aceh War | ![]() |
Anti-Dutch forces |
1904 | 1904 | Dutch intervention in Bali (1904)[8] | ![]() |
Anti-Dutch forces |
1904 | 1904 | Resistance on Tidore[8] | ![]() |
Tidore |
1904 | 1909 | Sulawesi expeditions[8] | ![]() |
Anti-Dutch forces |
1904 | 1905 | 1904–1905 uprising in Madagascar | ![]()
|
Rebels |
1904 | 1907 | Portuguese campaign against the Ovambo
(See Battle of Mufilo) |
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1904 | 1904 | Vaccine Revolt | ![]() |
Anti-vaccination rebels |
1904 | 1904 | Revolution of 1904 | ![]() |
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1904 | 1904 | 1904 Sasun uprising | ![]() |
Armenian fedayees |
1904 | 1908 | Herero Wars | ![]() |
Herero and Namaqua peoples |
1904 | 1905 | Russo-Japanese War | ![]() |
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1904 | 1905 | Yemeni Rebellion of 1904
Part of the Yemeni–Ottoman Conflicts |
Zaidis | ![]() |
1904 | 1908 | Macedonian Struggle | ![]() |
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1905 | 1905 | Ping-liu-li Uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1905 | 1906 | Military actions in Onin[8] | ![]() |
Anti-Dutch forces |
1905 | 1905 | Ottoman incursion into Persia[21] | ![]() |
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1905 | 1911 | Military actions Sumba and Sumbawa[8] | ![]() |
Anti-Dutch forces |
1905 | 1911 | Persian Constitutional Revolution |
The Revolution:
Semi-organized groups: Struggle and Civil War:
|
|
1905 | 1905 | Argentine Revolution of 1905 | ![]() |
Radical Civic Union |
1905 | 1905 | Shoubak Revolt of 1905 | ![]() |
Shoubakis |
1905 | 1905 | Łódź insurrection (1905) | ![]() |
Polish worker militias |
1905 | 1905 | Kurdish rebellion of 1905[31] | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels |
1905 | 1906 | 1905 Tibetan Rebellion | ![]() |
Tibetan Buddhists |
1905 | 1907 | 1905 Russian Revolution | ![]() |
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1905 | 1907 | Maji Maji Rebellion | ![]() |
Indigenous rebels |
1905 | 1906 | Yemeni Expedition of 1905
Part of the Yemeni–Ottoman Conflicts |
Zaidis | ![]() |
1905 | 1905 | South Sulawesi expedition | ![]() |
South Sulawesi kingdoms of Bone, Luwu and Wajo |
1906 | 1906 | Taba Crisis of 1906 | ![]() |
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1906 | 1907 | Resistance in Lombok[8] | ![]() |
Messianic rebels |
1906 | 1908 | Actions against fighters from Jambi in Indragiri[8] (Location: Sumatra) | ![]() |
Jambi |
1906 | 1906 | Ottoman invasion of Persia (1906) | ![]() |
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1906 | 1906 | Sokoto Uprising of 1906[32] | ![]() |
Rebels |
1906 | 1906 | 1906 Mesopotamia uprising | ![]() |
Mesopotamian tribesmen |
1906 | 1906 | Dutch intervention in Bali (1906) | ![]() |
Badung Tabanan Klungkung |
1906 | 1906 | Bambatha Rebellion | ![]() |
Zulu |
1907 | 1907 | Campaign against the Mahafaly[33] | ![]() |
Onilahy (Mahafaly) kingdom |
1907 | 1907 | Kurdish–Nestorian ethnic clashes (1907)[4] | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels
Nestorian rebels |
1907 | 1918 | Asir rebellion[34] | ![]() Supported by: |
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1907 | 1907 | Dersim uprising of 1907[35]
Part of the Dersim uprisings |
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Kurdish rebels |
1907 | 1907 | Huanggang Uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1907 | 1907 | Huizhou Qinühu Uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1907 | 1907 | Anqing Uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1907 | 1907 | Qinzhou Uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1907 | 1907 | Zhennanguan Uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1907 | 1907 | Bitlis uprising (1907)[4] | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels |
1907 | 1910 | Dembos War of 1907-1910[32] More info: Revoltas e Campanhas nos Dembos (1872-1919) (In Portuguese) |
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Dembos[13] |
1907 | 1907 | Anti-Foreign Revolt[13] | ![]() |
Forces loyal to Sheika Ma Al-Ainine (Ma al-'Aynayn ?) |
1907 | 1907 | Mutair revolt[36] | ![]() |
Mutair tribe |
1907 | 1907 | 1907 Romanian Peasants' Revolt | ![]() |
Romanian peasants |
1907 | 1907 | Honduran-Nicaraguan War | ![]() |
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1907 | 1907 | Beipu uprising | ![]() |
Hakka |
1907 | 1907 | 1907 Diyarbakır uprising[37] | ![]()
|
Rebels of Diyarbakır |
1907 | 1908 | Zakka Khel raids on towns and villages in the British Raj | ![]() |
Zakka Khel clan of the Afridi |
1908 | 1908 | Qin-lian Uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1908 | 1908 | Hekou Uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1908 | 1908 | Mapaoying Uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1908 | 1909 | Bondelswarts rebellion of 1908[10] | ![]() |
Bondelswarts |
1908 | 1908 | Wad Hubaba Revolt | ![]() |
Neo-Madhist rebels |
1908 | 1909 | Lobi and Dyula revolt in Mali[7] | ![]() |
Lobi and Dyula rebels |
1908 | 1914 | Mossi rebellions in Kouddigou and Fada N'gourma[7] | ![]() |
Mossi rebels |
1908 | 1908 | Mohmand Expedition of 1908[38]
Part of the instability on the North-West Frontier |
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Mohmand rebels |
1908 | 1908 | Bazar Valley campaign | ![]() |
Zakka Khel clan of the Afridi |
1908 | 1908 | Kurdish uprising of 1908[35]
Part of the Dersim uprisings |
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Kurdish rebels |
1908 | 1908 | Buraida rebellion[39] | ![]() |
Forces loyal to Muhammad Aba al-Kehil |
1908 | 1908 | Battle of Marrakech | Forces of Mulay Hafid | Forces of the Sultan of Morocco |
1908 | 1909 | Mau uprising | ![]() |
Indigenous rebels |
1908 | 1908 | Young Turk Revolution | Young Turks | ![]() |
1908 | 1910/1914 | Hamawand rebellion |
|
Kurdish rebels
|
1908 | 1908 | Dutch intervention in Bali (1908) | ![]() |
Karangasem Klungkung Gelgel |
1908 | 1910 | Actions in the Toba and Batak islands[8] | ![]() |
Anti-Dutch forces |
1908 | 1915 | Actions in West-Kalimantan[8] | ![]() |
Anti-Dutch forces |
1908 | 1908 | Dutch–Venezuelan crisis of 1908 | ![]() |
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1909 | 1909 | Nyasaland resistance[7] | ![]() |
Rebels |
1909 | 1909 | Battle of Nias[8] | ![]() |
Anti-Dutch forces |
1909 | 1911 | Actions on the Halmahera, Seram, Papua and Mentawei islands[8] | ![]() |
Anti-Dutch forces |
1909 | 1909 | Kurdish uprising of 1909[35]
Part of the Dersim uprisings |
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Kurdish rebels |
1909 | 1909 | Estrada's rebellion | ![]() |
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1909 | 1909 | Kolašin Affair (1909) | ![]() |
Black Hand |
1909 | 1910 | Zaraniq rebellion | ![]() |
Zaraniq tribesmen |
1909 | 1909 | Crazy Snake Rebellion | ![]() |
Creek |
1909 | 1910 | Second Melillan campaign | ![]() |
Riffian people |
1909 | 1910 | Hauran Druze Rebellion | ![]() |
Druze rebels |
1909 | 1911 | Ouaddai War | ![]() |
Ouaddai Empire |
1910 | 1910 | Gengxu New Army Uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1910 | 1910 | Portuguese conquest of the Angoche Sultanate[40] | ![]() |
Angoche Sultanate |
1910 | 1910 | Uprising of Cape Nguni[10] | ![]() |
Nguni rebels |
1910 | 1912 | Xiong Mi Chang's rebellion[41] | ![]() |
Rebels loyal to Xiong Mi Chang |
1910 | 1910 | Actions on Ajer HItam and near Timor[8] | ![]() |
Anti-Dutch forces |
1910 | 1911 | Actions in Langkat[8] (Location: Sumatra) | ![]() |
Anti-Dutch forces |
1910 | 1912 | Portuguese conquest of the Kasanje Kingdom[42] | ![]() |
Kasanje Kingdom |
1910 | 1910 | Monégasque Revolution | Rebels | ![]() |
1910 | 1910 | Battle of Hadia | ![]() |
Al-Muntafiq |
1910 | 1910 | Karak Revolt | ![]() |
Karakis |
1910 | 1910 | Albanian Revolt of 1910 | ![]() |
Albanian rebels |
1910 | 1910 | 5 October 1910 revolution | ![]() |
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1910 | 1910 | Chinese expedition to Tibet (1910) | ![]() |
Tibet |
1910 | 1911 | Sokehs Rebellion | ![]() |
Soheks rebels |
1910 | 1920 | Mexican Revolution | Maderistas Orozquistas Villistas Zapatistas Carrancistas Magonistas Seditionistas |
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1910 | 1919 | Border War (1910–19) Part of the Mexican Revolution |
![]() ![]() Maderistas |
Villistas |
1910 | 1915 | Bandit War Part of the Mexican Revolution |
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1910 | 1910 | Revolts at Moush[31] | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels |
1911 | 1911 | Revolts at Khuyt[31] | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels |
1911 | 1911 | 1911 Kenya revolt[7] | ![]() |
Forces loyal to Siume (a priestess) and Kiamba (a young man) |
1911 | 1911 | Belitung miner's revolt[8] | ![]() |
Miner rebels |
1911 | 1911 | Kurdish uprising of 1911[35]
Part of the Dersim uprisings |
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Kurdish rebels |
1911 | 1913 | Revolt of Salar-al-Daulah | ![]() |
Forces of Salar-al-Daulah |
1911 | 1911 | Revolt of Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar[43] | ![]() |
Forces of Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar |
1911 | 1911 | Magonista rebellion of 1911 Part of the Mexican Revolution |
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1911 | 1912 | 1911 Paraguayan Civil War | Liberal Party | ![]() |
1911 | 1911 | Russian Invasion of Tabriz Part of the Persian Constitutional Revolution |
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Persian Constitutionalists |
1911 | 1911 | Albanian Revolt of 1911 | ![]() |
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1911 | 1911 | Second Guangzhou Uprising | ![]() |
Anti-Qing rebels |
1911 | 1912 | Dominican Civil War (1911–12) | ![]() |
Dominican Army conspirators |
1911 | 1912 | French conquest of Morocco | ![]() |
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1911 | 1912 | Italo-Turkish War | ![]() |
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1911 | 1912 | East Timorese Rebellion | ![]() |
East Timorese rebels |
1911 | 1912 | Xinhai Revolution 1911 Revolution |
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1911 | 1912 | War of the Generals | Liberal rebels | ![]() |
1912 | 1912 | 1912 Kordofan uprising[1] | ![]() |
Faki Najm al-Din's forces |
1912 | 1912 | Turkoman Revolt of 1912–1913 | ![]() |
Yomud Turkomans |
1912 | 1914 | Ecuadorian Civil War of 1912–1914 | ![]() |
Rebels of Esmeraldas Province |
c.1912 | c.1912 | Sirte revolt[44] | ![]() |
Rebels loyal to Ramadan Asswehly |
1912 | 1912 | Khost rebellion (1912) | ![]() |
Rebel tribes |
1912 | 1913 | First Balkan War | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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1912 | 1912 | Albanian Revolt of 1912 | Albanian rebels | ![]() |
1912 | 1916 | Contestado War | ![]() |
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1912 | 1933 | United States occupation of Nicaragua Part of the Banana Wars |
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1912 | 1912 | Royalist attack on Chaves | ![]() |
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1912 | 1912 | Negro Rebellion Part of the Banana Wars |
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Independent Party of Color |
1913 | 1913 | Oyango Dande rebellion[7] | ![]() |
Oyango Dande |
1913 | 1913 | Kurdish revolt of 1913[45] | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels |
1913 | 1913 | 1913 Euphrates rebellion | ![]() |
Al-Fatlah tribe |
1913 | 1920 | Muscat rebellion[46] | ![]() |
Ibāḍī imamate |
1913 | 1915 | Sino–Mongolian War of 1913–1915 | ![]() |
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1913 | 1913 | Urtatagai conflict (1913) | ![]() |
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1913 | 1913 | Atmene uprising | ![]() |
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1913 | 1913 | Conquest of al-Hasa
Part of the Unification of Saudi Arabia |
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1913 | 1913 | Second Balkan War | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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1913 | 1913 | Tikveš Uprising Part of the Second Balkan War |
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Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization |
1913 | 1913 | Ohrid–Debar Uprising | ![]() |
Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization |
1913 | 1913 | Second Revolution | ![]() |
Sun Yat-sen![]() |
1913 | 1914 | Bai Lang Rebellion | ![]() Jahriyya menhuan Xidaotang |
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1914 | 1914 | 1914 Kenya revolt[7] | ![]() |
Giriama rebels |
1914 | 1914 | North Java peasant revolt[8] | ![]() |
Peasant rebels |
1914 | 1914 | Kolongongo War[47] More info: The Mbunda Kingdom in Angola (Section "Kolongongo war") |
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Mbunda Kingdom |
1914 | 1914 | First Yemeni–Asiri war[48] | ![]()
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1914 | 1914 | Dersim uprising of 1914[35] Part of the Dersim uprisings |
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Kurdish rebels |
1914 | 1914 | Bitlis uprising | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels
Supported by: |
1914 | 1914 | Uprising in Barzan[49] | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels loyal to Abdülselam Barzani[49] Supported by: |
1914 | 1917 | Kongo revolt of 1914[50][51] | ![]() |
![]() Various rebel groups (1914–1917)[52] |
1914 | 1914 | Operations in the Tochi
Part of the instability on the North-West Frontier |
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Rebel tribesmen from Khost |
1914 | 1914 | Revolt of Juazeiro | ![]() |
Rebels |
1914 | 1921 | Zaian War | ![]() |
Zaian Confederation |
1914 | 1914 | Dominican Civil War of 1914 | Rebels | ![]() |
1914 | 1914 | Haitian Civil War[53] | ||
1914 | 1914 | Blayong's uprising[54] | ![]() |
Murut rebels |
1914 | 1914 | Peasant Revolt in Albania | ![]() Kosovar Albanian units |
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1914 | 1914 | Truku War | ![]() |
Truku Tribe |
1914 | 1918 | World War I | Allied Powers:
|
Central Powers: |
1914 | 1914 | United States occupation of Veracruz Part of the Banana Wars |
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1914 | 1915 | Bluff War | ![]() |
Ute Paiute |
1914 | 1917 | Ovambo insurrection in Portuguese Angola
See Battle of Mongua |
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1914 | 1915 | Maritz Rebellion | ![]() |
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1915 | 1915 | 1915 Rehoboth Basters rebellion[10] | ![]() |
Rehoboth Basters |
1915 | 1915 | Betsileo uprising[9] | ![]()
|
Rebels |
1915 | 1917 | Sadiavahe rebellion[55] | ![]()
|
Sadiavahe movement |
1915 | 1915 | Imerina uprising[9] | ![]()
|
Rebels |
1915 | 1915 | Kru Coast Rebellion[56] | ![]() |
Kru rebels |
1915 | 1915 | Botan revolt[45] | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels |
1915 | 1915 | Tapani incident | ![]() |
Han Taiwanese
Taiwanese aborigines |
1915 | 1915 | Turkoman Revolt of 1915[57] | ![]() |
Yomud Turkomans |
1915 | 1915 | Battle of Kanzaan (1915) | ![]() |
Ajman tribe |
1915 | 1915 | Battle of Jarrab
Part of the Unification of Saudi Arabia and World War I |
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1915 | 1915 | Chilembwe uprising | ![]() |
Nyasaland rebels |
1915 | 1915 | Bussa rebellion | ![]() |
Bussa warriors |
1915 | 1915 | 1915 Singapore Mutiny | ![]() |
5th Native Light Infantry sepoys |
1915 | 1915 | Kelantan rebellion | ![]() |
Tok Janggut's rebel forces |
1915 | 1915 | Rundum revolt | ![]() |
Antanum's rebel forces |
1915 | 1916 | Volta-Bani War | ![]() |
Tribal insurgents |
1915 | 1916 | National Protection War Anti-Monarchy War |
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1915 | 1917 | Senussi Campaign Part of World War I |
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![]() ![]() Darfur Emirate |
1915 | 1934 | United States occupation of Haiti Part of the Banana Wars |
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1916 | 1916 | Jambi rebellion[58] | ![]() |
Rebels |
1915 | 1915 | Operations against the Mohmands, Bunerwals and Swatis in 1915
Part of the instability on the North-West Frontier |
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Rebel tribes |
1916 | 1934 | Yarahmadzai uprising | ![]() ![]() |
Yarahmadzai tribe |
1916 | 1916 | Dersim uprising of 1916
Part of the Dersim uprisings |
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Kurdish rebels |
1916 | 1917 | Mohmand blockade
Part of the instability on the North-West Frontier |
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Mohmands |
1916 | 1918 | Cuban Civil War
(See Sugar Intervention) |
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1916 | 1917 | Kaocen Revolt | ![]() |
Tuareg guerrillas |
1916 | 1916 | 1916 Cochinchina uprising | ![]() |
Cochinchina rebels |
1916 | 1916 | Battle of Segale | Regents of Ethiopia | Lij Iyasu loyalists |
1916 | 1916 | Noemvriana | ![]() |
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1916 | 1916 | Central Asian revolt of 1916 | ![]() |
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1916 | 1916 | Easter Rising | ![]() Dublin Metropolitan Police Royal Irish Constabulary |
![]() Irish Volunteers Irish Citizen Army Cumann na mBan Hibernian Rifles Fianna Éireann |
1916 | 1924 | United States occupation of the Dominican Republic (1916–24) Part of the Banana Wars |
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Dominican rebels |
1916 | 1918 | Arab Revolt Part of World War I |
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1916 | 1934 | Basmachi movement Part of World War I and Russian Civil War |
![]() (1916–17) ![]() (1917)
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1917 | 1917 | Uukwanyama rebellion[10] | ![]() |
Uukwanyama rebels |
1917 | 1917 | 1917 Uganda rebellion[7] | ![]() |
Forces loyal to Rembe |
1917 | 1917 | Kurdish uprisings of summer 1917 | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels |
1917 | 1917 | Kurdish uprisings of August 1917 | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels Supported by: |
1917 | 1917 | February Revolution | ![]() |
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1917 | 1917 | July Days | ![]() |
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1917 | 1917 | Operations against the Mahsuds (1917) | ![]() |
Mahsud rebels |
1917 | 1917 | Manchu Restoration | ![]() |
Monarchist rebels |
1917 | 1917 | Thái Nguyên uprising | ![]() |
Vietnamese rebels |
1917 | 1917 | Polubotkivtsi Uprising | ![]() |
Ukrainian separatists |
1917 | 1917 | Toplica insurrection | ![]() |
Chetniks |
1917 | 1917 | Kornilov Affair | ![]() |
Soldiers under Lavr Kornilov |
1917 | 1917 | Green Corn Rebellion | ![]() |
Anti-draft rebels |
1917 | 1917 | October Revolution Part of Russian Civil War |
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1917 | 1917 | Kerensky–Krasnov uprising Part of Russian Civil War |
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1917 | 1922 | Russian Civil War | Victorious in Russia, Ukraine, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, and Mongolia:
Victorious in their respective countries: |
![]() Central Powers (until 1918):
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1917 | 1922 | Constitutional Protection Movement | ![]() |
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1917 | 1921 | Ukrainian War of Independence Part of World War I and Russian Civil War |
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1917 | 1949 | Ngolok rebellions (1917–49) | ![]() |
Ngolok tribesmen |
1918 | 1918 | Operations against the Marri and Khetran tribes (1918)[62] Part of the instability on the North-West Frontier |
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Marri and Khetran tribesmen |
1918 | 1918 | Adubi War | ![]() |
Egba rebels |
1918 | 1922 | Simko Shikak revolt (1918–22) | ![]() |
Rebels
|
1918 | 1918 | Judenburg mutiny Part of World War I |
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17th Infantry Regiment |
1918 | 1918 | Cattaro Mutiny Part of World War I |
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Elements of the Austro-Hungarian Navy |
1918 | 1918 | Aster Revolution Part of World War I |
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1918 | 1918 | Radomir Rebellion Part of World War I |
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Bulgarian Agrarian National Union |
1918 | 1918 | Left SR uprising Part of the Russian Civil War |
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Left Socialist Revolutionary Party |
1918 | 1918 | Finnish Civil War | ![]() ![]() |
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1918 | 1918 | Georgian–Armenian War | ![]() |
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1918 | 1958 | Polish–Czechoslovak border conflicts | ![]() |
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1918 | 1918 | Internal conflict in the Banat Republic | ![]() |
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1918 | 1918 | Serbian incursion into the Banat Republic | ![]() |
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1918 | 1918 | Viena expedition | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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1918 | 1918 | First Pechenga expedition | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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1918 | 1919 | Austro-Slovene conflict in Carinthia | ![]() ![]() |
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1918 | 1919 | German Revolution of 1918–19 | ![]() |
Royalist Forces:
Communist Forces: |
1918 | 1919 | Greater Poland Uprising (1918–19) | ![]() |
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1918 | 1919 | Hungarian–Czechoslovak War | ![]() ![]() |
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1918 | 1919 | Polish–Ukrainian War Part of the Ukrainian War of Independence |
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1918 | 1920 | Georgian–Ossetian conflict (1918–20) Part of the Russian Civil War |
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1918 | 1919 | Sochi conflict Part of the Russian Civil War |
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1918 | 1920 | Armenian–Azerbaijani War Part of the Russian Civil War |
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1918 | 1920 | Estonian War of Independence Part of the Russian Civil War |
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1918 | 1920 | Latvian War of Independence Part of the Russian Civil War |
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1918 | 1919 | Lithuanian–Soviet War Part of the Lithuanian Wars of Independence |
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1918 | 1919 | Al-Khurma dispute Part of the Unification of Saudi Arabia |
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1918 | 1921 | War of the Insane | ![]() |
Hmong rebels |
1918 | 1920 | Revolt of the Ingrian Finns | ![]() |
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1918 | 1921 | Franco-Turkish War Part of the Turkish War of Independence |
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1919 | 1923 | Second Yemeni–Asiri War[48] | ![]() Supported by: |
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1919 | 1919 | Toli-Toli incident[8] | ![]() |
Anti-Dutch forces |
1919 | 1919 | Garut incident[8] | ![]() |
Anti-Dutch forces |
1919 | 1919 | Punjab Rebellion[63] (See: Amritsar Massacre)
Part of the instability on the North-West Frontier |
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Rebels |
1919 | 1919 | Black Sea mutiny | ![]() |
Mutineers |
1919 | 1919 | 1919 Royalist uprising in Northern Portugal | ![]() |
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1919 | 1919 | Christmas Uprising | ![]() ![]() |
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1919 | 1919 | Spartacist uprising Part of the German Revolution of 1918–19 |
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1919 | 1919 | Lithuanian War of Independence (War against the Bermontians) Part of the Lithuanian Wars of Independence |
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1919 | 1919 | Sejny Uprising | ![]() ![]() |
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1919 | 1919 | First Barzanji Revolt | ![]() |
Kurdish Tribesmen |
1919 | 1919 | Polish–Czechoslovak War Part of the Polish–Czechoslovak border conflicts |
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1919 | 1919 | Khotin Uprising | ![]() |
Ukrainian rebels |
1919 | 1919 | Hungarian–Romanian war of 1919 | ![]() |
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1919 | 1922 (Armistice) 1923 (Treaty) |
Turkish War of Independence | ![]()
Supported by: |
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1919 | 1919 | Third Anglo-Afghan War | ![]() |
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1919 | 1920 | Waziristan campaign (1919–1920) | ![]() |
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1919 | 1919 | Impresa di Fiume | ![]() |
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1919 | 1920 | Italo-Yugoslav War | ![]() |
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1919 | 1919 | First Honduran Civil War | Rebels | ![]() |
1919 | 1921 | Polish–Soviet War |
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1919 | 1919 | First Silesian Uprising Part of the Silesian Uprisings |
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1919 | 1919 | Aunus expedition | ![]() ![]() |
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1919 | 1920 | Alawite Revolt of 1919 | ![]() |
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1919 | 1921 | Irish War of Independence | ![]() |
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1919 | 1920 | Kuwait–Najd War | ![]() ![]() |
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1919 | 1922 | Greco-Turkish War (1919–1922) Part of the Turkish War of Independence |
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1919 | 1923 | Revolts during the Turkish War of Independence | ![]() |
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1920–1929
Start | Finish | Name of Conflict | Belligerents | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Victorious party (if applicable) | Defeated party (if applicable) | |||
1920 | 1920 | Franco-Syrian War | ![]() ![]() |
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1920 | 1920 | 1920 uprising in Afghanistan[64] | ![]() |
Safi regiment |
1920 | 1920 | Misurata-Warfalla War[65] | Warfallan tribesmen | ![]() |
1920 | 1920 | Husino rebellion | ![]() |
Bosnian miners |
1920 | 1920 | 1920 Iraqi Revolt | ![]() |
Iraqi rebels |
1920 | 1920 | Vlora War | ![]() |
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1920 | 1922 | 1920–1922 Jabal al-Gharbi civil war | Tribal fighters | Tribal fighters |
1920 | 1920 | Polish–Lithuanian War Part of the Lithuanian Wars of Independence |
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1920 | 1920 | Kapp Putsch | ![]() |
Far-right Freikorps |
1920 | 1920 | Ruhr Uprising | ![]() Freikorps |
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1920 | 1920 | Second Silesian Uprising Part of the Silesian Uprisings |
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1920 | 1920 | 1920 Georgian coup attempt | ![]() |
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1920 | 1920 | May Uprising | ![]() ![]() |
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1920 | 1920 | Turkish–Armenian War Part of the Turkish War of Independence |
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1920 | 1920 | Zhili–Anhui War | ![]() Fengtian clique |
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1920 | 1920 | Second Pechenga expedition | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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1920 | 1921 | Guangdong–Guangxi War | ![]() |
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1920 | 1921 | Dagestan Uprising Part of the Russian Civil War |
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Dagestani rebels |
1920 | 1926 | Rif War | ![]() |
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1920 | 1920 | 1920 Upper Asir conflict[48] | Rebel tribes | ![]() |
1921 | 1921 | 1921 Khorosan rebellion[66] | ![]() |
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1921 | 1921 | Kurdish uprising of Autumn 1921[45] | ![]() |
Anti-Kemalist Kurdish rebels |
1921 | 1921 | Waziristan campaign (1921–1924) | ![]() |
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1921 | 1921 | Anti-fascist uprising in Albona | ![]() |
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1921 | 1921 | Red Army invasion of Georgia Part of the Russian Civil War |
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1921 | 1921 | Kronstadt rebellion Part of the Russian Civil War |
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1921 | 1921 | February Uprising Part of the Russian Civil War |
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1921 | 1921 | Coto War | ![]() |
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1921 | 1921 | Battle of Mountainous Armenia Part of the Russian Civil War |
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1921 | 1921 | March Action | ![]() |
Communist Party of Germany Communist Workers' Party of Germany |
1921 | 1921 | Third Silesian Uprising Part of the Silesian Uprisings |
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1921 | 1921 | Mongolian Revolution of 1921 Part of Russian Civil War |
Mongolian Communists ![]() |
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1921 | 1921 | Charles I of Austria's attempts to retake the throne of Hungary | Regentists | Loyalists |
1921 | 1921 | Uprising in West Hungary | ![]() ![]() |
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1921 | 1921 | Malabar rebellion | ![]() |
Khilafat Movement |
1921 | 1921 | 1921 Persian coup d'etat | ![]() |
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1921 | 1921 | Conquest of Ha'il |
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1921 | 1922 | East Karelian Uprising and Soviet–Finnish conflict 1921–22 Part of Russian Civil War |
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Finnish and East Karelian rebels |
1921 | 1922 | Rand Rebellion | ![]() |
Miners ![]() Syndicalists |
1921 | 1923 | Kura Rebellion | ![]() ![]() |
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1921 | 1921 | Ikhwan attack on Najran[67] | ![]() |
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1922 | 1922 | 18 of the Copacabana Fort revolt | ![]() |
Tenentista movement |
1922 | 1922 | 1922 bombardment of Yemen[68] | ![]() |
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1922 | 1924 | Ikhwan raids on Transjordan | ![]()
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Ikhwan ('Utaybah tribe) |
1922 | 1922 | Bondelswarts Rebellion | ![]() |
Bondelswarts |
1922 | 1922 | San rebellion[10] | ![]() |
San rebels |
1922 | 1922 | 1922 Uukwambi revolt[10] | ![]() |
Uukwambi rebels |
1922 | 1922 | First Zhili–Fengtian War | ![]() |
Fengtian clique |
1922 | 1924 | Rampa Rebellion of 1922 | ![]() |
Rebel forces loyal to Alluri Sitarama Raju |
1922 | 1922 | 11 September 1922 Revolution | Venizelist rebels | ![]() |
1922 | 1923 | Irish Civil War | ![]() |
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1922 | 1923 | Paraguayan Civil War (1922) | ![]() |
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1922 | 1924 | Sheikh Khazal rebellion
Part of the Arab separatism in Khuzestan |
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1922 | 1924 | Second Barzanji Revolt | ![]() ![]() |
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1922 | 1927 | Tenente revolts | ![]() |
Tenentismo ![]() |
1923 | 1923 | 1923 Aden Protectorate uprising[68] | ![]()
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Rebel tribes:
|
1923 | 1923 | Alizai rebellion of 1923 | ![]() |
Alizai |
1923 | 1923 | Corfu incident | ![]() |
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1923 | 1923 | Guna revolution | ![]() |
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1923 | 1923 | De la Huerta Rebellion[70][71] | ![]() |
Forces loyal to Adolfo de la Huerta |
1923 | 1923 | June Uprising | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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1923 | 1923 | Leonardopoulos–Gargalidis coup d'état attempt | ![]() |
Monarchist rebels |
1923 | 1923 | Adwan Rebellion | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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1923 | 1923 | Posey War | ![]() |
Ute Paiute |
1923 | 1923 | Hamburg Uprising | ![]() |
Communist Party of Germany |
1923 | 1923 | Beer Hall Putsch | ![]() |
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1923 | 1923 | Klaipėda Revolt | ![]() |
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1923 | 1923 | September Uprising | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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1923 | 1932 | Pacification of Libya | ![]() |
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1923 | Ongoing | Arab separatism in Khuzestan | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
![]() ![]() APCO PFLA AFLA ![]() Iranian Arab protesters |
1924 | 1925 | Chechen uprising of 1924[72] | ![]() |
Chechen rebels |
1924 | 1925 | Turkoman Rebellion in Eastern Iran[73] | ![]() |
Turkmen rebels |
1924 | 1924 | Paulista Revolt of 1924 | ![]() |
Tenentista movement |
1924 | 1924 | Beytussebab rebellion | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels |
1924 | 1924 | Zazejskie uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1924 | 1924 | Second Honduran Civil War | Rebels | ![]() |
1924 | 1925 | Khost rebellion (1924–1925) | ![]() Allied tribes: |
Rebel tribes |
1924 | 1928 | 1924–1928 Saqqawist insurgency in Afghanistan
Escalated into the Afghan Civil War |
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1924 | 1924 | Vaalgras revolt[10] | ![]() |
Vaalgras |
1924 | 1924 | August Uprising | ![]() |
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1924 | 1925 | Tungus uprising | ![]() |
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1924 | 1924 | June Revolution | Faction of Fan Noli | Principality of Albania |
1924 | 1924 | 1924 Estonian coup d'état attempt | ![]() |
Comintern |
1924 | 1924 | Tatarbunary uprising | ![]() |
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1924 | 1925 | Saudi conquest of Hejaz | ![]() ![]() |
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1924 | 1924 | Nestorian rebellion | ![]() |
Nestorians |
1924 | 1924 | Second Zhili–Fengtian War | Fengtian clique | ![]() |
1924 | 1926 | Third Yemeni–Asiri War[48] | ![]() |
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1924 | 1924 | First Asiri Civil War[48] | ![]() (Sayyid Ali ibn Muhammad al-Idrisi loyalists) |
Rebels led by Mustafa |
1925 | 1925 | 1925 Aden Protectorate uprising[68] | ![]() |
Hukais tribe |
1925 | 1925 | 1925 Rehoboth Basters rebellion[10] | ![]() |
Rehoboth Basters |
1925 | 1925 | Incident at Petrich | ![]() |
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1925 | 1925 | Sheikh Said rebellion | ![]() |
Kurdish tribesmen |
1925 | 1925 | Pink's War | ![]() |
Mahsud tribesmen |
1925 | 1925 | Raçkotan and Raman pacifying operations[77] | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels |
1925 | 1937 | Sason rebellion[77] | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels |
1925 | 1929 | Zaraniq rebellion (1925–1929) | ![]() |
Zaraniq tribe
Supported by: |
1925 | 1927 | Great Syrian Revolt | ![]() |
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1925 | 1926 | Anti-Fengtian War | Fengtian clique![]() |
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1925 | 1926 | Urtatagai conflict | ![]() |
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1925 | 1926 | Second Asiri Civil war[48] | Rebels led by Sayyid al-Hasan ibn Ali al-Idrisial-Hasani
Supported by: |
![]() (Sayyid Ali ibn Muhammad al-Idrisi loyalists) |
1926 | 1926 | Asiri tribal revolts of 1926[48] | ![]() |
Rebel tribes |
1926 | 1927 | Tarimese Civil War[78] | Government of the Sultanate of Tarim
|
Tamimi rebels |
1926 | 1926 | 1926 Simko Shikak revolt | ![]() |
Shikak tribesmen
Herki tribesmen Begzadeh tribesmen |
1926 | 1927 | Nicaraguan civil war (1926-1927) | Nicaraguan Conservatives (government) | Nicaraguan Liberals (rebels) |
1926 | 1928 | Northern Expedition | ![]() |
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1926 | 1929 | Cristero War | ![]() |
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1926 | 1926 | 1926 Communist Revolt in Indonesia | ![]() |
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1927 | 1927 | 1927 Nuer uprising[1] | ||
1927 | 1930 | Ararat rebellion | ![]() |
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1927 | 1930 | Ikhwan Revolt | ![]() ![]() |
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1927 | 1927 | Koçuşaği rebellion[77] | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels |
1927 | 1927 | Mutki rebellion[77] | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels |
1927 | 1927 | Bicar suppression[77] | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels |
1927 | 1927 | Ikhwan raid on Busayya
Part of the Ikhwan revolt |
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1927 | 1950 | Chinese Civil War | ![]() After 1949: ![]() |
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1928 | 1935 | Persian conquest of West Baluchistan[79][80][81][82] | ![]() |
West Baluchistan |
1928 | 1932 | Hamed bin Rafda's rebellion | ![]() |
Rebels loyal to Hamed bin Rafda |
1928 | 1928 | Haji Abdul Rahman Limbong's rebellion | ![]() |
Rebels |
1928 | 1928 | Battle of Al-Regeai | ![]() |
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1928 | 1929 | Afghan Civil War (1928–1929) | ![]() (Until 14 January 1929) ![]() (14-17 January 1929) ![]() (17 January - 9 February 1929) Various anti-Saqqawist tribes
![]() (March–October 1929) Intervening against Basmachi: ![]() |
Shinwari tribesmen (14 November–December 1928) ![]() (November 1928 – 17 January 1929)
|
1928 | 1931 | Kongo-Wara rebellion | ![]() |
Gbaya rebels |
1929 | 1929 | 1929 Aden protectorate uprising[68] | ![]() |
Subayhi tribe |
1929 | 1932 | Aday rebellion (1929—1932) | ![]() |
Rebels |
1929 | 1929 | Escobar Rebellion | ![]() |
Escobar rebels |
1929 | 1929 | 1929 Basmachi border raids on the Soviet Union | ![]() |
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1929 | 1929 | Chiang-Gui War | ![]() |
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1929 | 1929 | Afghan campaign of the Red Army (1929) | ![]() |
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1929 | 1929 | Sino-Soviet conflict (1929) | ![]() |
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1929 | 1929 | Batpakkarinskoe uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1929 | 1929 | Bostandyk uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1929 | 1930 | Alakat Uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1929 | 1929 | Asi Resul rebellion[77] | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels |
1929 | 1929 | Tendürük rebellion[77] | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels |
1929 | 1931 | Anti-Saqqawist campaigns in Kuhdaman and Herat | ![]() |
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1929 | 1930 | Women's War | Igbo Women of Owerri and Calabar Provinces | Warrant Chiefs![]() |
1929 | 1929 | Antananarivo uprising[9] | ![]()
|
Rebels |
1929 | 1929 | Persian tribal uprisings of 1929 | ![]() |
Qashqai, Khamseh, Buyir Ahmadi and Bakhtiari rebels |
1929 | 1929 | Nejd Civil War[84] | ![]() |
Rebels |
1930–1944
Start | Finish | Name of Conflict | Belligerents | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Victorious party (if applicable) | Defeated party (if applicable) | |||
1930 | 1935 | Port Bergé rebellion[9] | ![]()
|
Rebels |
1930 | 1930 | Shinwari rebellion | ![]() |
Shinwari tribesmen |
1930 | 1930 | Savur suppression[77] | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels |
1930 | 1930 | Aramar rebellion[77] | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels |
1930 | 1930 | Pülümür rebellion[77] | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels |
1930 | 1930 | Menemen rebellion[77] | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels |
1930 | 1930 | Afridi Redshirt Rebellion | ![]() |
Afridi tribesmen |
1930 | 1930 | Kuhistan rebellion (February–April 1930) | ![]() |
Rebels |
1930 | 1931 | Uprising of the Nghệ-Tĩnh Soviets | ![]() |
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1930 | 1930 | Hnov uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1930 | 1930 | Tugsbuyant uprising | ![]() |
Buddhist clergy, former feudal lords, Arats. |
1930 | 1930 | Sarysu-Sozak uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1930 | 1930 | Anti-Soviet Sarbaz uprising of 1930 | ![]() |
Rebels |
1930 | 1930 | Muromtsevsky uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1930 | 1930 | Asanic uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1930 | 1930 | Baribaev uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1930 | 1930 | Balkash-Shokparskoe uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1930 | 1930 | Khorinskoe uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1930 | 1930 | Kuhistan rebellion (July 1930) | ![]() |
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1930 | 1930 | Yen Bai mutiny | ![]() |
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1930 | 1930 | Central Plains War Part of Chinese Civil War |
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1930 | 1930 | Chittagong armoury raid | ![]() |
Anushilan Samiti |
1930 | 1930 | Gugsa Wale's Rebellion | Haile Selassie loyalists | Empress Zewditu supporters |
1930 | 1931 | Nghe-Tinh Revolt | ![]() |
Vietnamese rebels |
1930 | 1932 | Saya San Rebellion | ![]() |
Burmese rebels |
1930 | 1930 | Afghan campaign of the Red Army (1930) | ![]() |
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1930 | 1932 | Sino-Tibetan War | ![]() |
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1930 | 1930 | Brazilian Revolution of 1930 | ![]() |
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1930 | 1930 | Wushe Rebellion | ![]() Toda Truku[85] (Taroko) |
Tkdaya[85] |
1931 | 1931 | 1931 Aden Protectorate uprising[68] | ![]() |
Ahl Ma'ir tribe |
1931 | 1933 | Idrisid Emirate Rebellion | ![]() |
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1931 | 1931 | 1931 Saudi–Yemeni border skirmish | ![]() |
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1931 | 1931 | Alak Uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1931 | 1931 | Abralin Uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1931 | 1931 | Flour Revolt | ![]() |
Rebels |
1931 | 1931 | March Incident | ![]() |
Sakurakai |
1931 | 1931 | Uranian peasant uprising | ![]() |
Rebels |
1931 | 1931 | October Incident | ![]() |
Sakurakai |
1931 | 1931 | 1931 Cyprus Revolt | ![]() |
Greek Cypriot rebels |
1931 | 1931 | Jafar Sultan revolt | ![]() |
Kurdish rebels |
1931 | 1931 | Norte Grande insurrection | ![]() |
Communist Party of Chile |
1931 | 1931 | Chilean naval mutiny of 1931 | ![]() |
Chilean Navy rebels |
1931/32 | 1932 | Najran conflict | ![]() |
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1931 | 1932 | Japanese invasion of Manchuria | ![]() |
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1931 | 1932 | Ahmed Barzani revolt | ![]() |
Barzan tribe |
1931 | 1934 | Kumul Rebellion | ![]() |
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1932 | 1932 | 1932 Aden Protectorate uprising[68] | ![]() |
Qutaybi tribe |
1932 | 1932 | Uukwambi uprising[10] | ![]() |
Uukwambi rebels |
1932 | 1932 | Ethiopian conquest of the Kingdom of Jimma[86] | ![]() |
Kingdom of Jimma |
1932 | 1932 | Lesko uprising | ![]() |
Peasant rebels |
1932 | 1932 | Constitutionalist Revolution | ![]() |
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1932 | 1932 | Ecuadorian Civil War | Leftist and Liberal rebels | ![]() |
1932 | 1932 | January 28 Incident | ![]() |
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1932 | 1932 | Chechen uprising of 1932 | ![]() |
Chechen rebels |
1932 | 1932 | May 15 Incident | ![]() |
League of Blood |
1932 | 1932 | 1932 armed uprising in Mongolia | ![]() ![]() |
Anti-communist rebels |
1932 | 1932 | Kirghiz rebellion | ![]() |
Kirghiz rebels |
1932 | 1932 | Mäntsälä rebellion | ![]() |
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1932 | 1932 | 1932 Salvadoran peasant uprising | ![]() |
Salvadoran peasants |
1932 | 1932 | Sanjurjada | ![]() |
Rebel Officers |
1932 | 1933 | Leticia Incident | ![]() |
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1932 | 1935 | Chaco War | ![]() |
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1932 | 1932 | Darre Khel revolt | ![]() |
Rebels |
1932 | 1932 | Emu War | Emus | ![]() |
1932 | 1939 | Soviet–Japanese border conflicts | ![]() ![]() |
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|
1933 | 1933 | 1933 Aden Protectorate uprising[68] | ![]() |
Mawsata tribe |
1933 | 1933 | 1933 Mohmand revolt in Afghanistan[87] | ![]() |
Mohmand rebels |
1933 | 1933 | Crazy Fakir's rebellion | ![]() |
Forces of the Crazy Fakir |
1933 | 1936 | Actions in Inner Mongolia (1933–36) | ![]() |
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1933 | 1933 | Boworadet Rebellion | ![]() |
Rebels under Prince Boworadet |
1933 | 1933 | Sergeants' Revolt | Rebels | ![]() |
1933 | 1933 | Kazym rebellion | ![]() |
Khanty rebels |
1933 | 1933 | Anarchist uprising in Spain (1933) | ![]() |
Spanish Anarchists |
1933 | 1933 | Casas Viejas incident | ![]() |
Spanish Anarchists |
1933 | 1933 | De Zeven Provinciën Mutiny | ![]() |
Dutch Navy rebels |
1934 | 1934 | 1934 Aden Protectorate uprising[68] | ![]() |
Qutaybi tribe |
1934 | 1938 | Second Cristero War | ![]() |
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1934 | 1934 | Asturian Revolution | ![]() |
Asturian Miners |
1934 | 1934 | Mandalada | ![]() |
Rebels |
1934 | 1934 | Soviet invasion of Xinjiang | ![]() |
![]() ![]() Torgut Mongols |
1934 | 1934 | Military Academy incident | ![]() |
Imperial Way Faction |
1934 | 1934 | Austrian Civil War | ![]() |
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1934 | 1934 | July Putsch | ![]() |
Austrian Legion |
1934 | 1934 | 1934 Latvian coup d'état | Kārlis Ulmanis | ![]() |
1934 | 1934 | 1934 Estonian coup d'état | Konstantin Päts | ![]() |
1934 | 1934 | Events of 6 October | ![]() |
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1934 | 1934 | 1934 Khamba Rebellion | ![]() Sichuan clique ![]() |
Khamba Tribesmen |
1934 | 1934 | Saudi–Yemeni War | ![]() |
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1935 | 1935 | Narrenrevolte | ![]() |
Rebels |
1935 | 1935 | Mohmand campaign of 1935 | ![]() |
Mohmand tribesmen |
1935 | 1935 | May 2 uprising | ![]() |
Sakdalista |
1935 | 1935 | 1935 Yazidi revolt | ![]() |
Yazidis |
1935 | 1935 | Goharshad Mosque rebellion | ![]() |
Bazaaris |
1935 | 1935 | 1935 Greek coup d'état attempt | ![]() |
Venizelist rebels |
1935 | 1936 | 1935–36 Iraqi Shia revolts | ![]() |
Shia tribesmen |
1935 | 1935 | Brazilian uprising of 1935 | ![]() |
Brazilian Communist Party |
1935 | 1936 | Second Italo-Ethiopian War | ![]() |
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1936 | 1937 | 1936–1937 Aden Protectorate uprising[68] | ![]() |
Mansuri rebels |
1936 | 1936 | 1936 Iraqi coup d'état | ![]() |
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1936 | 1936 | Scythe Cross rebellion | ![]() |
Hungarian National Socialist Party |
1936 | 1936 | 1936 Naval Revolt (Portugal) | ![]() |
Revolutionary Armed Organization |
1936 | 1936 | February 26 Incident | ![]() |
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1936 | 1939 | 1936–39 Arab revolt in Palestine | ![]() ![]() Palestine Police Force Jewish Settlement Police Jewish Supernumerary Police Haganah Special Night Squads FOSH Peulot Meyuhadot Irgun Peace Bands |
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1936 | 1939 | Spanish Civil War | ![]()
Supported by: |
![]()
Supported by:
|
1936 | 1939 | Waziristan campaign (1936–1939) | ![]() |
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1937 | 1937 | March–April 1937 Aden Protectorate uprising[68] | ![]() |
Shayri tribe |
1937 | 1939 | Katawz rebellion[88] | ![]() |
Rebels |
1937 | 1937 | Afghan tribal revolts of 1937[87] | ![]() |
Rebel tribes: |
1937 | 1937 | Islamic rebellion in Xinjiang (1937) | ![]() ![]() |
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1937 | 1937 | September–October 1937 Aden Protectorate uprising[68] | ![]() |
Subayhi tribe |
1937 | 1937 | Dieu Python movement | ![]() |
Degar rebels |
1937 | 1938 | Dersim Rebellion | ![]() |
Dersim tribes |
1937 | 1945 | Second Sino-Japanese War Part of World War II |
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|
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|
1937 | 1937 | December 1937 Aden Protectorate uprising[68] | ![]() |
Rebel tribes:
|
1938 | 1938 | Brazilian Integralist uprising of 1938 | ![]() |
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1938 | 1938 | Shinwari revolt of 1938[88][89] | ![]() |
Shinwari rebels under Muhammad Afzal[90] |
1938 | 1938 | Suleiman Khel rebellion | ![]() |
Suleiman khel rebels |
1938 | 1938 | Ghilzai rebellion | ![]() |
Ghilzai rebels |
1938 | 1938 | February 1938 Aden Protectorate uprising[68] | ![]() |
Hamumi tribe |
1938 | 1939 | Alizai winter uprising[91] | ![]() |
Alizai rebels |
1938 | 1938 | 1938 Greek coup d'état attempt | ![]() |
Venizelist rebels |
1938 | 1938 | April 1938 Aden Protectorate uprising[68] | ![]() |
Subayhi tribe |
1938 | 1938 | July–September 1938 Aden Protectorate uprising[68] | ![]() |
Mansuri tribe |
1938 | 1938 | Sudeten German uprising | ![]() |
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1939 | 1939 | Hungarian Invasion of the Carpatho-Ukraine | ![]() |
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1939 | 1939 | Slovak–Hungarian War | ![]() |
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1939 | 1965 | Maquis insurgency | ![]() |
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1939 | 1939 | Italian invasion of Albania | ![]() |
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1939 | 1945 | World War II | Allied Powers:![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Axis Powers:![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
1939 | 1939 | 1939 Ondonga uprising[10] | ![]() |
Odonga rebels |
1939 | 1940 | Winter War Part of World War II |
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1940 | 1941 | 1940–1941 Aden Protectorate uprising[68] | ![]() |
Qutaybi tribe |
1940 | 1944 | 1940–44 insurgency in Chechnya
Part of World War II and the Chechen–Russian conflict |
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![]() Supported by: |
1940 | 1940 | Czortków uprising Part of World War II |
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1940 | 1940 | Soviet occupation of the Baltic states (1940) Part of World War II |
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1940 | 1940 | Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina Part of World War II |
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1940 | 1941 | Franco-Thai War Part of World War II |
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1941 | 1941 | Legionnaires' Rebellion | ![]() |
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1941 | 1941 | Ecuadorian–Peruvian War | ![]() |
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1941 | 1941 | Anglo-Iraqi War Part of World War II |
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1941 | 1944 | Continuation War Part of World War II |
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1941 | 1944 | Hama Rashid revolt | ![]() |
Kurdish tribes |
1941 | 1941 | June 1941 uprising in eastern Herzegovina | ![]() |
Serb rebels from eastern Herzegovina and Montenegro |
1941 | 1941 | Uprising in Serbia (1941) | ![]() |
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1942 | 1954 | Hukbalahap Rebellion | ![]() ![]() |
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1943 | 1943 | 1943 Khuzestan revolt[92] | ||
1943 | 1945 | 1943 Barzani revolt | ![]() Supported by: Kurdish tribesmen (1945)
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Kurdish rebels
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1943 | 1943 | Woyane rebellion | ![]() |
Woyanne rebels |
1943 | 1944 | Jesselton revolt Part of World War II |
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Kinabalu rebels |
1943 | 1949 | Ukrainian Insurgent Army insurgency | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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1944 | 1945 | 1944–1945 Insurgency in Balochistan | ![]() |
Badinzai rebels |
1944 | 1947 | Afghan tribal revolts of 1944–1947 | ![]() • Allied Nuristani and Shinwari tribesmen ![]() • ![]() |
Rebel tribes: |
1944 | 1945 | Lapland War Part of World War II |
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1944 | 1946 | Anti-communist resistance in Poland (1944-1946) | ![]() ![]() |
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1944 | 1947 | Jewish insurgency in Palestine | ![]() |
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1944 | 1944 | Luluabourg and Jadotville Mutiny[93] | ![]() |
Force Publique Mutineers |
1944 | 1944 | 1944 Kivu Uprising | ![]() |
Watchtower Movement |
1944 | 1949 | Ili Rebellion | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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1944 | 1951 | Goryani Insurgency | ![]() |
Goryani |
1944 | 1953 | Guerrilla war in the Baltic states | ![]() |
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References
- Niblock, Tim. Class and Power in Sudan: The Dynamics of Sudanese Politics, 1898-1985. SUNY Press. p. 162. ISBN 978-1-4384-1466-9.
Primary resistance took three forms. First. nabi 'Isa movements emerged in the northern Sudan, among parts of the population which had been strongly influenced by Mahdism. Such movements were based on the belief, emanating from Islamic eschatology, that the anti-Christ (al-daffal) who had destroyed the rule of the Mandi and his successor would in due course be defeated by Jesus (nabi 'lea) descending from heaven and leading the Muslims to victory. A number of self-professed nabi 'Isas arose in the years following 1898. Even the more successful of these, however, only managed to secure a very localised support. The principal nabi 'Isa uprisings were those staged by Muhammad al-Amin in Tegale (1903); Adam Wad Muhammad in Sennar (1904); 'Abd al-Qadir Wad Habbuba in the Gezira (1908)' Faki Najm al-Din in Kordofan (1912); and Ahmad 'Umar in Darfur (1915).
Second, sporadic tribal uprisings took place in the southern Sudan and in the Nuba mountains over the first 30 years of Condominium rule. Of particular importance was the Nuer resistance, led by Den-gkur and Diu (1899-1908); the Zande resistance under Sultan Yam-bio (1900-1905); the scattered but continuing incidents in the Nuba mountains (going up to 1918); the risings among the Agar Dinka (1901) and the Atwot Dinka (1903-10); and the widely-based rising among the Nuer in 1927' The Condominium authorities suppressed these uprisings mainly by despatching punitive expeditions, with the occasional aerial bombardments in the period which followed the First World War. - "Frontier and overseas expeditions from India". 1907.
- Weiser, Martin (2006). "The Herero war – the first genocide of the 20th century?". Bachelor's Thesis, Univerzita Karlova v Praze
- McCarthy, Justin (2006-09-29). The Armenian Rebellion at Van. University of Utah Press. pp. 81, 82. ISBN 9780874808704.
- McCarthy, Justin (2006-09-29). The Armenian Rebellion at Van. University of Utah Press. p. 82. ISBN 978-0-87480-870-4.
In the late 1890s the government began to improve the security in the Van Province with mixed but real results. Soldiers were sent to defend Armenian villages from tribes. The Ottomans responded to tribal raids in southern Van Province by sending regular troops to Hakkâri Sancak to protect the Nestorians. They succeeded in keeping the area quiet, at least for the time being. Troops opposed incursions by Persian Kurds. They even used artillery to bombard the fortified villages of raiding tribes. In 1900 the government gained a victory when regular troops captured Şerif, the leader of the Shekifti subtribe of the Shikak Kurds and long-standing plague for both the government and the Armenians, in a bloody battle in the Albak region near Başkale.
- Rasoul, Rasoul (2017). "History of Kirkuk from the Beginning of the Nineteenth Century until Becoming Part of the Iraqi Monarchy in 1925" (PDF). db-thueringen.de. Faculty of Philosophy, University of Erfurt. p. 118.
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- Hagen, Piet (2018-05-10). "Opstanden, expedities en oorlogen". Koloniale oorlogen in Indonesië: Vijf eeuwen verzet tegen vreemde overheersing (in Dutch). Singel Uitgeverijen. ISBN 9789029524209.
- Boahen, A. Adu; Africa, Unesco International Scientific Committee for the Drafting of a General History of (1985). Africa Under Colonial Domination 1880-1935. UNESCO. p. 244. ISBN 9789231017131.
- "Uprisings against the German/South African Colonial Power". klausdierks.com.
- Shoup, John A. (2011-10-31). Ethnic Groups of Africa and the Middle East: An Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 266. ISBN 9781598843620.
The kingdom was able to last until 1901, when the French conquered it as part of their conquest of the Niger River/Sahara region
- White, John Albert (2002-06-27). Transition to Global Rivalry: Alliance Diplomacy and the Quadruple Entente, 1895-1907. Cambridge University Press. p. 131. ISBN 978-0-521-52665-4.
Revolutionary activity began in Central Asia well before the St. Petersburg events of January 1905. The railway workers at Kala-i-Mor near Kushka struck in 1902 and the Russian railway workers of Tashkent demonstrated on May 1, 1904. Central Asia was thus prepared to join in the great strike of October 1905 and did so formally and officially on a signal from the strike committee of Ashkhabad at midnight on the night of October 13-14. The Grand Duke Konstantin Nikolaevich who was then in Tashkent noted on October 26 that the strike appeared to be over and it officially ended the next day only to begin again when the First Tashkent Reserve Battalion and other units mutinied on November 15. General Dean Ivanovich Subotich, who was sent in early 1906 to take over the troubled city of Tashkent, tried, at a time of administrative weakness, to restore order by appeasing the terrorists and revolutionaries, thus assisting them. When the government began to regain control of the situation, Subotich and his assistant, General V. V. Sakharov, were relieved of their commands. The government never lost complete control of the region and by early 1907 it was once more in command of the situation.
- Katagiri, Noriyuki (2015). Adapting to Win: How Insurgents Fight and Defeat Foreign States in War. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 197. ISBN 9780812246414.
- Intelligence Branch, Army Headquarters, India (1907). Frontier And Overseas Expeditions From India Vol. 2. Low Price Publications. p. 445. ISBN 978-1845743536.
- Baldry, John (1976). "Anglo-Italian Rivalry in Yemen and ʿAsīr 1900-1934". Die Welt des Islams. 17 (1/4): 155–193. doi:10.2307/1570344. ISSN 0043-2539. JSTOR 1570344.
- The Idrisi State in Asir 1906–1934: Politics, Religion and Prestige in Arabia. Hurst Publishers. 1997. pp. 33, 34.
- "( 1903 ) -". Retrieved 12 December 2014.
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- "Britain Sokoto Conquest 1903". www.onwar.com. Retrieved 2019-06-19.
- Collett, Nigel (2006-10-15). The Butcher of Amritsar: General Reginald Dyer. A&C Black. p. 89. ISBN 978-1-85285-575-8.
- Kashani-Sabet, Firoozeh (2014-08-07). Frontier Fictions: Shaping the Iranian Nation, 1804-1946. Princeton University Press. pp. xvii. ISBN 9781400865079.
- Abrahamian, Ervand (1982). Iran Between Two Revolutions. Princeton University Press. pp. 76–77. ISBN 0-691-10134-5.
- Abrahamian, Ervand (1982). Iran Between Two Revolutions. Princeton University Press. pp. 83. ISBN 0-691-10134-5.
- Abrahamian, Ervand (1982). Iran Between Two Revolutions. Princeton University Press. pp. 81. ISBN 0-691-10134-5.
- Abrahamian, Ervand (1982). Iran Between Two Revolutions. Princeton University Press. pp. 84. ISBN 0-691-10134-5.
- Abrahamian, Ervand (1982). Iran Between Two Revolutions. Princeton University Press. pp. 97. ISBN 0-691-10134-5.
- Abrahamian, Ervand (1982). Iran Between Two Revolutions. Princeton University Press. pp. 95. ISBN 0-691-10134-5.
- Abrahamian, Ervand (1982). Iran Between Two Revolutions. Princeton University Press. pp. 91. ISBN 0-691-10134-5.
- Berberian, Houri (2001). Armenians and the Iranian Constitutional Revolution of 1905–1911. Westview Press. pp. 116–117. ISBN 978-0-8133-3817-0.
- Jack A. Goldstone. The Encyclopedia of Political Revolutions Routledge, 29 apr. 2015 ISBN 1135937583 p 245
- "Records of the Kurds: Territory, Revolt and Nationalism, 1831-1979 - Cambridge Archive Editions". www.archiveeditions.co.uk. Retrieved 2020-02-22.
- "COW War List". correlatesofwar.org. Correlates of War. Retrieved 6 September 2019.
- Picard (1907). "Observations sur les Mahafalys" (PDF). persee.fr. p. 206.
- Al-Maghafi, Fadhl (2012). "MORE THAN JUST A BOUNDARY DISPUTE:THE REGIONAL GEOPOLITICS OF SAUDI-YEMENI RELATIONS" (PDF). pp. 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102, 103.
- Yılmazçelik, İbrahim. "ersim Sancağının Kurulmasından Sonra Karşılaşılan Güçlükler ve Dersim Sancağı ile İlgili Bu Dönemde Yazılan Raporlar (1875-1918)" (PDF). dergiler.ankara.edu.tr (in Turkish).
- "Arabia, Yemen, and Iraq 1700-1950 by Sanderson Beck". www.san.beck.org. Retrieved 2019-06-21.
Abdul Aziz ibn Saud still had to put down occasional revolts by the tribes. In May 1907 the Mutair tribe was defeated at Majma’a and pardoned. They rebelled again and were defeated at Buraida.
- Klein, Janet (2011-05-31). The Margins of Empire: Kurdish Militias in the Ottoman Tribal Zone. Stanford University Press. p. 101. ISBN 978-0-8047-7775-9.
- "MOHMAND EXPEDITION". Kalgoorlie Miner (WA : 1895 - 1954). 27 May 1908. p. 5. Retrieved 2019-10-17.
- "Arabia, Yemen, and Iraq 1700-1950 by Sanderson Beck". www.san.beck.org. Retrieved 2019-06-21.
Buraida’s Governor Muhammad Aba al-Kehil rebelled in 1908, and after his defeat the Saudi prince restored him.
- Henriksen, Thomas H. (1978). Mozambique: a history. Collings. p. 86. ISBN 978-0-86036-017-9.
- Lee, Mai Na M. (2015-06-16). Dreams of the Hmong Kingdom: The Quest for Legitimation in French Indochina, 1850–1960. University of Wisconsin Pres. p. 96. ISBN 978-0-299-29884-5.
- Henige, David (1979). History in Africa. African Studies Association. p. 54.
By the time Portuguese military expeditions reached Kasanje in 1910, intent on effective occupation and "pacification," only regional chieftains, some still claiming the kinguri title, remained to resist their advance. Portuguese military commanders seized and destroyed the regalia of the kinguri position in 1912, thereby ending the history of the state by burning the symbols in which had inhered the power of its kings.
- Sykes, Sir Percy (2013-09-27). A History Of Persia. Routledge. p. 423. ISBN 978-1-136-52597-1.
- St John, Ronald Bruce (4 June 2014). Historical Dictionary of Libya. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 316. ISBN 9780810878761.
- Eskander, Saad (2014). "Britain's Policy Towards The Kurdish Question, 1915-1923" (PDF). etheses.lse.ac.uk. p. 44, 45, 217.
- "File 4684/1913 'Pt 1 Muscat rebellion'". Qatar Digital Library. 2016-06-08. Retrieved 2019-11-25.
- Association, Cheke Cultural Writers (1994). The history and cultural life of the Mbunda speaking peoples. The Association. p. 101. ISBN 9789982030069.
- Bang, Anne (1997). The Idrisi State in Asir 1906–1934. pp. 104, 111, 113, 118, 122, 123.
- Henning, Barbara (2018-04-03). Narratives of the History of the Ottoman-Kurdish Bedirhani Family in Imperial and Post-Imperial Contexts: Continuities and Changes. University of Bamberg Press. pp. 322, 323, 324, 325, 326, 327. ISBN 9783863095512.
- Abegaz, Berhanu (2018-06-09). A Tributary Model of State Formation: Ethiopia, 1600-2015. Springer. p. 48. ISBN 9783319757803.
- Vos, Jelmer (2015). Kongo in the Age of Empire, 1860–1913: The Breakdown of a Moral Order. University of Wisconsin Pres. p. 350. ISBN 9780299306243.
- Minahan, James (2002-05-30). Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations: Ethnic and National Groups Around the World A-Z [4 Volumes]. ABC-CLIO. p. 350. ISBN 9780313076961.
- Lundahl, Mats; Lundius, Jan (2012-10-02). Peasants and Religion: A Socioeconomic Study of Dios Olivorio and the Palma Sola Religion in the Dominican Republic. Routledge. p. 105. ISBN 978-1-134-68765-7.
- Contesting Colonial Discourse: Rewriting Murut History of Resistance in British North Borneo from 1881 to 1915 http://ejournals.ukm.my/akademika/article/download/3037/1935
- Peil, Margaret; Oyeneye, Olatunji Y. (1998). Consensus, Conflict, and Change: A Sociological Introduction to African Societies. East African Publishers. p. 115. ISBN 978-9966-46-747-8.
The second important reaction was the Sadiavahe movement (1915-17). This was an armed peasant uprising which first began in the south-west on the left bank of the river Menarandra in early February 1915 and spread very quickly to the districts of Ampanihy and Tsihombe. The Sadiavahe stole cattle, attacked villages, cut telegraph wires. and withdrew into hiding-places well away from the posts controlled by the administration. They formed bands, ranging in number from ten to forty members at most, which were extremely mobile. Among the reasons why entire villages gave open or clandestine support to the Sadiavahe was the acute poverty of the population as a result of the very infrequent but violent rainfall, the imposition of a cattle tax, and the far-reaching of fats of the First World War, which had led to the mobilisation of people and to food shortages.
- Davis, Ronald W. (1975). "The Liberian Struggle for Authority on the Kru Coast". The International Journal of African Historical Studies. 8 (2): 222–265. doi:10.2307/216649. ISSN 0361-7882. JSTOR 216649.
- Sokol, Edward Dennis (2016). The Revolt of 1916 in Russian Central Asia. JHU Press. p. 136. ISBN 9781421420509.
These Yomud Turkomans situated along the Persian border proved much more difficult to deal with. These Yomuds had shown their rebellious disposition before when in 1912 and 1915 those subject to the Khivan khanate revolted. In 1915 an attack was organized against the city of Khiva and was beaten off only with the help of Russian troops under General Galkin.
- The Netherlands Indies and the Great War, 1914-1918. p. 453.
- In Union with him and Bey Madamin counter-revolutionary robber bands with July 10, 1919, to January 1920.
- Muḥammad, Fayz̤; Hazārah, Fayz̤ Muḥammad Kātib (1999). Kabul Under Siege: Fayz Muhammad's Account of the 1929 Uprising. Markus Wiener Publishers. p. 12. ISBN 9781558761551.
- Supporters of Habibullah had fought in alliance with such films only in northern Afghanistan
- Report of the Battles Nomenclature Committee
- The Third Afghan War 1919 Official Account p. 13
- Adamec, Ludwig W. (1975). Historical and Political Who's who of Afghanistan (PDF). Akademische Druck- u. Verlagsanstalt. p. 166. ISBN 978-3-201-00921-8.
There was an abortive uprising by the Safi regiment in his favour in June 1920. This regiment was raised in Tagao by Sardar Inayatullah.
- Ahmida, Ali Abdullatif (2002). The making of modern Libya. Albany, New York: SUNY Press. pp. 126–131. ISBN 978-1-4384-2891-8. Retrieved 12 June 2011.
- Farrokh, Kaveh (2011-12-20). Iran at War: 1500-1988. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 187. ISBN 978-1-78096-240-5.
- Al-Maghafi, Fadhl (2012). "MORE THAN JUST A BOUNDARY DISPUTE: THE REGIONAL GEOPOLITICS OF SAUDI-YEMENI RELATIONS" (PDF). eprints.soas.ac.uk. p. 107, 110.
- Peterson, J. E. (2016-08-05). Defending Arabia. Routledge. p. 35. ISBN 978-1-317-22999-5.
- Joab B. Eilon, Yoav Alon. The making of Jordan: tribes, colonialism and the modern state. 2007: pp.54-56.
- Machado, Manuel A. (1972). "The United States and the De la Huerta Rebellion". The Southwestern Historical Quarterly. 75 (3): 303–324. ISSN 0038-478X. JSTOR 30238152.
- Sarkees, Meredith Reid; Wayman, Frank Whelon (2010-07-01). Resort to war: a data guide to inter-state, extra-state, intra-state, and non-state wars, 1816-2007. CQ Press. p. 399. ISBN 9780872894341.
- "Восстание в Чечне 1924-1925 гг". www.hrono.ru. Retrieved 2019-07-15.
- Olson, Robert (1991). "The Turkoman Rebellion in Eastern Iran, 1924-5: Its Consequences and the Soviet Reaction". Die Welt des Islams. 31 (2): 216–227. doi:10.2307/1570580. ISSN 0043-2539. JSTOR 1570580.
- Poullada, Leon B. (1973). Reform and rebellion in Afghanistan, 1919-1929: King Amanullah's failure to modernize a tribal society. Cornell University Press. p. 123. ISBN 9780801407727.
- Chua, Andrew. "The Promise and Failure of King Amanullah's Modernisation Program in Afghanistan" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2018-03-29. Retrieved 21 January 2019.
- Dixon, Jeffrey S.; Sarkees, Meredith Reid (2015-08-12). A Guide to Intra-state Wars: An Examination of Civil, Regional, and Intercommunal Wars, 1816–2014. CQ Press. pp. 475, 476. ISBN 9781506317984.
- Olson, Robert (2013-12-18). The Emergence of Kurdish Nationalism and the Sheikh Said Rebellion, 1880–1925. University of Texas Press. p. 205. ISBN 9780292764125.
39. Tuncay, Tek-Parti, pp. 127–128 n., gives a list of eighteen rebellions as recorded in Türkiye Cumhuriyeti nde Ayaklanmalar (1924–1938), which is an official version of Turkish military history as written by the General Staff of the Turkish Armed Forces in 1972. Tuncay considers the Nestorian (Nasturi) rebellion of September 1924 not directly connected to the Kurdish rebellions. The following list is from Tuncay. (1) Nestorian (Nasturi) rebellion (12–28 September 1924); (2) Sheikh Said rebellion (13 February–31 May 1925); (3) Raçkotan and Raman pacifying operations (9–12 August 1925); (4) Sason (Sasun) rebellion (1925–1937); (5) First Ağri (Ararat) rebellion (16 May–17 June 1926) Koçuşaği rebellion (7 October–30 November 1927); (7) Mutki rebellion (26 May–25 August 1927); (8) Second Ağri (Ararat) rebellion (13–20 September 1927); (9) Bicar suppression (7 October–17 November 1927); (10) Asi Resul rebellion (22 May-3 August 1929); (11) Tendürük rebellion (14-27 September 1929); (12) Savur suppression (26 May-9 June 1930); (13) Zeylan rebellion (20 June-beginning of September 1930); (14) Aramar rebellion (16 July-10 October 1930); (15) Third Ağrı (Ararat) rebellion (7-14 November 1930); (16) Pülümür rebellion (8 October-14 November 1930); (17) Menemen rebellion (December 1930); (18) Tunceli (Dersim) suppression (1937-1938)
- Boxberger, Linda (2012-02-01). On the Edge of Empire: Hadhramawt, Emigration, and the Indian Ocean, 1880s-1930s. SUNY Press. p. 232. ISBN 9780791489352.
- "Baluchistan: A Repugnant Iranian Occupation | الإخبارية". www.alekhbariya.net. Retrieved 2020-04-06.
Approximately three months after Arabistan, in 1928, the Iranian regime occupied Baluchistan after the defeat of Baluchi forces at the hands of the army of the founder of the Pahlavi line, Reza Shah Pahlavi.
- Rehman, Zia (2014). "The Baluch insurgency: linking Iran to Pakistan" (PDF). files.ethz.ch. p. 1.
In 1928 independent West Baluchistan (today the Sistan and Baluchistan Province of Iran) was forcibly annexed to Iran by Reza Shah Pahlavi
- "BALUCHISTAN i. (cont.) – Encyclopaedia Iranica". www.iranicaonline.org. Retrieved 2020-04-06.
- Salzman, Philip (2008). "Politics and Change among the Baluch in Iran" (PDF).
But everything changed after Reza Shah’s military campaign in 1928-35 which brought Baluchistan under Persian control (Arfa 1964: Ch. 13). The tribes were “pacified” and forced to accept the suzerainty of the Shah. Consequently raiding was suppressed, and gradually the tribes were disarmed. Control was imposed over thehakomates, with vari-ous oasis forts knocked down by the Shah’s artillery.
- Ritter, William S. (1990). "Revolt in the Mountains: Fuzail Maksum and the Occupation of Garm, Spring 1929". Journal of Contemporary History. 25 (4): 547–580. doi:10.1177/002200949002500408. ISSN 0022-0094. JSTOR 260761.
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- Khan, Hafeez R. (1960). "Afghanistan and Pakistan". Pakistan Horizon. 13 (1): 55. ISSN 0030-980X. JSTOR 41392239.
1933: Siege of Matun, the capital of the Afghan province of Khost, by the Mohmands. 1937: Uprising of the Mohmands, the Shinwaris and the Sulayman Khel section of the Ghilzais. 1938: Abortive tribal movement under the Shami Pir to oust King Zahir Shah
- Jalali, Ali (2002). "Rebuilding Afghanistan's National Army". ssi.armywarcollege.ed. Retrieved 10 September 2019.
The situation enabled the army to successfully respond to simultaneous internal disturbances, including the Katawz rebellion in 1937-39, the Shinwari revolt of 1938, Alizai-Durani unrest in 1939, and the 1944-45 rebellion of the Safi tribe in eastern Kunar province.
- "Before Taliban". publishing.cdlib.org. Retrieved 2019-08-16.
his father helped to mediate three tribal uprisings—one among the Zadran tribe in Paktia Province, the Safi uprising in 1945 (about which Qazi Amin had little information), and an uprising among the Shinwari, which he believed occurred in the late 1930s or early 1940s.
- "Before Taliban". publishing.cdlib.org. Retrieved 2019-08-16.
Qazi Amin knew the most about the Shinwari upheaval, which he said centered around Shinwari leader Muhammad Afzal’s right to keep fifty militiamen whose salaries were paid by the government. Qazi Amin believed that Afzal was holding out for increased privileges from the government, and when he didn’t get his way, he attacked the local government base and set up his own government. Because his father had lived a long time in the Shinwari area, he was in a position to mediate between the government and Afzal, who eventually gave up his opposition.
- Martin, Mike (2014). An Intimate War: An Oral History of the Helmand Conflict, 1978-2012. Oxford University Press. p. 27. ISBN 978-0190237912.
The two monarchs from the dynasty, Nadir Shah and Zahir Shah, did not immediately learn from the lessons of Amanullah and faced a number of serious rebellions in their early years, such as in the winter of 1938/9. The government was carrying out a campaign for compulsory (male) education, which was used as a rallying cry by Alizai mullahs who said that female education would be next-a red line for the tribes of the south. what started as an Alizai disturbance quickly spread to the other tribes and there was a confrontation between the government and the tribesmen at Yakhchal, near Gereshk, which was eventually resolved when the government employed aircraft (bought from the British) against the tribesmen.
- "Iran : the " liberation " of Arabistan". articles.abolkhaseb.net. Retrieved 2019-04-09.
New revolts occurred in 1943 and 1945 and were quelled in blood.
- Williams, Susan (2016-08-09). Spies in the Congo: America's Atomic Mission in World War II. PublicAffairs. ISBN 978-1-61039-654-7.