Academic literature on the topic 'January uprising'

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Journal articles on the topic "January uprising"

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El Nour, Saker. "Small farmers and the revolution in Egypt: the forgotten actors." Contemporary Arab Affairs 8, no. 2 (2015): 198–211. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17550912.2015.1016764.

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This paper analyses the relationship between small farmers and revolution in Egypt by describing their role in the current uprising and redefining the track and stages of the revolution's development, as well as evaluating the historical relationship between small farmer uprisings and the urban elite. The paper provides a historical reading of the peasant uprisings and the way in which the urban elites have ignored their struggles. The study confirms that revolution is not a moment but a long process socially constructed and the peasant uprising in 1997 was the first spark of a protest wave that culminated in January 2011.
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Gobe, Eric, and Lena Salaymeh. "Tunisia's “Revolutionary” Lawyers: From Professional Autonomy to Political Mobilization." Law & Social Inquiry 41, no. 02 (2016): 311–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/lsi.12154.

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On January 14, 2011, after twenty‐three years in power and one month of popular protest demanding his resignation, President Ben Ali fled Tunisia. Lawyers, wearing their official robes, had marched frequently in the uprising's demonstrations. By engaging with and supporting the uprising, lawyers—both the profession in general and the bar's leadership—gained considerable symbolic influence over the post‐uprising government that replaced Ben Ali's regime. This article outlines the various forms of political lawyering undertaken by Tunisian lawyers and their professional associations from Tunisia's independence to post‐uprising transitions. We demonstrate that economic concerns, professional objectives, and civic professionalism contributed to the collective action of Tunisian lawyers before and after the uprising. Tunisian lawyers moved beyond the realm of their profession to adopt a role as overseers of the post‐uprising government.
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Mikołajczyk, Jolanta. "Małopolska Heritage of the January Uprising." Sowiniec 26, no. 47 (2015): 7–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.12797/sowiniec26.2015.47.02.

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On the occasion of the 150th anniversary of the outbreak of the January Uprising there appeared the idea of the realisation of a project of collecting information about the war graves of the insurrectionists of the period 1863-1864 located within the boundaries of the present-day Małopolska voivodeship. During the course of the collection of the materials there appeared the necessity of locating in Poland the war graves of those who headed to join the uprising from the villages and towns of Małopolska. The resources kept by the voivodeship offices proved extremely helpful in the realisation of this endeavour.In Poland about 540 graves of insurrectionists (individual and collective graves) are protected by the state – i.e. graves of insurrectionists who perished, died due to the wounds they received, were killed as war prisoners or were executed according to the sentences of the Russian summary courts. In the area of the Małopolska voivodeship 29 structures of this type are preserved (23 collective graves and 6 individual graves). In other regions of the country the presence of one individual and 13 collective war graves in which those who perished originated from the Małopolska region was established. On the basis of the materials that were collected more than one hundred names of the insurrectionists who were buried there were established as well. The search is in progress; the present article describes the state of knowledge as of December 2015.
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Wasef, Nevine Henry. "Domestic and Social Violence against Women during the Egyptian Uprising." Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences 9, no. 1 (2018): 213–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/mjss-2018-0020.

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AbstractThis study discusses how social and domestic violence against women increased during the period of political violence represented by the Egyptian Uprising of the 25thof January 2011. In this paper, the term political violence had been defined as any use of force practiced by governmental or anti-governmental groups to achieve political goals. Many scholars use the terms political violence and political instability interchangeably while the latter refers to a situation when a government had been toppled which was found to be strongly affiliated with political violence. Political violence includes uprisings and political transition of authority. Social violence is associated with sexual harassment, social norms and gender roles. Domestic violence refers to any physical harm among family members against women and domestic practices like early marriage and female circumcision. The article discusses first how the three types of violence interact and affect one another. The study in turn researches the increase of domestic violence rate against women in reaction to the political conflict resulting from the Egyptian Uprising of January 25th, 2011 through conducting interviews with abused women to investigate how the Egyptian Uprising had affected them socially and domestically. The study concludes that political violence had a direct impact on social and domestic violence against women.
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Niewczas, Łukasz. "Colloquia Norwidiana XIII: Norwid and the January Uprising." Studia Norwidiana 34 English Version (2016): 297–303. http://dx.doi.org/10.18290/sn.2016.34-17en.

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Legieć, Jacek. "The prison in Kielce during the January uprising." Res Historica 39 (December 9, 2015): 95. http://dx.doi.org/10.17951/rh.2015.0.95.

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Beinin, Joel. "Workers and Egypt's January 25 Revolution." International Labor and Working-Class History 80, no. 1 (2011): 189–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0147547911000123.

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One of the less noticed events of the “January 25 Revolution,” as Egyptians call the popular uprising that ousted President Hosni Mubarak, is the formation of the Egyptian Federation of Independent Trade Unions (EFITU). Its existence was announced at a press conference on January 30, 2011, in Cairo's Tahrir Square—the epicenter of the popular movement. The independent unions of Real Estate Tax Authority workers, healthcare technicians, and teachers established since 2008 initiated the new federation. They were joined by the 8.5 million-member retirees' association, which has just received permission to reorganize itself as a professional syndicate, as well as representatives of textile, pharmaceutical, chemical, iron and steel, and automotive workers from industrial zones in Cairo, Helwan, Mahalla al-Kubra, Tenth of Ramadan, and Sadat City. The independent trade union federation was the first new institution to emerge from the popular uprising, and it linked the cause of workers to what was, after January 28, an explicitly revolutionary movement.
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Nagy, Nahla. "The Egyptian revolution seen through the eyes of a psychiatrist." International Psychiatry 9, no. 3 (2012): 60–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/s1749367600003210.

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The 2011–12 Egyptian revolution (thawret 25 yanãyir, revolution of 25 January) took place following a popular uprising that began on Tuesday 25 January 2011 and is still continuing. The uprising was mainly a campaign of nonviolent civil resistance. In this revolution the participants have proved that if resistance begins with sincerity and unity, it may yet achieve victory.
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Nagy, Nahla. "The Egyptian revolution seen through the eyes of a psychiatrist." International Psychiatry 9, no. 3 (2012): 60–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1749367600003210.

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The 2011–12 Egyptian revolution (thawret 25 yanãyir, revolution of 25 January) took place following a popular uprising that began on Tuesday 25 January 2011 and is still continuing. The uprising was mainly a campaign of nonviolent civil resistance. In this revolution the participants have proved that if resistance begins with sincerity and unity, it may yet achieve victory.
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Strojnowska, Dorota. "Places Commemorating the January Uprising in the Krzeszowice region." Sowiniec, no. 43 (2013): 53–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.12797/sowiniec.24.2013.43.04.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "January uprising"

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El-Shazli, Heba Fawzi. "An Elusive Victory - Egyptian Workers Challenge the Regime (2006-2012)." Diss., Virginia Tech, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/71883.

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"We started the 2011 revolution and the rest of Egypt followed," say Egyptian workers with strong conviction. Egyptian independent workers' continuous claims of contention and repertoires of protest were one of several main factors leading to the January 25, 2011 uprising. After thirty-two years of a Mubarak-led authoritarian regime, massive protests began in January 2011 and forced President Mubarak to step down from his position. The first question of this research endeavor is: how did Egyptian workers challenge the regime and how they became one of the factors leading to the January 2011 uprising? These workers were organized into loose networks of different independent groups that had been protesting for a decade and longer prior to January 2011. However, their regular protests for over a decade before 2011 challenged the authoritarian regime. This dissertation examines the combative role of Egyptian independent workers' formal and informal organizations as a contentious social movement to challenge the regime. It will examine the evolving role of workers as socio-economic actors and then as political actors in political transitions. Social Movement Theory (SMT) and its mechanisms and Social Movement Unionism (SMU) will be the lenses through which this research will be presented. The methodology will be the comparative case studies of two different movements where workers who advocated for their rights for a decade prior to January 2011 experienced significantly differing outcomes. One case study showcases the municipal real estate tax collection workers who were able to establish a successful social movement and then create an independent trade union. The second case study examines an influential group of garment and textile workers, who also developed an effective social movement, yet were not able to take it to the next step to establish an independent union. I will explore within this research a second question: why one group of workers was able to establish an independent union while the other arguably more influential group of workers, the garment and textile workers, was not able to do so. This had an impact on the influence they were able to exercise over the regime in addition to their effectiveness as a social movement for change.<br>Ph. D.
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Lippert, Andrew Michael. "SOCIAL DEMOCRACY IN POWER: REVOLUTIONARY GERMANY, NOVEMBER 1918 - JANUARY 1919." Master's thesis, Temple University Libraries, 2013. http://cdm16002.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p245801coll10/id/214789.

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History<br>M.A.<br>Few historical works focus on the period of German history immediately following World War I. Fewer still inquire about how the Majority Social Democratic Party (MSPD) regime exercised power. This paper looks at the rhetoric in the MSPD's party organ Vorwärts to understand how they presented themselves to the German people following the collapse of the Imperial regime. The official party organ provides unique insight into how the MSPD regime transitioned from a party in opposition to leading the provisional government and how it justified holding that power. The official party newspaper of the radical Spartakusbund coupled with the conservative Neue Preußische Kreuzzeitung provide a context to further understand the rhetoric of the MSPD and how the opponents of the majority socialist regime responded to the interim government. The MSPD was in a difficult position after the collapse of the Imperial regime, which was exacerbated by a hostile rhetorical environment. Upon assuming power, the MSPD was hesitant and defensive but grew into their position of leadership, winning the largest portion of votes in the January 19th election of 1919 as well as the early elections of the Weimar republic.<br>Temple University--Theses
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Opalski, Magdalena M. "The Jews in the literary legend of the January uprising of 1863: A case study in Jewish stereotypes in Polish literature." Thesis, University of Ottawa (Canada), 1986. http://hdl.handle.net/10393/21177.

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Ghazal, Rehab Y. "The Arab Spring and beyond| Society, education, and the civic engagement of women in Egypt before, during, and after the January 25 uprising." Thesis, State University of New York at Buffalo, 2014. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=3640767.

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<p> This dissertation examines the civic experiences of women before, during and after the January 25, 2011 Uprising in Egypt in an attempt to explore this group's perception of what encouraged or discouraged them from engaging civically. Two questions guide this investigation. How do Egyptian women with a social studies background narrate their civic experiences before, during and after the January 25 Uprising? And to what extent have the K-12 citizenship education and related policies impacted the civic engagement of these future teachers before, during and after the Uprising? </p><p> Inspired by the works of Dewey, Freire and hook, this study views education as key in developing engaged citizens. Schools represent the society and are responsible for cultivating future generations. The experiences students have influences their knowledge and attitudes as citizens. This study traces the impact of education, school environment, and the society in general on empowering women to have a voice, engage in the community, and make political choices. </p><p> Data were collected in Egypt in 2013 amid much instability but at a time when Egyptians had to put their civic duty first and make many political choices. Twenty-two women took part in face-to-face semi-structured interviews. The participant pool included teachers of social studies, graduate students of social studies education or history, and undergraduate students majoring in a social studies related field. Additional sources of data included, non-participant observations, document analysis, and field notes. </p><p> Using grounded theory to analyze and interpret the data; findings reveal that societal norms and school practices have limited the participants' choices and led the women to believe that their voices were silenced. However, the data also reflects strong human agency that the women exhibited consciously and unconsciously. Through intensive fieldwork, this dissertation sets the groundwork for future studies targeting education and women in the Middle East. It offers intellectual space for a much-needed conversation on educational policies, citizenship education, democracy, and women status in the Middle East.</p>
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Kołodziejczak, Aleksandra. ""Moje wspomnienia" księcia Włodzimierza Mieszczerskiego. Poetyka - Portret elity rosyjskiej - Wizja kultury polskiej." Phd thesis, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/11320/4682.

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Książę Włodzimierz Mieszczerski jest jedną z najbardziej znanych postaci rosyjskiego życia drugiej połowy XIX wieku. "Moje wspomnienia" do tej pory nie były przedmiotem badań naukowych. W pierwszym rozdziale przeanalizowano strukturę tekstu i jego kompozycję narracyjną. Wyodrębnione zostały cechy specyficzne dla gatunku wspomnieniowego. W rozdziale drugim poprzez zbadanie autoprezentacji pamiętnikarza przybliżona została jego sylwetka, scharakteryzowane zostało czasopismo "Grażdanin". W utworze autor rozpatruje zachodzące w Rosji zmiany z pozycji konserwatysty. Dla niego idealną formą władzy okazuje sie nieograniczone samodzierżawie, którego fundamentem powinna być szlachta. Dziadek księcia , Mikołaj Karamzin, był jego ideologicznym autorytetem. Znaczącym elementem strukturalnym "Moich wspomnień" są portrety literackie: Aleksego Apuchtina, Michała Katkowa, Aleksego Tołstoja, Piotra Wiaziemskiego, Fiodora Tiutczewa, Fiodora Dostojewskiego, Iwana Turgieniewa i Iwana Aksakowa. Aleksander III jest jednym z głównych bohaterów utworu. W rozdziale trzecim został pokazany stosunek księcia do mentalności Polaków, do państwa polskiego oraz do ziem zachodnich ówczesnego Imperium Rosyjskiego.<br>Prince Vladimir Meschersky is one of the most renowned characters of Russian life of the second half of the 19th century. His "Memoirs" are a subject of academic research for the first time. Chapter 1 of this study analyses the text's structure and its narrative composition, identifying the features specific for the memoir genre. The second chapter takes a close look at the memoirist's figure. His own magazine, "Grazhdanin" was analysed. Throughout his "Memoirs" he examines and analyses the changes taking place in Russia from a conservative's footing. To him, unlimited autocracy seemed the ultimate form of government, and the nobility its foundation. His grandfather, Nikolay Karamzin, was his ultimate authority in terms of ideology. Literary portrayls constitute an important structural element of his "Memoirs". The writers depicted include Alkesey Apukhtin, Michael Katkov, Aleksy Tolstoy, Pyotr Vyazemski, Fyodor Dostoyevski, Ivan Turgenev, and Ivan Aksakov. One of the mainprotagonists of "Memoirs" is Alexander III. Chapter 3, examines closely the Prince's attitude to Polish mentality, the Polish state, and the western territories of the Russian Empire.<br>Wydział Filologiczny
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Vlasák, Patrik. "Postoj Velké Británie k polskému lednovému povstání (1863-1864)." Master's thesis, 2019. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-404654.

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The thesis focuses on analysis of the standpoints within the British government and its representatives towards Poland during the January insurrection (1863-1864) in the context of international relationships and towards representatives of the Polish nation in Poland and in exile. The thesis further describes actions that were taken by the Polish emigrants in The Great Britain and their influence on the British foreign policy and society. Key words: The January uprising, Great Britain, Poland, Polish insurrection, 19th century, British-Polish relations
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Books on the topic "January uprising"

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Kulecka, Alicja. Dziedzictwo Powstania Styczniowego: Pamięć, historiografia, myśl polityczna : zbiór studiów = Legacy of the January Uprising : commemoration, historiography, political thought, collected essays. Wydawnictwa Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego, 2013.

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Fundacja na Rzecz Nauki Polskiej, ed. Przepisywanie historii: Powstanie styczniowe w powieści polskiej w perspektywie pamięci kulturowej = Re-writing history : the January Uprising in Polish novels in the perspective of memory policy. Wydawnictwo Naukowe Uniwersytetu Mikołaja Kopernika, 2014.

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Manning, Roberta Thompson. The rise and fall of "the extraordinary measures," January-June, 1928: Toward a reexamination of the onset of the Stalin Revolution. Center for Russian & East European Studies. University Center for International Studies, University of Pittsburgh, 2001.

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Jumet, Kira D. The January 25th Uprising. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190688455.003.0004.

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This chapter uses qualitative data and interviewee accounts to explain how government violence and repression affected protest mobilization during the Egyptian Revolution. It examines rational altruistic decisions to protest and the emotional mechanisms, such as moral shock and moral outrage, which produce such decisions. The chapter focuses on the emotion of “moral shock” in the face of government violence, as well as feelings of nationalism and “collective national identity,” as motivators for protest. The chapter also investigates instances where elements of empathy or feelings of injustice were absent from the emotional process. When such elements were missing, individuals were deterred from participating in protest.
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The awakening: A chronicle of the Bulgarian civic uprising of January-February 1997. Democracy Network Program, 1998.

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The awakening: A chronicle of the Bulgarian civic uprising of January-February 1997 (Bulgaria in transition). Centre for Social Practices, NBU, 1998.

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Polonsky, Antony, ed. Polin: Studies in Polish Jewry Volume 1. Liverpool University Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781904113171.001.0001.

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This book explores central themes in Jewish and European history. Launching what was to become a comprehensive and vigorous forum for discussion of all aspects of the Jewish experience in Poland, this first volume established the pattern of bringing together work by established and younger scholars from many countries. The book begins with a discussion of the reconstruction of the history of pre-Ashkenazic Jewish settlement patterns in the Slavic lands. It examines the fundamental security and the economic and political power which the Jews possessed in 16th–18th century Poland and investigates the basic characteristics of the Jewish experience in Poland. It then investigates the changes in the attitude of Polish society toward the Jews in the 18th century. Further attention is given to Polish–Jewish relations and the January uprising, the assimilation of Jews in the Kingdom of Poland, and the role of Hasidism. It next looks at Yiddish literature in Poland between the two World Wars, the underground movement in Auschwitz, Polish–Jewish dialogue and relations, and the response of the Western Allies to the Holocaust. The latter part of the volume examines a selection of published works.
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Tunia, Krzysztof, ed. Kartki z dziejów igołomskiego powiśla. Wydawnictwo i Pracownia Archeologiczna PROFIL-ARCHEO, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.33547/igolomia2020.

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„Cards from the history of Igołomia region on the Vistula River” is a monumental, richly illustrated collective work devoted to the history of a patch of Małopolska (Lesser Poland; S Poland) located north-east of Kraków, in the Western Lesser Poland Loess Upland. This area is known to archaeologists for years as a kind of Eldorado, inhabited by subsequent human groups, ranging from Palaeolithic hunter-gatherers, through the shepherds of the Corded Ware culture, to the creators of the Igołomia-Zofipole wheel-trown pottery production center in the late Roman period. It played a significant role also in historical times, thanks to its location in the foreground of the capital of Małopolska. The monograph edited by Dr. Krzysztof Tunia, an archaeologist who has devoted most of his professional career to researching this region, reflects the current state of research on the prehistory and history of this part of the Vistula river. The advantage of the publication is the fact that the individual chapters come „first hand”: from the researchers who have conducted excavations, historical queries or anthropological studies here, and today synthesize their results in a form accessible to a wide audience. The reading is accompanied by the thought of longue durée – it is inevitable, in fact, when in one book one reads about the subsistence strategies of the first farmers from the 6th millennium BC, the innovations of their Slavic successors from the 6th century AD, the bias of local peasants toward the January Uprising or the attitude of the rural population in the face of the atrocities of the Holocaust…
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Tunia, Krzysztof, ed. Kartki z dziejów igołomskiego powiśla. 2nd ed. Wydawnictwo i Pracownia Archeologiczna Profil-Archeo, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.33547/igolomia2021.

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The second, supplemented edition of the „Cards from the history of Igołomia region on the Vistula River” is a monumental, richly illustrated collective work devoted to the history of a patch of Małopolska (Lesser Poland; S Poland) located north-east of Kraków, in the Western Lesser Poland Loess Upland. This area is known to archaeologists for years as a kind of Eldorado, inhabited by subsequent human groups, ranging from Palaeolithic hunter-gatherers, through the shepherds of the Corded Ware culture, to the creators of the Igołomia-Zofipole wheel-trown pottery production center in the late Roman period. It played a significant role also in historical times, thanks to its location in the foreground of the capital of Małopolska. The monograph edited by Dr. Krzysztof Tunia, an archaeologist who has devoted most of his professional career to researching this region, reflects the current state of research on the prehistory and history of this part of the Vistula river. The advantage of the publication is the fact that the individual chapters come „first hand”: from the researchers who have conducted excavations, historical queries or anthropological studies here, and today synthesize their results in a form accessible to a wide audience. The reading is accompanied by the thought of longue durée – it is inevitable, in fact, when in one book one reads about the subsistence strategies of the first farmers from the 6th millennium BC, the innovations of their Slavic successors from the 6th century AD, the attitude of local peasants toward the January Uprising or about daily life of the rural population in the dark times of the German occupation and atrocities of the Holocaust…
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Rey, Terry. Trou Coffy and the Léogâne Insurgent Theater. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190625849.003.0005.

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“Trou Coffy and the Léogâne Insurgent Theater” springs from the previous biographical chapters profiling this book’s two chief subjects and returns to the 1791 insurgencies in the West Province of Saint-Domingue, with the geographic focus shifting to the city of Léogâne and the plantations on its surrounding plain. After first considering earlier slave and free colored uprisings in the West Province and revisiting their turbulent sociopolitical context, this chapter details the activities of Romaine’s followers at Trou Coffy in the Léogâne insurgent theater. Their raids on local whites and the resultant destruction of their property left their surviving enemies in a desperate state, threatened with famine or violent elimination. They saw no choice but to enter into negotiations with Romaine-la’Prophétesse, which, in part due to Abbé Ouvière, led to the cessation of control over the city to the mysterious, prophetic warlord. The time period covered is September 1791 to January 1792.
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Book chapters on the topic "January uprising"

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Gentes, Andrew A. "The 1863 January Uprising." In The Mass Deportation of Poles to Siberia, 1863-1880. Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-60958-4_3.

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Ostrowski, Marius S. "The Communist Uprising in Berlin, January 1919." In Eduard Bernstein on the German Revolution. Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-27719-2_14.

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Healy, Róisín. "From the January Uprising to the First Home Rule Bill, 1860–1886." In Poland in the Irish Nationalist Imagination, 1772–1922. Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-43431-5_5.

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"The Uprising of January 1919." In The German Revolution, 1917-1923. BRILL, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789047405726_013.

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Rutherford, Bruce K., and Jeannie L. Sowers. "The 2011 Uprising and Its Aftermath." In Modern Egypt. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/wentk/9780190641146.003.0001.

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What Happened on January 25, 2011? Egyptian activists called for street protests against the long-standing rule of President Hosni Mubarak on January 25, 2011 using a variety of social media platforms including Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube. They chose January 25 because it is National Police...
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"Roots of the 25 January Uprising." In A Dialectical Pedagogy of Revolt. BRILL, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004262669_012.

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"7. The January Uprising and Its Lesson." In A Surplus of Memory. University of California Press, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/9780520912595-010.

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"The urban uprising of January to June 1974." In The Ethiopian Revolution 1974–1987. Cambridge University Press, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cbo9780511563102.004.

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Gdaniec, Maciej. "Konstantynopol jako „iπποδρομιοσ” zmagań armii z fakcjonistami, buntownikami i mieszkańcami w czasie powstania Nika w 532 roku." In Oblicza Wojny. Tom 5. Miasto i wojna. Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.18778/8220-699-9.02.

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This article presents the actions of the imperial army during the Nika revolt. The first use of the army, confirmed by sources, took place on 14, 17, 18 January 532. The first, source-confirmed, use of the army took place on 14 January. Fighting with the rebels under Belisarius continued until the evening and did not bring the expected results, the uprising continued and brought more and more destruction. On 17 January reinforcements arrived from the surrounding towns. As research shows, the mere appearance of a larger army in the city escalated tensions and paradoxically became the reason for its immediate use. The use of a larger force did not end the uprising and led to the greatest destruction since it began. The mercenaries under the command of Belisarius and Mundus proved to be the key foundation for maintaining Justinian the Great’s power in January 532, as they proved loyal to their superiors and the emperor, compared to the troops of the imperial guard. The source giving the most information about the warfare during the Nika uprising turned out to be the Chronicon Paschale, which details the account of, among others, John Malalas. The account of Procopius of Caesarea seems to be useful only in interpreting the operations of 18 January.
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Opalska, Magdalena. "Polish-Jewish Relations and the January Uprising: The Polish Perspective." In Polin: Studies in Polish Jewry Volume 1. Liverpool University Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781904113171.003.0007.

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This chapter focuses on Polish–Jewish relations and the January uprising. The memory of the pro-Polish orientation of the Jews in the January uprising remained alive throughout the 19th and in the early 20th centuries. The legend of patriotic ‘Poles of Mosaic faith’, which crystallized in the 1860s as a part of a broader romantic myth, gained a lasting place in literary tradition. The positive evaluation of the Jewish role generally remained artistically and ideologically rooted in the traditional romantic worldview. From that point of view, many later works can be seen as fossils of Polish romanticism. As the character of Polish–Jewish relations deteriorated, the Jewish legend of 1863 was continually revised in retrospect and it evolved in an increasingly negative fashion. Projecting new problems upon the past, Polish literature of the realist and modernist periods emphasized the economic aspect of Polish–Jewish relations and portrayed Jewish political loyalties with growing ambivalence. Echoing complex structural changes in post-insurrectionary Polish society as a whole, changes which brought about the revision of the larger myth of 1863, the evolution of its Jewish aspect followed closely the course of the debate on the so-called ‘Jewish question’.
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Conference papers on the topic "January uprising"

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Prokofiev, A. I. "«История в настоящем совершенном времени»: семиосфера нарратива Тринадцатилетней войны 1654−1667 гг. в российской имперской историографии (1864−1912 гг.)". У VIII Information school of a young scientist. Central Scientific Library of the Urals Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.32460/ishmu-2020-8-0029.

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On the basis of an interdisciplinary synthesis of historiography and semiotics, the article proposes a new way of analysing the conceptions of historians, who studied the war between the Moscow state and the Commonwealth in the middle of the XVII century. The attention is paid not to the search for genetic links and biographical pages in the writings of researchers working in the same era. But discovery is presented of the speech units that affect the production of discourses that add up specific narratives. The author seeks to trace the processes of convergence or estrangement of scientific ideas with/from the state request, which was delivered after the January uprising of 1863–1864 in the provinces of the Kingdom of Poland (Congress Poland) and the Northwest Krai. Therefore, the aim of the study is to verify the author's vision of the usefulness and complementarity of the semiotic understanding of the interaction of the text and its creator with the history of ideas. Such understanding is a significant part of the process of historiographic accumulation of information. Concretely, the author applies this synthesis to the micro level, i. e., to the stage of specific historical research.
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