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Journal articles on the topic 'Punitive Expedition'

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1

V.C.P. "Punitive Expedition." Americas 54, no. 1 (1997): 130–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003161500025712.

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2

Hatch, David A. "The Punitive Expedition Military Reform and Communications Intelligence." Cryptologia 31, no. 1 (2007): 38–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01611190600964264.

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3

Brenner, Sylvia, and Rondal R. Bridgemon. "San Joaquín Canyon and the 1916 Punitive Expedition." Journal of the Southwest 54, no. 1 (2012): 47–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jsw.2012.0000.

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4

Kim, Sungmoon. "Confucian Humanitarian Intervention? Toward Democratic Theory." Review of Politics 79, no. 2 (2017): 187–213. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0034670516001212.

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AbstractIt is widely claimed that Mencius's account of punitive expedition can be understood as a Confucian justification of humanitarian intervention and thus has the potential to play the role of constraining China's imperial ventures abroad. This paper challenges this optimism, by drawing attention to internal and external obstacles—the problem of virtue's self-indulgence and the problem of justification to non-Confucians—that prevent Mencius's virtue-based political theory of punitive expedition from developing into a modern theory of humanitarian intervention. It argues that for the Menci
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5

Marble, William Sanders. "Medical Support for Pershing's Punitive Expedition in Mexico, 1916–1917." Military Medicine 173, no. 3 (2008): 287–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.7205/milmed.173.3.287.

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6

Anderson, Mark C., and Joseph A. Stout. "Border Conflict: Villistas, Carrancistas and the Punitive Expedition, 1915-1920." Western Historical Quarterly 31, no. 2 (2000): 236. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/970083.

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7

Wasserman, Mark, and Joseph A. Stout. "Border Conflict: Villistas, Carrancistas and the Punitive Expedition, 1915-1920." American Historical Review 105, no. 4 (2000): 1356. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2651515.

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8

Vandiver, Frank E., and Joseph A. Stout. "Border Conflict: Villistas, Carrancistas, and the Punitive Expedition, 1915-1920." Journal of Military History 63, no. 4 (1999): 994. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/120590.

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9

Asker, Khashirov. "Military, political, administrative and economic activities of general G.A. Emanuel in the Cauca-sus (1826–1831)." Kavkazologiya 2022, no. 4 (2022): 53–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.31143/2542-212x-2022-4-53-68.

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The article handles the military-political and administrative-economic activity aspects of General G.A. Emanuel as commander of the troops on the Caucasian line, in the Black Sea and Astrakhan, head of the Caucasian region. His contribution to the settlement of interethnic relations in the Central Caucasus is indicated. G.A. Emanuel preferred to use diplomatic methods instead of mili-tary punitive methods, whereby several ethnic groups voluntarily became part of the Russian Em-pire. But, against the Circassians of the Western Caucasus on his instructions, military punitive expeditions were con
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10

Datan, Ipoi. "The Ulu Trusan Expedition 1900: Review From a Local." Sarawak Museum Journal LXXV, no. 96 (2015): 121–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.61507/smj22-2015-5bs1-05.

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In May 1900, the second Rajah of Sarawak, Charles Brooke, launched what was probably one of his last major punitive expeditions1 against so-called ‘trouble makers’ from among the Murut (now known as Lun Bawang)2 community of the upper Trusan River in present-day Lawas District, Limbang Division. While a fairly good account of the bala3 Brooke had been reported by members of the invading force (Ricketts 1900: 113-115) very little is known or recorded about the baweh4 and its aftermath from the local perspective. This article attempts to address this literature imbalance.
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Eyo, Ekpo. "The Dialectics of Definitions: "Massacre" and "Sack" in the History of the Punitive Expedition." African Arts 30, no. 3 (1997): 34. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3337496.

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12

Vickers, Michael, David Gill, and Maria Economou. "Euesperides: the Rescue of an Excavation." Libyan Studies 25 (January 1994): 125–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0263718900006282.

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There was a time when the Department of Antiquities at the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford was prosperous enough to support a venture which called itself the Ashmolean Expedition to Cyrenaica. The form this exercise took was the excavation over three seasons between 1952 and 1954 of parts of the site of the Greek city of Euesperides situated on the outskirts of Benghazi (Fig. 1 ).Euesperides does not figure large in history. We first hear of it in 515 in connection with the revolt of Barca from the Persians: a punitive expedition was sent by the satrap in Egypt and it marched as far west as Euesper
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Gibson, Padraic. "Communists and the 1933 Campaign That Ended Frontier Massacres in Australia." Labour History 126, no. 1 (2024): 47–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/labourhistory.2024.5.

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In August and September 1933, agitation by the Communist Party of Australia (CPA) led trade unions and unemployed workers’ organisations to join a national campaign for Aboriginal rights for the first time in history. Police in the Northern Territory were publicly planning a “punitive expedition” to kill Yolngu people, in response to the spearing death of an officer. Public mobilisation stopped the expedition, effectively ending the practice of frontier massacres that had long characterised the colonisation of Australia. Existing histories have emphasised the leading role of missionaries and o
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14

Merkviladze, David. "ON THE LOCALIZATION OF THE BATTLEFIELD BETWEEN SAHAK, EMIR OF TBILISI AND MUHAMMAD IBN KHALID." Pro Georgia No 31 31, no. 31 (2021): 133–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.32690/1230-1604/merkviladze.

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The goal of the present paper is to determine the specific location of the battle between Khalid ibn-Yazid and Sahak (Ishak), emir of Tbilisi. The Arab conquests in Transcaucasia and their dominion on the territory of the Eastern Georgia gave rise to the formation of Tbilisi emirate. In the beginning of the 9-th century Tbilisi emirs, deprived of the part of their domain, ceased to subordinate to the power of the Caliph and misappropriated collected tributes. Caliphs resorted to punitive expeditions to bring disobedient emirs to submission. In 842, during the expedition conducted by Khalid ibn
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15

Ya, Komenan Raphael, Yatté Roch Cédric Assamoi, and Casimir Bahoueli. "Contribution of Endogenous Mechanisms in the Settlement of Community Conflicts Between Attie Indigenous People and Malinke Allogenes in The Village of Moape in the Department of Adzope." Uirtus 5, no. 1 (2025): 190. https://doi.org/10.59384/uirtus.2025.2622.

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In August 2006, the village of Moapé (Sous-préfecture of Adzopé) was shaken by the discovery of the body of a young Attié native near an allogeneic neighborhood. Despite attempts by the gendarmerie and traditional authorities to ease tensions, some residents organized a punitive expedition against the allogeneic community, accused of being responsible. Within a day, the traditional tribunal issued a drastic sanction: the banishment of this community for thirty years. This case highlights the limitations of endogenous mechanisms of social regulation, which, while essential for social cohesion,
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Urban, Andrew. "Asylum in the Midst of Chinese Exclusion: Pershing’s Punitive Expedition and the Columbus Refugees from Mexico, 1916–1921." Journal of Policy History 23, no. 2 (2011): 204–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0898030611000042.

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17

Ryan, Lyndall. "Untangling Aboriginal resistance and the settler punitive expedition: the Hawkesbury River frontier in New South Wales, 1794–1810." Journal of Genocide Research 15, no. 2 (2013): 219–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14623528.2013.789206.

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18

Roese, P. M., and A. R. Rees. "A Bibliography of Benin: a commentary on published & unpublished sources written in German." African Research & Documentation 45 (1988): 15–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305862x0001181x.

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As the history of the former Benin Empire is well known to the specialists, there is no need to elaborate on it in this paper. Although sporadic information about Benin was reaching Europe as early as the end of the 15th Century, real interest was aroused only in the wake of the British ‘Punitive Expedition’ to Benin City in 1897. Few had suspected the existence of such a highly developed African culture with a range and volume of works of art which were brought to Europe as booty by the returning army. Initial investigations in Benin left many questions unanswered, and it was the late J.U. Eg
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Roese, P. M., and A. R. Rees. "A Bibliography of Benin: a commentary on published & unpublished sources written in German." African Research & Documentation 45 (1988): 15–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0305862x0001181x.

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As the history of the former Benin Empire is well known to the specialists, there is no need to elaborate on it in this paper. Although sporadic information about Benin was reaching Europe as early as the end of the 15th Century, real interest was aroused only in the wake of the British ‘Punitive Expedition’ to Benin City in 1897. Few had suspected the existence of such a highly developed African culture with a range and volume of works of art which were brought to Europe as booty by the returning army. Initial investigations in Benin left many questions unanswered, and it was the late J.U. Eg
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20

Sosnowski, Daniela. "El levantamiento de las milicias cordobesas de 1731 a partir de un legajo del Archivo Histórico de la Provincia de Córdoba." Revista Electrónica de Fuentes y Archivos 1, no. 13 (2022): 87–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.70629/1853.4503.v1.n13.37891.

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Within the context of a punitive expedition towards the Chaco region in 1731, several companies of the militias of Córdoba deserted and returned to the city refusing to subordinate to the lieutenant in charge. This episode was registered in some historical documents found in a file at the Archivo Histórico de la Provincia de Córdoba. That file also contains another document, related to a previous event, but which also concerns the same lieutenant and militias. This paper has a double objective: on the one hand, we analyze the desertion based on a careful reading of the different documents, see
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21

Sogbesan, Oluwatoyin, and Tokie Laotan-Brown. "Reflections on the Customary Laws of Benin Kingdom and Its Living Cultural Objects in the Discourse of Ownership and Restitution." Santander Art and Culture Law Review 8, no. 2 (2022): 9–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.4467/2450050xsnr.22.011.17024.

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The British punitive expedition of 1897 led to the theft and vandalization of the cultural heritage of the Benin kingdom. The plunder included more than 3,000 cultural objects made of bronzes, ivories, beads, and other objects, which were produced since the 1st century AD to commemorate historical moments, political transitions, and ritual purposes. This theft dishonoured the spiritual and ritual significance of these living cultural objects, and has turned them into museum artefacts. As international debates on restitution and the return of Benin Bronzes intensify, two pertinent questions whi
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22

Zhigalova, Natalia. "Ottoman Military Campaigns in the Peloponnese in the Second Quarter of the 15th Century: Military-Political Aspect." ISTORIYA 14, no. 1 (123) (2023): 0. http://dx.doi.org/10.18254/s207987840024212-2.

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In this article, the author examines the causes, course and results of the Ottoman military campaigns in the Peloponnese in the second quarter of the 15th century. The author comes to the conclusion that the raids of the Ottoman commander Turahan Bey in 1423, 1431 and 1435 were rather local acts of aggression aimed at intimidating the Morean despots and were intended to prevent the expansion of Byzantine influence in Greece and in the north of the Peloponnese. At the same time, the Ottoman campaign against the Peloponnese in 1446 had the character of a punitive expedition. Sultan Murad II pers
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23

Mukhanov, V. M. "On the initial stage of the Georgian-Ossetian conflict." Гуманитарные и юридические исследования 11, no. 2 (2024): 297–302. http://dx.doi.org/10.37493/2409-1030.2024.2.12.

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Introduction. The article examines the background, causes and initial stage of the Georgian-Ossetian conflict, tied to the aggressive and nationalistic policy of the authorities of the Georgian Democratic Republic during the period of independence - 1918-1921. Materials and Methods. The analysis was carried out on f Russian, Georgian and Ossetian sources of various formats, including those of administrative nature and personal origin. First of all, it is necessary to highlight the memoirs and speeches of major political and military figures of the era in question N. Zhordania, V. Dzhugeli, G.
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24

Kwan, C. Nathan. "‘Putting down a common enemy’: Piracy and occasional interstate power in South China during the mid-nineteenth century." International Journal of Maritime History 32, no. 3 (2020): 697–712. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0843871420944629.

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Piracy was considered a crime in international law, and British authorities felt its suppression justified the extension of state power into Asian waters. Only after the Opium War and the colonisation of Hong Kong, however, did Britain gain an interest and the wherewithal to act against pirates off the coast of South China. Ships of the Royal Navy, enforcing British ideas of international and maritime law in Chinese waters, together with the criminal justice system in Hong Kong, proved limited in their capacity to deal with piracy in South China in the mid-nineteenth century. Agents of British
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25

Khamidullin, Salavat I. "The entry of Bashkiria into the Mongol Empire." Vestnik Tomskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta. Istoriya, no. 89 (2024): 83–94. https://doi.org/10.17223/19988613/89/10.

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This article examines the process of accession of the Bashkirs to the Mongol Empire, reconstructs the course of events in the 1220-30s in the Ural-Volga region, and reveals the immediate causes of the Mongol invasion of Bashkiria. A special place in the study is given to the question of the character of Bashkir subjection, since two opposite points of view are usually expressed in the scientific literature. Some researchers believe that the Bashkirs voluntarily recognized the power of the Mongol Khan, while others claim that they were conquered by force of arms. Based on a comparative analysis
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26

Pierzchała, Andrzej. "The East India Company and the pirates of the Persian Gulf from the first punitive expedition to the signing of the General Maritime Treaty." Saeculum Christianum 22 (September 20, 2016): 194–205. http://dx.doi.org/10.21697/sc.2015.22.17.

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Although almost every sea was dominated by Royal Navy, it couldn’t reach every single place in the world. Trade company’s ships and fully armed merchant ships many times had to take care of themselves. The East India Company had an independent policy that goes beyond the subcontinent. During the first decade of 19th century, the most difficult problem to solve (except the problems of India) was the Persian Gulf, which appeared to be the source of many profits and problems, that wasn’t easy to solve and took a lots of time to conclude.The Treaty of 1820 solved the problems of sea and overland c
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27

Solodkin, Ya.G. "Berezov uyezd in 1595: the rebellion of «foreigners» and the service people." Bulletin of Nizhnevartovsk State University, no. 3 (November 18, 2019): 82–88. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3546470.

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In 1595, shortly after founding, the Berezov fort was besieged by the Ostyaks (probably under the command of the Kunovat-Lyapin prince Shatrov Luguev) and the Samoeds. A quarter century later, three servicemen from Berezov evidenced in the Kazan Prikaz that the siege, during which the ‘foreigners’ burned the fort, lasted over six months. Contrary to the common opinion, the reliability of this evidence can be doubted because it does not completely agree with the news on Shatrov Luguev’s assault of Berezov in 1594–1595. Moreover, the garrison of the fortress on the Severn
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Gusev, Dmitrii V. "CAPTAIN IVAN BORISOV ON THE ISLAND OF SAMOS IN AUGUST 1771. ON THE HISTORY OF THE RUSSIAN-GREEK RELATIONS DURING THE FIRST ARCHIPELAGO EXPEDITION." History and Archives 6, no. 2 (2024): 80–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.28995/2658-6541-2024-6-2-80-93.

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The article considers the short staying of stay of the commander of the “Saint Ianuarius” ship, captain Ivan Borisov, on the Greek island of Samos in 1771. during the Russian-Turkish War of 1769–1774. The Russian naval forces were on the island for only about a month. But, thanks to the report of the ship commander preserved in the Russian State Naval Archives, we have the opportunity to analyze the social relations of the local villages among each other, as well as evaluate their attitude towards the Russian naval forces. The cited document shows that with apparent sympathy for Russia, there
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29

Mayers, Ruth E. "Real and Practicable, not Imaginary and Notional: Sir Henry Vane, A Healing Question, and the Problems of the Protectorate." Albion 28, no. 1 (1996): 37–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4051953.

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The year 1655 might with reason have been described as the “annus horribilis” of Oliver Cromwell's Protectorate. January saw the dissolution of his first Parliament, which had signally failed to ratify the Instrument of Government, the constitution imposed by the Army in December 1653. This undermined the already dubious constitutional basis of the government's ordinances, resulting in legal challenges and even recalcitrance among some of the judges. The policy of “healing and settling” had gained at best a grudging acquiescence from the political nation, and the determined enemies of the Prot
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A.I., Kudaybergenova. "Peasant uprisings of 1929–1932 in Kazakhstan and Kazakhs’ migration (in the memory of the people)." Bulletin of the Karaganda university History.Philosophy series 107, no. 3 (2022): 134–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.31489/2022hph3/134-144.

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The article deals with one of the topical issues of the history of the XXth century — the history of migration-refugees of the Kazakhs in the 1930s in Kazakhstan.Confiscation of the property of large bays, kulaks, semifeudal lords (middle peasants and sharua peasants), forced collectivization, forced sedentarization, grain and meat procurement, punitive implementation of the Law «On Three Spikelets» — all these political campaigns led to forced migrations of the population from their homes: at first, migration of bays and representatives of all social strata in whole auls; further, subsequentl
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31

Twiss, Sumner B., and Jonathan Chan. "CLASSICAL CONFUCIANISM, PUNITIVE EXPEDITIONS, AND HUMANITARIAN INTERVENTION." Journal of Military Ethics 11, no. 2 (2012): 81–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15027570.2012.708177.

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Nivison, David S., and Kevin D. Pang. "Astronomical Evidence for the Bamboo Annals' Chronicle of Early Xia." Early China 15 (1990): 87–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0362502800005022.

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Tradition says that Yu, first ruler of the Xia Dynasty, was chosen by the “sage emperor” Shun as Shun's successor. The “Modern Text” Bamboo Annals (Jinben Zhushu jinian) dates this act of choice to the fourteenth year of Shun. (With E. L. Shaughnessy, “On the Authenticity of the Bamboo Annals,” Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 46 (1986), we accept this text as at least in part the text found in a royal tomb of Wei in A.D. 281.) Following D. Pankenier's argument (“Mozi and the Dates of Xia, Shang and Zhou,” Early China 9–10 [1983–85]), we date this event to 1953 B.C., the year of a dramatic f
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Bogdanov, Andrey Petrovich. "Polish campaign A.V. Suvorov 1794: truth and myths." Исторический журнал: научные исследования, no. 6 (June 2023): 188–214. http://dx.doi.org/10.7256/2454-0609.2023.6.69022.

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The legendary personality of Alexander Vasilyevich Suvorov seriously complicates the study of his thoughts and deeds, forcing the scientist to approach the analysis of sources especially critically. Nevertheless, an objective look at the development of Suvorov’s thought and actions based on his ideas and beliefs are quite possible. The article shows this using the example of one, relatively short event in the commander’s biography: the Polish campaign of 1794. The author rejects both speculation about Suvorov’s campaign as a punitive expedition, and ideas rooted in Russian historiography about
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Memmott, Paul, Jonathan Richards, and Jessica Kane. "A Man of the ‘Wild’ Queensland Frontier: King Gida of the Kaurareg." Memoirs of the Queensland Museum - Culture 12 (2021): 27–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.17082/j.2205-3239.12.1.2021.2021-03.

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This biographical study concerns a Kaurareg man named Gida (c.1849–1899), who resided on Muralag (Prince of Wales Island), in Torres Strait in the late nineteenth century. It is part of a larger research project on the so-called ‘Meston’s Wild Australia’ or ‘Wild Australia Show’ of 1892–93 which was conceived by Queensland entrepreneur Archibald Meston. Meston conscripted a travelling troupe of Aboriginal people from the Queensland frontier whom he presented to the public as ‘wild’ but ‘magnificent’ both physically and in relation to particular skilled customs, yet doomed to extinction, being
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Kozlyakov, Vyacheslav. "Military Operations of the Polish-Lithuanian Garrison in Moscow Against the First Zemstvo Militia in Early 1611." Vestnik Volgogradskogo gosudarstvennogo universiteta. Serija 4. Istorija. Regionovedenie. Mezhdunarodnye otnoshenija 26, no. 1 (2021): 23–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.15688/jvolsu4.2021.1.3.

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Introduction. The article is devoted to the study of the military confrontation between the PolishLithuanian garrison and the Zemstvo forces to counter the organization of the First Zemstvo Militia led by P.P. Lyapunov in early 1611. Methods and materials. Information is analyzed from the previously unknown manuscript of the Diary of the Campaign of King Sigismund III recently introduced into the scientific circulation of materials from the “Russian Archive of Jan Sapieha”, the translation of “The Diary of Jan Peter Sapieha”, royal messenger Jan Komorowski’s report on the uprising in Moscow on
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Murphy, J. T. "Columns of Vengeance: Soldiers, Sioux, and the Punitive Expeditions, 1863-1864." Annals of Iowa 73, no. 1 (2014): 68–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.17077/0003-4827.12040.

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McCrady, D. G. "Columns of Vengeance: Soldiers, Sioux, and the Punitive Expeditions, 1863-1864." Journal of American History 101, no. 2 (2014): 590–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jahist/jau488.

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Sen, Anandaroop. "Insurgent law: Bengal Regulation III and the Chin-Lushai expeditions (1872–1898)." Modern Asian Studies 56, no. 5 (2022): 1515–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x21000366.

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AbstractThis article studies the adjudicatory practices deployed by colonial military and police forces during a series of punitive British expeditions in the eastern frontiers of British India and the northern reaches of British Burma, specifically the Lushai and Chin Hills in the late nineteenth century. It magnifies the lives, deaths, and afterlives of two ‘tribal’ chiefs of Lushai Hills. Among others, these figures were held responsible for a series of raids carried out in the settled British territories of the northeastern frontiers in the 1890s. After a few inconclusive skirmishes with t
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Obradović, Ivan. "Three Images of Death – An Essay on the Perception of Death in Serbia, 1914–1916." Balkanistic Forum 34, no. 1 (2025): 97–118. https://doi.org/10.37708/bf.swu.v34i1.6.

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The First World War, particularly the period of 1914-1916 is engraved in the collective memory of Serbian society as “Time of Death”. The aim of the article is to analyze the individual perceptions of death, the images and representations of death in the war, and how contemporaries related to death, dying and funeral customs in the above-mentioned period. The discussion is based on the works created by the painter Miodrag Petrović during the war, more precisely his sketch for the composition The Funeral, made in 1916. An important topic of this article is whether and how the specificity of the
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Wadley, R. L. "Punitive Expeditions and Divine Revenge: Oral and Colonial Histories of Rebellion and Pacification in Western Borneo, 1886-1902." Ethnohistory 51, no. 3 (2004): 609–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00141801-51-3-609.

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Bleakley, Paul. "A State of Force." Contention 6, no. 2 (2018): 44–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/cont.2018.060204.

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Australian history is littered with examples of situations in which police have engaged in the use of force—in some cases, disproportionate violence—to maintain order and stability. In addition to this effort to control the population and ensure social order, extreme use of force was a key factor in repressing civil dissent and preventing marginalized communities from exercising their voice within the social discourse. Former Queensland Police Commissioner Frederic Urquhart was at the forefront of several high-profile examples of police enforcing social control during his tenure with the Queen
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Tareke, Gebru. "From Lash to Red Star: the pitfalls of counter-insurgency in Ethiopia, 1980–82." Journal of Modern African Studies 40, no. 3 (2002): 465–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022278x02003981.

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By 1980, Ethiopia was gripped in escalating civil wars. After a series of punitive expeditions had failed to suppress them, the government organised large-scale operations in the early 1980s against the insurgencies in the eastern and northern territories. The operations seemed to have been informed by what is called ‘total strategy’. Although the emphasis was on the coercive component, the state also used psychological and economic incentives. The results were mixed. The eastern rebels were defeated more easily because they were factious. The northern campaign failed because of the rebels' st
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Sánchez Smith, Antonio, Luis Alfonso Miño Morales, and Ángel Oswaldo Sisalema Carrillo. "Constitutionality of the expedited procedure in contraventions against women or members of the family nucleus." Revista Metropolitana de Ciencias Aplicadas 5, no. 2 (2022): 198–208. http://dx.doi.org/10.62452/mqmr7883.

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Violence against women and members of their family nucleus from earlier stages is defined as a serious social problem at the international level. The Constitution of the Republic of Ecuador of 2008, highly guaranteeing rights, establishes expeditious procedures for the trial and punishment of crimes of domestic violence subject to the principle of procedural orality and summary proceedings. The object of investigation turned out to be the implementation of the punitive model in contraventions of violence against women or members of the family nucleus. A mixed research approach was used with a
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SUMKO, E. V. "POST-WAR EVERYDAY LIFE OF THE RURAL POPULATION OF BELARUS: LIVING STANDARDS AND SUSTENANCE STRATEGIES." HISTORY OF EVERYDAY LIFE, no. 2 (2024): 163–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.35231/25422375_2024_2_163.

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Based on a wide range of sources, the article examines the everyday life of the rural population of Belarus after liberation from Nazi occupation and during the period of the post-war reconstruction. The archival documents and oral history materials made it possible to reconstruct certain elements of everyday life with a sufficient degree of probability. The author draws attention to the fact that the following factors influenced the structuring of the postwar reality of the Belarusian village: the coexistence of two models of sustenance of collective and individual peasants; the presence of "
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Mashman, Valerie. "Looted objects, Badeng histories and Brooke peacemaking." Sarawak Museum Journal LXXXI, no. 102 (2019): 225–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.61507/smj22-2019-5xjk-06.

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This paper explores the meaning of objects that were looted from the Badeng and were subsequently donated by a Brooke administrator to the Sarawak Museum, as a trigger to examining Badeng responses to Brooke rule. The official histories of Sarawak express the satisfaction of the Brooke officers with their efforts at state-making through punitive expeditions, but these are underpinned by local oral histories of arson, violence and devastation. Through intermediaries, the Badeng succumbed to Brooke rule and are portrayed as being happy with the efforts of peace-making, yet they eventually migrat
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Tovsultanov, Rustam Аlhazurovich, and Lilia Nadipovna Galimova. "Bey-Bulat Taymiev as an outstanding military and political figure of Chechnya in the first quarter of the XIX century." Samara Journal of Science 5, no. 4 (2016): 109–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.17816/snv20164207.

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This paper analyzes the political and military situation prevailing in Chechnya at the end of XVIII - the first quarter of the XIX century. The authors note that the crisis of the military-political situation in Chechnya occurred after a number of regions and countries of the Caucasus joined Russia in the early XIX century. The establishment of effective control over the unconquered mountain people converted from a purely border problem into a strategic task for the tsarism. This task was given to General A.P. Yermolov who paid all his attention to the left wing (which included Chechnya) of th
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Pushkarenko, E. A. "German Propaganda of Anti-Semitism in the Occupied Soviet Territory (on the Example of the General District of Belarus)." Modern History of Russia 12, no. 2 (2022): 303–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.21638/11701/spbu24.2022.203.

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This article examines anti-Semitic propaganda of German authorities in the occupied Soviet territory in the General District of Belarus. The author identifies the main directions of anti-Semitic propaganda, analyzes its content, determines the effectiveness of the ideological influence of the German occupation authorities on the Belarusian population, and proves that the occupiers tried to appeal to national feelings of Belarusians using anti-Semitism. The author concludes that the odious, false, anti-Semitic propaganda did not find a response among the Belarusian population of the district. B
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Magaramov, Sharafetdin. "The Russian Empire in the Western Caspian Region in 1722—1735: Management Experience." ISTORIYA 12, no. 10 (108) (2021): 0. http://dx.doi.org/10.18254/s207987840017048-1.

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Based on documentary data from the funds of federal and state archives and taking into account the modern achievements of Russian historiography, the article examines the experience of the administrative practice of the Russian Empire in the Western Caspian region in 1722—1735. The activity of the commanders-in-chief of the Grassroots Corps of Generals M. A. Matyushkin and V. V. Dolgorukov on the organization of a management system for the southwestern shores of the Caspian Sea, ensuring the security of communications and the loyalty of Caucasian and Persian societies. Strengthening the positi
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Drobyshev, Yuliy. "Ideology of the Mongol World Domination in “The Collection of Chronicles” by Rashid al-Din." Vostok. Afro-aziatskie obshchestva: istoriia i sovremennost, no. 4 (2023): 48. http://dx.doi.org/10.31857/s086919080024941-2.

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The article presents the results obtained in the course of work on identifying plots in medieval written sources that demonstrate manifestations of the Mongol imperial ideology and allow not only to clearly identify its contours and content, but also to establish with the greatest possible accuracy the moment of transition of the Mongols from predatory and punitive expeditions to systematic subordination of the whole known world space. To achieve this goal, materials contained in the collective work “Collection of Chronicles” (“Jami al-tawarikh”) were analyzed, the compiler and, apparently, th
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Genetin-Pilawa, C. Joseph. "38 Nooses: Lincoln, Little Crow, and the Beginning of the Frontier’s End by Scott W. Berg, and; Columns of Vengeance: Soldiers, Sioux, and the Punitive Expeditions, 1863–1864 by Paul N. Beck." Journal of the Civil War Era 4, no. 3 (2014): 465–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/cwe.2014.0059.

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