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    The maccabean revolt

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    Maccabean Revolt During much of the time between the Old and New Testaments‚ the land of Israel was under the rulership of the Greek empire (see Ancient Empires - Greece and Daniel’s Statue)‚ either by Alexander the Great himself (see Alexander The Great In Prophecy)‚ or the military commanders and their successors who had divided up his kingdom after his early death (see The Seleucids and The Ptolemies). Seleucus was the commander who took control of the Syrian region of Alexander’s empire‚

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    Maccabean Revolt Lester L. Grabbe Professor Emeritus of University of Hull article called Life Under Empire‚ has this to say about the world in which the Maccabean revolt blossomed. “The Jewish people have spent most of their history under one empire or another. Only for a short time under the Judahite monarchy and for less than a century under the Hasmoneans was Judah a genuinely independent state. The biblical text is generally positive toward Persian rule‚ but this is probably the result of a

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    Paul Simeon Ogle History 383 Dr. J.P. Dessel Final Paper Overview The Breaking of the Sarissas: How the Maccabean Rebellion fostered Jewish religious identity and nationalism. Thesis- the Maccabean Rebellion changed permanently the status of Jewish social and religious identity‚ reverting the status mandate from foreign influence‚ and fostered indigenous ideologies of nationalism and religion. *Possible opening paragraph The subjugation of Judea‚ by the armies

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    Revolts

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    cent to collect every dollar of taxation. In Luzon‚ it now costs ninety-five cents. The only taxes that can be profitably collected are those in Manila. The rich islands of Leyte and Mindanao contribute practically nothing. The first islands to revolt were Luzon‚ Mindanao‚ and Leyte. About one year and a half ago‚ agents of the insurrectionists appealed to the government at Washington to interfere in their behalf. The petition was received and filed. In the hot season‚ during the greater part

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    Revolts

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    MAP DISTORTION: Treaty of Tordesillas (1494)  A treaty between Spain and Portugal to divide up all the land of the earth outside of Europe (nonChristian land) Treaty led by Pope Alexander VI   Preceded by Inter Caetera Papal Bull‚ issued on May 4‚ 1493. He drew imaginary line and gave Spain the land to the west Cape Verde Islands and Portugal the land to the east of it.  – all lands discovered west of a meridian 100 leagues (one league is 3 miles or 4.8 km) west of the Cape

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    Iranian Revolt

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    Iranian Revolt It was started October 1977 and developed into civil resistance. The revolt was not sudden. Though there were many tensions that made this revolt start such as being defeated in the Iran-Iraq war‚ national debt and the government threatening traditional Islamic values. The Iranian revolt was an uprising against the Shah government that began on January 19th‚ 1979 in the Iranian capital‚ Tehran. Ayatollah Khomeini was a Shiite Muslim who wanted to overthrow the Shah government. He

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    Peasants Revolt

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    Peasant’s Revolt and The Decline of Serfdom | Why did the Peasants’ Revolt Occur? Did the insurgents hope to abolish serfdom? How and why did serfdom decline and eventually disappear in England‚ notwithstanding the failure of the 1381 uprising and other influences of lower class protest against social inequality and injustice? | Naomi Woods Student 297278812/22/2011 | The Peasants Revolt is one of the most well known revolts of Medieval England‚ the revolt began as a local revolt in Essex in

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    Pueblo Revolt

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    The Pueblo Revolt: Religious Tolerance Dreivon Thomas Ma’o “Now They Were as They had been in Ancient Times”: The Pueblo Revolt of 1680 (p. 54) 1)      What is the context for this historical source? 2)      What were the causes of the 1680 Pueblo Revolt? What role did labor play in the revolt? 3)      How was the revolt organized? 4)      Why was this revolt successful? 5)      What was the outcome of the revolt on Native-Spanish relations? In what ways does this source clarify “the

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    Barbados Revolt

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    them their freedom. 5) The work of missionaries among the slaves‚ for example the Baptists‚ provided opportunities for a few slaves to become literate and to assume leadership roles in their church. These privileges helped to contribute to some revolts. Samuel Sharpe was able to use his position of class leader to help to plan the 1831 Christmas Rebellion in Jamaica. He also had access to newspapers from which he learnt about the efforts of the abolitionists in Britain. This knowledge motivated

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    Peasant Revolt

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    Why did the peasants revolt in 1381? Background Information: The Black Death‚ which flooded through Europe between years 1348 and 1349‚ killed roughly half the population of England. Since peasants were usually quite poor and lived in tough conditions‚ many of them were wiped out completely during the Plague. This caused an increase in land but a shortage of labourers. Since the quantity of working class peasants dropped greatly‚ many survivors saw themselves differently. They thought the Lord

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