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Popular revolts in late medieval Europe

Popular revolts in late medieval Europe were uprisings and rebellions by peasants in the countryside, or the burgess in towns, against nobles, abbots and kings during the upheavals between 1300 and 1500, part of a larger "Crisis of the Late Middle Ages". Although sometimes known as 'peasant revolts', the phenomenon of popular uprisings was of broad scope and not just restricted to peasants. In Central Europe and the Balkan region, these rebellions expressed, and helped cause, a political and social disunity paving the way for the expansion of the Ottoman Empire.

Background[edit]

Before the 14th century, popular uprisings (such as uprisings at a manor house against an unpleasant overlord), though not unknown, tended to operate on a local scale. This changed in the 14th and 15th centuries when new downward pressures on the poor resulted in mass movements of popular uprisings across Europe. For example, Germany between 1336 and 1525 witnessed no fewer than sixty instances of militant peasant unrest.[1]


Most of the revolts expressed the desire of those below to share in the wealth, status, and well-being of those more fortunate. In the end, they were almost always defeated by the nobles. A new attitude emerged in Europe, that "peasant" was a pejorative concept, it was something separate, and seen in a negative light, from those who had wealth and status.[2] This was an entirely new social stratification from earlier times when society had been based on the three orders, those who work, those who pray, and those who fight, when being a peasant meant being next to God, just like the other orders.[2]

The . Beginning as a series of scattered rural riots in late 1323, peasant insurrection escalated into a full-scale rebellion that dominated public affairs in Flanders for nearly five years.

1323–1328 Flemish revolt

The of 1343–1345 in Estonia.

Saint George's Night Uprising

1345

Battle of Warns

The was a peasant revolt that took place in northern France in 1356–1358, during the Hundred Years' War.

Jacquerie

The 1378–1384

Tuchin revolt

The English or Great Rising of 1381 is a major event in the history of England. It is the best documented among the revolts of this period.

Peasants' Revolt

1401–1409

Samogitian uprisings

1419–1434

Hussite Wars

The in Galicia in 1431 and 1467.

Irmandiño revolts

The of 1434–1436 in Sweden.

Engelbrekt rebellion

1437–1438

Transylvanian peasant revolt

of 1450 led by Jack Cade.

Jack Cade's Rebellion

The

Morea revolt of 1453–1454

The in Old Catalonia in 1462–1486.

War of the Remences

1478

Carinthian Peasant Revolt

The .

Cornish Rebellion of 1497

1500  in Dithmarschen

Battle of Hemmingstedt

The of 1573

Peasant's uprising

The , Byzantine Empire, 1342–1350.

Zealots of Thessalonica

The revolt of in central Italy in 1347.

Cola di Rienzo

The in 1378 in Florence.

Ciompi Revolt

The in Rouen and Paris in 1382.

Harelle

The on the Dalmatian island of Hvar, Republic of Venice, 1510–1514.

Hvar rebellion

List of peasant revolts

Mollat and Wolff, The Popular Revolutions of the Late Middle Ages, 1973  0-04-940041-X

ISBN

Fourquin, The Anatomy of Popular Rebellion, 1978  0-444-85006-6

ISBN

Samuel K. Cohn, Jr., ed. and trans., Popular Protest in Late Medieval Europe: Italy, France and Flanders, Selected Sources Translated and Annotated, Manchester University Press, 2004.