Professional Documents
Culture Documents
War Timeline
War Timeline
War Timeline
1900–1919
1900–1919
Belligerents
1900 1900 War of the Golden Stool British Empire Ashanti Empire
British Empire
1900 1900 1900 Sudan revolt[5] Sudanese rebels
Anglo-Egyptian
Sudan
1900 1900 French conquest of Borno[5] France Borno
Peasant rebels
1900 1907 Unrest in Java[6] Dutch Empire Lone-wolf robbers and ars
onists
1900–1903 uprising in
1900 1903 France Rebels
southwest Madagascar[7]
1900 1900 Shoubak revolt of 1900 Ottoman Empire Shoubakis
House of Saud
Arab tribes
Al-Muntafiq
Mutayr
1900 1901 Kuwaiti–Rashidi war Jabal Shammar Otaibah
Al-Dhafeer
Ajman tribe
Al-Hawajir
Al Murrah
Bani Khalid
Subay'
Suhool
British Empire
1900 1901 Mahsud Waziri blockade Mahsud rebels
British Raj
German Empire
Bastaards from
1901 1901 Bastaard uprising of 1901[8]
German South Grootfontein Tribe
West Africa
1901 1907 Subjugation of Jambi[6] Dutch Empire Jambi
French conquest of the
1901 1901 France Dendi Kingdom
Dendi Kingdom[9]
1901 1903 Revolución Libertadora [es]
1901 1902 Anglo-Aro War British Empire Aro Confederacy
Battle of Holy Apostles
1901 1901 Armenian fedayi Ottoman Empire
Monastery
Forces loyal to Kadungure
1901 1903 1901 Mapondera Rebellion British Empire
Mapondera
French Indochina
1901 1936 Holy Man's Rebellion Phu Mi Bun Movement
Siam
Kala-i-Mor railway worker's
1902 1902 Russian Empire Rebel railway workers
revolt[10]
1902 1902 1902 Sudan revolt[5] British Empire Sudanese rebels
Kuanhama Rebellion of
1902 1904 Portuguese Empire Kuanhama
1902-1904[11]
Ovimbundu Kingdoms
1902 1904 Bailundo Revolt of 1902 Portuguese Empire Kisanji
Luimbi
German Empire
Venezuelan crisis of 1902–
1902 1903 United Kingdom Venezuela
03
Kingdom of Italy
Korintji
1902 1906 expeditions[6] (Location: Su Dutch Empire Korintji
matra)
Campaigns against
1902 1907 Dayak[6] (Location: Dutch Empire Dayak
Kalimantan)
Italian–Ottoman crisis of
1902 1902 Kingdom of Italy Ottoman Empire
1902[12]
German Empire
1903 1903 Kavango uprising[8] Kavango rebels
German South
West Africa
1903 1903 Actions on Yapen[6] Dutch Empire Tribes of Yapen
Resistance in
1903 1909 Dutch Empire Anti-coffee rebels
Minangkabau[6]
Mentawei islands
1903 1910 Dutch Empire Anti-Dutch forces
campaign[6]
1916
(Solor)
Military actions in Flores
1903 Dutch Empire Anti-Dutch forces
1940 and Solor[6]
(Flores)
Cretan
1903 1903 Theriso revolt State Cretan Rebels
Supported By:
Russian Empire
German Empire
Uprising of Namas in
1903 1903 Nama rebels
Maltahöhe[8] German South
West Africa
German Empire
Bondelswarts uprising of
1903 1904 Bondelswarts
1904[8] German South
West Africa
British Empire
Mahsud expedition of
1904 1904 Mahsud rebels
1904[17]
British Raj
First Brazilian
1904 1904 Vaccine Revolt Anti-vaccination rebels
Republic
Uruguayan govern
1904 1904 Revolution of 1904 [es] National Party
ment
1904 1904 1904 Sasun uprising Ottoman Empire Armenian fedayees
Herero and Namaqua peo
1904 1908 Herero Wars German Empire
ples
1904 1905 Russo-Japanese War Empire of Japan Russian Empire
Yemeni Rebellion of 1904
1904 1905 Part of the Yemeni– Zaidis Ottoman Empire
Ottoman Conflicts
The Revolution:
June 1905–August 1906
Secret Center[19]
Social
Democratic Party[19]
Society of
Humanity[19]
Revolutionary
Committee[19]
Secret
Society[19]
Semi-organized
groups:
Ulama and
Qajar Iran
seminary students[20]
Nazmiyeh[20]
Committee of
Merchants[21] Cossack Brigade[20]
Committee of
Persian Constitutional Guild Elders[22]
1905 1911
Revolution Students of Dar Qajar Iran
ul-Funun, School of Cossack Brigade
Political Russian
Science and School of Empire[27]
Agriculture[22] Shahsevans[23]
Parliament
Tabriz
Council[23]
Society of
Azerbaijanis[24]
Central
Society[25]
Dashnak[26]
Society of
Guilds[24]
Society of
College Graduates[24]
Argentine Revolution of
1905 1905 Argentina Radical Civic Union
1905
1905 1905 Shoubak Revolt of 1905 Ottoman Empire Shoubakis
1905 1905 Łódź insurrection (1905) Russian Empire Polish worker militias
1905 1905 Kurdish rebellion of 1905[28] Ottoman Empire Kurdish rebels
1905 1906 1905 Tibetan Rebellion Qing Dynasty Tibetan Buddhists
1905 1907 1905 Russian Revolution Russian Empire Revolutionaries
Idrisid Emirate of
Asir
Supported by:
1907 1918 Asir rebellion[31] Kingdom of Ottoman Empire
Italy (1911-1912)
British
Empire (1915-1918)
1908 Karangasem
Dutch intervention in Bali
1908 Dutch Empire Klungkung
(1908)
Gelgel
Actions in the Toba and
1908 1910 Dutch Empire Anti-Dutch forces
Batak islands[6]
Actions in West-
1908 1915 Dutch Empire Anti-Dutch forces
Kalimantan[6]
Dutch–Venezuelan crisis of
1908 1908 Dutch Empire Venezuela
1908
British Empire
1909 1909 Nyasaland resistance [5]
Rebels
Nyasaland
1909 1909 Battle of Nias[6] Dutch Empire Anti-Dutch forces
1911 Actions on the Halmahera, Anti-Dutch forces
1909 Seram, Papua and Dutch Empire
Mentawei islands[6]
Kurdish uprising of 1909[32]
1909 1909 Part of the Dersim Ottoman Empire Kurdish rebels
uprisings [tr]
Sublime State of
1911 1913 Revolt of Salar-al-Daulah Forces of Salar-al-Daulah
Persia
Revolt of Mohammad Ali Sublime State of Forces of Mohammad Ali
1911 1911
Shah Qajar[39] Persia Shah Qajar
1911 1911 Magonista rebellion of 1911 Mexico Mexican Liberal Party
Part of the Mexican
10 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Revolution
Paraguayan governm
1911 1912 1911 Paraguayan Civil War Liberal Party
ent
Russian Invasion of Tabriz
1911 1911 Part of the Persian Russian Empire Persian Constitutionalists
Constitutional Revolution
Albanian Malësorë
1911 1911 Albanian Revolt of 1911 Ottoman Empire (highlanders) and Catholic
tribes from Scutari Vilayet
Second Guangzhou
1911 1911 Qing Dynasty Anti Qing rebels
Uprising
Dominican Civil War (1911– Dominican Dominican
1911 1912
12) Republic Army conspirators
French conquest of
1911 1912 France Morocco
Morocco
1911 1912 Italo-Turkish War Kingdom of Italy Ottoman Empire
1911 1912 East Timorese Rebellion Portuguese Empire East Timorese rebels
Xinhai Revolution
1911 1912 Tongmenghui Qing Dynasty
1911 Revolution
Ecuador (Eloy
1911 1912 War of the Generals Liberal rebels
Alfaro loyalists)
Russian Empire
Turkoman Revolt of 1912–
1912 1912 Yomud Turkomans
1913
Khiva
Ecuadorian Civil War of Rebels of Esmeraldas
1912 1914 Ecuador
1912–1914 Province
c.191 Rebels loyal to Ramadan
c.1912 Sirte revolt[40] Kingdom of Italy
2 Asswehly
Rebel tribes
Emirate of Mangal
1912 1912 Khost rebellion (1912)
Afghanistan
Jadran
Ghilzai
Kingdom of
Bulgaria
Kingdom of Greece
1912 1913 First Balkan War Ottoman Empire
Kingdom of Serbia
Kingdom of
Montenegro
1912 1912 Albanian Revolt of 1912 Albanian rebels Ottoman Empire
Brazilian
1912 1916 Contestado War Contestado
Governists
United States occupation of
1912 1933 Nicaragua United States Nicaraguan rebels
Part of the Banana Wars
11 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Portuguese First
1912 1912 Royalist attack on Chaves Portuguese Royalists
Republic
Negro Rebellion Cuba
1912 1912 Independent Party of Color
Part of the Banana Wars United States
1913 1913 Oyango Dande rebellion[5] British Empire Oyango Dande
1913 1913 Kurdish revolt of 1913[41] Ottoman Empire Kurdish rebels
1913 1913 1913 Euphrates rebellion Ottoman Empire Al Fatla tribe
British Empire
Ottoman Empire
Kingdom of Greece
Kingdom of Serbia
1913 1913 Second Balkan War Kingdom of Kingdom of Bulgaria
Montenegro
Kingdom of
Romania
Tikveš Uprising Internal Macedonian
1913 1913 Part of the Second Balkan Kingdom of Serbia Revolutionary
War Organization
Internal Macedonian
1913 1913 Ohrid–Debar Uprising Kingdom of Serbia Revolutionary
Organization
Sun Yat-sen
Beiyang
1913 1913 Second Revolution southern China
Government
provinces
Republic of China
1913 1914 Bai Lang Rebellion Jahriyya menhuan Gelaohui
Xidaotang
1914 1914 1914 Kenya revolt[5] British Empire Giriama rebels
1914 1914 North Java peasant revolt [6]
Dutch Empire Peasant rebels
Kolongongo War[43] Portugal
More info: The Mbunda
1914 1914 Mbunda Kingdom
Kingdom in Angola
(Section "Kolongongo war") Angola
1914 1914 First Yemeni–Asiri war[44] Ottoman Empire Idrisid Emirate of Asir
12 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Autonomous
Yemeni Imamate
Dersim uprising of 1914[32]
1914 1914 Part of the Dersim Ottoman Empire Kurdish rebels
uprisings [tr]
Kurdish rebels
Kurdish rebels loyal to
Abdülselam Barzani[45]
1914 1914 Uprising in Barzan[45] Ottoman Empire Supported by:
Russian Empire[45]
Portugal Kingdom of
Kongo (1914)[46]
1914 1917 Kongo revolt of 1914[46][47] Angola (1914)
Various rebel groups
Congo (1914- (1914–1917)[48]
1917)[48]
Operations in the Tochi
Rebel tribesmen
1914 1914 Part of the instability on the British Empire
from Khost
North-West Frontier
First Brazilian
1914 1914 Revolt of Juazeiro [pt] Rebels
Republic
1914 1921 Zaian War France Zaian Confederation
Dominican Civil War of
1914 1914 Rebels Dominican Republic
1914
1914 1914 Haitian Civil War[49]
1914 1914 Blayong's uprising[50] British North Borneo Murut rebels
Albania
Romanian
volunteers
Albanian Muslim pro-
1914 1914 Peasant Revolt in Albania
Austro-Hungarian Ottoman rebels
volunteers
Kosovar Albanian units
British German
Empire Empire
France Austria-
Russia (19 Hungary
14–17) Ottoman
Serbia Empire
13 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Belgium
Montenegr
o
Japan
Italy (1915
–18)
United
States (1917–18)
Romania (1
916–18) Bulgaria (1915
Portugal (1 –18)
916–18) ...and co-belligerents
Hejaz (191
6–18)
China (191
7–18)
Greece (19
17–18)
Siam (1917
–18)
...and others
United States occupation of
1914 1914 Veracruz United States Mexico
Part of the Banana Wars
Ute
1914 1915 Bluff War United States
Paiute
Ovambo insurrection in
Portuguese Angola
1914 1917 Portugal Ovambo
See Battle of Mongua [fr]
Union of South
1914 1915 Maritz Rebellion "Bitterenders"
Africa
German Empire
1915 Rehoboth Basters
1915 1915 Rehoboth Basters
rebellion[8] German South
West Africa
France
Colony of
Madagascar and
14 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Dependencies
1915 1915 Kru Coast Rebellion[52] Liberia Kru rebels
1915 1915 Botan revolt[41] Ottoman Empire Kurdish rebels
Han Taiwanese
1915 1915 Tapani incident Empire of Japan
Taiwanese aborigines
Russian Empire
1915 1915 Turkoman Revolt of 1915 [53]
Yomud Turkomans
Khiva
1915 1915 Battle of Kanzaan (1915) [ar] Nejd and Hasa Ajman tribe
Battle of Jarrab
Part of the Unification of Emirate of Nejd and
1915 1915 Emirate of Ha'il
Saudi Arabia and World Hasa
War I
British Empire
1916 1934 Yarahmadzai uprising Yarahmadzai tribe
Sublime State of Persia
Dersim uprising of 1916
1916 1916 Part of the Dersim Ottoman Empire Kurdish rebels
uprisings [tr]
15 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Part of the instability on the
North-West Frontier
Russian Empire
(1916–17)
Basmachi
Khiva
Russian Republic (1918–20)
(1917)
White Army
(1919–20)[55]
Russian SFSR Bukhara
Basmachi movement (1920)
1916 1934 Part of World War Supported by:
I and Russian Civil War Turkestan Emirate of
ASSR Afghanistan (Until mid-1922)
[56]
Khorezm SSR
Bukharan PSR
Afghanistan
(1929)[57]
Soviet Union
(From December 30, 1922)
16 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
South
Africa
1917 1917 1917 Uganda rebellion[5] British Empire Forces loyal to Rembe
Kurdish uprisings of
1917 1917 Ottoman Empire Kurdish rebels
summer 1917
Kurdish rebels
Kurdish uprisings of August
1917 1917 Ottoman Empire Supported by:
1917
Russian Empire
Russian
1917 1917 February Revolution Russian Empire
revolutionaries
Russian
1917 1917 July Days Provisional Bolshevik Party
Government
1917 1917 Manchu Restoration Republic of China Monarchist Rebels
French colonial
1917 1917 Thái Nguyên uprising Vietnamese rebels
empire
Russian
1917 1917 Polubotkivtsi Uprising Provisional Ukrainian Separatists
Government
Kingdom of
1917 1917 Toplica insurrection Chetniks
Bulgaria
Russian
Soldiers under Lavr
1917 1917 Kornilov Affair Provisional
Kornilov
Government
1917 1917 Green Corn Rebellion United States Anti draft rebels
October Revolution Russian Provisional
1917 1917 Bolsheviks
Part of Russian Civil War Government
Kerensky–Krasnov uprising Rebels
1917 1917 Russian SFSR
Part of Russian Civil War under Alexander Kerensky
1917 1922 Russian Civil War Victorious in Russia, White Movement
Ukraine, Georgia,
Armenia, Azerbaijan, Central Powers (until
Kazakhstan, and 1918):
Mongolia: Austro-Hungarian
Empire
Russian SFSR German Empire
Other Soviet republics Ottoman Empire
Mongolian People's Allied Forces (from 1918):
Party
Czechoslovakia
Republic of China
France
Victorious in their
respective countries: Kingdom of Greece
Kingdom of Finland Kingdom of Italy
Republic of Estonia Empire of Japan
Republic of Latvia Poland
Kingdom of Romania
17 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Kingdom of Serbia
United Kingdom
Australia
Canada
United States
Other combatants:
Republic of
Revolutionary
Lithuania
Insurrectionary Army of
Second Polish
Ukraine
Republic
Ukrainian People's
Republic
Democratic Republic
of Georgia
Democratic Republic
of Armenia
Various pro-independence
movements
18 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Left SR uprising
Left Socialist
1918 1918 Part of the Russian Civil Russian SFSR
Revolutionary Party
War
Finnish White Finnish Red Guards
1918 1918 Finnish Civil War Guards
Russian SFSR
German Empire
First Republic of Democratic Republic
1918 1918 Georgian–Armenian War
Armenia of Georgia
First Czechoslovak
Republic (until 1938)
Second Czechoslovak
Republic (1938-1939)
Second Polish First Slovak
Polish–Czechoslovak
1918 1958 Republic (1939-1945)
border conflicts Republic
Third Czechoslovak
Republic (1945-1948)
Czechoslovak
Socialist Republic (1948-
1958)
Serb National
Council at Timișoara
Serb National
Council at Pančevo
Internal conflict in the Banat Timișoara Citizens'
1918 1918 Banat Republic
Republic Guard
"Octobrists"
Green cadres
Socialist rebels
Romanian rebels
Serbian incursion into the
1918 1918 Kingdom of Serbia Banat Republic
Banat Republic
File:Flag RSFSR
1918.svg Russian
SFSR Finnish White Guards
1918 1918 Viena expedition Finnish Red Finnish Jäger troops
Guards
United Kingdom
Russian SFSR
Finnish Red
1918 1918 First Pechenga expedition Finnish volunteers
Guards
Murmansk Legion
State of Slovenes,
Austro-Slovene conflict in Croats and Serbs Republic of German-
1918 1919
Carinthia Kingdom of Austria
Yugoslavia
1918 1919 German Revolution of Weimar Republic Royalist Forces:
1918–19
German
Empire (1918)
Imperial German
19 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Army
Communist Forces:
Bavarian Soviet
Republic
Spartacus League
German Communist
movements
Estonia
White Russia
Estonian War of Latvia Russian SFSR
Independence United Kingdom
1918 1920 Commune of Estonia
Part of the Russian Civil Ingria Latvian SSR
War Ober Ost
Finnish, Swedish and
Danish volunteers
20 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Estonia
Independence Poland
Part of the Russian Civil Latvian SSR
United Kingdom
War
France
Russian Soviet
Federative Socialist
Lithuanian–Soviet War Lithuania Republic
1918 1919 Part of the Lithuanian Wars
Saxon volunteers Lithuanian-
of Independence
Belorussian Soviet
Socialist Republic
Al-Khurma dispute
1918 1919 Part of the Unification of Emirate of Riyadh Kingdom of Hejaz
Saudi Arabia
1918 1921 War of the Insane French Indochina Hmong rebels
North Ingria
1918 1920 Revolt of the Ingrian Finns Russian SFSR
Finnish volunteers
Franco-Turkish War France
Turkish National
1918 1921 Part of the Turkish War of French Armenian
Movement
Independence Legion
Idrisid Emirate of
Asir
Mutawakkilite
1919 1923 Second Yemeni–Asiri War[44] Supported by: Kingdom of Yemen
British Empire
Black Sea
1919 1919
mutinies [fr; de; es; ru]
1919 Royalist uprising in First Portuguese
1919 1919 Monarchy of the North
Northern Portugal Republic
Montenegrin
Whites Montenegrin Greens
1919 1919 Christmas Uprising
Kingdom of Kingdom of Italy
Yugoslavia
1919 1919 Spartacist uprising Interim government Communist Party of
Part of the German Germany
Revolution of 1918–19 Freikorps
Spartacus
League
Independent Social
21 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Democratic Party of
Germany
Lithuanian War of
Independence (War against
Lithuania West Russian
1919 1919 the Bermontians)
Volunteer Army
Part of the Lithuanian Wars
of Independence
Polish Military
Lithuanian Sejny
Organization (PMO)
1919 1919 Sejny Uprising Command
41st Infantry
1st Reserve Battalion
Regiment
1919 1919 First Barzanji Revolt British Empire Kurdish Tribesmen
Polish–Czechoslovak War
Part of the Polish– Second Polish
1919 1919 Czechoslovakia
Czechoslovak border Republic
conflicts
1919 1919 Khotin Uprising Romania Ukrainian rebels
First Hungarian
Republic (until 21 March
Hungarian–Romanian war
1919 1919 Romania 1919)
of 1919
Hungarian Soviet
Republic
Turkish National Greece
Movement
France
Armenia (in 1920)
Grand National United Kingdom
1922
Assembly (after
(Armistic 1920) Ottoman Empire (until
e) Turkish War of 1922)
1919 o Kuva-yi
Independence
Nizamiye
1923 Kuva-yi
(Treaty) Kuva-yi
Inzibatiye (in 1920)
Milliye (until 1920)
Supported by: Italy
Russian SFSR Georgia (in 1921)
British Empire
1919 1919 Third Anglo-Afghan War Afghanistan
India
British Empire
Waziristan campaign
1919 1920 Waziristan
(1919–1920)
India
Forces loyal
1919 1919 Impresa di Fiume
to Gabriele D'Annunzio
Kingdom of Italy
Kingdom of Serbs,
1919 1920 Italo-Yugoslav War Free State of
Croats and Slovenes
Fiume
22 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Republic of Poland
Russian SFSR
1919 1921 Polish–Soviet War Ukrainian People's Ukrainian SSR
Republic
Kuva-yi
Inzibatiye (in 1920)
Revolts during the Turkish Turkish National
1919 1923 Pontic rebels
War of Independence Movement
Milli tribe
Koçgiri tribe
Rebels of Ethem the
Circassian (1920-1921)
1920–1929
1920–1929
Belligerents
Name of
start Finish
Conflict
Victorious party (if
Defeated party (if applicable)
applicable)
Franco- France
1920 1920 Syrian Rebels
Syrian War French Syria
23 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
]
Misurata-
1920 1920 Warfalla Warfallan tribesmen Tripolitanian Republic
War[61]
1920 Iraqi
1920 1920 British Empire Iraqi Rebels
Revolt
1920–1922
Jabal al-
1920 1922 Tribal fighters Tribal fighters
Gharbi civil
war
Polish–
Lithuanian
War
Part of
1920 1920 Poland Lithuania
the Lithuania
n Wars of
Independenc
e
Second
Silesian
Uprising German civil government and
1920 1920 Weimar Republic
Part of the police of Upper Silesia
Silesian
Uprisings
24 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Georgian
Georgia
coup attempt
Turkish–
Armenian
War
Turkish National
Part of the
1920 1920 Movement First Republic of Armenia
Turkish War
Russian SFSR
of
Independenc
e
Guangdong–
1920 1921 Old Guangxi clique Chinese Revolutionary Party
Guangxi War
Dagestan
Uprising
1920 1921 Part of the Russian SFSR Dagestani Rebels
Russian Civil
War
France
1920 1926 Rif War Rif Republic
Spain
Rebel tribes
1920 Upper
1920 1920 Sheikdom of Upper Asir
Asir conflict[44] Sultanate of Nejd
1921
Autonomous Government of
1921 1921 Khorosan Iran
Khorasan
rebellion[62]
1921 1921 Kurdish Turkey Anti-Kemalist Kurdish rebels
uprising of
25 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Autumn
1921[41]
Waziristan British Empire
1921 1921 campaign Waziristan
(1921–1924) India
Anti-fascist
1921 1921 uprising in Kingdom of Italy Albona Republic
Albona
Red Army
invasion of
Georgia Russian SFSR
1921 1921 Democratic Republic of Georgia
Part of the Turkey
Russian Civil
War
Kronstadt
rebellion
1921 1921 Part of the Russian SFSR Anarchist Sailors
Russian Civil
War
February
Uprising
Revolutionary committee Armenian Revolutionary
1921 1921 Part of the
(Revkom) of Armenia Federation
Russian Civil
War
1921 1921 Coto War Costa Rica Panama
Battle of
Mountainous Russian SFSR
Armenia
1921 1921 Armenia Turkey
Part of the
Azerbaijan SSR
Russian Civil
War
Communist Party of Germany
1921 1921 March Action Weimar Republic Communist Workers' Party of
Germany
Third
Silesian Silesian Rebels
Uprising
1921 1921 Weimar Republic
Part of the Poland
Silesian
Uprisings
Mongolian
Revolution of
1921 Mongolian Communists Bogd Khaanate
1921 1921
Part of Russian SFSR White Guards
Russian Civil
War
1921 1921 Charles I of Regentists Loyalists
Austria's
attempts to
retake the
throne of
26 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Hungary
Rongyos Gárda
Uprising in Lajtabánság
Austria
1921 1921 West
Hungary Bosnian and Albanian Muslim v
Hungary
olunteers
Malabar
1921 1921 British Empire Khilafat Movement
rebellion
Iranian Qajar police
Jangalis
1921 Persian Simko Kurdish rebels
1921 1921 Persian Cossack Brigade
coup d'etat Colonel Pesian's forces
supported by:
Soviet Union
Conquest of
1921 1921 Sultanate of Nejd Emirate of Ha'il
Ha'il
East Karelian
Uprising and
Soviet–
Finnish
1921 1922 conflict Russian SFSR Finnish and East Karelian rebels
1921–22
Part of
Russian Civil
War
Miners
Rand
1921 1922 Union of South Africa South African Communist Party
Rebellion
Syndicalists
Kura United Kingdom
1921 1923 Sheikh Kulaib
Rebellion Emir Abdullah
Ikhwan
1921 1921 attack on Ikhwan Principality of Najran
Najran[63]
18 of the
1922 1922 Copacabana First Brazilian Republic Tenentista movement
Fort revolt
1922 British Empire
Mutawakkilite Kingdom of
1922 1922 bombardmen
Yemen
t of Yemen[64] British RAF
1922 1924 Ikhwan raids British RAF Ikhwan ('Utaybah tribe)
on
Transjordan Pro-Hashemite tribesmen:
[65]
Adwan
Ajarma
Abbad
Bani Hasan
Bani Hamaida
Bani Sakhr
27 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Hadid
Union of South Africa
Bondelswart
1922 1922 Bondelswarts
s Rebellion
South West Africa
San
1922 1922 Union of South Africa San rebels
rebellion[8]
1922
1922 1922 Uukwambi Union of South Africa Uukwambi rebels
revolt[8]
First Zhili–
1922 1922 Fengtian Zhili clique Fengtian clique
War
Rampa British Empire
Rebel forces loyal to Alluri Sitarama
1922 1924 Rebellion of
Raju
1922 British Raj
11
September
1922 1922 Venizelist Rebels Kingdom of Greece
1922
Revolution
Irish Civil
1922 1923 Pro-treaty forces Anti-treaty forces
War
Paraguayan
1922 1923 Civil War Gondrists Schaererists
(1922)
Sheikh
Khazal
rebellion
Sheikhdom of Mohammerah
1922 1924 Part of Sublime State of Persia
Bakhtiari Tribesmen
the Arab
separatism
in Khuzestan
Tenente Tenentismo
1922 1927 First Brazilian Republic
revolts Brazilian Communist Party
Rebel tribes:
British Empire
1923 Aden
1923 1923 Protectorate Makhdumi
British RAF
uprising[64]
Aden Protectorate
Mansuri
Alizai
1923 1923 rebellion of Emirate of Afghanistan Alizai
1923
Corfu
1923 1923 Kingdom of Italy Kingdom of Greece
incident
28 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Guna
1923 1923 Panaman government Guna rebels
revolution [es]
De la Huerta
1923 1923 Rebellion [es] Mexican government Forces loyal to Adolfo de la Huerta
[66][67]
29 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
uprising [ru]
Second
1924 1924 Honduran
Civil War [es]
Rebel tribes
Emirate of Afghanistan
Mangal
Khost Allied tribes: Alikhel
1924 1925 rebellion
Sulaimankhel
(1924–1925) Khogyani Jaji[70]
Shinwari Jadran[71]
Ahmadzai[72]
Vaalgras
1924 1924 Union of South Africa Vaalgras
revolt[8]
August Committee for Independence of
1924 1924 Soviet Union
Uprising Georgia
Tungus
1924 1925 Soviet Union Tungus Republic
uprising [ru]
June
1924 1924 Faction of Fan Noli Principality of Albania
Revolution
1924
Estonian
1924 1924 Estonia Comintern
coup d'état
attempt
Tatarbunary
1924 1924 Romania Soviet Union
uprising
Saudi
Sultanate of Nejd
1924 1925 conquest of Kingdom of Hejaz
British Empire
Hejaz
Nestorian
1924 1924 Turkey Nestorians
rebellion
Second
Zhili–
1924 1924 Fengtian clique Zhili clique
Fengtian
War
Third
Mutawakkilite Kingdom of
1924 1926 Yemeni–Asiri Idrisid Emirate of Asir
Yemen
War[44]
Idrisid Emirate of Asir
First Asiri
1924 1924 (Sayyid Ali ibn Muhammad al- Rebels led by Mustafa
Civil War[44]
Idrisi loyalists)
British Empire
1925 Aden
1925 1925 Protectorate Royal Air Force Hukais tribe
uprising[64] British Army
Aden Protectorate
1925 1925 1925 Union of South Africa Rehoboth Basters
30 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Rehoboth
Basters
rebellion[8]
Incident at
1925 1925 Kingdom of Bulgaria Kingdom of Greece
Petrich
Sheikh Said
1925 1925 Turkey Kurdish tribesmen
rebellion
1925 1925 Pink's War United Kingdom Mahsud tribesmen
Raçkotan
and Raman
1925 1925 Turkey Kurdish rebels
pacifying
operations[73]
Sason
1925 1937 Turkey Kurdish rebels
rebellion[73]
Zaraniq tribe
Supported by:
Zaraniq
Mutawakkilite Kingdom of
1925 1929 rebellion
Yemen Kingdom of Hejaz and
(1925–1929)
Nejd
United Kingdom
Great Syrian
1925 1927 France Syrian rebels
Revolt
Fengtian clique Guominjun
Anti-Fengtian
1925 1926 Zhili clique (from February Zhili clique (until February
War
1918) 1918)
Urtatagai
1925 1926 Soviet Union Emirate of Afghanistan
conflict
Rebels led by Sayyid al-Hasan
ibn Ali al-Idrisial-Hasani Idrisid Emirate of Asir
Second Asiri
1925 1926 Supported by: (Sayyid Ali ibn Muhammad al-Idrisi
Civil war[44]
loyalists)
Sultanate of Nejd
Asiri tribal
1926 1926 revolts of Idrisid Emirate of Asir Rebel tribes
1926[44]
Government of the Sultanate of
Tarim
Tarimese
1926 1927 Tamimi rebels
Civil War[74] "The League"
Kathiri
Shikak tribesmen
1926 Simko Herki tribesmen
1926 1926 Pahlavi Iran
Shikak revolt
Begzadeh tribesmen
Nicaraguan
Nicaraguan Conservatives (go
1926 1927 civil war Nicaraguan Liberals (rebels)
vernment)
(1926-1927)
31 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Northern
1926 1928 Republic of China Beiyang Government
Expedition
1926 1929 Cristero War Mexico Cristeros
1926
Communist
1926 1926 Dutch Empire Communist Party of Indonesia
Revolt in
Indonesia
Ararat
1927 1930 Turkey Republic of Ararat
rebellion
Ibn Saud
Ikhwan United Kingdom
1927 1930 Ikhwan
Revolt
Kuwait
Koçuşaği
1927 1927 Turkey Kurdish rebels
rebellion[73]
Mutki
1927 1927 Turkey Kurdish rebels
rebellion[73]
Bicar
1927 1927 suppression[7 Turkey Kurdish rebels
3]
Ikhwan raid
on Busayya
1927 1927 Part of Ikhwan Iraqi Police force
the Ikhwan
revolt
Battle of Al-
1928 1928 Kuwait Ikhwan
Regeai
1928 1929 Afghan Civil Amānullāh Khān Shinwari tribesmen
War (1928– (Until 14 January 1929) (14 November–December 1928)
1929)
Inayatullah Khan Saqqawists
(14-17 January 1929) (November 1928 – 17 January 1929)
Emirate of Afghanistan
Ali Ahmad Khan (18 January – 13 October 1929)
(17 January - 9 February 1929) In cooperation with:
Basmachi
(1929)
32 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Various anti-Saqqawist tribes
Wardak
Maydan
Jalriz
Sanglakh
Intervening against
Basmachi:
Soviet Union[75]
Kongo-Wara
1928 1931 France Gbaya rebels
rebellion
British Empire
1929 Aden
1929 1929 protectorate Subayhi tribe
Royal Air Force
uprising[64]
Aden Protectorate
Aday
rebellion
1929 1932 Soviet Union Rebels
(1929—
1932) [ru]
Escobar
1929 1929 Mexico Escobar rebels
Rebellion
1929
Basmachi
1929 1929 border raids Soviet Union Basmachi
on the Soviet
Union
Chiang-Gui
1929 1929 Republic of China New Guangxi Clique
War [zh]
Afghan
campaign of
1929 1929 the Red Soviet Union Basmachi
Army
(1929) [ru]
Sino-Soviet
1929 1929 conflict Soviet Union Republic of China
(1929)
Batpakkarins
1929 1929 koe Soviet Union Rebels
uprising [ru]
Bostandyk
1929 1929
uprising [ru]
Alakat
1929 1930 Soviet Union Rebels
Uprising [ru]
1929 1929 Asi Resul Turkey Kurdish rebels
33 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
rebellion[73]
Tendürük
1929 1929 Turkey Kurdish rebels
rebellion[73]
Anti-
Saqqawist
1929 1931 campaigns in Kingdom of Afghanistan Saqqawists
Kuhdaman
and Herat
Women's Igbo Women of Owerri and Warrant Chiefs
1929 1930
War Calabar Provinces British Colonial Forces
France
Antananarivo
1929 1929 Rebels
uprising[7] Colony of Madagascar
and Dependencies
Persian tribal
Qashqai, Khamseh, Buyir
1929 1929 uprisings of Sublime State of Persia
Ahmadi and Bakhtiari rebels
1929
Nejd Civil Kingdom of Hejaz and
1929 1929 Rebels
War[76] Nejd
1930–1944[edit]
1930–1944
Belligerents
France
1930 1935 Port Bergé rebellion[7] Rebels
Colony of
Madagascar and
Dependencies
Kingdom of
1930 1930 Shinwari rebellion Shinwari tribesmen
Afghanistan
1930 1930 Savur suppression[73] Turkey Kurdish rebels
1930 1930 Aramar rebellion[73] Turkey Kurdish rebels
1930 1930 Pülümür rebellion[73] Turkey Kurdish rebels
1930 1930 Menemen rebellion[73] Turkey Kurdish rebels
Afridi Redshirt
1930 1930 British Empire Afridi tribesmen
Rebellion
1930 1930 Kuhistan rebellion Kingdom of Rebels
34 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
(February–April 1930) Afghanistan
Uprising of the Nghệ- French colonial
1930 1931 Nghệ-Tĩnh Soviets
Tĩnh Soviets empire
1930 1930 Hnov uprising [ru] Soviet Union Rebels
Tugsbuyant Mongolian People's Buddhist clergy, former
1930 1930
uprising [ru] Republic feudal lords, Arats.
Sarysu-Sozak
1930 1930 Soviet Union Rebels
uprising [ru]
Anti-Soviet Sarbaz
1930 1930 Soviet Union Rebels
uprising of 1930 [ru]
Muromtsevsky
1930 1930 Soviet Union Rebels
uprising [ru]
1930 1930 Asanic uprising [ru] Soviet Union Rebels
1930 1930 Baribaev uprising [ru] Soviet Union Rebels
Balkash-Shokparskoe
1930 1930 Soviet Union Rebels
uprising [ru]
1930 1930 Khorinskoe uprising [ru] Soviet Union Rebels
Kuhistan rebellion (July Kingdom of
1930 1930 Saqqawists
1930) Afghanistan
1930 1930 Yen Bai mutiny French Indochina VNQDD
Central Plains War Forces of the coalition
Forces of Chiang Kai- of Yan Xishan, Feng
1930 1930 Part of Chinese Civil
shek Yuxiang, Wang Jingwei,
War
and Li Zongren
Chittagong armoury
1930 1930 British Empire Anushilan Samiti
raid
Gugsa Wale's
1930 1930 Haile Selassie loyalists Empress Zewditu supporters
Rebellion
1930 1931 Nghe-Tinh Revolt French Indochina Vietnamese rebels
1930 1932 Saya San Rebellion British Empire Burmese Rebels
Afghan campaign of
1930 1930 the Red Army Soviet Union Basmachi
(1930) [ru]
1930 1932 Sino-Tibetan War Republic of China Tibet
Liberal Alliance
Brazilian Revolution of and tenentistas.
1930 1930 First Brazilian
1930 Republic
Brazilian Army
Empire of Japan
1930 1930 Wushe Rebellion Toda Tkdaya[77]
Truku[77] (Taroko)
1931 1931 1931 Aden British Empire Ahl Ma'ir tribe
Protectorate uprising[64]
35 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Royal Air Force
Aden Protectorate
Idrisid Emirate
36 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
1932 1932 January 28 Incident Republic of China Empire of Japan
Chechen uprising of
1932 1932 Soviet Union Chechen rebels
1932 [ru]
1932 1932 May 15 Incident Empire of Japan League of Blood
Mongolian People's
1932 armed uprising in
1932 1932 Republic Anti-communist rebels
Mongolia
Soviet Union
1932 1932 Kirghiz rebellion Republic of China Kirghiz rebels
1932 1932 Mäntsälä rebellion Finland Lapua movement
1932 Salvadoran
1932 1932 El Salvador Salvadoran peasants
peasant uprising
1932 1932 Sanjurjada Spanish Republic Rebel Officers
1932 1933 Leticia Incident Colombia Peru
1932 1935 Chaco War Paraguay Bolivia
Kingdom of
1932 1932 Darre Khel revolt Rebels
Afghanistan
1932 1932 Emu War Emus Australia
Japan
Soviet–Japanese Soviet Union
1932 1939
border conflicts Mongolia Manchukuo
Japanese Korea
British Empire
1933 Aden
1933 1933 Mawsata tribe
Protectorate uprising[64] Royal Air Force
Aden Protectorate
1933 Mohmand revolt Kingdom of
1933 1933 Mohmand rebels
in Afghanistan[79] Afghanistan
Kingdom of
1933 1933 Crazy Fakir's rebellion Forces of the Crazy Fakir
Afghanistan
Empire of Japan
Manchukuo
Actions in Inner Chinese
1933 1936 Republic of China
Mongolia (1933–36) collaborators
Mongol
Military
Government (1936)
Rebels under Prince
1933 1933 Boworadet Rebellion Thailand
Boworadet
1933 1933 Sergeants' Revolt
1933 1933 Kazym rebellion Soviet Union Khanty rebels
1933 1933 Boworadet rebellion
1933 1933 Anarchist uprising in Spanish Republic Spanish Anarchists
37 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Spain (1933)
1933 1933 Casas Viejas incident Spanish Republic Spanish Anarchists
De Zeven Provinciën
1933 1933 The Netherlands Dutch Navy rebels
Mutiny
British Empire
1934 Aden
1934 1934 Qutaybi tribe
Protectorate uprising[64] Royal Air Force
Aden Protectorate
Second Cristero
1934 1938 Mexican Government Cristeros
War [es]
1934 1934 Asturian Revolution Spanish Republic Asturian Miners
1934 1934 Mandalada [ru] Soviet Union Rebels
Soviet Union
Soviet invasion of
1934 1934 Republic of China White Russian forces
Xinjiang
Torgut Mongols
Military Academy
1934 1934 Empire of Japan Imperial Way Faction
incident
First Austrian Republic
Social Democratic Party
1934 1934 Austrian Civil War
Fatherland's Front of Austria
38 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Second Italo-Ethiopian
1935 1936 Kingdom of Italy Ethiopian Empire
War
British Empire
1936–1937 Aden
1936 1937 Mansuri rebels
Protectorate uprising[64] Royal Air Force
Aden Protectorate
Bakr Sidqi's
1936 1936 1936 Iraqi coup d'état Iraqi Government
supporters
Hungarian National Socialist
1936 1936 Scythe Cross rebellion Kingdom of Hungary
Party
1936 Naval Revolt Revolutionary Armed
1936 1936 Portugal
(Portugal) Organization
1936 1936 February 26 Incident Empire of Japan Righteous Army
United Kingdom
British Army
Palestine Police Force
Jewish Settlement Police
Jewish Supernumerary
1936–39 Arab revolt in Police
1936 1939 Arab Higher Committee
Palestine Haganah
Special Night Squads
FOSH
Peulot Meyuhadot
Irgun
Peace Bands
Republican faction
Italy International
Germany Brigades
Portugal Soviet
Union (1936–1938)
Foreign volunteers
Mexico
France (1936)
British Empire
Waziristan campaign
1936 1939 Waziristan
(1936–1939)
India
39 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
British Empire
March–April 1937
1937 1937 Aden Protectorate Shayri tribe
Royal Air Force
uprising[64]
Aden Protectorate
Kingdom of
1937 1939 Katawz rebellion[80] Rebels
Afghanistan
Rebel tribes:
40 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
1938 Greek coup d'état Second Hellenic
1938 1938 Venizelist Rebels
attempt Republic
British Empire
April 1938 Aden
1938 1938 Subayhi tribe
Protectorate uprising[64] Royal Air Force
Aden Protectorate
British Empire
July–September 1938
1938 1938 Aden Protectorate Mansuri tribe
Royal Air Force
uprising[64]
Aden Protectorate
Sudetendeutsches
Sudeten German Freikorps
1938 1938 Czechoslovakia
uprising
Germany
Hungarian Invasion of
1939 1939 Kingdom of Hungary Carpatho-Ukraine
the Carpatho-Ukraine
1939 1939 Slovak–Hungarian War Kingdom of Hungary Slovak Republic
1939 1965 Maquis insurgency Nationalist Spain Spanish Maquis
Italian invasion of
1939 1939 Kingdom of Italy Albanian Kingdom
Albania
Allied Powers:
Soviet Union
United States
United Kingdom
China
France
Poland Axis Powers:
Yugoslavia Germany
Greece Japan
Netherlands Italy
Belgium Romania
Luxembourg Hungary
1939 1945 World War II
Norway Bulgaria
Czechoslovakia Slovakia
India Croatia
Canada Finland
Australia Thailand
New Zealand Iraq
South Africa
Philippines
Ethiopia
Brazil
Mongolia
Mexico
1939 Ondonga
1939 1939 South Africa Odonga rebels
uprising[8]
Winter War
1939 1940 Soviet Union Finland
Part of World War II
41 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
British Empire
1940–1941 Aden
1940 1941 Qutaybi tribe
Protectorate uprising[64] Royal Air Force
Aden Protectorate
Czortków uprising
1940 1940 Soviet Union Polish rebels
Part of World War II
Soviet occupation of Estonia
1940 1940 the Baltic states (1940) Soviet Union Latvia
Part of World War II Lithuania
Soviet occupation of
Bessarabia and
1940 1940 Soviet Union Romania
Northern Bukovina
Part of World War II
Vichy France
Franco-Thai War
1940 1941 Thailand
Part of World War II French Indochina
Finland
Soviet Union
Continuation War
1941 1944 Nazi Germany
Part of World War II United Kingdom
Kingdom of Italy
Government of Partisans
Uprising in Serbia National Salvation
1941 1941
(1941) Chetniks
Nazi Germany
Hukbalahap
Philippines
1942 1954 Hukbalahap Rebellion Soviet Union
United States
Japan
1943 Khuzestan
1943 1943
revolt[84]
42 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Kingdom of Iraq
Supported by:
Kurdish tribesmen (1945) Kurdish rebels
Jesselton Revolt
1943 1944 Empire of Japan Kinabalu Rebels
Part of World War II
Soviet Union
People's Republic of
Poland
Nazi Germany (1941–
1944)
United Kingdom
1944–1945 Insurgency
1944 1945 Badinzai rebels
in Balochistan
British India
Rebel tribes
43 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Soviet Union
White Russian forces
Mongolian People's
Republic
People's Republic of
1944 1951 Goryani Insurgency Goryani
Bulgaria
Guerrilla war in the
1944 1953 Soviet Union Forest Brothers
Baltic states
References
1. ^ Weiser, Martin (2006). "The Herero war – the first genocide of the 20th century?". Bachelor's
Thesis, Univerzita Karlova v Praze
2. ^ Jump up to:a b c d McCarthy, Justin (2006-09-29). The Armenian Rebellion at Van. University of Utah
Press. pp. 81, 82. ISBN 9780874808704.
3. ^ 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.
4. ^ 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.
5. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f g h i j k Asante, Molefi Kete (2018-12-18). "Appendix I - Chronology of Africa". The
History of Africa: The Quest for Eternal Harmony. Routledge. ISBN 9781351685153.
6. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab 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.
7. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e 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.
8. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "Uprisings against the German/South African Colonial
Power". klausdierks.com.
9. ^ 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
10. ^ 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.
44 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
11. ^ Jump up to:a b c d Katagiri, Noriyuki (2015). Adapting to Win: How Insurgents Fight and Defeat Foreign
States in War. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 197. ISBN 9780812246414.
12. ^ 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.
13. ^ The Idrisi State in Asir 1906–1934: Politics, Religion and Prestige in Arabia. Hurst Publishers.
1997. pp. 33, 34.
14. ^ "( 1903 ) -". Retrieved 12 December 2014.
15. ^ " "معركة جو لبن. Retrieved 12 December 2014.
16. ^ "Britain Sokoto Conquest 1903". www.onwar.com. Retrieved 2019-06-19.
17. ^ Collett, Nigel (2006-10-15). The Butcher of Amritsar: General Reginald Dyer. A&C Black.
p. 89. ISBN 978-1-85285-575-8.
18. ^ Kashani-Sabet, Firoozeh (2014-08-07). Frontier Fictions: Shaping the Iranian Nation, 1804-
1946. Princeton University Press. pp. xvii. ISBN 9781400865079.
19. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e Abrahamian, Ervand (1982). Iran Between Two Revolutions. Princeton University
Press. pp. 76–77. ISBN 0-691-10134-5.
20. ^ Jump up to:a b c Abrahamian, Ervand (1982). Iran Between Two Revolutions. Princeton University
Press. pp. 83. ISBN 0-691-10134-5.
21. ^ Abrahamian, Ervand (1982). Iran Between Two Revolutions. Princeton University Press.
pp. 81. ISBN 0-691-10134-5.
22. ^ Jump up to:a b Abrahamian, Ervand (1982). Iran Between Two Revolutions. Princeton University
Press. pp. 84. ISBN 0-691-10134-5.
23. ^ Jump up to:a b Abrahamian, Ervand (1982). Iran Between Two Revolutions. Princeton University
Press. pp. 97. ISBN 0-691-10134-5.
24. ^ Jump up to:a b c Abrahamian, Ervand (1982). Iran Between Two Revolutions. Princeton University
Press. pp. 95. ISBN 0-691-10134-5.
25. ^ Abrahamian, Ervand (1982). Iran Between Two Revolutions. Princeton University Press.
pp. 91. ISBN 0-691-10134-5.
26. ^ Berberian, Houri (2001). Armenians and the Iranian Constitutional Revolution of 1905–1911.
Westview Press. pp. 116–117. ISBN 978-0-8133-3817-0.
27. ^ Jack A. Goldstone. The Encyclopedia of Political Revolutions Routledge, 29 apr.
2015 ISBN 1135937583 p 245
28. ^ Jump up to:a b c "Records of the Kurds: Territory, Revolt and Nationalism, 1831-1979 - Cambridge
Archive Editions". www.archiveeditions.co.uk. Retrieved 2020-02-22.
29. ^ Jump up to:a b "COW War List". correlatesofwar.org. Correlates of War. Retrieved 6
September 2019.
30. ^ Picard (1907). "Observations sur les Mahafalys" (PDF). persee.fr. p. 206.
31. ^ 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.
32. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e 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).
33. ^ "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.
34. ^ "MOHMAND EXPEDITION". Kalgoorlie Miner (WA : 1895 - 1954). 27 May 1908. p. 5.
Retrieved 2019-10-17.
35. ^ "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.
36. ^ Henriksen, Thomas H. (1978). Mozambique: a history. Collings. p. 86. ISBN 978-0-86036-017-
9.
37. ^ 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.
45 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
38. ^ 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.
39. ^ Sykes, Sir Percy (2013-09-27). A History Of Persia. Routledge. p. 423. ISBN 978-1-136-52597-
1.
40. ^ St John, Ronald Bruce (4 June 2014). Historical Dictionary of Libya. Rowman & Littlefield.
p. 316. ISBN 9780810878761.
41. ^ Jump up to:a b c Eskander, Saad (2014). "Britain's Policy Towards The Kurdish Question, 1915-
1923" (PDF). etheses.lse.ac.uk. p. 44, 45, 217.
42. ^ "File 4684/1913 'Pt 1 Muscat rebellion'". Qatar Digital Library. 2016-06-08. Retrieved 2019-11-
25.
43. ^ Association, Cheke Cultural Writers (1994). The history and cultural life of the Mbunda speaking
peoples. The Association. p. 101. ISBN 9789982030069.
44. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f g Bang, Anne (1997). The Idrisi State in Asir 1906–1934. pp. 104, 111, 113, 118,
122, 123.
45. ^ Jump up to:a b c d 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.
46. ^ Jump up to:a b Abegaz, Berhanu (2018-06-09). A Tributary Model of State Formation: Ethiopia, 1600-
2015. Springer. p. 48. ISBN 9783319757803.
47. ^ 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.
48. ^ Jump up to:a b 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.
49. ^ 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.
50. ^ 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
51. ^ 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.
52. ^ 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.
53. ^ 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.
54. ^ The Netherlands Indies and the Great War, 1914-1918. p. 453.
55. ^ In Union with him and Bey Madamin counter-revolutionary robber bands with July 10, 1919, to
January 1920.
56. ^ 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.
57. ^ Supporters of Habibullah had fought in alliance with such films only in northern Afghanistan
46 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
58. ^ Report of the Battles Nomenclature Committee
59. ^ The Third Afghan War 1919 Official Account p. 13
60. ^ 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.
61. ^ 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 June2011.
62. ^ Farrokh, Kaveh (2011-12-20). Iran at War: 1500-1988. Bloomsbury Publishing.
p. 187. ISBN 978-1-78096-240-5.
63. ^ 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.
64. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Peterson, J. E. (2016-08-05). Defending Arabia. Routledge.
p. 35. ISBN 978-1-317-22999-5.
65. ^ Joab B. Eilon, Yoav Alon. The making of Jordan: tribes, colonialism and the modern state. 2007:
pp.54-56. [1]
66. ^ 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.
67. ^ 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.
68. ^ "Восстание в Чечне 1924-1925 гг". www.hrono.ru. Retrieved 2019-07-15.
69. ^ 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.
70. ^ 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.
71. ^ 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.
72. ^ Cite
error: The named reference :5 was invoked but never defined (see
the help page).
73. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f g h i j k 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)
74. ^ Boxberger, Linda (2012-02-01). On the Edge of Empire: Hadhramawt, Emigration, and the
Indian Ocean, 1880s-1930s. SUNY Press. p. 232. ISBN 9780791489352.
75. ^ 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.
76. ^ - كتاب مقاتل من الصحراء- حركات التمرد ضد السلطان عبدالعزيز Archived 2017-03-18 at the Wayback Machine
77. ^ Jump up to:a b "Wushe Incident - Encyclopedia of Taiwan". Archived from the originalon 25 March
2014. Retrieved 23 November 2012.
78. ^ Mekonnen, Yohannes K. (2013). Ethiopia: The Land, Its People, History and Culture. New Africa
Press. pp. 302, 303. ISBN 978-9987-16-024-2.
47 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
79. ^ Jump up to:a b 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
80. ^ Jump up to:a b 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.
81. ^ "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.
82. ^ "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.
83. ^ 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.
84. ^ "Iran : the " liberation " of Arabistan". articles.abolkhaseb.net. Retrieved 2019-04-09. New
revolts occurred in 1943 and 1945 and were quelled in blood.
48 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
1945–1949[edit]
Belligerents
Crusader insurgenc SFR
8 May 1945 1950 Crusaders
y Yugoslavia
1945 Khuzestan
1945 1945
revolt[1]
49 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
m
Canad
a
France
Philippi
nes
Colom
bia
Ethiopi
a
Greece
Luxem
bourg
Netherl
ands
New
Zealand
South
Africa
Thailan
d
Turkey
Medical
support[show]
Netherlands
United
27 December Indonesian National Kingdom (until
17 August 1945 Indonesia
1949 Revolution 1946)
Japan (until
1946)
Iran Republic of
Mahabad
Supported by
15 November 15 December Azerbaijan
Iran crisis of 1946 United States
1945 1946 People's Republic
United
Supported by:
Kingdom Soviet Union
Provisional
Democratic
Kingdom of Government
Greece
Hellenic DSE
Army NOF partisans
30 March 1946 16 October 1949 Greek Civil War Supported by:
United Supported by:
States (from 1947) Yugoslavia
Bulgaria
United
Albania
Kingdom (until 1947)
Soviet
Union (until 1947)
50 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Hukbalahap Philippines
4 July 1946 17 May 1954 rebellion (post- Supported by Hukbalahap
WWII) United States
United
Autumn Uprising of States Army
September 1946 November 1946 Military Peasant rebels
1946 in Korea
Government in
Korea
Laborers in
Travancore: Ki Punnapra and
Punnapra-Vayalar
October 1946 October 1946 ngdom of Vayalar
uprising
Travancore Communist
Party of India
French Union
French
Fourth
Republic
State
Viet Minh of Vietnam
Pathet Lao Cambo
Khmer Issarak dia
United Issarak Kingdo
Front m of Laos
19 December First Indochina War Japanese Su
1 August 1954 pp
1946 Indochina Wars holdouts
Supported by: ort
Soviet Union ed
by
China
:
East Germany
Poland
Un
ite
d
St
ate
s
7 2 Pa
0 rag Pa Lib
M ua rag er
a A ya ua al
r u n ya Pa
c g Civ n rty
h u il Go
s Wa ver PR
1 t r nm F
9 1 (19 ent
4 9 47) PC
7 4 Mil P
7 itar
y
of
51 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Pa
rag
ua
y
Co
lor
ad
o
Pa
rty
Pe
opl
e
of
Po
on
ch
Ma
an
ha
d
raj
O Mir
a
J c 19 pur
Ha
u t 47 ; M
ri
n o Po usl
Si
e b on im
ng
e ch Co
h a
1 r Re nfe
nd
9 1 bel ren
his
4 9 lio ce
Do
7 4 n
Su gr
7
pp a f
ort orc
ed es
by
:
Pa
kis
tan
Int
egr
ati
1 1
on Ju
9 9
of Ind na
4 4
Ju ia ga
7 7
na dh
ga
dh
1 1 Ro
9 9 ma Ro An
4 6 nia ma ti-
7 2 n nia co
ant Su m
i- pp mu
52 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
co
m
ort
mu
ed
nis
by
t nis
:
res t
ist re
So
an bel
vie
ce s
t
mo
Un
ve
ion
me
nt
2 5
2
J
Ind
O a
o-
c n Un Un
Pa
t u de de
kist
o a cid cid
ani
b r ed/ ed/
Wa
e y Dr Dr
r of
r aw aw
19
1 1 47
9 9
4 4
7 9
2
9 N
o
v
M Ma Ma
e
a lag lag
m
r as as
b Fr
c y y
e an
h Up re
r ce
risi bel
1
1 ng s
9
9 4
4 8
7
2 1 19
9 4 47 Je Ar
– ws ab
N M 48 of s
o a Civ Pal of
v y il est Pa
e Wa ine les
m 1 r in tin
b 9 Ma Ha e
e 4 nd ga
r 8 ato na Ar
1 ry h m
9 Pal y
Irg
4 est of
un
7 ine th
53 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
e
Ho
Pa
ly
rt
W
of
ar
the
19 Ar
Le ab
48
hi Li
Pal
est be
ine rat
wa io
r n
Ar
m
y
1
9
4
8 Kin
Saf
[4
gd
1 i Sa
]
om
9 Re fi r
o of
4 bel eb
r Af
9 lio els
1 gh
n[4]
9 [5] ani
4 sta
7 n
[5
2 2 19
0 5 48 Co Cz
Cz m ec
F F ec mu ho
e e ho nis slo
b b slo t va
r r va Pa k
u u k rty go
a a co of ver
r r up Cz nm
y y d'é ec ent
tat ho
1 1 slo
9 9 va
4 4 kia
8 8 Su
pp
ort
ed
by
:
So
vie
t
Un
54 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
ion
1
2
2
4
Co Na Go
M
A sta tio ver
a
p Ric nal nm
r
r an Lib ent
c
i Civ era of
h
l il tio Co
1 Wa n sta
1 r
9 Ar Ri
9
4 my ca
4
8
8
2 O Int An
n ern Un ti-
A g al io go
p o co n ve
r i nfli go rn
i n ct ve m
l g in rn en
1 Bu me t
9 rm nt fa
4 a (19 cti
8 48 on
– s:
19
62)
KN
U (
AF sin
PF ce
L 19
49
Mil )
ita
ry
go K
ve NL
rn A
me D
nt K
s B
(19 A (
62 sin
– ce
20 20
11) 10
)
B
Mu
SP
jah
P (
ide
19
en
62
55 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Co
– m
19 mu
88 nis
) t
Pa
S rty
P (1
D 94
C ( 8–
19 19
88 88
– )
20
11
) R
ed
Cu fla
rre gs
nt (1
go 94
ve 8–
rn 19
me 78
nt )
(si
nc M
e N
20 DA
11) A (
sin
ce
U 19
S 89
D )
P (
sin N
ce DA
20 A (
11 sin
) ce
DK 19
BA 89
(19 )
94
– SS
20 A (
10) sin
ce
19
88
)
S
56 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
S
A
S
S
S
A
N
SS
NA
(1
99
5–
20
05
)
W
NA
(1
97
5–
19
88
)
U
W
SP
(si
nc
e
19
88
)
U
W
S
A
KI
O (
sin
ce
19
61
)
KI
A
57 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
PN
O (
19
49
–
19
91
)
M
TA
(1
98
5–
19
96
)
Go
d's
Ar
my
(1
99
7–
20
06
)
AB
SD
F (
Si
nc
e
19
80
s)
SS
VF
(1
96
7–
19
80
)
R
NA
(si
nc
e
19
98
)
58 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
TN
LA
(si
nc
e
19
92
)
Su
pp
ort
ed
by
:
R
O
C (
19
48
–
19
80
s)
Th
ail
an
d
Ind
on
esi
a
Un
ite
d
St
ate
s
PR
C
3 M Jej W
a u So ork
A y upr uth ers
p isin Ko '
r 1 g rea Pa
i 9 rty
l 4 of
1 9 So
9 uth
4 Ko
59 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
re
8
a
Go
ver
nm
9
ent
of
A
Co
p
1 La lo Lib
r
9 Vio mb er
i
5 len ia al
l
8 cia Pa
1
Co rty
9
ns
4
erv
8
ati
ve
Pa
rty
Eg
19 ypt
48
Ar Ira
ab q
–
1 Isr Tr
1 0 ael an
4 i sjo
M Wa rd
M a r an
a r Pa
y c rt Isr Sy
h of ael ria
1 the
9 1 Ar H
4 9 ab W
8 4 – A
9 Isr
ael AL
i A
co
nfli Le
ct ba
no
n
1 1 Ma
6 2 lay Un
an ite A
J J Em d Support
u u erg Kin ed by:
n l en gd
e y cy et Union
60 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
om
Federa
tion of
Malaya
Southe
rn
Rhodesia a
Fiji
King's nesia
1 1 African
9 9 Rifles h
4 6 Vietnam
8 0 alia from 1954)
Zealand Minh
m 1954)
Gurkhas
Support
ed by:
and
13 18
Operatio l State of
September September
n Polo Hyderab
1948 1948
ad
Madiun
People's
Affair
Democra
Part of
18 tic Front
October the
September Indonesi
1948 nesian nesia
1948 an
National
Socialist
Revoluti
Party
on
Yeosu–
September October Suncheo Communi
1948 1948 n h Korea st Rebels
rebellion
Anti-
governm
ent
Pre-
insurgent
25 June Korean
1948 s
1950 War h Korea
rgency
North
Korean
ebels
Hazara
1949
ebels
Hazara dom of
1949 1949 under
Rebellio Afghanist
Qurban
n an
Zawar
61 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Palestini
an stinian
Fedayee Fedayee
n n
insurgen Support
29 October cy ed by:
1949
1956 Part of
the
t
li–
Palestini
an an
conflict
Supporte
26 Palace
rs of
Februar Rebellio
and Phanomy
y 1949 n
ong
Campaig
n to
Suppres
s Bandits nal
le's
1949 1951 in Revolutio
Republic
Central nary
of China
and Army
Southern
China
Darul
Islam
Insurgen
cy
7 August Part of nesia
1965
1949 the l Islam
nesian erlands
National
Revoluti
on
Afghanis stan
anistan
tan–
Support
1949 Ongoing Pakistan Support
ed by:
skirmish ed by:
es
a
1950–1959[edit]
Belligerents
62 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
1950 1961 Buraimi War [ar]
Kuomintang
9 January People's
1958 Islamic Republic of China
1950 Republic of China
insurgency
Makassar
Uprising
5 April 21 April Part of
Indonesia Ambonese Veterans
1950 1950 the Indonesian
National
Revolution
Utuado Uprising
Jayuya Uprising
North Korea
25 June 27 July Korean War UN Command: China
1950 1953[7] Part of Soviet Union
the Korean South
conflict Medical support[show]
Korea
United
States
United
Kingdom
Australia
Belgium
63 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Canada
France
Philippin
es
Colombi
a
Ethiopia
Greece
Luxembo
urg
Netherla
nds
New
Zealand
South
Africa
Thailand
Turkey
Medical
support[show]
Manhattan
29 June 1951 Thailand Rebel naval units
Rebellion
Palestinian Fedayeen
13 Jordan
14 April Reprisal
November Israel
1951 operations Egypt
1966
Syria
1951 Anglo-
1951 1951 United Kingdom Egypt
Egyptian War[9]
Harazajat Kingdom of
1952 1952 Rebels
peasant's revolt[10] Afghanistan
Trucial Oman
Scouts Saudi Arabia
Supported by Supported by
Invasion of
1952 1955
Hamasa British Empire
Al Bu Shamis tribe
Sultanate of Na'im tribe
Muscat and Oman
64 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Uyghur separatist
movements
Including:
1954 Ongoing Xinjiang conflict China
[show]
16 May 26 June
Kengir uprising USSR Kengir resistance
1954 1954
3 ROC
First Taiwan
September 1 May 1955 PRC
Strait Crisis United States
1954
Annexation of
22 July 11 August
Dadra and Nagar India Portugal
1954 1954
Haveli
22 ROC
23 June Second Taiwan
September PRC
1958 Strait Crisis United States
1958
Preventive Strike
1955 1955 of Marechal
Lott [pt]
Calderonistas
Calderonista
1955 1955 Invasion of Costa Costa Rica Nicaragua
Rica
Venezuela
Cameroonian
Union of the Peoples of
1955 1964 Independence France
Cameroon
War
Upper Yafa
1955 1957 British Empire Rebels
uprisings[12]
18 August 27 March First Sudanese SSLM Anglo-Egyptian Sudan
1955 1972 Civil War AZL
65 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Republic of the Sudan
Anyanya
Democratic Republic of
the Sudan
South Vietnam
North Vietnam
United States
FNL
South Korea
Khmer Rouge
Thailand
1 Khmer Issarak
Australia
30 April Pathet Lao
November Vietnam War New Zealand
1975 China
1955 Kingdom of Laos
North Korea
Khmer Republic
Soviet Union
Philippines
Supported by:[show]
Supported by:[show]
7 Israel[13]
29 October
November Suez Crisis United Kingdom Egypt[14]
1956
1956 France
2 14
Quỳnh Lưu
November November North Vietnam Anti-communist rebels
Uprising
1956 1956
Anti-taxation
Late 1950s Late 1950s uprising in Kingdom of Hazara rebels
Afghanistan[15] Afghanistan
INM
15 July 25 October 1958 Lebanon Lebanon LCP
1958 1958 crisis United States
PSP
14 July
14 July 1958 Free Officers Arab Federation
Revolution
North
Vietnamese
invasion of Laos
December September
Part of the North Vietnam Kingdom of Laos
1958 1959
Vietnam War and
the Laotian Civil
War
66 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
30 15 Mexico–
December September Guatemala Guatemala Mexico
1958 1959 conflict
1958 1961 Permesta Indonesia Permesta rebels
7 March 11 March 1959 Mosul
Iraq Arab nationalist rebels
1959 1959 uprising
Tibet
10 March 23 March 1959 Tibetan People's
1959 1959 uprising Republic of China Chushi Gangdruk
Kingdom of Laos
2 Pathet Lao United States
23 May North Vietnam Thailand
December Laotian Civil War
1959 South Vietnam
1975 Supported by:[show]
Supported by:[show]
Escambray
1959 1965 Cuba Anti-communist guerrillas
Rebellion
Pashtun Revolt in Kingdom of
1959 1959 Pashtun rebels
Kandahar[16] Afghanistan
Upper Yafa
British Empire Rebels
disturbances[17]
15 June 18 June (Further Supported by:
1959 1959 info: House of Upper Mutawakkilite Kingdom of
commons Yafa Yemen
debate)
Cuban invasion
1959 1959 Panama Cuba
of Panama[18]
Cuban invasion
Dominican Cuba
1959 1959 of the Dominican
Republic
Republic[19]
Spain ETA
GAL Basque National
31 July 20 October
Basque conflict AAA Liberation Movement
1959 2011
BVE ETA (pm)
France Iparretarrak
1960–1969[edit]
Belligerents
Star
Finish Name of conflict
t
Victorious party (if
Defeated party (if applicable)
applicable)
67 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
1960–61 campaign at People's Republic of
National Revolutionary
1960 1961 the China–Burma China
Army
border Burma
1960–63:
Katanga
1960–63:
South Kasai
Republic of the Supported by:
Congo Belgium
Supported by: France
Soviet Union (1960) Union of South Africa
Rhodesia
1960 1965 Congo Crisis 1960–62:
ONUC[show]
Stanleyville government
1964–65: 1964–65:
Democratic Republic Simba and Kwilu rebels
of the Congo Supported
by: Supported by:
United States
Belgium Soviet Union
China
Cuba
Mai-Mai Kata Katanga (2011–
2016)
Democratic Republic
of the Congo Mai Mai Gédéon
CORAK
Ongoin MONUSCO
1960 Katanga insurgency CPK
g Benin
Egypt
Self-defence groups
FDLR
Mai Mai Yakutumba
Russia
68 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Armed groups:
Turkistan Islamic
Party
(1988–present)
ETLO
(2000–2003)[citation needed]
China Supported by:
List[show]
People's
Police ETPRP
People's (1968–89)
Ongoin
1960 Xinjiang conflict URFET
g Armed Police
(1968–89)
People's Various small groups[20]
Liberation Army Supported by:
Supported by: List[show]
SCO (2001–present)
Civilian groups:
Uyghurs
Han people
Hui people[21]
Mongol people
Contras
1961 1990 Nicaraguan Revolution FSLN
Somoza government
Republic of Iraq
1961 1970 First Iraqi–Kurdish War KDP
Syrian Arab Republic
United States
1961 1961 Bay of Pigs Invasion Cuba
Cuban exiles
1961 1961 Bizerte crisis France Tunisia
1961 1962 Operation Trikora Indonesia Netherlands
EPLF Ethiopia
Eritrean War of Cuba
1961 1991
Independence Soviet Union
ELF
South Yemen
Indian annexation of
1961 1961 India Portugal
Goa
69 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Tuareg rebellion
1962 1964 Mali Tuareg guerrillas
(1962–64)
Mutawakkilite Kingdom of
Yemen
Yemen Arab Supported by:
1962 1970 North Yemen Civil War Republic
Saudi Arabia
Egypt (until 1967) Jordan
United Kingdom
United Kingdom
North Borneo Federation
1962 1962 Brunei revolt Brunei
Indonesia
Malaya
70 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Colonial War
NLF United Kingdom
1963 1967 Aden Emergency
FLOSY Federation of South Arabia
1964 Ethiopian–Somali
1964 1964 Ethiopian Empire Somali Republic
Border War
Simba rebellion Congo-Léopoldville
1964 1964 Part of the Congo Belgium Simba Rebels
Crisis United States
ZANU
FRELIMO Rhodesia
1964 1979 Rhodesian Bush War
ZAPU Zimbabwe Rhodesia
MK
North
Vietnam (1964–1976)
FULRO insurgency United Front for the
1964 1992 Viet Cong
against Vietnam Liberation of Oppressed Races
South Vietnam
Vietnam (after 1976)
FARC
ELN
EPL
IRAFP
Colombian conflict M-19
1964 Present Colombia
(1964–present) MOEC
MAQL
ERC
GRA
PRT
Mozambican War of
Independence
1964 1974 FRELIMO Portugal
Part of the Portuguese
Colonial War
NSCN
Ongoin Insurgency in PREPAK
1964 India
g Northeast India ULFA
ATTF
Afro-Shirazi Party
1964 1964 Zanzibar Revolution Sultanate of Zanzibar
Umma Party
30 September Thirtieth of September
1965 1965 Indonesia
Movement Movement
(CEFA) Dominican
Armed Forces Training
Center
(SIM) Dominican Military Dominican Armed Forces
1965 1965 Dominican Civil War Constitutionalists
Intelligence Service
United States PRD partisans
(IAPF) Inter-American
Peace Force
1965 1965 United States invasion United States Dominican Republic
of the Dominican
71 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Republic (1965) [es]
United States
Inter-American Peace
Force:
American occupation of Brazil
1965 1966 the Dominican Honduras Dominican Republic
Republic (1965–66) Paraguay
Nicaragua
Costa Rica
El Salvador
Indo-Pakistani War of
1965 1965 1965 India Pakistan
Indo-Pakistani Wars
Communist insurgency Communist party of
1965 1983 Thailand
in Thailand Thailand
FROLINAT
Chadian Civil War Chad
1965 1979 GUNT
(1965–79) France
Libya
Guerrilha do
1966 1967 Brazil Rebels
Caparaó [pt]
France
Crisis in French
1966 1977 Djiboutian nationalists
Somaliland[23]
French Somaliland
Stanleyville mutinies
1966 1967 Part of the Congo DRC Katangan Mercenaries
Crisis
Ñancahuazú Bolivia
1966 1967 Ejército de Liberación Nacional
Guerrilla War United States
Korean DMZ Conflict
South Korea
1966 1969 Part of the Korean North Korea
United States
conflict
Angola
Cuba
South African Border South Africa
1966 1989 SWAPO
War UNITA
Zambia
Umkhonto we Sizwe
Invasion of
1967 1967 Venezuela Cuba
Machurucuto
1967 China-India
1967 1967 India China
border conflicts
1967 1967 Six-Day War Israel Egypt
Syria
Jordan
Arab Expeditionary Forces:
Iraq
Saudi Arabia
Morocco
72 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Algeria
Libya
Kuwait
Tunisia
Sudan
PLO
1967 Kurdish revolt in
1967 1968 Iran Kurdish tribesmen
Iran
Brazilian military
1967 1974 Araguaia Guerrilla War Communist Party of Brazil
government
National United
Front of Kampuchea Khmer Republic
1967 1975 Cambodian Civil War Khmer Rouge United States
North Vietnam South Vietnam
Viet Cong
1967 1970 Nigerian Civil War Nigeria Biafra
Egypt
Soviet Union
Cuba
1967 1970 War of Attrition Israel
PLO
Jordan
Syria
Communist Party of India
(Marxist–Leninist) Naxalbari
Communist Party of United
States of India
Communist Party of India
(Marxist–Leninist) New
Democracy
Ongoin Naxalite–Maoist Communist Party of India
1967 India (Marxist–Leninist) (Mahadev
g insurgency
Mukherjee)
Centre of Indian
Communists (until 1977)
People's Liberation Army
of Manipur
Tamil Nadu Liberation Army
Purbo Banglar Communist
Party
Red Brigades
Front Line
October 22 Group
PAC
73 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Continuous Struggle
PO
AO
Far-right terrorist
National Vanguard
Black Order
NAR
Third Position
Soviet Union
People's Republic of
Bulgaria
Warsaw Pact invasion East Germany Czechoslovak Socialist
1968 1968
of Czechoslovakia People's Republic of Republic
Hungary
People's Republic of
Poland
Communists:
Communist Party
NPA
Philippines NDF
Makabayan
Support: Moro people:
United States
Ongoin Civil conflict in the
1969 Australia
g Philippines MNLF
Government of
MILF
Indonesia
Government of Sulu
Malaysia Islamists:
RSM
JI
BIFF
1969 Ongoin Insurgency of the Philippines CPP
g Communist Party of the United States[24] * NPA
Philippines Anti-communist militia MLPP-RHB [25]
APP [25]
Alsa RPA [25]
Masa (1986–?) ABB [25]
CPLA [25]
Support:
People's Republic of
China (1969–1976)
Libyan Arab
Jamahiriya (1980s–2011)
North Korea (Alleged)
74 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Vietnam (1980s)
Rajah Sulaiman
Armed Forces
of the Philippines Movement
Khalifa Islamiyah
Philippine
Mindanao[35]
National Police
Ongoin Moro insurgency in the Supported by:
1969 Bangsamoro
g Philippines United Islamic Freedom Fighters
States (advisers) Jemaah Islamiyah
Australia
MILF rogue
Malaysia (since 2001) factions[36]
Indonesia
Other MILF rogue factions
IMT:[26][show]
Justice for Islamic
Movement
Supported by:
al-Qaeda[37]
14K Triad (to ASG)[38]
Islamic State of Iraq and
the Levant[39]
Abu Sayyaf[40][41]
1969 1969 Football War El Salvador Honduras
1969 1969 Al-Wadiah War Saudi Arabia South Yemen
Sino-Soviet border
1969 1969 China Soviet Union
conflict
Activists
Authorities
1970–1979[edit]
75 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Belligerents
Star
Finish Name of conflict
t
Defeated party (if
Victorious party (if applicable)
applicable)
Christian Democracy
Italian Social
Movement
Italian Social
Democratic Party
1970 1972 Reggio revolt Italy National Italian
Workers' Union
Italian General
Confederation of
Labour
'Ndrangheta
Indo-Pakistani War of
1971
Bangladesh Liberation
1971 1971 India[42][43][44] Pakistan
War and the Indo-
Pakistani wars and
conflicts
76 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
1972 invasion of
1972 1972 Uganda FRONASA
Uganda[45]
Gonobahini
1972–1975
1972 1975 Bangladesh Bangladesh Bangladesh
insurgency
Purba Banglar
Sarbahara Party
77 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
EDUP
OLF North Korea
ONLF Libya
WSLF
ALF
Second Iraqi–Kurdish
1974 1975 Ba'athist Iraq KDP
War
MPLA
FNLA
Cuba
UNITA
Soviet Union
South Africa
East Germany
1975 2002 Angolan Civil War FLEC
SWAPO
Zaire
MK
United States
Vietnam
China
Portugal
Angola
Cuba
1975 Ongoing Cabinda War FLEC
East Germany(1975–1990)
Soviet Union (1975–1991)
PUK
1975 1979 PUK insurgency Iraq
KDP
LF Syria
Syria (until 1976) PLA
ADF
Tigers Militia
ALZ LNM (until 1982)
LNRF (from 1982)
1975 1990 Lebanese Civil War
Israel (1982) Amal
SLA LCP
SSNP
PLO (1978–1983)
United States
France
Italy Hezbollah
78 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Thailand
United States
Indonesian invasion of
1975 1975 Indonesia Fretilin / Falintil
East Timor
Montoneros
1976 1983 Dirty War Argentina
ERP
Free Aceh
1976 2005 Insurgency in Aceh Indonesia
Movement
79 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
FANT
PKK
Turkey
Kurdish–Turkish KCK
1978 Ongoing KDP
conflict PJAK
PUK
KDP/North
Democratic Republic of
1979 1979 1979 Herat uprising Army mutineers
Afghanistan
South Yemen
1979 1979 Yemenite War of 1979 North Yemen
NDF
APCO
1979 Khuzestan DRFLA
1979 1979 Iran
uprising PFLA
AFLA
1980–1989[edit]
Belligerents
80 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Eritrean
February 24 March Second Eritrean Civil Eritrean Liberation
People's Liberation
1980 1981 War Front
Front
10 July
9 July 1980 Nojeh coup plot Iran Royalist Officers
1980
Vanuatu
August September
Coconut War Papua New Nagriamel rebels
1980 1980
Guinea
TKP/ML-TİKKO
MKP-HKO-PHG
12
Maoist insurgency in MLKP
September Ongoing Turkey
Turkey
1980
Maoist Party Centre
THKP-C
(Dissolved)
THKO
(Dissolved)
Iran
Iraq
22 KDP
MEK
20 August PUK
September Iran–Iraq War DRFLA
1988 ISCI
1980
Supported by:[show]
Supported by:[show]
25 January 5 February
Paquisha War Peru Ecuador
1981 1981
81 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
8 February 12 February 1981 Entumbane
Zimbabwe ZIPRA
1981 1981 uprising
Senegal Movement of
1982 Ongoing Casamance conflict Gambia Democratic Forces of
Guinea-Bissau Casamance
Union of Iranian
25 January 1982 1982 Amol uprising Iran
Communists
14 June
2 April 1982 Falklands War United Kingdom Argentina
1982
PLO
Syria
Hezbollah
Jammoul
6 June Amal
June 1985 1982 Lebanon War Al-Mourabitoun
1982
Israel
Islamic Amal
SLA
ASALA
Lebanese Front
Al-Tawhid
PKK
Hezbollah
18 February 25 May
Security Zone conflict Jammoul
1985 2000
Amal
Ethiopia
August 1982 Ethiopian–
June 1982 Somalia Somali Salvation
1982 Somali Border War
Democratic Front
SPLA
SPLA-Nasir Sudan
5 June 9 January Second Sudanese SSLM SSDF
1983 2005 Civil War Anyanya II Janjaweed
Eastern LRA
Coalition
Kurdish rebellion of
September 1983 KDP
1985 Iraq
1983 Part of the Iran–Iraq PUK
War
82 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Antigua and
Barbuda
Barbados
Dominica
Cuba
Jamaica
Saint Lucia
Saint Vincent
and the Grenadines
25
13 April
November Siachen conflict India[51][52][53] Pakistan
1984
2003
25 30
December December Agacher Strip War Mali Burkina Faso
1985 1985
Ciskei-Transkei
1986 1987 Ciskei Transkei
conflict
Socialist
15 November 1987 Brașov rebellion Demonstrators
Republic of Romania
Citizens of the Baltic
States:
1987 1991 Singing Revolution Lithuania Soviet Union
Latvia
Estonia
Unified National
1 November Leadership of the
8 1991 Uprising
December (or 13 First Intifada Israel Hamas
1987 September
1993) Palestinian Islamic
Jihad
1987–89 JVP
1987 1989 Sri Lanka JVP
insurrection
1987 Sino-Indian
1987 1987 China India
skirmish
1987 Ongoing Lord's Resistance Uganda Lord's Resistance
Army insurgency South Sudan Army
Democratic
Republic of the
Congo
MONUC
Central African
83 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Republic
Nagorno-
20 February 12 May Nagorno-Karabakh
Karabakh Azerbaijan
1988 1994 War
Armenia
1
20 April Bougainville
December Bougainville Civil War Papua New Guinea
1998 Revolutionary Army
1988
Civil war in
Afghanistan (1989– Democratic Republic
15 February 30 April 92) Mujahideen
of Afghanistan
1989 1992 part of the war in Supported by:[show]
afghanistan(1978– Supported by:[show]
present)
18 July Mauritania–Senegal
9 April 1989 Mauritania Senegal
1991 Border War
13 July 23 August KDPI insurgency Government of
KDP-I
1989 1996 (1989–96) Iran
Harkat-ul-Jihad al-
Islami
Lashkar-e-Taiba
Insurgency in Jammu
Jaish-e-Mohammed
13 July and Kashmir
Ongoing India Hizbul Mujahideen
1989 Part of the Kashmir
conflict Harkat-ul-Mujahideen
Al-Badr
Jammu Kashmir
Liberation Front
Anti-Ceaușescu
protestors Socialist Republic of
16 27
Romanian Army Romania
December December Romanian Revolution
1989 1989 Dissident Securitate and other
members of the loyalist forces
Communist Party
20 United States
31 January United States
December Panamanian Panama
1990 invasion of Panama
1989 opposition
Armed Forces of
National Patriotic Liberia
24
2 August First Liberian Civil Front of Liberia ULIMO
December
1997 War Supported by: United Nations
1989
Libya Independent National
Patriotic Front of Liberia
See also[edit]
List of wars 1990–2002
List of wars 2003–present
References[edit]
84 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
1. ^ "Iran : the " liberation " of Arabistan". articles.abolkhaseb.net. Retrieved 9 April 2019. New
revolts occurred in 1943 and 1945 and were quelled in blood.
2. ^ Jump up to:a b "Českoslovenští lékaři stáli v korejské válce na straně KLDR. Jejich mise stále
vyvolává otazníky" (in Czech). Czech Radio. 11 April 2013. Retrieved 25 July 2016.
3. ^ "Romania's "Fraternal Support" to North Korea during the Korean War, 1950–1953". Wilson
Centre. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
4. ^ Jump up to:a b c 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. 1948-49:
Rebellion of the Safi tribes. 1955: Abortive tribal movement on Kabul
5. ^ Jump up to:a b Robinson, Francis (4 November 2010). The New Cambridge History of Islam: Volume
5, The Islamic World in the Age of Western Dominance. Cambridge University
Press. ISBN 9781316175781. In addition, tension between the government and the Bānki Millī group and
the Ṣāfī Pashtūn tribal revolt (1947– 9) in Nangarhār Province brought Muḥammad Dāʾūd, who brutally
suppressed it, to national attention.
6. ^ Frank, R.B.; Clark, W.K. (2007). MacArthur: A Biography. St. Martin's Press.
p. 150. ISBN 9780230610767. Retrieved 2 December 2014.
7. ^ US State Department statement regarding "Korea: Neutral Nations Supervisory Commission"
and the Armistice Agreement "which ended the Korean War."
8. ^ "Romania's "Fraternal Support" to North Korea during the Korean War, 1950–1953". Wilson
Centre. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
9. ^ Egypt 1951 War with Britain, Globalsecurity.org
10. ^ Giustozzi, Antonio (2008). "AFGHANISTAN: TRANSITION WITHOUT END" (PDF). p. 21. The
‘peasant’ revolt of Harazajat in 1952 has also been attributed to the abuses of the state administration
(Davydov 1967: 162). In this case, the revolt was immediate because the population was still well armed
following the civil war, but my hypothesis is that elsewhere the ‘imperial’ system of oppression and
exclusion and the patrimonial system of administration were slowly preparing the ground for future
explosions, should the opportunity arise.
11. ^ Giustozzi, Antonio (2008). "Afghanistan: Transition without end" (PDF). Crisis States Research
Centre. p. 36. The last tribal revolt of the pre-1978 period was easily crushed in 1955.
12. ^ Waldemar Gruschke, Markenländer-Lexikon, vol. 3 N–Sh, 2006, p. 83, ISBN 3-8334-4936-5
13. ^ "Israel Routs Egypt"
14. ^ "Nasser lost the war in military terms"
15. ^ Jalālzaʾī, Mūsá Ḵẖān (2002). Afghanistan's internal security threats: the dynamics of ethnic and
sectarian violence. Dua Publications. p. 114. In the late 1950s Hazaras again organized an armed
insurrection in opposition to the imposition of heavy taxes. The state pacified the resistance by repealing
taxes levied on the Hazaras and imprisoned the leaders of the rebellion, including Mohammad Ebrahim
Beg, known as Bacha-e- Gaw Sawar, Khawja Naeem and Sayed Mohammad Esmail Balkhi. Ebrahim,
who compromised his principles, was later released from jail, while Balkhi remained there until 1964.
16. ^ Innocent, Malou (2011). "Should America Liberate Afghanistan's Women?"(PDF). p. 35, 36. Yet
past efforts to reform, reshape or otherwise revamp Afghan society have only served to unite insular tribal,
ethnic and regional-based communities against the imposition of centralised control. Instances of this
include the Safi Rebellion (1945–46); the Pashtun revolt in Kandahar against provincial taxes and schools
for girls (1959); an Islamist uprising in the Panjshir Valley (1975); and resistance to land reform, education
policies and family law in Nuristan and Herat (1978). These rebellions were triggered when Kabul-based
modernists attempted to control the social environment of the more conservative rural hinterland.
17. ^ "Upper Yafa (Disturbances): 7 Jul 1959: House of Commons debates". TheyWorkForYou.
Retrieved 26 June 2019.
18. ^ "Rubén Miró y la invasión de cubanos a Panamá" (in Spanish). Panama City: La Estrella de
Panamá. 22 April 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
19. ^ Lora, J. Armando. "Invasión" (in Spanish). Retrieved 14 September 2018.
20. ^ Reed & Raschke (2010), p. 37.
21. ^ Associate Professor Department of International Relations Jae Ho Chung; Jae Ho Chung; Tao-
chiu Lam (16 October 2009). China's Local Administration: Traditions and Changes in the Sub-National
Hierarchy. Routledge. p. 75. ISBN 978-1-135-20372-6.
85 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
22. ^ Flores, Victor (28 September 2013). "Los cubanos son los artífices del fraude electoral en
Venezuela". El País (in Spanish). Madrid: Ediciones El País. Retrieved 14 September 2018.
23. ^ "17. French Somaliland (1956-1977)". uca.edu. Retrieved 20 February2020.
24. ^ "New People's Army". Stanford University. 22 August 2012. Retrieved 9 February 2015.
25. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e "Philippines-CPP/NPA (1969 – first combat deaths)". August 2014. Retrieved 23
February 2015.
26. ^ "Does Supply-Induced Scarcity Drive Violent Conflicts in the African Sahel? The Case of the
Tuareg Rebellion in Northern Mali" (Nov. 2008) Journal of Peace Research Vol. 45, No. 6
27. ^ Karlos Manlupig. "Mamasapano: Sleepy town roused by SAF-MILF clash". Rappler. Retrieved 8
March 2015.
28. ^ Anak Agung Banyu Perwita (2007). Indonesia and the Muslim World: Islam and Secularism in
the Foreign Policy of Soeharto and Beyond. NIAS Press. pp. 116–117. ISBN 978-87-91114-92-2.
29. ^ "Khadafy admits aiding Muslim seccesionists". Philippine Daily Inquirer. 5 August 1986. p. 2.
30. ^ Paul J. Smith (21 September 2004). Terrorism and Violence in Southeast Asia: Transnational
Challenges to States and Regional Stability. M.E. Sharpe. pp. 194–. ISBN 978-0-7656-3626-3.
31. ^ William Larousse (1 January 2001). A Local Church Living for Dialogue: Muslim-Christian
Relations in Mindanao-Sulu, Philippines : 1965-2000. Gregorian Biblical BookShop. pp. 151 &
162. ISBN 978-88-7652-879-8.
32. ^ Michelle Ann Miller (2012). Autonomy and Armed Separatism in South and Southeast Asia.
Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. pp. 291–. ISBN 978-981-4379-97-7.
33. ^ Tan, Andrew T/H. (2009). A Handbook of Terrorism and Insurgency in Southeast Asia.
Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar Publishing. pp. 230, 238. ISBN 978-1847207180.
34. ^ Isak Svensson (27 November 2014). International Mediation Bias and Peacemaking: Taking
Sides in Civil Wars. Routledge. pp. 69–. ISBN 978-1-135-10544-0.
35. ^ Kristine Angeli Sabillo. "New al-Qaeda-inspired group eyed in Mindanao blasts—terror expert".
Retrieved 29 June 2015.
36. ^ "MILF says MNLF joins fray on side of BIFM". InterAksyon.com. Archived from the original on
24 September 2015. Retrieved 29 June 2015.
37. ^ "Abu Sayyaf Group (Philippines, Islamist separatists)". Council on Foreign Relations.
Retrieved 26 January 2015.
38. ^ Miani 2011, p. 74.
39. ^ Peter Bergen, CNN National Security Analyst (8 March 2015). "ISIS goes global". CNN.
Retrieved 29 June 2015.
40. ^ "Senior Abu Sayyaf leader swears oath to ISIS". Rappler. Retrieved 18 July2015.
41. ^ "ISIS Now Has Military Allies in 11 Countries – NYMag". Daily Intelligencer. Retrieved 25
November 2014.
42. ^ Lyon, Peter (2008). Conflict between India and Pakistan: An Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO.
p. 166. ISBN 978-1-57607-712-2. India's decisive victory over Pakistan in the 1971 war and emergence
of independent Bangladesh dramatically transformed the power balance of South Asia
43. ^ Kemp, Geoffrey (2010). The East Moves West India, China, and Asia's Growing Presence in the
Middle East. Brookings Institution Press. p. 52. ISBN 978-0-8157-0388-4. However, India's decisive
victory over Pakistan in 1971 led the Shah to pursue closer relations with India
44. ^ Byman, Daniel (2005). Deadly connections: States that Sponsor Terrorism. Cambridge
University Press. p. 159. ISBN 978-0-521-83973-0. India's decisive victory in 1971 led to the signing of
the Simla Agreement in 1972
45. ^ Ruzindana, Augustine. "Remembering the Aborted 1972 Invasion by Ugandan Exiles." Daily
Monitor. September 14, 2014. Accessed December 31, 2015.
46. ^ Shazly, p. 278.
47. ^ Perez, Louis A. (2014). Cuba Between Reform And Revolution (Paperback ed.). Oxford
University Press. p. 300. ISBN 978-0199301447. Cuba also dispatched combat troops to Syria in 1973
during the Yom Kipur War
48. ^ Gott, Cuba, A New History, p. 280.
49. ^ Mahjoub Tobji (2006). Les officiers de Sa Majesté: Les dérives des généraux marocains 1956–
2006. 107: Fayard. ISBN 978-2213630151.
86 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
50. ^ Tripp, Charles (25 February 2013). The Power and the People: Paths of Resistance in the
Middle East. Cambridge University Press. p. 76. ISBN 978-1-139-85124-4.
51. ^ Kapur, S. Paul (2007). Dangerous Deterrent: Nuclear Weapons Proliferation and Conflict in
South Asia. Stanford University Press. p. 118. ISBN 978-0804755504.
52. ^ "The Himalayas War at the Top Of the World". Time. 31 July 1989.
53. ^ Pervez Musharraf (2006). In the Line of Fire: A Memoir. Free Press. ISBN 0-7432-8344-9.(pp.
68–69)
This is a list of wars that began between 1990 and 2002. Other wars can be found in the historical lists
of wars and the list of wars extended by diplomatic irregularity. Major wars from this era include
the Second Congo War in Africa, the Second Chechen War in Europe, the Tajikistani Civil War in Asia,
and the Cenepa War in South America.
87 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Belligerents
Star
Finish Name of Conflict
t
Victorious party (if Defeated party (if
applicable) applicable)
Kuwait
United States
United Kingdom
Saudi Arabia
France
Italy
1990 1991 Gulf War Iraq
Canada
Australia
Egypt
Syria
Qatar
Coalition Forces
1990–1998 Indonesian
1990 1998 military operations in Indonesia Free Aceh Movement
Aceh
DHKP/C insurgency in
1990 Ongoing Turkey DHKP-C
Turkey
Government of Rwanda
France
Zaire
1990 1994 Rwandan Civil War FPR
Interahamwe
Impuzamugambi
88 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Belligerents
Star
Finish Name of Conflict
t
Victorious party (if Defeated party (if
applicable) applicable)
Tamoust
Federal Republic of
1990 1990 1990 Mindanao crisis Philippines
Mindanao
Brazil
1991 1991 Operation Traira FARC
Colombia
South Ossetia
1991–1992 South
1991 1992 North Ossetian volunteers Georgia
Ossetia War
Russia
SFR Yugoslavia (1991–
1992)
SAO Krajina (1991)
SAO Western
Croatia
Slavonia (1991)
Bosnia and
Croatian War of SAO Eastern Slavonia,
1991 1995 Herzegovina (1994–1995)
Independence Baranja and Western
Support:
Syrmia (1991)
NATO
Republic of Serbian
Krajina (1992–1995)
Republika
Srpska (1992–1995)
Armed Islamic
1991 2002 Algerian Civil War Algerian government
Group (GIA)
89 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Belligerents
Star
Finish Name of Conflict
t
Victorious party (if Defeated party (if
applicable) applicable)
Zviadists
Georgian State Council
1991 1993 Georgian Civil War National Guard of
Russia
Georgia
Shia militias
1991 1991 1991 uprisings in Iraq Ba'athist Iraq
Kurdistan
90 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Belligerents
Star
Finish Name of Conflict
t
Victorious party (if Defeated party (if
applicable) applicable)
NATO (1995) 1995)
Al Qaeda
Jamiat-i Islami
Supported by:
Pakistan Shura-i Nazar
Saudi Arabia Ittehad-i Islami
Civil war in Afghanistan Harakat-i Islami
1992 1996
(1992–1996) Hezbi Islami (until
Hezbi Islami(Supported August 1992)
by Pakistan) Junbish-i Milli (until
Hezb-i Wahdat (Supported 1994)
by Iran) Hezb-i
Junbish-i Milli (Supported Wahdat (until
by Uzbekistan and Russia) December 1992)
Transnistria
Russian Volunteers Moldova
1992 1992 War of Transnistria Russian 14th Army Romanian Volunteers
Ukrainian Volunteers and advisors
Don Cossacks
Abkhazia
Russia
War in Abkhazia (1992–
1992 1993 Confederation of Mountain Georgia
1993)
Peoples of the Caucasus
Russian Cossacks
91 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Belligerents
Star
Finish Name of Conflict
t
Victorious party (if Defeated party (if
applicable) applicable)
Uzbekistan
United States
Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco, Firearms and
1993 1993 Waco siege Explosives (ATF)
Branch Davidians
Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI)
Texas Ranger
Division
U.S. Military
Provisional Council of
the Chechen Republic [ru]
Chechen Republic of National Salvation
1993 1994 Chechen Civil War [ru]
Ichkeria Committee [ru]
Supported by:
Russia
Government forces:
CNDD-FDD
1993 2005 Burundian Civil War Burundian military FNL
Supported by:
ONUB
African Union Mission in Tutsi militias
Burundi
Republic of the
Republic of the Congo Congo government Congolese Party of
1993 1994
Civil War (1993–1994) Labour
Gabon
India
Sagaing Region
1993 1993 1993 Russian President of Russia Supreme Soviet of
92 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Belligerents
Star
Finish Name of Conflict
t
Victorious party (if Defeated party (if
applicable) applicable)
Main Administration of
Protection
Ministry of the Interior Russia
Ministry of Defence Congress of People's
Deputies of Russia
Kantemirovskaya Tank Vice President of Russia
constitutional crisis
Division
Taman Division
Supporters of the Supreme
FAPSI Soviet and Alexander
Rutskoy
Alpha Group
Vympel
PUK
INC
KDP
PKK
KCP Iraq
1994 1997 Iraqi Kurdish Civil War Iran (from 1995)
Turkey
SCIRI
PDKI
Iran (until 1995)
Support
United States (from 1996)
Zapatista Army of
1994 Ongoing Chiapas conflict Mexico
National Liberation[2]
Government of
1994 Bophuthatswana BDF Mutineers Bophuthatswana
1994 1994
crisis SADF Afrikaner Volksfront
AWB
93 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Belligerents
Star
Finish Name of Conflict
t
Victorious party (if Defeated party (if
applicable) applicable)
Yemen
Chechen Republic of
Ichkeria
1994 1996 First Chechen War Russia
Foreign mujahideen
Ukrainian volunteers
Ogaden National
1995 2019 Insurgency in Ogaden Ethiopia
Liberation Front
Ethiopia
RSADO
DMLEK Eritrea
1995 2018 Second Afar Insurgency
EPLF ARDUF
ENSF
DFEU
Allied Democratic
Uganda
Forces
1996 Ongoing ADF insurgency Democratic Republic of the
National Army for the
Congo
Liberation of Uganda
Kingdom of
Nepal (Government)
Communist Party of Nepal Supported by:
(Maoist) United States
1996 2006 Nepalese Civil War Supported by: India
China United Kingdom
Indonesia France
Portugal
European Union
94 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Belligerents
Star
Finish Name of Conflict
t
Victorious party (if Defeated party (if
applicable) applicable)
United Kingdom
Canada al-Qaeda
Australia
Supported by: Supported by:
Iran Pakistan
India
Zaire
AFDL UNITA
Uganda
Army for the Liberation
1996 1997 First Congo War Rwanda of Rwanda
Burundi
Angola
Interahamwe
Albania
Albanian Rebellion of Ad hoc local Albanian
1997 1997 Germany
1997 militias
Italy
Republic of the
Republic of the
Congo (Pascal
Congo (Denis Sassou
Lissouba government)
Republic of the Congo Nguesso government)
1997 1999 Cocoye militia
Civil War (1997–1999) Cobra militia
Ninja militia
Rwandan Hutu militia
Nsiloulou militia
Angola
Mamba militia
Norodom
1997 clashes in Hun Sen (CPP)
1997 1997 Ranariddh (FUNCINPEC)
Cambodia Vietnam
Khmer Rouge
Johnson's forces (ex-
ULIMO-J)
Liberian Limited involvement:
1998 1998 1998 Monrovia clashes
government (Taylor loyalists)
Nigeria
United States
White Legion
1998 1998 War in Abkhazia (1998) Abkhazia
Forest Brotherhood
95 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Belligerents
Star
Finish Name of Conflict
t
Victorious party (if Defeated party (if
applicable) applicable)
Albania
AFRK
Kosovo Liberation Army
Pro-government:
Dem Rep of Congo
Namibia
Zimbabwe
Angola
Chad
Anti-Ugandan forces:
Rwandan-aligned militias:
Lord's Resistance Army
Sudan (alleged) RCD
RCD-Goma
ADF Banyamulenge
UNRF II Ugandan-aligned militias:
1998 2003 Second Congo War FNI
Anti-Rwandan militias: MLC
FDLR Forces for Renewal
UPC
Mai-Mai Tutsi-aligned forces
Interahamwe Anti-Angolan forces:
RDR UNITA
ALiR
Other Hutu-aligned
forces
Anti-Burundi militias:
CNDD-FDD
FROLINA
Guinea-Bissau
1998 1999 Guinea-Bissau Civil War Rebels led by Mané Senegal
Guinea
96 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Belligerents
Star
Finish Name of Conflict
t
Victorious party (if Defeated party (if
applicable) applicable)
Republican Guard
Yemeni Air Force
Yemen’s paramilitary
force
Pro-government tribes[3]
AQAP
Aden-Abyan Islamic
Houthi fighters[4] Army
Islamic Jihad of
Yemen
Supported by:
Supported by:
United States Al-Shabaab
Saudi Arabia
Iran[4]
Morocco
Jordan
Kargil War
1999 1999 India Pakistan
Part of the Indo-
Pakistani Wars
East Timor
1999 East Timorese Pro-Indonesia militia
1999 2000 Australia
crisis Indonesia
U.N. INTERFET
Maluku sectarian
1999 2002
conflict
97 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Belligerents
Star
Finish Name of Conflict
t
Victorious party (if Defeated party (if
applicable) applicable)
Congo Congo (PFJC)
MONUC
Mai-Mai Simba
Artemis
IIPB
1999 1999 War of Dagestan Russia
Shura of Dagestan
Republic of Ichkeria
Russian Federation
1999 2009 Second Chechen War Caucasian militants
Republic of Chechnya
Foreign mujahideen
Hamas
Al-Aqsa Martyrs'
Brigades and Tanzim
PFLP
2000 2005 Second Intifada Israel
Abu Ali Mustapha
Brigades
DFLP
PRC
Islamic Jihad
al-Quds Brigades
Other
Supported by:
Iraq[5]
Hezbollah
2000–2006 Shebaa
2000 2006 Israel Supported by:
Farms conflict Syria[6]
Iran[6]
98 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Belligerents
Star
Finish Name of Conflict
t
Victorious party (if Defeated party (if
applicable) applicable)
Ansar al-Islam[7][8]
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan
Kurdistan Islamic
Kurdistan Islamist Kurdistan Democratic Party
2001 2003 Group[7]
conflict United States
Kurdistan Islamic
Movement[9]
United States Army
al-Qaeda
Insurgency in the
2001 2001 Republic of Macedonia National Liberation Army
Republic of Macedonia
Insurgent groups:
Coalition:
Taliban
al-Qaeda
ISAF (2001–14)[show]
Haqqani
2001 Ongoing War on Terror Islamic Republic of network
Afghanistan (2004–present) Hezb-e-Islami
Gulbuddin
Operation Resolute United Tajik
Support[show] Opposition
IMU 1
Other groups
2002–2003 conflict in
2002 2003 Republic of the Congo Ninja militia
the Pool Department
Moro/Islamic insurgents:
Moro Islamic Liberation
Government of the Front (until 6 Oct 2012)
Philippines Abu Sayyaf
Operation Enduring United States (advisors)
2002 2015 Jemaah Islamiyah
Freedom – Philippines
Communist insurgents:
United States
Armed Forces New People's Army
Communist Party of the
Philippines
99 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Belligerents
Star
Finish Name of Conflict
t
Victorious party (if Defeated party (if
applicable) applicable)
Harakat al-Shabaab
Mujahedeen
Hizbul Islam (Dis)
Pirates:
Somali Marines
National Volunteer
Coast Guard (NVCG)
Marka group
Puntland Group
Yemeni Pirates
Ivory Coast
Liberian mercenarie
New Forces (FN)
s
Young Patriots of
2002 2007 First Ivorian Civil War
Abidjan militia
France
Supported by: UN Peacekeepers
Russia[10]
Bulgaria[11]
Belarus
100 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
Belligerents
Star
Finish Name of Conflict
t
Victorious party (if Defeated party (if
applicable) applicable)
Jamiat-e Islami
Junbish-i-Milli
HIG (until 2016)
Hezbe Wahdat
al-Qaeda
Coalition: IJU
India (2015–present)
Dadullah Front
Formerly:
Fidai Mahaz
ISAF (2001–14)[show]
Notes[edit]
1. ^ Jump up to:a b c d e f g h i j Major contributing nations with more than 200 troops as of May 2015
References[edit]
1. ^ Kenya: Seven Oromo Liberation Front Fighters Held in GarissaAllafrica.com (Daily Nation),
January 6, 2007
2. ^ Guzmán, J.L.S. (2003). El enemigo interno: contrainsurgencia y fuerzas armadas en México.
Centro de Estudios Estratégicos de América del Norte. p. 166. ISBN 9789707221963. Retrieved 18
June 2017.
3. ^ "Violent Clashes between Al-Maraqeshah and Gunmen of Mobility in Abyan- Yemen Post
English Newspaper Online". Retrieved 29 June 2015.
4. ^ Jump up to:a b "Saudi Leaders Have High Hopes for Yemen Airstrikes, but Houthi Attacks
Continue". The New York Times. 2 April 2015. Retrieved 4 April 2015.
5. ^ "Iraq's Involvement in the Palestinian Terrorist Activity against Israel". Global Security. 2003.
6. ^ Jump up to:a b A. Kaufman. The Israel-Hezbollah Conflict and the Shebaa Farms. The Joan B. Croc
Institute. 2006.
7. ^ Jump up to:a b "Iraqi political groupings and individuals". web.archive.org. 2007-03-05.
Retrieved 2019-11-28.
8. ^ Masters of Chaos, Chapter 13 p. 7 Archived 2012-02-14 at the Wayback Machine
9. ^ "Ansar al-Islam in Iraqi Kurdistan (Human Rights Watch Backgrounder)". Retrieved 20
March 2015.
10. ^ "Cote d'Ivoire, since 2002". Acig.org. Retrieved 16 October 2014.
11. ^ "Cote d'Ivoire, since 2002". Acig.com. Retrieved 16 October 2014.
12. ^ "News – Resolute Support Mission". Archived from the original on 28 February 2015.
Retrieved 17 July 2015.
101 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D
102 | T I M E L I N E O F W A R S O F W O R L D