Date
|
Revolution/Rebellion
|
Location
|
Revolutionaries/Rebels
|
Result
|
Image
|
Ref
|
3–6
|
Gaetulian War
|
Mauretania,
Roman Empire
|
Gaetuli
|
Revolt suppressed by
Cossus Cornelius Lentulus
|
|
[50]
|
6
|
Judas Uprising
|
Judea,
Roman Empire
|
Zealots led by
Judas of Galilee
|
Riots against the
Roman census erupt throughout the country, but others are convinced by the
High Priest of Israel to obey the census.
|
|
[51]
|
6–9
|
Bellum Batonianum
|
Illyricum,
Roman Empire
|
Illyrian tribes
|
Revolt eventually suppressed by the Romans.
|
|
[52]
|
9–16
|
Germanic revolt
|
Germania
|
Alliance of
Germanic tribes, led by
Arminius
|
The
Roman legions led by
Publius Quinctilius Varus were defeated in the
Battle of the Teutoburg Forest, temporarily halting further Roman occupation and colonization.
|
|
[53]
|
14
|
Mutiny of the legions
|
Germania and
Illyricum,
Roman Empire
|
Roman legions
|
Revolt suppressed by
Germanicus and
Drusus Julius Caesar respectively
|
|
[54]
|
15–24
|
Tacfarinas' revolt'
|
Mauretania,
Roman Empire
|
Musulamii
|
Revolt suppressed by
Publius Cornelius Dolabella
|
|
[55]
|
17–23
|
First Red Eyebrow Rebellion
|
China
|
Red Eyebrow and
Lulin rebels
|
Xin dynasty overthrown and the
Gengshi Emperor is instated on the throne.
|
|
[56]
[57]
|
24–27
|
Second Red Eyebrow Rebellion
|
China
|
Red Eyebrow rebels
|
Revolt suppressed by
Liu Xiu's forces and the
Eastern Han dynasty is established.
|
|
[58]
[59]
|
21
|
Gaulish debtors' revolt
|
Gaul,
Roman Empire
|
Treveri and
Aedui
|
The
Treveri revolt was put down by
Julius Indus and the Aedui revolt was put down by
Gaius Silius.
|
|
[60]
|
26
|
Thracian revolt
|
Odrysian kingdom
|
Thracians
|
Revolt suppressed by
Gaius Poppaeus Sabinus.
|
|
[61]
|
28
|
Revolt of the Frisii
|
Frisia
|
Frisii
|
The Roman Empire is driven out of Frisia.
|
|
[62]
|
36
|
Revolt of the Cietae
|
Cappadocia,
Roman Empire
|
Cietae
|
Rebellion put down by
Archelaus of Cilicia.
|
|
[63]
|
40–43
|
Trung sisters' rebellion
|
Lĩnh Nam
|
Vietnamese led by the
Trung Sisters
|
After brief end to the
First Chinese domination of Vietnam, the
Han dynasty reconquers the country and begins the
Second Chinese domination of Vietnam.
|
|
[64]
|
40–44
|
Mauretanian revolt
|
Mauretania,
Roman Empire
|
Mauri led by
Aedemon and
Sabalus
|
Revolt suppressed by
Gaius Suetonius Paulinus and
Gnaeus Hosidius Geta,
Mauretania is annexed directly into the empire and split into the
Roman provinces of
Mauretania Tingitana and
Mauretania Caesariensis.
|
|
[65]
|
42
|
Camillus' revolt
|
Dalmatia,
Roman Empire
|
Roman legions led by
Lucius Arruntius Camillus Scribonianus
|
Rebellion quickly collapses, Camillus flees to
Vis where he takes his own life.
|
|
[66]
|
46–48
|
Jacob and Simon uprising
|
Galilee,
Judea,
Roman Empire
|
Zealots
|
Revolt suppressed, Jacob and Simon executed by
Tiberius Julius Alexander.
|
|
[67]
|
60–61
|
Boudican revolt
|
Norfolk,
Britain,
Roman Empire
|
Celtic Britons led by
Boudica
|
Revolt crushed by
Gaius Suetonius Paulinus.
|
|
[68]
|
66–73
|
First Jewish–Roman War
|
Judea
|
Jewish people
|
Revolt crushed by the
Roman Empire,
Jerusalem and the
Second Temple are destroyed in the process.
|
|
[69]
|
68
|
Vindex's Revolt
|
Gallia Lugdunensis,
Roman Empire
|
Gaius Julius Vindex
|
Vindex was defeated in battle by
Lucius Verginius Rufus and committed suicide.
|
|
[70]
|
69
|
Colchis uprising
|
Colchis,
Roman Empire
|
Anicetus
|
Uprising put down by Roman forces.
|
|
[71]
|
69–70
|
Revolt of the Batavi
|
Batavia
|
Batavi
|
Revolt crushed by
Quintus Petillius Cerialis and the Batavi again submitted to Roman rule, Batavia is incorporated into the
Roman province of
Germania Inferior.
|
|
[72]
|
89
|
Revolt of Saturninus
|
Germania Superior,
Roman Empire
|
Lucius Antonius Saturninus
|
Revolt swiftly crushed by the Roman legions.
|
|
[73]
|
115–117
|
Kitos War
|
Eastern Mediterranean,
Roman Empire
|
Zealots
|
Revolt crushed by the Roman legions and its leaders executed.
|
|
[74]
|
117
|
Mauretanian revolt
|
Mauretania,
Roman Empire
|
Mauri
|
Revolt suppressed by
Marcius Turbo
|
|
|
132–135
|
Bar Kokhba revolt
|
Judea,
Roman Empire
|
Jewish people led by
Simon bar Kokhba
|
All-out defeat of the Jewish rebels, followed by wide-scale persecution and genocide of Jewish people and the suppression of Jewish religious and political autonomy.
|
|
[75]
|
172
|
Bucolic war
|
Egypt,
Roman Empire
|
Egyptians led by
Isidorus
|
Revolt suppressed by
Avidius Cassius
|
|
[76]
|
184–205
|
Yellow Turban Rebellion
|
China
|
Yellow Turban Army led by
Zhang Jue
|
The uprising eventually collapsed and was fully suppressed by various warlords of the
Eastern Han dynasty. However, the large devolution of power to regional warlords led to the collapse of the Han dynasty not long after.
|
|
[77]
|
185–205
|
Heishan secession
|
Taihang Mountain,
China
|
Heishan bandits
|
The autonomous confederacy eventually surrendered to the warlord
Cao Cao.
|
|
[78]
|
185
|
Roman mutiny
|
Britain,
Roman Empire
|
Roman legions
|
Mutiny suppressed by
Pertinax.
|
|
[79]
|
218
|
Battle of Antioch
|
Antioch,
Syria,
Roman Empire
|
Elagabalus
|
Elagabalus overthrows
Macrinus and is installed as
Roman Emperor.
|
|
[80]
|
225–248
|
Lady Triệu's uprising
|
Vietnam
|
Vietnamese led by
Lady Triệu
|
After several months of warfare Lady Triệu was defeated and committed suicide. The
Second Chinese domination of Vietnam continues.
|
|
[81]
|
227–228
|
Xincheng Rebellion
|
Cao Wei,
China
|
Meng Da
|
The revolt was suppressed by
Sima Yi, Meng Da was captured and executed.
|
|
[82]
|
251
|
Wang Ling's Rebellion
|
Shouchon,
Cao Wei,
China
|
Wang Ling
|
Wang Ling surrendered to the Wei forces and later committed suicide.
|
|
[83]
|
255
|
Guanqiu Jian and Wen Qin's Rebellion
|
Shouchon,
Cao Wei,
China
|
Guanqiu Jian and
Wen Qin
|
Cao Wei is victorious, Guanqiu Jian is slain, Wen Qin and his family fled to
Eastern Wu.
|
|
[83]
|
257–258
|
Zhuge Dan's Rebellion
|
Shouchon,
Cao Wei,
China
|
Zhuge Dan
|
Cao Wei is victorious and the
Sima clan cements control over the Wei government until its eventual demise.
|
|
[83]
|
284–286
|
Gallic peasants' rebellion
|
Gaul,
Roman Empire
|
Bagaudae
|
Rebellion crushed by Caesar
Maximian, though the Bagaudae movement would persist until the
Fall of the Western Roman Empire.
|
|
[84]
|
286–296
|
Carausian Revolt
|
Britain and northern
Gaul,
Roman Empire
|
Carausius and
Allectus
|
Revolt suppressed, Britain and Gaul retaken.
|
|
[85]
|
291–306
|
War of the Eight Princes
|
China
|
Princes of the
Sima clan
|
Sima Yue wins the war and gains influence over the
Jin emperor but is killed a few years later.
|
|
[86]
|
304–316
|
Uprising of the Five Barbarians
|
North China
|
Five Barbarians
|
Rebel victory in northern China; Fall of the
Western Jin dynasty in northern China; Formation of the
Eastern Jin dynasty in southern China; Rebel victory for
Cheng Han's independence; Hubei southern
Nanman Aboriginal uprising defeated.
|
|
[87]
|
293
|
Revolt of the Thebaid
|
Thebaid,
Roman Empire
|
Busiris and
Qift
|
Revolt suppressed by
Galerius.
|
|
[88]
|
351–352
|
Jewish revolt against Constantius Gallus
|
Syria Palaestina,
Roman Empire
|
Jewish people
|
The Romans crush the revolt and destroy several Jewish cities.
|
|
[89]
|
398
|
Gildonic War
|
Africa,
Western Roman Empire
|
Comes Gildo
|
The revolt was subdued by
Flavius Stilicho.
|
|
[90]
|
484
|
Justa uprising
|
Samaria,
Byzantine Empire
|
Samaritans
|
Uprising suppressed by
Zeno, who rebuilt the church of Saint Procopius in Neapolis and banned the Samaritans from
Mount Gerizim.
|
|
[91]
|
495
|
Samaritan unrest
|
Samaria,
Byzantine Empire
|
Samaritans
|
Uprising suppressed by the Byzantines.
|
|
[91]
|
496
|
Mazdak's Revolt
|
Sasanian Empire
|
Mazdakites
|
Mazdak successfully converted
Kavadh I, before the latter was overthrown by the nobility and the former was executed.
|
|
[92]
|
529–531
|
Ben Sabar Revolt
|
Samaria,
Byzantine Empire
|
Samaritans led by
Julianus ben Sabar
|
The forces of
Justinian I quelled the revolt with the help of the
Ghassanids; tens of thousands of Samaritans died or were enslaved. The Christian Byzantine Empire thereafter outlawed the Samaritan faith.
|
|
[91]
|
532
|
Nika revolt
|
Constantinople,
Byzantine Empire
|
Blue and Green
demes
|
Revolt suppressed, its participants killed and
Justinian I's rule over the Byzantine empire is strengthened.
|
|
[93]
|
541
|
Vietnamese uprising
|
Vạn Xuân
|
Vietnamese led by
Lý Nam Đế
|
The
Second Chinese domination of Vietnam is brought to an end, the country declares itself independent as the Kingdom of Vạn Xuân and crowns Lý Nam Đế as the first king of the
Early Lý dynasty.
|
|
[94]
|
556
|
Samaritan revolt
|
Samaria,
Byzantine Empire
|
Samaritans and
Jewish people
|
Amantius, the governor of the
East was ordered to quell the revolt.
|
|
[91]
|
572–578
|
Samaritan revolt
|
Samaria,
Byzantine Empire
|
Samaritans and
Jewish people
|
Revolt suppressed, the Samaritan faith was outlawed and from a population of nearly a million, the Samaritan community dwindled to near extinction.
|
|
[91]
|
608–610
|
Heraclian revolt
|
Exarchate of Africa,
Byzantine Empire
|
Heraclius the Elder
|
Phocas executed and
Heraclius the Younger is installed as
Byzantine Emperor, establishing the
Heraclian dynasty.
|
|
[95]
|
611–617
|
Anti-Sui rebellions
|
China
|
Former
Sui officials and peasant rebels
|
The
Sui dynasty is overthrown, followed by the rise of rebel leader
Li Yuan, founder of the
Tang dynasty.
|
|
[96]
|
614–625
|
Jewish revolt against Heraclius
|
Palaestina Prima,
Byzantine Empire
|
Jewish people
|
After Palestine was retaken by the Byzantines, Jewish people were massacred and expelled from the region.
|
|
[97]
|
623–626
|
Slavic revolt
|
Avar Khaganate
|
Slavs led by
Samo
|
Avar rule overthrown, Slavic tribes in the area unify to form
Samo's Empire.
|
|
[98]
|
632–633
|
Ridda wars
|
Arabia,
Rashidun Caliphate
|
Arab tribes
|
Rebels forced to submit to the caliphate of
Abu Bakr.
|
|
[99]
|
656–661
|
First Fitna
|
Rashidun Caliphate
|
Umayyads
|
Hasan ibn Ali
negotiates a treaty acknowledging
Mu'awiya I as caliph, establishing the
Umayyad Caliphate.
|
|
[100]
|
680–692
|
Second Fitna
|
Umayyad Caliphate
|
Zubayrids,
Alids and
Kharijites
|
The Umayyad Caliphate increases its own power, restructuring the army and
Arabizing and
Islamizing the state bureaucracy.
|
|
[101]
|
696–698
|
Sufri revolt
|
Central Iraq,
Umayyad Caliphate
|
Sufri led by
Shabib ibn Yazid al-Shaybani
|
Defeated by the caliphate, although Sufrism continued to be practiced in
Mosul.
|
|
[102]
|
700–703
|
Ibn al-Ash'ath's rebellion
|
Iraq,
Umayyad Caliphate
|
Abd al-Rahman ibn Muhammad ibn al-Ash'ath
|
Revolt suppressed by the caliphate, signalling the end of the power of the tribal nobility of Iraq, which henceforth came under the direct control of the Umayyad regime's staunchly loyal Syrian troops.
|
|
[103]
|
720–729
|
Yazid's mutiny
|
Basra,
Umayyad Caliphate
|
Yazid ibn al-Muhallab
|
Revolt suppressed by the caliphate.
|
|
[104]
|
713–722
|
Annam uprising
|
Vietnam
|
Vietnamese led by
Mai Thúc Loan
|
The independent kingdom was put down by a military campaign at the order of the
Emperor Xuanzong of Tang, continuing the
Third Chinese domination of Vietnam
|
|
[105]
|
734–746
|
Harith's rebellion
|
Khurasan,
Umayyad Caliphate
|
Al-Harith ibn Surayj
|
Harith is killed and the rebellion crushed, although the revolt weakened Arab power in Central Asia and facilitated the beginning of the Abbasid Revolution.
|
|
[106]
|
740
|
Zaidi Revolt
|
Kufa,
Umayyad Caliphate
|
Zayd ibn Ali
|
The Umayyad governor of Iraq managed to bribe the inhabitants of Kufa which allowed him to break the insurgence, killing Zayd in the process
|
|
[107]
|
740–743
|
Berber Revolt
|
Maghreb,
Umayyad Caliphate
|
Berbers led by
Maysara al-Matghari
|
Umayyads expelled from the Maghreb and several independent Berber states are established in the area.
|
|
[108]
|
744–747
|
Third Fitna
|
Umayyad Caliphate
|
Pro-Yaman
Umayyads,
Alids led by
Abdallah ibn Mu'awiya,
Kharijites led by
Al-Dahhak ibn Qays al-Shaybani
|
Victory of
Marwan II and the pro-Qays faction in the inter-Umayyad civil war and anti-Umayyad revolts crushed, although Umayyad authority was now permanently weakened.
|
|
[109]
|
747–748
|
Ibadi revolt
|
South Arabia,
Umayyad Caliphate
|
Ibadis
|
Umayyad victory in the
Hijaz and the
Yemen; though Ibadi autonomy is secured in
Hadramawt.
|
|
[110]
|
747–750
|
Abbasid Revolution
|
Umayyad Caliphate
|
Abbasids
|
Abbasid Caliphate established, bringing an end to the privileged status for Arabs and discrimination against non-Arabs.
|
|
[106]
|
752–760
|
Mardaite revolts
|
Mount Lebanon and
Abbasid Caliphate
|
Lebanese Christians and
Byzantine Empire
|
Christian inhabitants of parts of interior and coastal Lebanon expelled and replaced with Arab tribes.
|
|
[111]
|
754
|
Abdallah's rebellion
|
Syria,
Abbasid Caliphate
|
Abdallah ibn Ali
|
Abdallah's army is defeated by
Abu Muslim.
|
|
[112]
|
755
|
Córdoban revolution
|
Almuñécar,
al-Andalus,
Abbasid Caliphate
|
Umayyads led by
Abd al-Rahman I
|
Umayyads take control of
al-Andalus, establishing the
Emirate of Córdoba.
|
|
[113]
|
755–763
|
An Lushan Rebellion
|
Yan,
China
|
An Lushan
|
Yan defeated by the Tang imperial forces, although the Tang dynasty was weakened.
|
|
[114]
|
762–763
|
Alid Revolt
|
Hejaz and
Southern Iraq,
Abbasid Caliphate
|
Alids led by
Muhammad ibn Abdallah
|
Revolt suppressed by the caliphate, followed by a large-scaled reprisal campaign against the Alids.
|
|
[115]
|
772–804
|
Saxon Wars
|
Saxony
|
Saxons
|
Saxony is annexed into the
Frankish empire and the Saxons are forcibly converted from
Germanic paganism to
Catholicism.
|
|
[116]
|
786
|
Alid revolt
|
Mecca,
Hejaz,
Abbasid Caliphate
|
Alids
|
Revolt crushed by the Abbasid army and members of the Alid house are executed. One of the Alids,
Idris ibn Abdallah, fled the battlefield to the
Maghreb, where he established the
Idrisid dynasty.
|
|
[117]
|
791–802
|
Phùng rebellion
|
Vietnam
|
Vietnamese led by
Phùng Hưng
|
Briefly ruled the country before the
Third Chinese domination of Vietnam is reestablished.
|
|
[118]
|
793–796
|
Qays–Yaman war
|
Syria,
Abbasid Caliphate
|
Qays
|
Revolt crushed by the Abbasids and their Yamani allies.
|
|
[119]
|
794–795
|
Al-Walid's rebellion
|
Jazira,
Abbasid Caliphate
|
Kharijites led by
Al-Walid ibn Tarif al-Shaybani
|
Yazid ibn Mazyad al-Shaybani met the rebels in battle in late 795, at
al-Haditha above
Hit, and defeated al-Walid in
single combat, killing him and cutting off his head. Yazid also killed a large number of the Kharijites and forced the remainder to disperse, and the revolt ended in defeat.
|
|
[120]
|
811–838
|
Fourth Fitna
|
Abbasid Caliphate
|
Alids led by
Muhammad ibn Ja'far al-Sadiq,
Qays led by
Nasr ibn Shabath al-Uqayli and
Khurramites led by
Babak Khorramdin
|
Al-Ma'mun takes power as
Caliph, al-Sadiq is forced into exile, Qays territory is lost and Nasr surrenders to the caliphate, Babak is executed and the
Tahirids begin their reign over
Khorasan
|
|
[121]
|
814
|
al-Ribad rebellion
|
Guadalquivir,
Emirate of Córdoba
|
Clerics in
al-Ribad
|
Rebellion crushed at
Al-Hakam I
|
|
[122]
|
821–823
|
Thomas the Slav's rebellion
|
Anatolia,
Byzantine Empire
|
Thomas the Slav
|
Thomas is surrendered and executed by the Byzantines
|
|
[123]
|
824–836
|
Tunisian mutiny
|
Tunisia,
Ifriqiya,
Abbasid Caliphate
|
Arabs
|
Aghlabids put down the revolt with the help of the
Berbers
|
|
[124]
|
822
|
Aristocratic rebellion
|
Silla
|
Aristocrats led by
Kim Heonchang
|
The royal faction was able to regain much of the territory that Heonchang's forces had taken. After the fall of
Gongju, Gim Heon-chang took his own life.
|
|
|
841–842
|
Umayyad rebellion
|
Palestine,
Abbasid Caliphate
|
Umayyads led by
Al-Mubarqa
|
Al-Hidari defeated al-Mubarqa's forces in a battle near Ramlah, al-Mubarqa taken prisoner and brought to the caliphal capital,
Samarra, where he was thrown into prison and never heard of again.
|
|
[125]
|
841–845
|
Stellinga
|
Saxony,
Carolingian Empire
|
Saxon
freemen and
freedmen
|
Revolt crushed by the
Carolingians and their allies in the Saxon
nobility.
|
|
[126]
|
845–846
|
Jang Bogo's mutiny
|
Silla
|
Jang Bogo
|
Jang Bogo assassinated by an emissary from the Silla court.
|
|
[127]
|
859–860
|
Qiu's rebellion
|
Zhejiang,
China
|
Peasants led by
Qiu Fu
|
Rebellion was suppressed by the imperial general Wang Shi.
|
|
[128]
|
861–876
|
Saffarid revolution
|
Sistan,
Khorasan,
Abbasid Caliphate
|
Saffarids led by
Ya'qub ibn al-Layth al-Saffar
|
al-Saffar overthrows
Abbasid rule over
Iran and establishes the
Saffarid dynasty.
|
|
[129]
|
864
|
Alid uprising
|
Iraq,
Abbasid Caliphate
|
Alids led by
Yahya ibn Umar
|
The Alids attacked
Al-Musta'in's forces, but were defeated and fled, Umar was subsequently executed.
|
|
[130]
|
865–866
|
Fifth Fitna
|
Iraq,
Abbasid Caliphate
|
Al-Mu'tazz
|
Al-Musta'in deposed as Caliph and succeeded by Al-Mu'tazz.
|
|
[131]
|
866–896
|
Kharijite Rebellion
|
Jazira,
Abbasid Caliphate
|
Kharijites
|
It was finally defeated after the caliph
al-Mu'tadid undertook several campaigns to restore caliphal authority in the region.
|
|
[132]
|
869–883
|
Zanj Rebellion
|
Sawad,
Abbasid Caliphate
|
Zanj
|
Revolt eventually suppressed by the
Abbasids.
|
|
[133]
|
874–884
|
Qi rebellion
|
China
|
Wang Xianzhi and
Huang Chao
|
Rebellions suppressed by the
Tang dynasty, which later collapsed due to the destabilization caused by the rebellion.
|
|
[134]
|
880–928
|
Bobastro rebellion
|
Emirate of Córdoba
|
Muwallads and
Mozarabs led by
Umar ibn Hafsun
|
Ibn Hafsun died in 917, his coalition then crumbled, and while his sons tried to continue the resistance, they eventually fell to
Abd-ar-Rahman III, who proclaimed the
Caliphate of Córdoba.
|
|
[135]
|
899–906
|
The Qarmatian Revolution
|
Eastern Arabia,
Abbasid Caliphate
|
Qarmatians
|
Qarmatians successfully establish a
republic in Eastern Arabia, becoming the most powerful force in the
Persian Gulf. The Qarmatians were eventually reduced to a local power by the
Abbasids in 976 and annihilated by the
Seljuq-backed
Uyunid Emirate in 1076.
|
|
[136]
|
917–924
|
Bulgarian–Serbian war
|
Balkans
|
Serbians led by
Zaharija
|
Serbia is annexed into the
First Bulgarian Empire.
|
|
[137]
|
928–932
|
Bithynian rebellion
|
Bithynia,
Byzantine Empire
|
Basil the Copper Hand
|
The revolt was finally subdued by the imperial army and Basil was executed.
|
|
[138]
|
943–947
|
Ibadi Berber revolt
|
Ifriqiya,
Fatimid Caliphate
|
Ibadi
Berbers led by
Abu Yazid
|
Revolt suppressed by the
Fatimids,
Abu Yazid captured and killed.
|
|
[139]
|
969–970
|
First rebellion of Bardas Phokas the Younger
|
Caesarea,
Byzantine Empire
|
Phokas family
|
Rebellion extinguished by
Bardas Skleros, Phokas was captured and exiled to
Chios, where he stayed for 7 years.
|
|
[140]
|
976–979
|
Rebellion of Bardas Skleros
|
Anatolia,
Byzantine Empire
|
Bardas Skleros
|
Bardas Phokas the Younger recalled from exile to put down Skleros' rebellion at the
Battle of Pankaleia, Skleros seeks refuge in
Baghdad.
|
|
[141]
|
983
|
Great Slav rising
|
Elbe,
Germany,
Holy Roman Empire
|
Polabian Slavs
|
Halt to
Ostsiedlung.
|
|
[142]
|
987–989
|
Second Rebellion of Bardas Phokas the Younger
|
Anatolia,
Byzantine Empire
|
Bardas Phokas the Younger and
Bardas Skleros
|
Rebel armies surrendered after the death of Phokas.
|
|
[143]
|
993–995
|
Da Shu rebellion
|
Sichuan,
China
|
Da Shu Kingdom
|
The Song dynasty was able to suppress the rebellion and restore their rule over the Shu region.
|
|
[144]
|
996
|
Peasants' revolt in
Normandy
|
Normandy
|
Norman peasants
|
Suppression of the rebellion
|
|
[145]
|
996-998
|
Revolt of Tyre (996–998)
|
Tyre, Lebanon,
Fatimid Caliphate
|
Tyrians and
Byzantine Empire
|
Revolt suppressed and rebels killed or enslaved
|
|
[146]
|