Revolutionary Committee (other)
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Revolutionary Committee (other)
Revolutionary committee may refer to: *Revolutionary committee (China), committees that took over the functions of government during the Cultural Revolution * Revolutionary Committee (Persia), played a role in the Persian Constitutional Revolution of 1905–1911 *Revolutionary committee (Soviet), Bolshevik provisional governments in envisioned Soviet republics ** Galician Revolutionary Committee **Siberian Revolutionary Committee **Provisional Polish Revolutionary Committee **Military Revolutionary Committee *Supreme Revolutionary Committee, the unrecognized acting government of Yemen *Revolutionary Committee of the Batavian Republic *Revolutionary Committee of the Chinese Kuomintang *Revolutionary Committee of Puerto Rico *Bulgarian Revolutionary Central Committee *Bulgarian Secret Central Revolutionary Committee *Islamic Revolution Committees, Iran *Punjab Communist Revolutionary Committee *Revolutionary Committee of Unity and Action * Revolutionary Committee (Gabon), a faction in ...
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Revolutionary Committee (China)
Revolutionary committees () were tripartite bodies established during the Cultural Revolution (1966–1976) in the People's Republic of China to facilitate government by the three mass organisations in China — the people, the People's Liberation Army (PLA), and the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). They were originally established in the power-seizure movement as a replacement system of government to the old Party apparatus, but quickly became subordinate to it. Background As the spirit of the Cultural Revolution spread across China in the latter half of 1966, it soon became clear to the Maoist leadership in Beijing that the ability of local party organizations and officials to resist the attempts by the Red Guards to remove them from power was greater than had been thought. As a result, Mao Zedong proposed dramatic seizures of power by the various Red Guard and workers' groups and the establishment of new local governments based on Karl Marx's Paris Commune model. The first ...
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Bulgarian Revolutionary Central Committee
The Bulgarian Revolutionary Central Committee ( bg, Български революционен централен комитет, ''Balgarski revolyutsionen tsentralen komitet'') or BRCC was a Bulgarian revolutionary organisation founded in 1869 among the Bulgarian emigrant circles in Romania. The decisive influence for the establishment of the committee was exerted by the ''Svoboda'' ("Freedom") newspaper which Lyuben Karavelov began to publish in the autumn of 1869. Some of the other revolutionaries who took active part in the formation and work of the BRCK were Panayot Hitov, Vasil Levski and Dimitar Tsenovich. Karavelov was elected chairman of the BRCK in the spring of 1870. He also prepared the first programme of the organisation (promulgated in Geneva on 1 August 1870), which envisaged the liberation of Bulgaria through a nationwide revolution and the establishment of a democratic republic. By the end of 1871, both Karavelov and Vasil Levski, the leader of the other Bul ...
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Revolutionary Council (other)
A workers' council or labor council is a form of political and economic organization in which a workplace or municipality is governed by a council made up of workers or their elected delegates. The workers within each council decide on what their agenda is and what their needs are. The council communist Antonie Pannekoek, Pannekoek describes shop-committees and sectional assemblies as the basis for workers' management of the Secondary sector of the economy, industrial system. A variation is a soldiers' council, where soldiers direct a mutiny. Workers and soldiers have also operated councils in conjunction (like the 1918 German ''Arbeiter- und Soldatenrat''). Workers' councils may in turn elect delegates to central committees, such as the Congress of Soviets. In such a system, the workers themselves are able to exercise decision-making power. Some socialists believe that workers' councils are necessary for the organization of a proletarian revolution and the implementation of a c ...
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1964 Gabonese Coup D'état
The 1964 Gabonese coup d'état was staged between 17 and 18 February 1964 by Gabonese military officers who rose against Gabonese President Léon M'ba. Before the coup, Gabon was seen as one of the most politically stable countries in Africa. The coup resulted from M'ba's dissolution of the Gabonese legislature on 21 January 1964, and during a takeover with few casualties 150 coup plotters arrested M'ba and a number of his government officials. Through Radio Libreville, they asked the people of Gabon to remain calm and assured them that the country's pro-France foreign policy would remain unchanged. A provisional government was formed, and the coup's leaders installed Deputy Jean-Hilaire Aubame, who was M'ba's primary political opponent and had been uninvolved in the coup, as president. Meanwhile, M'ba was sent to Lambaréné, from Libreville. There was no major uprising or reaction by the Gabonese people when they received word of the coup, which the military interpreted as ...
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Revolutionary Committee (Gabon)
Revolutionary committee may refer to: *Revolutionary committee (China), committees that took over the functions of government during the Cultural Revolution * Revolutionary Committee (Persia), played a role in the Persian Constitutional Revolution of 1905–1911 *Revolutionary committee (Soviet), Bolshevik provisional governments in envisioned Soviet republics ** Galician Revolutionary Committee **Siberian Revolutionary Committee **Provisional Polish Revolutionary Committee **Military Revolutionary Committee *Supreme Revolutionary Committee, the unrecognized acting government of Yemen *Revolutionary Committee of the Batavian Republic *Revolutionary Committee of the Chinese Kuomintang *Revolutionary Committee of Puerto Rico *Bulgarian Revolutionary Central Committee *Bulgarian Secret Central Revolutionary Committee *Islamic Revolution Committees, Iran *Punjab Communist Revolutionary Committee *Revolutionary Committee of Unity and Action * Revolutionary Committee (Gabon), a faction in ...
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Revolutionary Committee Of Unity And Action
Revolutionary Committee for Unity and Action (in French: ''Comité Révolutionnaire d'Unité et d'Action'') was a militant group in Algeria formed in order to fight French rule. CRUA regrouped former elements of the OS and radical members of the MTLD. The CRUA was founded by 33 persons. CRUA would later evolve into the FLN and produce the Declaration of 1 November 1954 written by the journalist Mohamed Aïchaoui. Group of 22 *Mohamed Belouizdad * Mostefa Ben Boulaïd * Mohamed Larbi Ben M'Hidi * Benmostefa Benaouda *Lakhdar Bentobal *Rabah Bitat * Zoubir Bouadjadj * Said Bouali * Ahmed Bouchaïb *Mohamed Boudiaf *Abdelhafid Boussouf *Lyès Deriche *Mourad Didouche * Abdessalam Habachi *Abdelkader Lamoudi *Mohamed Mechati *Slimane Mellah * Mohamed Merzoughi *Badji Mokhtar * Abdelmalek Ramdane * Boudjemaa Souidani *Youcef Zighoud See also * Declaration of 1 November 1954 The Declaration of 1 November 1954 is the first independentist appeal addressed by t ...
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Punjab Communist Revolutionary Committee
Punjab Communist Revolutionary Committee, originally the Bhatinda District Committee of AICCCR. The committee was one of the sections that broke away when AICCCR founded CPI(M-L). In June 1976 PCRC merged with UCCRI(ML). See also *Wahikar Union The Wahikar Union was a peasants organization in Punjab, India. It was founded in the mid-1970s and functioned as a mass organization of the Punjab Communist Revolutionary Committee (later the UCCRI(ML)). The Wahikar Union organized a militant ... Defunct political parties in Punjab, India Defunct communist parties in India Political parties disestablished in 1976 Political parties with year of establishment missing {{India-party-stub ...
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Islamic Revolution Committees
Islamic Revolution Committees or Committees of Islamic Revolution ( fa, کمیته‌های انقلاب اسلامی, Komitehāye Enqelābe Eslāmi), simply known as the Committee ( fa, کمیته, Komīte), was a law enforcement force in Iran acting under Ministry of Interior. The Committee was responsible for enforcing Islamic regulations and moral standards on social behavior. Founded as one of Organizations of the Iranian Revolution in 1979, it was eventually merged with Shahrbani and Persian Gendarmerie, Gendarmerie to form Law Enforcement Command of Islamic Republic of Iran (FARAJA) in 1991.Schirazi ''The Constitution of Iran'' (1997), p.152 References

{{Iran Military Islamic Revolution Committees, Organizations established in 1979 1979 establishments in Iran Islamic religious police Defunct law enforcement agencies Revolutionary institutions of the Islamic Republic of Iran Sharia in Iran ...
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Bulgarian Secret Central Revolutionary Committee
Bulgarian Secret Central Revolutionary Committee (BSCRC) was a Bulgarian revolutionary organization founded in Plovdiv, then in Eastern Rumelia on February 10, 1885. The original purpose of the committee was to gain autonomy for the region of Macedonia (''Western Rumelia''), but in perspective, the formation of a Balkan federation. According to Ivan Andonov, the committee was established to resolve the Macedonian Question by the initiative of the revolutionary Spiro Kostov, who inspired both, Andonov and Zahari Stoyanov toward revolutionary activity for the liberation of the Macedonian Bulgarians. However, BSCRC played an important role in the organization of the Unification of Bulgaria and Eastern Rumelia Eastern Rumelia ( bg, Източна Румелия, Iztochna Rumeliya; ota, , Rumeli-i Şarkî; el, Ανατολική Ρωμυλία, Anatoliki Romylia) was an autonomous province (''oblast'' in Bulgarian, ''vilayet'' in Turkish) in the Otto ....Андонов, Ива ...
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Revolutionary Committee Of Puerto Rico
The Revolutionary Committee of Puerto Rico ( es, Comité Revolucionario de Puerto Rico) was founded by Puerto Rican exiles such as Juan Ríus Rivera, Ramón Emeterio Betances and José Francisco Basora living at the time in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. The committee was founded on January 8, 1867, and composed of Puerto Rican and Dominican patriots. The goal of the committee was to create a united effort by Cubans and Puerto Ricans to win independence from Spain. Early in the Cuban Ten Years' War, the Revolutionary Committee gave financial support, and weaponry to the Cuban independence efforts. Such weaponry included 400 Enfield rifles, 45 snider rifles, 110 carbines, 87 handguns and one cannon with 200 shells, culminated from hidden caches on Saint Thomas, Curaçao and Haiti. El Grito de Lares On September 23, 1868, the Revolutionary Committee, led by Betances, declared independence in the city of Lares, Puerto Rico, calling it the Republic of Puerto Rico. Some 40 ...
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Revolutionary Committee (Persia)
The Revolutionary Committee ( fa, کمیته انقلابی, Komīte-ye enqelābī) was a radical revolutionary organization in Persia, founded in 1904. It played an important role in the Persian Constitutional Revolution The Persian Constitutional Revolution ( fa, مشروطیت, Mashrūtiyyat, or ''Enghelāb-e Mashrūteh''), also known as the Constitutional Revolution of Iran, took place between 1905 and 1911. The revolution led to the establishment of a par .... References Persian Constitutional Revolution 1904 establishments in Iran {{iran-stub ...
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Revolutionary Committee Of The Chinese Kuomintang
The Revolutionary Committee of the Chinese Kuomintang (RCCK), also commonly known, especially when referenced historically, as the Left Kuomintang or Left Guomindang, is one of the eight legally recognised minor political parties in the People's Republic of China that follow the direction of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). It was founded in January 1948, during the height of the Chinese Civil War, by members of the left wing of the Kuomintang (KMT), especially those who were against Chiang Kai-shek's policies. The first Chairman of the party was General Li Jishen, a senior Nationalist military commander who had many disputes with Chiang over the years, while Soong Ching-ling (the widow of Sun Yat-sen) was named Honorary Chairwoman. Other early leading members were Wang Kunlun, Cheng Qian, He Xiangning and Tao Zhiyue. The party claims to be the true heir of Sun Yat-sen's legacy and his Three Principles of the People. By the end of 2017, it had 131,410 members. Soong Ching- ...
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