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This article is about bourgeois revolutions against feudalism or slavery. For bourgeois-led revolutions against socialism, see counterrevolution.

Bourgeois revolution is a social revolution that aims to destroy a feudal system and establish the rule of the bourgeoisie to create a bourgeois state.[1] Some examples of bourgeois revolutions include the Statesian Revolution, the French Revolution, and the Russian Revolution of 1905.
Examples
- Dutch Revolt (1568–1609)
- English Civil War (1642–1652)Glorious Revolution (1688)
- Statesian Revolution (1775–1783)
- French Revolution (1789–1815)
- Haitian Revolution (1791–1804)
- Batavian Revolution (1795)
- Irish Rebellion (1798)
- Bolivian War of Independence (1809–1825)
- Peruvian War of Independence (1809–1826)
- Mexican War of Independence (1810–1821)
- Argentine War of Independence (1810–1818)
- Venezuelan War of Independence (1810–1823)
- Chilean War of Independence (1810–1826)
- Portuguese Liberal Revolution (1820)
- Spanish Liberal Revolution (1820–1823)
- Ecuadorian War of Independence (1820–1822)
- Greek Revolution (1821–1829)
- Decembrist Revolt (1826)
- Belgian Revolution (1830–1831)
- July Revolution (1830)
- November Uprising (1830–1831, failed)
- February Revolution (1848)
- Hungarian Revolution (1848, failed)
- Poznań Uprising (1848, failed)
- Reform War (1858–1861)
- Union victory in the Statesian Civil War (1861–1865)
- April Uprising (1866)
- Fenian Rising (1867)
- Meiji Restoration (1868)
- Spanish Glorious Revolution (1868–1874)
- Ten Years' War (1868–1878, failed)
- Serbian Revolution (1876–1878)
- Romanian Revolution (1877–1878)
- Republican Revolution (1889)
- Russian Revolution (1905, failed)
- Mexican Revolution (1910–1920)
- Xinhai Revolution (1911)
- February Revolution (1917)
References
- ↑ Bourgeois Revolution. (n.d.) The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition. (1970-1979). Retrieved June 18 2022 from https://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Bourgeois+Revolution