1800s
Midnight legislation: Class Struggle in Ireland 1760-1840
This article was originally carried in issue 60 of Organise!, journal of the Anarchist Federation. It is a brief history of Whiteboy groups in rural Ireland.
During the years 1788-1868, 2,249 political prisoners were transported from Ireland to exile in Australia. Of that number, less than 20% belonged to the well commemorated nationalist rebellions and conspiracies of 1798, 1803, 1848 and 1867.1
Who were the rest?
1850-1994: The Battle for Hyde Park: ruffians, radicals and ravers
A timeline and radical history of rebellion, riots, sex and subversion in London's most famous park
[9,500 words]
Contents
1855: Marx in the Park: "it looked as if the demonstration was going to simmer down to harmless Sunday amusements, but the police reckoned differently"
1866: The Hyde Park railings affair: "The police brought their truncheons into active use, and a number of the roughs were somewhat severely handled"
1914: Suffragettes on the Serpentine.
Good old-fashioned trade unionism - Wildcat
Wildcat argue that unions have sabotaged working class struggle since their inception.
The year 1842 was a very significant one for the proletariat of the British Isles. On the positive side it was the occasion of a great struggle against wage cutting and on the negative side it marked the formation of the first modern national trade union.
1789-1989: Revolutionary song in France
A history of song, music and revolutionary working class politics in France from the 1789 Revolution up to the 1980s and punk.
Like
other political groups, anarchists have seen music as an excellent means of
agitation and of popular education, and have made it one of their key activities
of propaganda in many countries.
1799-today: Repression in Britain
A short history of repressive and anti-worker government practice and legislation in Britain over the past two centuries.
Ever since the rise of capitalism and the modern state, governments have sought a compliant and quiescent workforce and have initiated various methods of control over those sections of the population that they see as a potential threat to the status quo.
1871: The Paris Commune
A brief history of the world's first socialist working class uprising. The workers of Paris, joined by mutinous National Guardsmen, seized the city and set about re-organising society in their own interests based on workers' councils. They could not hold out, however, when more troops retook the city and massacred 30,000 workers in bloody revenge.
The Paris Commune is often said to be the first example of working people taking power. For this reason it is a highly significant event, even though it is ignored in the French history curriculum.
1851: The Sydney sailors' riot
A history of the violent clash between Australian sailors and police after officers attempted to arrest a man dressed as a woman.
On Sunday August 23rd 1851 a hard fought riot broke out in Sydney. Whilst such disturbances were common place at the time this particular riot is interesting in that it was sparked by the arrest of a sailor for wearing women's clothing, was led by military men and involved attacks on a number of police watch-houses.
1833-1849: The Dorr Rebellion
Howard Zinn's history of a movement in the United States against a political system which permitted the vote only to landowners. Drafting their own “People’s Convention” the rebels were let down by some of their own ideas, such as racism, and were put down by force.
Taking the case to the Supreme Court, the precedent was then set that the Court should not meddle in politics.
9. Slavery Without Submission, Emancipation Without Freedom
7. As Long As Grass Grows Or Water Runs
6. The Intimately Oppressed
Principles of Communism
- 1 - What is Communism?
Communism is the doctrine of the conditions of the liberation of the proletariat.
- 2 - What is the proletariat?










