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A communist revolution is a proletarian revolution inspired by the ideas of Marxism that aims to replace capitalism with communism.[1] Depending on the type of government, the term socialism can be used to indicate an intermediate stage between capitalism and communism and may be the goal of the revolution, especially in Marxist–Leninist views.[2] The idea that a proletarian revolution is needed is a cornerstone of Marxism;[3][4] Marxists believe that the workers of the world must unite and free themselves from capitalist oppression to create a world run by and for the working class.[5] Thus, in the Marxist view, proletarian revolutions need to happen in countries all over the world.
Karl Marx saw revolution as a necessity for communism, where the revolution would be based on class struggle led by the organised proletariat to overthrow capitalism and the bourgeoisie, followed by the establishment of a dictatorship of the proletariat.[1]
Leninism argues[6][7] that a communist revolution must be led by a vanguard of "professional revolutionaries", men and women who are fully dedicated to the communist cause and who can then form the nucleus of the revolutionary movement.[8] Thus meaning that under Lenin's framework a communist revolution is not necessarily a proletarian revolution.[9] Some Marxists, such as Rosa Luxemburg,[10][8] disagree with the idea of a vanguard as put forth by Lenin, especially left communists.[11][12][13] Another line of criticisms insist that the entire working class—or at least a large part of it—must be deeply involved and equally committed to the socialist or communist cause in order for a proletarian revolution to be successful. To this end, they seek to build massive communist parties with very large memberships.
The following is a list of successful and unsuccessful communist revolutions and coups throughout history. Among the lesser-known revolutions, a number of borderline revolutions have been included which may or may not have been communist revolutions. The nature of unsuccessful revolutions is particularly contentious since one can only speculate as to the kinds of policies that would have been implemented by the revolutionaries had they achieved victory.
Start date | End date | Duration | Event(s) | State | Rebel group | Revolutionary base area | Deaths | Result | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
18 March 1871 | 28 May 1871 | (72 days)[14] | Paris Commune[14][15] | France | Paris | 7,544 killed overall[16][17] | Revolt suppressed[18]
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1 October 1915[19] | 5 June 1920[20] | (4 years, 249 days) | Jangal Movement | Qajar Iran | Jangal revolutionaries[21][22] | Gilan province | Establishment of the Persian Socialist Soviet Republic[19] | [a] | |||
24 April 1916 | 29 April 1916 | (6 days) | Easter Rising | United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland | Irish rebel forces | Dublin | 485 killed[25][26][27] | Unconditional surrender of rebel forces,[28] execution of most leaders.[29] | [b] | ||
7 November 1917 | 7 November 1917 | (1 day)[30] | October Revolution | Russia | Bolsheviks Petrograd Soviet Left SRs Red Guards Anarchists[31] |
Petrograd | Few wounded Red Guard soldiers[32] | Bolshevik victory Start of the Russian Civil War[33] |
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27 January 1918 | 15 May 1918 | (109 days) | Finnish Civil War[34] | Finland | Finland | 38,300 killed[37] | Finnish Whites victory | ||||
2 August 1918 | 11 June 1925 | (6 years, 314 days) | Canadian Labour Revolt | Canada | Canada | Failure of the revolt | |||||
28 October 1918 | 31 October 1918 | (4 days) | Aster Revolution | Austria-Hungary | Hungarian National Council
|
Hungary | Revolutionary victory
|
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29 October 1918 | 11 August 1919 | (287 days) | German Revolution of 1918–19[41][42] | German Empire (1918) German Republic (1918–1919) |
Communist revolutionaries:
Soviet Republics: |
Various regions of Germany | 150–196[51] |
|
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9 November 1918 | 14 November 1918 | (6 days) | Red Week | Netherlands | Faction of the Social Democratic Workers' Party[52] | No revolution | |||||
10 November 1918[53] | 14 January 1919 | (66 days) | Luxembourg communist revolution | Luxembourg | Assorted communists, socialists, and liberals | French Army victory[53]
|
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28 November 1918 | 2 February 1920[54] | (1 year, 67 days) | Estonian War of Independence | Estonia | Estonian Worker's Commune[55] RSFSR Red Latvian Riflemen |
3,988+ killed[56][57][58] | Treaty of Tartu:[54] | ||||
29 January 1919[59] | 24 May 1923 | (4 years, 116 days) | Irish soviets[60][61][62] | United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland (1919–1921) Irish Free State (1921–1923) |
Irish soviets | Ireland |
|
[c] | |||
23 March 1919 | 1 August 1919 | (132 days) | Hungarian Soviet Republic[d][42] | Hungarian Republic | Hungarian Soviet Republic[63] | Hungary | 6,670 killed[64] |
|
[e] | ||
27 May 1919 | 27 May 1919 | (1 day) | Bender Uprising | Romania | Red Guards Ukrainian SSR |
Tighina | 150[66] | Romanian–French victory | |||
2 May 1920 | 3 May 1920 | (2 days) | 1920 Georgian coup attempt | Democratic Republic of Georgia | Georgian Bolsheviks | Georgia | Several killed | Government Victory[67][68][69]
|
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1 March 1921 | 11 July 1921 | (133 days) | Mongolian Revolution of 1921 | Bogd Khanate of Mongolia Outer Mongolia |
Mongolian People's Party[71] | Outer Mongolia | Mongolian communist victory:[72][73]
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2 February 1921 | 5 April 1921 | (63 days) | Proština rebellion | Italy | Civilians led by Ante Ciliga[74] | Istria | Unknown | Government victory:
|
[f] | ||
3 March 1921[76] | 8 April 1921[77] | (37 days) | Labin mining strike and rebellion | Italy | Labin Republic | Istria | 5[78] | Government victory:
|
[g] | ||
14 September 1923 | 29 September 1923 | (16 days) | September Uprising | Bulgaria | BCP BZNS Anarchists |
841 killed[80] | Bulgarian government victory:
|
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23 October 1923[81] | 24 October 1923 | (2 days) | Hamburg Uprising | Weimar Republic | Communist Party of Germany | Hamburg | 99 killed[81] | Government victory | |||
15 September 1924[82] | 18 September 1924[83] | (4 days) | Tatarbunary Uprising | Romania | Tatarbunary Revolutionary Committee[84] | Tatarbunary | 3,000 killed[83] | Revolt quelled by the Romanian government | |||
1 December 1924 | 1 December 1924 | (1 day)[85] | 1924 Estonian coup attempt | Estonia | Communist Party of Estonia[86][87] | 151 killed | Estonian government victory | ||||
1 August 1927[88][89] | 1 October 1949[90][91] | (22 years, 62 days) | China | Chinese Communist Party
|
Communist-controlled China | cca. 8 million | Communist victory:
|
[h] | |||
22 January 1932[94] | February 1932 | (11 days) | 1932 Salvadoran peasant uprising | Republic of El Salvador | Communist Party of El Salvador Pipil rebels |
Western El Salvador: | 10,000 – 40,000[95] | Revolt suppressed, ethnocide of Pipil people[96] | [i] | ||
23 November 1935 | 27 November 1935 | (5 days) | Brazilian communist uprising of 1935 | Brazil | National Liberation Alliance | Natal, Recife, and Rio de Janeiro | 150+ killed | Government victory | |||
19 July 1936 | 25 May 1937 | (311 days)[98] | Spanish Revolution of 1936 | Spain | CNT-FAI[99][100] | Various regions of Spain – primarily Madrid, Catalonia, Aragon, Andalusia, and parts of Levante, Spain. | Suppressed after ten-month period. | ||||
22 June 1941[102] | 29 November 1945 | (4 years, 161 days) | Yugoslav People's Liberation War | Yugoslavia | Yugoslav Partisans | 850,000–1,200,000[103] | Yugoslav Partisan–Allied victory:
|
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29 March 1942[106] | 2 September 1945 | (3 years, 158 days) | Hukbalahap Rebellion (First phase) |
Japan | Hukbalahap[107] | Central Luzon | Huk victory:
|
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16 September 1942[109] | August 1945 | (2 years, 320 days) | National Liberation Movement[109] | Albanian Kingdom | National Anti-Fascist Liberation Movement[110] | Albania | Establishment of the People's Socialist Republic of Albania | ||||
9 September 1944 | 9 September 1944 | (1 day) | 1944 Bulgarian coup d'état | Bulgaria | Fatherland Front | Fatherland Front victory:
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16 August 1945 | 30 August 1945 | (15 days) | August Revolution[111] | Empire of Vietnam | Việt Minh | Northern, Central and Southern Vietnam | Việt Minh victory:
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6 September 1945[114] | 25 June 1950 | (4 years, 293 days) | Korean Revolution[j] | Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea |
|
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[k] | ||||
May 1946 | 17 May 1954[123] | (8 years, 17 days) | Hukbalahap Rebellion (Second phase) |
Republic of the Philippines | Communist Party of the Philippines[124] | Central Luzon | Nearly 6,000 killed | Philippine government victory:
|
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4 July 1946[125] | 25 October 1951[126] | (5 years, 114 days) | Telangana Rebellion | Hyderabad State (1946–1948)
Union of India (1948–1951)[127][128] |
Telangana peasants Andhra Mahasabha Communist Party of India |
Withdrawal of rebellion:
|
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19 December 1946 | 1 August 1954 | (7 years, 226 days) | First Indochina War | French Indochina | DR Vietnam
Lao Issara (1945–1949)
|
400,000–842,707 total killed [133][page needed] [134][page needed] [135] |
DR Vietnam-allied victory:[136]
|
[l] | |||
21 February 1948[137] | 25 February 1948[138] | (5 days) | 1948 Czechoslovak coup d'état | Czechoslovak Republic |
|
Appointment of a communist-dominated government[138] | |||||
2 April 1948[139] | 16 April 1989[140] | (41 years, 15 days) | Communist insurgency in Burma |
|
|
Shan State | 3,000+ killed | Burmese government victory[140] | |||
3 April 1948[142][143] | 13 May 1949[144] | (1 year, 41 days) | Jeju uprising[145] |
|
Workers' Party of South Korea | Jeju Island | 30,000–100,000 killed[146][144][147] | Uprising suppressed[144] | [m] | ||
16 June 1948 | 31 July 1960 | (12 years, 46 days) | Malayan Emergency | Malayan Communist Party | British Malaya | 11,107[150][151] | British-allied victory:
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18 September 1948[152] | 19 December 1948[153] | (93 days) | Madiun Affair | Indonesia | People's Democratic Front:[154] | Madiun | 1,920+ killed[155][156] | Rebellion suppressed | |||
26 July 1953[157][158] | 1 January 1959[159][158] | (5 years, 160 days) | Cuban Revolution[160] | Cuba | 26th of July Movement[161] Student Revolutionary Directorate Second National Front of Escambray |
Sierra Maestra | 3,000[162] | 26 July Movement victory:
|
[n] | ||
1 November 1955 | 30 April 1975[167] | (19 years, 181 days) | Vietnam War | South Vietnam | Viet Cong | Memot District (1966–72) Lộc Ninh (1972–75) |
1,326,494–3,447,494[168] | Communist victory | |||
23 May 1959 | 2 December 1975 | (16 years, 194 days) | Laotian Civil War | Laos | Lao People's Party | Xam Neua | 20,000–62,000 killed[169] | Pathet Lao and North Vietnamese victory:
|
[o] | ||
13 November 1960 | 29 December 1996[170] | (36 years, 47 days) | Guatemalan Civil War | Guatemala | URNG[171] (from 1982) | Guatemala | Between 140,000 and 200,000 dead and missing (estimated) [174][175][176] |
Peace accord signed in 1996 | |||
4 February 1961 | 25 April 1974 | (13 years, 81 days) | Angolan War of Independence | Portuguese Angola | MPLA | Province of Angola | 12,990+ killed[177][178] | Angolan victory:[179][180]
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19 July 1961 | 17 July 1979 | (17 years, 364 days) | Nicaraguan Revolution | Nicaragua | FSLN
MAP-ML (1978–1979) |
North Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region | 30,000+ killed | FSLN military victory in 1979:
|
[p] | ||
c. December 1962 | 3 November 1990[185][186] | (27 years, 338 days) | Communist insurgency in Sarawak | Malaysia | North Kalimantan Communist Party[186]
|
Sarawak | 400–500 killed | Government victory:
|
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13 August 1963[189] | 15 August 1963 | (3 days) | Trois Glorieuses | Congo | Congolese trade unions:[190]Armed Forces of the Republic of the Congo[190] | Uprising successful:
|
[q] | ||||
27 May 1964[196] | Present | (60 years, 172 days) | Colombian conflict[197][198] | Colombia |
|
Colombia with spillovers into Venezuela | 220,000+ killed[221][222][223] | Ongoing: | |||
1965 | 1983 | (18 years, 1 day) | Communist insurgency in Thailand | Thailand |
|
Nakhon Phanom Province | 6,762+ killed[227][228] | Thai government victory:
|
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18 May 1967 | Present | (57 years, 181 days) | India | Communist Party of India (Maoist) | Red corridor | Since 1997: 13,060–14,552[230][231] | Ongoing | [r] | |||
17 June 1968 | 2 December 1989 | (21 years, 169 days)[232][233] | Communist insurgency in Malaysia | Malaysia | Malayan Communist Party | Malay Peninsula and Sarawak[234] | 367 | Peace Agreement of Hat Yai signed: | |||
17 January 1968 | 17 April 1975 | (7 years, 91 days) | Cambodian Civil War | Cambodia | Communist Party of Kampuchea | Ratanakiri Province | 275,000–310,000 killed | Communist victory | [s] | ||
29 March 1969 | Present[238] | (55 years, 231 days) | New People's Army rebellion | Philippines | Communist Party of the Philippines[239] | Samar | 43,000+ killed (up to 2008)[240] (63,973+ killed) | Ongoing[241] | [t] | ||
22 June 1969[243] | 22 June 1969 | (1 day) | Corrective Move | South Yemen | Marxist faction of the NLF | No deaths[244] | Coup successful:[245]
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21 October 1969 | 21 October 1969 | (1 day) | 1969 Somali coup d'état | Somali Republic | Supreme Revolutionary Council | Mogadishu | Supreme Revolutionary Council victory:[246]
|
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19 July 1970[247] | 1 November 1970 | (106 days) | Teoponte Guerrilla | Bolivia | Guerrilla de Teoponte (Ejército de Liberación Nacional)[247] | Teoponte Municipality | Bolivian government victory | ||||
5 April 1971 | June 1971 | (62 days) | 1971 JVP insurrection | Dominion of Ceylon | JVP
|
Southern Province and Sabaragamuwa Province | Official: 1,200 Estimated: 4,000–5,000[248][249] |
Ceylonese government victory:[250][251]
|
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19 July 1971 | 22 July 1971 | (4 days)[252] | 1971 Sudanese coup d'état | Democratic Republic of Sudan | Revolutionary Council
|
Khartoum | Coup attempt fails:[253]
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April 1972 | October 1974 | (2 years, 214 days)[254] | Araguaia Guerrilla War | Federative Republic of Brazil | Communist Party of Brazil[254] | Goiás and Tocantins[254] | 90+ killed[255] | Military dictatorship victory:
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24 April 1972 | Present | (52 years, 205 days) | Maoist insurgency in Turkey | Turkey | Communist Party of Turkey/Marxist–Leninist
|
Tunceli Province[256] | Ongoing | ||||
25 April 1974 | 25 April 1974 | (1 day)[257] | Carnation Revolution | Estado Novo | Armed Forces Movement | 5 deaths[258] | Coup successful:
|
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12 September 1974 | 12 September 1974 | (1 day) | 1974 Ethiopian coup d'état | Ethiopia | Coordinating Committee of the Armed Forces, Police and Territorial Army[261] | Coup successful:[262]
|
[u] | ||||
7 November 1975[268] | 7 November 1975 | (1 day) | 7 November 1975 Bangladeshi coup d'état | Bangladesh | Jatiya Samajtantrik Dal[269] Biplobi Shainik Sangstha[270] |
Successful coup:
|
[v] | ||||
27 April 1978[273] | 28 April 1978 | (2 days) | Saur Revolution | Afghanistan | People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan | Afghanistan | 2,000[274] | PDPA victory:
|
[w] | ||
13 March 1979[278] | 13 March 1979 | (1 day)[279][280] | New Jewel Movement | Grenada | New Jewel Movement[278] | Installation of the People's Revolutionary Government[279] | |||||
15 October 1979 | 16 January 1992 | (12 years, 94 days) | Salvadoran Civil War | El Salvador | FMLN[281] | 87,795+ killed[282] | Chapultepec Peace Accords[283] | [x] | |||
17 May 1980[286][287] | Present[288] | (44 years, 182 days) | Internal conflict in Peru | Peru | Communist Party of Peru–Shining Path[289]
Militarized Communist Party of Peru[290] Túpac Amaru Revolutionary Movement[291] (1982–1997) |
Ayacucho Region | 70,000+ killed[292][293][294] | Ongoing | [y] | ||
25 January 1982 | 25 January 1982 | (1 day) | 1982 Amol uprising | Iran | Union of Iranian Communists (Sarbedaran) | Amol County | 80–300 killed | Iranian government victory | |||
4 August 1983 | 4 August 1983 | (1 day) | Upper Voltan coup d'état[295][296] | Upper Volta | Left-wing armed forces faction led by Thomas Sankara and Blaise Compaoré | 13 killed[297] |
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15 April 1987 | 29 December 1987 | (259 days) | 1987–1989 JVP insurrection | Sri Lanka | Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna | 60,000–80,000 killed[302][303] | Sri Lankan Government victory:
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13 February 1996 | 21 November 2006 | (10 years, 282 days) | Nepalese Civil War | Nepal | Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist)[304] | Rapti Zone | 17,800 killed overall[305] | Comprehensive Peace Accord[306] | [aa] | ||
20 June 2021 | June 2023 | (2 years, 1 day) | 2021–2023 Eswatini protests | Eswatini |
|
24+[311][312] | Protests suppressed.[313] | ||||
August 2021[314][315] | Present | (3 years, 106 days) | Myanmar civil war (2021–present) | Myanmar | Myanmar | 45,264+ killed[319] | Ongoing |
Further, it has co-ordinated the social development of the civilized countries to such an extent that, in all of them, bourgeoisie and proletariat have become the decisive classes, and the struggle between them the great struggle of the day. It follows that the communist revolution will not merely be a national phenomenon but must take place simultaneously in all civilized countries – that is to say, at least in England, America, France, and Germany.
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The URNG was the result of the merger of the left-wing armed groups, EGP, ORPA, FAR and PGT, supported by the FDR of El Salvador and the Nicaragua NDF. The PAC were local militias created by the Guatemalan Government.
There was, therefore, little to hinder the assault mounted by the rebel 4th Armored Brigade, led by Major Mohammed Aslam Watanjar, who had also been prominent in Daoud's own coup five years before. Watanjar first secured the airport, where the other coup leader, Colonel Abdul Qadir, left by helicopter for the Bagram air base. There he took charge and organized air strikes on the royal palace, where Daoud and the presidential guard were conducting a desperate defense. Fighting continued the whole day and into the night, when the defenders were finally overwhelmed. Daoud and almost all of his family members, including women and children, died in the fighting. Altogether there were possibly as many as two thousand fatalities, both military and civilian.