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Terrorism |
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The following is a list of terrorist incidents that were not carried out by a state or its forces (see state terrorism and state-sponsored terrorism). Assassinations are presented in List of assassinations and unsuccessful attempts at List of people who survived assassination attempts and List of heads of state and government who survived assassination attempts.
Definitions of terrorism vary, so incidents listed here are restricted to those that are notable and described as "terrorism" by a consensus of reliable sources.
Scholars dispute what might be called terrorism in earlier periods. The modern sense of terrorism emerged in the mid-19th century.[1]
Date | Type | Dead | Injured | Location | Details | Perpetrator | Part of |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1865–1877 | Murders | c. 3,000 | Several | Southern United States | Approximately 3,000 Freedmen and their Republican Party allies are killed in well-organized campaigns of violence by the Ku Klux Klan and other white supremacists in a campaign of terrorist violence that weakened the reconstructionist governments in the Southern United States and helped re-establish legitimized segregation.[2][3] | Ku Klux Klan | Reconstruction Era |
1881–1885 | Bombing | 0 (+3) | 98 | United Kingdom | Fenian dynamite campaign.[citation needed] | Irish Republican Brotherhood | |
4 May 1886 | Bombing | 7 (+4) | 160+ | Chicago, United States | Haymarket Affair. A peaceful rally in Haymarket, Chicago, Illinois, was disrupted when a bomb was detonated as police were dispersing the public demonstration.[citation needed] | FOTLU | |
9 December 1893 | Bombing | 0 | 20 | Paris, France | French anarchist Auguste Vaillant bombed the French Chamber of Deputies injuring 20 deputies.[citation needed] | Auguste Vaillant | |
26 August 1896 | Hijacking | 10+ | 0 | Constantinople, Ottoman Empire | Occupation of the Ottoman Bank by Armenian Revolutionary Federation members in protest of the Hamidian massacres. A resulting anti-Armenian pogrom killed around 6,000 individuals.[citation needed] | Armenian Revolutionary Federation |
Date | Type | Dead | Injured | Location | Details | Perpetrator | Part of |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
28 April – 1 May 1903 | Bombings | 0 (+4) | Thessaloniki, Ottoman Empire | Members of the Boatmen of Thessaloníki, a Bulgarian anarchist group, carried out a series of bombings in Thessaloniki. | Boatmen of Thessaloníki | ||
18 May 1904 | Kidnapping | 0 | 2 kidnapped | Tangier, Morocco | Perdicaris affair: Ion Perdicaris and Cromwell Varley were kidnapped and held for ransom by bandit Mulai Ahmed er Raisuli in Morocco.[4] | Mulai Ahmed er Raisuli | |
31 May 1906 | Bombing | 24 | Several | Madrid, Spain | Morral affair. 24 people were killed when terrorist bombed the Royal Couple, Alfonso XIII of Spain and Victoria Eugenie, on their wedding day. | Mateo del Morral | |
25 August 1906 | Bombing | 28 | Several | Aptekarsky Island, Russia | 28 people were killed when three terrorists bombed a reception in an attempt to assassinate Pyotr Stolypin. | Union of Socialists-Revolutionaries-Maximalists | |
11–12 July 1908 | Bombing | 1 | 23 | Malmö, Sweden | Night between 11 and 12 July: Bombing of the boat Amalthea where British strikebreakers lived by Anton Nilsson One was killed and 23 wounded. | Anton Nilsson | |
1 October 1910 | Bombing | 21 | 105+ | Los Angeles, United States | Los Angeles Times bombing killed 21 people and wounded over 100 others. | John J. McNamara and James B. McNamara | |
28 June 1914 | Various | 2 | 16-22 | Sarajevo, Austria-Hungary | The Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir presumptive to the Austrian throne, and his wife, Sophie, Duchess of Hohenberg. As the Archduke's car approached the third assassin after the others failed to act, the bomb bounced off the Archduke's car and exploded the car behind him, injuring 16-20 people. Later, as the Archduke's car turned a wrong corner, assassin Gavrilo Princip shot dead the Archduke and his wife in their car. This resulted in the July Crisis, and World War I. | Gavrilo Princip (with the Black Hand) | Prelude to World War I |
22 July 1916 | Bombing | 10 | 40 | San Francisco, United States | Preparedness Day Bombing was a bombing in San Francisco, California, on 22 July 1916, when the city held a parade in anticipation of the United States' entry into World War I. During the parade, a suitcase bomb was detonated, killing ten and wounding forty. | Galleanist Anarchists (suspected) | |
30 July 1916 | Bombing | 4 | Hundreds | Jersey City, United States | Black Tom explosion was a planned detonation of a munitions factory at Black Tom Island in the neutral United States by Imperial German Agents that killed four and injured hundreds, as well as causing millions of dollars in damages. | Imperial German Agents | World War I |
16 September 1920 | Bombing | 40 | 143+ | New York City, United States | Wall Street bombing killed 40 people and wounded over 143 others.[5] | Galleanist Anarchists (suspected) | Red Scare |
14 October 1920 | Bombings | 1 | 10 | Trieste, Italy | In Trieste, nationalists threw six bombs at the editorial office of a socialist newspaper, resulting in one death and ten injuries.[6] | Italian Nationalists | |
15 October 1920 | Bombings | 0 | 2 | Milan, Italy | In Milan, anarchists were responsible for throwing two bombs at a hotel holding a British delegation attending the Milan International Conference; there were two injuries.[6] | Anarchists | |
8 December 1920 | Bombing | 3 | 3 | Bucharest, Romania | A bomb placed by a left-wing terrorist group blows up in the Romanian Senate, killing the Minister of Justice and two other senators. The President of the Senate and two Orthodox bishops were severely injured. | Max Goldstein, Leon Lichtblau and Saul Ozias | |
31 May 1921 | Riot | 39–300 | 800+ | Tulsa, United States | The Tulsa race riot killed at least 39 people and injured over 800.[7] | Ku Klux Klan | |
13 December 1921 | Bombing | 100 | Bolgrad, Romania | The Bolgrad palace bombing occurred when a bomb thrown by Bessarabian separatists at the Bolgrad palace, killed 100 soldiers and police officers.[8] | Bessarabian separatists | Union of Bessarabia with Romania | |
31 October 1923 | Shooting | 1 | 1 | Dublin, Irish Free State | Far-right extremists shot two Jewish men as they walked across St. Stephen's Green in Dublin. One of the men was killed.[9] | Far-right extremists | |
16 April 1925 | Bombing | 150 | ~500 | Sofia, Bulgaria | St Nedelya Church assault – The Bulgarian Communist Party (BCP) blew up the church's roof during the funeral service of General Konstantin Georgiev, who had been killed in a previous Communist assault on 14 April. 150 people, mainly from the country's political and military elite, were killed in the attack and around 500 were injured.[10] | Bulgarian Communist Party |
Date | Type | Dead | Injured | Location | Details | Perpetrator | Part of |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
3 March 1940 | Arson | 5 | 5 | Luleå, Sweden | Politically motivated arson attack targeted at the communist newspaper Norrskensflamman (Northern Flame) by various perpetrators. 5 people were killed, 2 of which were children, along with 5 others injured. | Norrbottens-Kuriren | |
4 July 1940 | Bombing | 2 | 0 | New York City, United States | Time bomb is recovered from the British Pavilion at the 1939 New York World's Fair, two NYPD policemen were killed.[11] | Unknown | |
1940–1956 | Serial bombings | 0 | 15 | New York City, United States | George Metesky, the "Mad Bomber", places over 30 bombs in New York City in public places such as Grand Central Terminal and The Paramount Theater, injuring ten during this period, in protest against the local electric utility. He also sends many threatening letters.[12] | George Metesky | |
22 July 1946 | Bombing | 91 | 46 | Jerusalem, Mandatory Palestine | The King David Hotel bombing by Zionist paramilitary group Irgun kills 91 and injures 46 non-fatally.[13] | Irgun | Jewish insurgency in Mandatory Palestine |
25 July 1947 | Airliner hijacking | 1 | 0 | Romania | Three Romanian terrorists kill an aircrew member aboard a Romanian airliner.[14] This is regarded as the first aircraft hijack resulting in a fatality.[citation needed] | Unknown | |
22 February 1948 | Car bombings | 58 | 123 | Jerusalem, Mandatory Palestine | Ben Yehuda Street bombings: three British Army trucks led by an armoured car driven by Arab irregulars and British deserters exploded on Ben Yehuda Street killing 58 Jewish civilians and injuring 140.[15][16] | Arab insurgents and rogue British soldiers | 1947–1948 civil war in Mandatory Palestine |
7 May 1949 | Airliner bombing | 13 | 0 | Philippines | Thirteen people are killed as a Philippine airliner explodes in flight travelling from Daet to Manila. A time bomb detonates 30 minutes after departure near Alabat Island.[17] | Unknown | |
5 August 1949 | Grenade attack | 12 | ~30 | Damascus, Syria | 12 killed and dozens injured in the Menarsha synagogue attack. | Arab Redemption Suicide Phalange | 1948 Palestine war |
Date | Type | Dead | Injured | Location | Details | Perpetrator | Part of |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
17 March 1954 | Shooting | 12 | 2 | Scorpions Pass, Israel | Ma'ale Akrabim massacre: an Israeli civilian passenger bus is attacked by unknown assailants at the Scorpions Pass in the Negev, resulting in the deaths of eleven passengers.[18][19] | Palestinian fedayeen | Palestinian Fedayeen insurgency |
16 June 1955 | Bombing | 308 | ~1200 | Buenos Aires, Argentina | Bombing of Plaza de Mayo: Thirty aircraft from the Argentine Navy and Air Force bombed and strafed Plaza de Mayo. The attack targeted the adjacent Casa Rosada, the seat of government of former president Juan Peron.[20][21] | Anti-Peronist elements of the Argentine Armed Forces | 1955 Argentine coup d'état |
16 June 1956 | Bombing | 1 | 6 | Nicosia, British Cyprus | The United States vice consul is killed and six other consulate staff are injured when a terrorist throws 2 bombs in a restaurant in Nicosia.[22] | Unknown | Cyprus Emergency |
15 August 1958 | Bombing | 3 | 10 | Beirut, Lebanon | Three people are killed in a bomb blast in Beirut. The bombing also injures ten more at a grocery store near the Lebanese Parliament.[23] | Unknown | 1958 Lebanon crisis |
22 November 1962 | Riot | 2 (+5) | ? | Paarl, South Africa | Members of the Pan Africanist Congress' military wing, the Azanian People's Liberation Army (also known as Poqo) targeted the town of Paarl in the Western Cape, when a crowd of over 200 people armed with axes, pangas and other home-made weapons marched from the Mbekweni township into Paarl and attacked the police station, homes and shops. Two white residents and 5 attackers were killed. Poqo directed its activities at the white population in general. It was also Poqo's avowed policy to attack and kill black people who were some way or another linked to the apartheid state.[24] | PAC (APLA) | Internal resistance to apartheid |
29 August 1963 | Bank robbery | 2 | 3 | Buenos Aires, Argentina | The Tacuara Nationalist Movement robbed a bank, stealing almost 100,000 US dollars. 2 people died and 3 were injured. | Tacuara Nationalist Movement | |
15 September 1963 | Bombing | 4 | 22 | Birmingham, United States | 16th Street Baptist Church bombing – Four members of the Ku Klux Klan planted at least 15 sticks of dynamite attached to a timing device beneath the front steps of the church. The explosion killed 4 girls and wounded 22.[25] | Ku Klux Klan | Civil rights movement |
1963–1970 | Bombings | 8 | ? | Quebec, Canada | Front de libération du Québec (FLQ) committed frequent bombings targeting English businesses and banks, as well as McGill University. The whole bombing campaign resulted in 8 known deaths and numerous injuries. | Front de libération du Québec | Quebec sovereignty movement |
26 June 1965 | Bombings | 42 | 80 | Saigon, South Vietnam | Two simultaneous explosions took place near a restaurant in the 1965 Saigon bombing during the Vietnam War. The attack killed 42 people and 80 were wounded. | Viet Cong | Vietnam War |
1966 | Riots and massacres | 8,000 to 30,000 | ? | Northern Region, Nigeria | The 1966 anti-Igbo pogrom was a series of massacres committed against Igbos and other people of southern Nigerian origin living in northern Nigeria starting in May 1966 and reaching a peak after 29 September 1966. Between 8,000 and 30,000 Igbos and easterners have been estimated to have been killed. A further 1 million Igbos fled the Northern Region into the East. These events led to the secession of the eastern Nigerian region and the declaration of the Republic of Biafra, which ultimately led to the Nigeria-Biafra war. | Racist mobs | 1966 Nigerian coup d'état |
28–29 September 1966 | Airliner hijacking | 0 | 0 | Argentina and Falkland Islands | Aerolíneas Argentinas Flight 648 hijacking: a group of militant Argentine nationalists hijacked a civilian Aerolineas Argentinas aircraft while flying over Puerto Santa Cruz and forced the captain at gunpoint to land in the Falkland Islands, where they took several civilians hostage. The crisis was resolved 36 hours later when the hijackers agreed to release their hostages and return to Argentina for trial.[26] | Argentine nationalist militants | Falkland Islands sovereignty dispute |
12 October 1967 | Airliner bombing | 66 | 0 | Greece | A bomb explodes on board Cyprus Airways Flight 284 near Rhodes killing all 66 people on the aircraft.[27] | Unknown | |
4 September 1968 | Bombings | 1 | 51 | Tel Aviv, Israel | Three bombs are detonated in Tel Aviv, killing one person and injuring 51 people.[28] | Palestine Liberation Organization | Israeli–Palestinian conflict |
21–25 February 1969 | Bombings | 2 | 20 | Jerusalem, Israel | 1969 Jerusalem bombings: Three separate bombings in Jerusalem, one in a supermarket and two in the British Consulate. In the supermarket bombing two Israelis were killed, and in all attacks 20 were injured. One of the bombers involved was Rasmea Odeh.[29][30] | PLO (PFLP) | Israeli–Palestinian conflict |
5 August 1969 | Bombing | 0 | 0 | Dublin, Ireland | A bomb was detonated in Dublin at the main studio of the state broadcaster, RTÉ. The Ulster Volunteer Force was responsible. No one was injured.[31] | Ulster Volunteer Force | The Troubles |
19 October 1969 | Attempted bombing | 0 (+1) | 0 | Ballyshannon, Ireland | A UPV bomber attacked a power station in Ballyshannon, County Donegal. The bomb exploded prematurely as it was being planted, resulting in no casualties other than the attacker. The UVF issued a statement saying the attempted attack was a protest against the Irish Army units "still massed on the border in County Donegal". The statement added: "so long as the threats from Éire continue, so long will the volunteers of Ulster's people's army strike at targets in Southern Ireland". | Ulster Protestant Volunteers | The Troubles |
31 October 1969 | Bombing | 0 | 0 | Dublin, Ireland | The Ulster Volunteer Force bombed a monument in Bodenstown, Dublin, dedicated to the Irish Republican hero Wolfe Tone. There were no injuries.[32] | Ulster Volunteer Force | The Troubles |
12 December 1969 | Bombings | 17 | 104 | Milan and Rome, Italy | Piazza Fontana bombing in Milan kills at least 17 people and injures at least 88. Three additional blasts occur in Rome, injuring 16 people.[33] | Ordine Nuovo | Years of Lead |
26 December 1969 | Bombing | 0 | 0 | Dublin, Ireland | The Ulster Volunteer Force bombed the O'Connell Monument in Dublin. There were no injuries but buildings were damaged in a half mile radius.[32] | Ulster Volunteer Force | The Troubles |
28 December 1969 | Bombing | 0 | 0 | Dublin, Ireland | The Ulster Volunteer Force detonate a bomb outside the Garda central detective bureau in Dublin. The nearby telephone exchange headquarters is suspected to have been the target. | Ulster Volunteer Force | The Troubles |
... it was possible ... [that the] drivers [were] from the more than two hundred deserters who had already joined the Arab force [as opposed to being officially sanctioned by the British Army]