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    Egyptian Revolution vs. American Revolution While it may not seem like the Egyptian and American Revolutions share much in common‚ they do. Nearly 250 years separated the two‚ and while technology‚ weaponry‚ and methods of revolution‚ have greatly evolved‚ many similarities remained. The American Revolution began in 1775‚ to protest the tyrannical rule of King George and what they felt was unfair treatment. The Egyptian Revolution began in 2011‚ after a series of revolutions in the Middle East

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    The Scientific Revolution

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    ------------------------------------------------- The Scientific Revolution (1550-1700) ------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------- General Summary For the long centuries of the Middle Ages (500-1350 AD) the canon of scientific knowledge had experienced little change‚ and the Catholic Church had preserved acceptance of a system of beliefs based on the teachings of the ancient Greeks and Romans‚ which it had incorporated into religious

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    Once the fighting ceased and the Americans had gained independence‚ citizens would question how revolutionary the war actually was. The American Revolution was in fact revolutionary because the battles and treaties between the two nations led to the American people getting their independence as well as inspiring another revolution. The American revolution was actually revolutionary because the battles allowed for a complete shift in power to occur. The battles themselves led to the destruction of

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    The American Revolution was an extremely important event that helped shape the modern world‚ however‚ it was not a true revolution. According to Richard Price‚ a British Unitarian minister‚ "A true social revolution destroys the institutional foundations of the old order and transfers power from a ruling elite to new social groups." (Digital History ID 3222) During the 1700’s‚ the American colonies had already been engaging in a form of self-government in their localities‚ which they largely fashioned

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    The Haitian Revolution was one of the most successful slave revolutions of all time. During the period before the Haitian Revolution‚ Haiti was one of the richest countries in the Western Hemisphere: fueled by slave labor. Slaves were forced to work as long as the sun was up and they often spent all day chopping or hacking at sugar cane with a machete. If the slaves refused to work‚ they were shot or beaten. This upsets me because people of color were treated like lesser beings because of their skin

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    Weavers of Revolution

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    Greg Parkhurst 11/2/06 Allende and the Weavers of Revolution In Peter Winn’s Weavers of Revolution‚ a factory in Santiago‚ Chile fights for their independence against the Chilean government of the 1970’s. While this rebellion is going on‚ presidential elections are taking place and Salvador Allende is the presidential candidate which represents the common people. The relation between Allende and the people he represents is a unique one because at first this class‚ the working class‚ helps

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    The Conservative Revolution It seems to be the case that the American Revolution was a conservative revolution‚ or at least more conservative than revolutions in places such as France and Russia. There was no social class upheaval‚ no “terror” like the one in France‚ and no dramatic redistribution of wealth and land. In fact‚ the Revolution was a rather expected and natural event of human history. Part of this has to do with the enlightened age. Enlightened people were thinking of themselves

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    The Scientific Revolution

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    Scientific Revolution Caige Comstock 4/15/2016 Columbus Signature Academy New Tech Campus “I am deeply religious nonbeliever – this is a somewhat new kind of religion”-Albert Einstein. The Scientific Revolution was a period of great change in the daily life and future of many people. The Scientific Revolution was majorly during the years of 1550-1700 A.D. This movement emphasized thinking with logical explanations and experimentation instead of religion and faith. Even though religion was

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    The Mexican Revolution

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    The Mexican Revolution The Mexican Revolution was the culmination of a mass of political‚ economic‚ and social tension that accompanied the regime of the dictator Porfirio Diaz. The Revolution began with the aims to overthrow Diaz‚ but the Revolution had a pronounced effect on the organization of Mexico’s government‚ economy‚ and society. Porfirio Diaz was the president of Mexico when the Revolution broke out. He was elected in 1877‚ and although he swore to step down in 1880‚ he continued

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    The Chilean Revolution

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    as a "spontaneous" seizure by the union leaders of the mill‚ it was decades of oppression‚ manipulation‚ and exploitation that forced the hands of the workers to either live free‚ or die trying to gain that freedom. The necessity for the Chilean revolution was not only seen from the bottom up perspective of the workers‚ it also was recognized from the top down‚ by the Salvador Allende government‚ and the people of Chile who voted his Populist Party into power. Faced with the majority of its wealth

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