The Baikal Insurrection (Polish: Powstanie zabajkalskie or Powstanie nad Bajkałem, Russian: Кругобайкальское восстание), also known as the Siberian Uprising, was a short-lived uprising of about 700 Polish political prisoners and exiles (Sybiracy) in Siberia, Russian Empire, that started on 24 June 1866 and lasted for a few days, until their defeat on 28 June.
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The BaikalInsurrection (Polish: Powstanie zabajkalskie or Powstanie nad Bajkałem, Russian: Кругобайкальское восстание), also known as the Siberian Uprising...
The January Uprising was an insurrection principally in Russia's Kingdom of Poland that was aimed at putting an end to Russian occupation of part of Poland...
that day. Bor-Komorowski and Jankowski issued their final order for the insurrection when it was erroneously reported to them that the Soviet tanks were entering...
exiled Aleksander Zenowicz, was the mayor of Kyakhta. The Polish BaikalInsurrection of 1866 also took place in Buryatia. Polish insurgents disarmed Russian...
uprising in the city, which was part of the Operation Tempest, a nationwide insurrection plan. During the Warsaw Uprising, the Polish Home Army's Battalion Zośka...
prevail, prompting the local Polish activists to organise an uprising. The insurrection was to begin in early in May. Having learned from previous failures,...
Polish political exiles who participated in the unsuccessful 1866 BaikalInsurrection. Kropotkin secured a promise from the governor-general to suspend...
Kraków under Colonel Edward Godlewski. The Home Army considered an armed insurrection in the city of Kraków, but this plan was abandoned (see Kraków Uprising...