1672–78 revolt against the patrician government of Messina
Messina
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Location in Italy
v
t
e
Franco-Dutch War
Low Countries and Lower Rhine
Groenlo
Tolhuis
Groningen
Aardenburg
Coevorden
1st Maastricht
Naarden
Bonn
Seneffe
Grave
2nd Maastricht
Valenciennes
Cassel
Cambrai
Ghent
Ypres
Saint-Denis
Upper Rhine
Sinsheim
Entzheim
Mulhouse
Turckheim
Salzbach
Altenheim
Konzer Brücke
Trier
Philippsburg
Kochersberg
Freiburg
Rheinfelden
Ortenbach
France
Besançon
Noirmoutier
Southern Italy
1st Messina
North Germany and Scandinavia
Brandenburg
Rathenow
Nauen
Fehrbellin
Bremen-Verden
Gotland
Halmstad
Lund
Malmö
Landskrona
Marstrand
Conquest of Jemtland
Uddevalla
Warksow
Rügen
Stralsund
Great Sleigh Drive
Pyrenees
Maureillas
Espouilles
Americas
Dutch Raid on North America
1st Curaçao
New Netherland
Acadia
Martinique
Naval battles
Action of 12 March 1672
Solebay
First and Second Schooneveld
James River
Texel
Masulipatnam
Málaga
2nd Messina
Stromboli
Augusta
Bornholm
Öland
Palermo
Tobago
Møn
Køge Bay
Wissant
The Messina revolt of 1672–78 began with a revolt against the patrician government of Messina on the island of Sicily by skilled workers in 1672.
When the patricians regained control in 1674 they turned the movement into a revolt against Spanish rule.
They obtained support from the French, and Messina was independent until the end of the Franco-Dutch War of 1672–78, when the Spanish regained control.
Messina The Messinarevolt of 1672–78 began with a revolt against the patrician government of Messina on the island of Sicily by skilled workers in 1672...
Ongoing conflict 1847: The Taos Revolt in New Mexico against the United States. 1847: The Sonderbund War, a revolt by the Swiss Confederation against...
blew up the castle and demolished the coastal batteries. July 7 – The Messinarevolt against Spanish rule begins on the island of Sicily as the Italian residents...
blew up the castle and demolished the coastal batteries. July 7 – The Messinarevolt against Spanish rule begins on the island of Sicily as the Italian residents...
The University of Messina (Italian: Università degli Studi di Messina; Latin: Studiorum Universitas Messanae), known colloquially as UniME, is a state...
of philosophy, science and magic to the Senate of Messina; the collection, after the Messinarevolt (1674-1678), was confiscated and carried to Spain...
and returned to Europe. In July 1674, the Messinarevolt broke against Spanish rule and the people of Messina asked for French protection. A small French...
Victor de Rochechouart, Count of Vivonne, reinforces the rebels in the Messinarevolt with eight additional warships and three fireships to bring to 20 the...
unrest: in October, the people of Messinarevolted, demanding that the foreigners leave. Richard attacked Messina, capturing it on 4 October 1190. After...
garrisoned, even during the Messina War (1672–78) and the Nine Years' War (1688–97). At the start of the Messinarevolt in 1672, the viceroy dispatched...
The Senate of Messina was an ancient city institution, emblem of the privileges enjoyed by the city of the strait from the 15th to the 17th century. The...
alarming to Rome because its military seemed powerless to suppress it. The revolt began in 73 BC, with the escape of around 70 slave gladiators from a gladiator...
fortified city of Messina, which ultimately would be used to take back the island by force. Similarly, it was the city of Messina that held out the longest...
studied law. During this period of his life which corresponded to the Messinarevolt and the attempt by Louis XIV to use this occasion to weaken an already...
Statute [it]). Charles II, Duke of Parma was ousted. Sicily, excepting Messina, revolted against the Bourbon Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. On 23 February, the...
for Messina which was well fortified, and whose leading family, the Riso, remained faithful to Charles. But on 28 April it too broke into open revolt under...
King of Sicily. After Syracuse lost the Seventh Sicilian War, the city of Messina was ceded to Carthage in 307 BC. When Agathocles died in 289 BC he left...
lives. There were revolts during the 17th century, but these were quelled with force, especially the revolts of Palermo and Messina. North African slave...
towards the continent. With the conquest of Messina, Garibaldi began preparations to cross the Straits of Messina,: 63–64 appointing Agostino Depretis pro-dictator...
freight cars were forced to remain on the other side of the Straits of Messina. The revolt was taken over by young neo-fascists of the Italian Social Movement...
Greece and punish Athens and its allies for their interference in the Ionian Revolt. In 480 BC, Xerxes personally led a large army and crossed the Hellespont...