Pogrom Filter Pogrom topics

Share This
table started by arielb for the arielb's Base
There is no user-contributed description yet.
+

x

   
x name x image x article
+

Do you know something that's missing from this view? Add it!

If you have a list you can use our wizard to match it with topics that may already be in Freebase.
Go to the import tool »
x Istanbul Pogrom Turkish mob attacking Greek property
The Istanbul Pogrom (also known as Istanbul Riots or Constantinople Pogrom; Greek: Σεπτεμβριανά (Events of September); Turkish: 6–7 Eylül Olayları (Events of September 6–7)), was a pogrom directed primarily at Istanbul's Greek minority on 6–7...
x Kristallnacht Kristallnacht, example of physical damage
Kristallnacht (German pronunciation: [kʁɪsˈtalˌnaxt]; literally "Crystal night") or the Night of Broken Glass was an anti-Jewish pogrom in Nazi Germany and Austria on 9 to 10 November 1938. It is also known as Novemberpogrome, Reichskristallnacht,...
x Kishinev pogrom Kishinev elegy
The Kishinev pogrom was an anti-Jewish riot that took place in Chişinău, then the capital of the Bessarabia province of the Russian Empire (now the capital of Moldova) on April 6-7, 1903. The riot started after an incident on April 6 when a...
x Kielce pogrom The building at 7 Planty Street
The Kielce pogrom was an outbreak of violence against the Jewish community of Kielce, Poland on July 4, 1946. It was perpetrated by the communist police, soldiers and an angry mob of non-Jewish locals. Allegations of blood libel following a police...
x Sumgait Pogrom Sumgaitrioting
The Sumgait pogrom (also known as the Sumgait Massacre or February Events) was an Azeri-led pogrom that targeted the Armenian population of the seaside town of Sumgait (Azerbaijani: Sumqayıt) in Soviet Azerbaijan during February 1988. On February 27...
x Jedwabne pogrom  
The Jedwabne pogrom (or Jedwabne massacre) (pronounced /jɛdvabnɛ/) was a massacre of at least 300 Polish Jews at Jedwabne in German occupied Poland in July 1941. The Polish Institute of National Remembrance has established that the crime was...
x Iaşi pogrom פוגרום יאשי 2
The Iaşi pogrom of June 27, 1941 was one of the most violent pogroms in Jewish history, launched by governmental forces in the Romanian city of Iaşi against its Jewish population, resulting in the murder of at least 13,266 Jews, according to...
x Kirovabad Pogrom  
The Kirovabad pogrom was an Azeri-led pogrom that targeted Armenians living in the city of Kirovabad (today called Ganja) in Soviet Azerbaijan during November 1988. An unidentified Armenian press editor said the commander of the Soviet troops asked...
x Kraków pogrom  
The Kraków pogrom refers to the events that occurred on August 11, 1945, in the city of Kraków, Poland, which resulted in one dead and five wounded victims. Around 68,000–80,000 Jews lived in Kraków before the German invasion of Poland in September,...
x Shushi Massacres Shusha after the 1920 pogroms
The Shusha pogrom of 1920 or the Massacre of Shusha was a pogrom directed against the ethnic Armenian population of Shusha, a town in the region of Nagorno-Karabagh. The event took place between 22 and 26 March 1920, and had as its background a...
x Pogrom of Armenians in Baku  
The Pogrom of Armenians in Baku was an anti-Armenian pogrom directed against the Armenian inhabitants of Baku, Azerbaijani SSR. Since the January 13, 1990 seven-day pogroms broke out against Armenians in the Baku, with a death toll of 48 or 66. Most...
x 1966 anti-Igbo pogrom  
The 1966 anti-Igbo pogrom was a series of massacres directed at Igbo and other southern Nigerian residents throughout Nigeria before and after the overthrow (and assassination) of the Aguiyi-Ironsi junta by Murtala Mohammed. In 1966, Nigeria was in...
x Farhud  
Farhud (translation from Arabic: "pogrom", "violent dispossession") was a violent pogrom against the Jews of Baghdad, Iraq on June 1-2, 1941. It took place when the city was without a political leadership after Rashid Ali al-Kaylani had fled but...
x Pogrom in Krnjeuša  
The Pogrom in Krnjeuša of August 9th and 10th of 1941 was an organized attack in the territory of the Catholic parish of Krnjeuša in northwestern Bosnia and Herzegovina, carried out by Chetniks against the local Croatian Catholics. The parish lied...
x Lwów pogrom  
The Lwów pogrom (also called the Lemberg pogrom) of the Jewish population of Lwów (now Lviv) took place on November 21 - November 23 1918 during the Polish-Ukrainian War. In the course of the three days of unrest in the city, an estimated 52-150...
x Częstochowa pogrom  
Częstochowa pogrom refers to the anti-Semitic pogrom that occurred in 1902, in the town of Chenstokhov, Russian Empire (modern Częstochowa, Poland). According to the official report by the Governor of Petrokov Guberniya, in which Chenstokhov was...
x Tykocin pogrom  
The Tykocin pogrom was the mass murder of Jewish residents of Tykocin in Nazi German occupied Poland in August 1941, following German attack on the Soviet Union in World War II. During Soviet and German invasion of Poland, pursuant to the secret...
x Dalmatian Serb pogrom of May 1991  
The Dalmatian anti-Serb riots were an act of violence that took place in the Croatian cities of Zadar and Šibenik on 2 May 1991. Croatian civilians vandalized and destroyed a lot of property of ethnic Serbs in both cities, but nobody was killed in...
x Odessa pogrom  
Odessa pogrom may refer to antisemitic communal violence in the city of Odessa (in today's Ukraine). Such events took place in 1821, 1859, 1871, 1881, 1886 and 1905. Odessa is a port city on the Black Sea and its multi-ethnic population included...
x Lviv pogrom of 1918  
Lviv pogrom of 1918. On November 11, 1918, Poland declared her independence and the following day the first units of the regular forces of the Polish Army under Maj. Wacᅤツaw Stachiewicz entered Przemyᅤロl, only some 70 kilometres away from Lviv....
x Mława pogrom  
The Mława pogrom was a series of violent incidents in June 1991, when a crowd attacked Roma residents of the Polish town of Mława. On June 26, some sixty Mława youths destroyed the house of a Roma leader. The assailants quickly grew in number and...
x Warsaw pogrom The Holy Cross Church
The Warsaw pogrom was a pogrom that took place in Russian-controlled Warsaw on December 25-27, 1881, then part of the Vistulan Country (an unofficial derogatory name of Polish provinces within the Russian Empire). A contemporary Jewish-Russian...
x Kielce pogrom  
Kielce pogrom of 1918 refers to the events that occurred on November 11, 1918, in the Polish town of Kielce. When Poland was becoming independent and Austrian troops were evacuated from Kielce, the city authorities allowed local Jews to hold a...
x Rintfleisch-Pogrom  
The Rintfleisch-Pogrom was a pogrom against Jews in the year 1298. It was set during the civil strife between King Adolf of Nassau and his rival Albert of Austria, when imperial authority, traditionally concerned with the protection of the Jews, had...
x Kaunas pogrom  
The Kaunas pogrom was a massacre of Jewish people living in Kaunas, Lithuania that took place in from June 25 to June 29, 1941 – the first days of the Operation Barbarossa and of Nazi occupation of Lithuania. The most infamous incident occurred in...
x Wąsosz pogrom  
The Wąsosz pogrom was the mass murder of Jewish residents of Wąsosz in Nazi German occupied Poland that took place on July 7, 1941, during World War II. When Nazi Germany invaded Poland in 1939, the village of Wąsosz (Podlaskie Voivodeship) was...
x Borozdinovskaya pogrom  
The Borozdinovskaya operation was cleansing raid (zachiska, Russian: зачистка) by the ethnic Chechen unit Battalion Vostok of the GRU Spetsnaz and the Chechen police on the ethnic minority Avar border village of Borozdinovskaya on 4 June 2005. The...
x Kiev Pogrom  
The Kiev pogrom of October 18-October 20 (October 31-November 2, 1905, N.S.) came as a result of the collapse of the city hall meeting of October 18, 1905 in Kiev in the Russian Empire. Consequently, a mob was drawn into the streets. Among the...
x Kiev Pogroms Pogrom victims in Alexandrov Hospital, Kiev, 1919. Credit: Elias Tcherikower.
The Kiev pogroms of 1919 refers to a series of Jewish pogroms in various places around Kiev carried out by Cossacks and the White Armies. The leaders of the White Army issued orders condemning the pogroms, but these were largely unheeded due to...
x Dorohoi Pogrom  
On 1 July 1940, in the town of Dorohoi in Romania, Romanian military units carried out a pogrom against the local Jews, during which, according to an official Romanian report, 53 Jews were murdered, and dozens injured. According to the town's Jews,...
Edit Collection Schema
All topics in this collection are typed as Pogrom
Use Data from this Collection
Choose a format:

Images and articles are not included in export files, which are limited to 1000 items. Complete data dumps are also available here.

Flag this Collection
Why do you want to flag this collection?