List of events named massacres
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a list of events named "massacre". The term suggests mass murder and its usage may be controversial.
The English word massacre comes from Middle French, derived from Old French maçacre (and variants) "slaughterhouse, butcher's shop". The term maçacre was already used in Anglo-Norman in the sense of "slaughter of many people" in the 12th century. The word's ultimate origin is from late Latin mazacrium "slaughter".[1] The first recorded use in English of the word massacre dates to the late 16th century, in reference to the St. Bartholomew's Day massacre. The Oxford English Dictionary records:[2]
- 1578 (R. Lindsay, Hist. & Cron. Scotl. (1899) II. 291): "The xxiiij day of August..the grytt..murther and massecar of Paris wes committit."
- 1593 (Marlowe) "The massacre at Paris"
- 1617, (F. Moryson Itinerary I. 131) "I wondered to see the Massacre of Paris painted upon the wall."
Massacre can also be used as a verb (the first usage of which was "1588 J. PENRY Viewe Publ. Wants Wales 65 Men which make no conscience for gaine sake, to breake the law of the æternall, and massaker soules..are dangerous subjects."),[3] and this usage is not recorded in this list.
Massacre is also used idiomatically for events that do not involve any deaths, such as the Saturday Night Massacre, which was a mass firing of political appointees during the Watergate scandal. Such events are not listed in the table below.
[edit] List of events
Note: the location column will sort by the following sub regions: Eastern Africa, Southern Africa, Central America, Northern America, South America, Eastern Asia, South-eastern Asia, Southern Asia, Western Asia, Eastern Europe, Northern Europe Southern Europe, Western Europe, and Oceania
| Date | Location | Name | Deaths | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 390 | Thessaloniki, Macedonia | Massacre of Thessaloniki | 7,000 | Emperor Theodosius I of Rome ordered the executions after the citizens of Thessaloniki murdered a top-level military commander during a violent protest against the arrest of a popular charioteer.[4][5] |
| November 13, 1002 | various cities, England | St. Brice's Day massacre | unknown | King Ethelred II of England ordered all Danes living in England killed. The Danes were accused of aiding Viking raiders. The King of Denmark invaded England and deposed King Ethelred.[6][7][8] |
| December 30, 1066 | Granada, Al-Andalus | Granada massacre | 4,000 | A Muslim mob crucified Jewish vizier Joseph ibn Naghrela and killed most of the Jewish population of the city, apparently angered by the prominence and wealth attained by Naghrela and his people. [9][10][11][12] |
| May 1182 | Constantinople, Byzantine Empire | Massacre of the Latins[13] | ca. 60,000-80,000[citation needed] | Wholesale massacre of all Latin (Western European) inhabitants of Constantinople by a mob. |
| 1325 | Crow Creek Site, South Dakota) | Crow Creek massacre[14][15] | c.500[16] | Native Americans indigenous to South Dakota killed Central Plains villagers.[16][17] |
| 1570 | Cyprus | Cyprus massacre | ca. 30,000-50,000[18][19][20][21] | Ottoman forces capturing Cyprus killed mostly Greek and Armenian Christian inhabitants. |
| 1572 | Paris, France | St. Bartholomew's Day massacre[22][23] | c.3,000[24] over several days. | A wave of Catholic mob violence against the Huguenots.[24][25][26] |
| 1615 | Westfjords, Iceland | Spanish Killings | 31 | Spanish whalers went on a whaling expedition to Iceland and were killed after conflict with the people of Iceland. |
| March 22, 1622 | Jamestown, Virginia | Jamestown Massacre[27][28] | 347[citation needed] | The Powhatans killed 347 settlers, almost one-third of the English population of the Virginia colony. |
| May 28, 1644 | Bolton, England | Bolton Massacre | up to 1,600[citation needed] | Royalist forces killed many of the town's defenders and citizens.[29][30][31] |
| September 11, 1649 | Drogheda, Ireland | Siege of Drogheda | up to 4,000[32] | Oliver Cromwell's New Model Army massacred almost all of the town's defenders and many citizens.[32] |
| February 13, 1692 | Scotland | Massacre of Glencoe[33] | 38[34] | Government soldiers, mainly from Clan Campbell, killed members of the Clan MacDonald of Glencoe.[34] |
| March 05, 1770 | Boston, Province of Massachusetts Bay | Boston Massacre | 5 [35] | British troops fired at a mob of colonists. This helped spark the American Revolution even though an all-colonist jury found the soldiers innocent. [36][37] |
| July 17, 1771 | Kugluktuk, Nunavut | Bloody Falls Massacre | 20[38] | Chipewyan warriors attacked an Inuit camp, killing men, women and children.[39][40][41] |
| September 28, 1778 | River Vale, New Jersey | Baylor Massacre | 15 killed[42] | British infantry troops attacked sleeping Continental Light Dragoons using bayonets.[42] |
| March 08, 1782 | Gnadenhutten, Ohio | Gnadenhutten massacre, also called the Moravian massacre[43] | 96 | Pennsylvania militia men attacked a Moravian mission and killed 96 peaceful Christian American Indians there in retaliation for unrelated deaths of several white Pennsylvanians.[43] |
| December 22, 1790 | Ismail, Bessarabia | Ismail Massacre/Russian conquest of Ismail[44] | about 40,000 | Russian forces pressed the assault from house to house, room to room, and nearly every Muslim man, woman, and child in the city had been killed in three days of uncontrolled massacre - some 40,000 Turks dead, only a few hundred surviving to be taken into captivity. General Alexander Suvorov later told an English traveller that when the massacre was over he went back to his tent and wept. |
| 1792 | France | September Massacres[45][46] | c. 1440[citation needed] | Popular courts in the French Revolution sentenced prisoners to death, including around 240 priests.[47] |
| December 1809 | Whangaroa, New Zealand | Boyd massacre | 66[citation needed] | Whangaroa Maori killed and ate 66 crew and passengers on ship The Boyd.[48] |
| August 16, 1819 | Manchester, England | Peterloo Massacre | 11 killed, over 500 injured[48] | Armed cavalry charged a peaceful pro-democracy meeting of 60,000 people.[48] |
| January 1838 | Waterloo Creek, Australia | Waterloo Creek massacre[49] | 100 to 300[citation needed] | Aboriginal Australians killed. [50][citation needed] |
| June 10, 1838 | Myall Creek, Australia | Myall Creek massacre[49] | 28[citation needed] | A white posse killed Aboriginal Australians. The perpetrators were convicted and sentenced to death.[51] |
| October 30, 1838 | Caldwell County, Missouri | Haun's Mill massacre[52] | 19[citation needed] | About 240 Livingston County Missouri Regulators militiamen and volunteers killed 18 Mormons and one ally.[53][54] |
| 1840 | Gippsland, Australia | Gippsland massacres[55]. | circa 450 [56] | A series of massacres spanning several years: 1840 - Nuntin, 1840 - Boney Point, 1841 - Butchers Creek - 30-35, 1841 - Maffra, 1842 - Skull Creek, 1842 - Bruthen Creek - "hundreds killed", 1843 - Warrigal Creek - between 60 and 180 shot, 1844 - Maffra, 1846 - South Gippsland - 14 killed, 1846 - Snowy River - 8 killed, 1846-47 - Central Gippsland - 50 or more shot, 1850 - East Gippsland - 15-20 killed, 1850 - Murrindal - 16 poisoned, 1850 - Brodribb River - 15-20 killed.[56]. See also Angus McMillan. |
| January 06, 1842 | Afghanistan | Massacre of Elphinstone's Army | 16,000[citation needed] | Afghan tribes massacred Elphinstone's British army including some 12,000 civilians.[57][58][59] |
| August 20, 1854 | Oregon Territory (near | Ward massacre[60] | 19[60] | Shoshone tortured, killed and plundered Oregon emigrant wagon train members.[61] |
| September 11, 1857 | Mountain Meadows, Utah | Mountain Meadows massacre | 120[62]
-140[63] |
Mormon militia, some dressed as Indians, and Paiute tribesmen killed and plundered unarmed members of the Fancher-Baker emigrant wagon train.[64] |
| November 1857 | Utah Territory | Aiken massacre | 6[65] | Six wealthy Californians travelling through the territory, arrested as spies, released, then killed.[66] |
| July 27, 1859 | Washington Territory near Holbrook, Idaho | Shepherd massacre | 5[67] | Bannock, Shoshone, and whites dressed as Indians killed and plundered California emigrant wagon train members.[68] |
| August 31, 1859 | Washington Territory near Massacre Rocks, Idaho | Miltimore massacre | 8[69]. | Bannock, Shoshone, and whites dressed as Indians tortured, killed and plundered Oregon emigrant wagon train members.[70] |
| January 18, 1863 | Madison County, NC | Shelton Laurel Massacre | 13 | Thirteen boys and men, who were accused of being Union sympathizers, were summarily executed by members of the 64th North Carolina Regiment of the Confederate Army. [71] |
| August 21, 1863 | Lawrence, Kansas | Lawrence Massacre | c.150[72][73] | Pro-Confederate bushwhackers attacked the town of Lawrence, Kansas during the American Civil War.[74][75] |
| November 29, 1864 | Kiowa County, Colorado | Sand Creek massacre | c. 200[76] | Colorado Territory militia destroyed a village of Cheyenne and Arapaho on the eastern plains.[77][78] |
| April 30, 1876 | Batak Ottoman Empire | Batak massacre[79][80][81] | 5,000[citation needed] | Ottoman army irregulars killed Bulgarian civilians barricaded in Batak's church.[82] |
| December 29, 1890 | Wounded Knee, South Dakota | Wounded Knee Massacre | c.200-300[83] | The U.S. 7th Cavalry intercepted a band of Lakota Sioux people on their way to the Pine Ridge Reservation for shelter from the winter; as they were disarming them, a gun was fired, and the soldiers turned their artillery on the Lakota, killing men women and children.[84][85] |
| March 10, 1906 | Bud Dajo, Jolo Island, Philippines | Moro Crater massacre[86][87] | 800 to 1,000[citation needed] | Forces of the U.S. Army under the command of Major General Leonard Wood, a naval detachment comprising 540 soldiers, along with a detachment of native constabulary, armed with artillery and small firearms, attacked a village hidden in the crater of a dormant volcano.[88] |
| April 13, 1919 | Amritsar, India | Amritsar massacre | 379[89][90] | British Indian Army soldiers, led by Brigadier Reginald Dyer fired at unarmed civilians.[89][90] |
| November 21, 1920 | Dublin, Ireland | Croke Park Massacre | 23[91] | British Auxiliary police and Black and Tans fired at Gaelic football spectators at Croke Park.[91][92] |
| May 31, 1921 | Tulsa, Oklahoma | Tulsa Massacre | c.300[93] | White mobs looted and burned Tulsa's prosperous African American neighborhood, shooting and clubbing to death many of its inhabitants.[94][95][96] |
| February 14, 1929 | Chicago | Saint Valentine's Day massacre | 7[97] | Al Capone's gang shot rival gang members and their associates.[98] |
| April 23, 1930 | Peshawar, British Raj | Qissa Khwani bazaar massacre | 200 to 250[99][100] | Soldiers of the British Raj fired on unarmed non-violent protestors of the Khudai Khidmatgar with machine guns during the Indian independence movement[99][100] |
| 1937 | Nanjing, China | Nanking Massacre[101][102] (Rape of Nanking) | 42,000–400,000, median: 260,000[103] | The Imperial Japanese Army pillaged Nanking for six weeks[104] |
| 1940 | Katyn, Soviet Union | Katyn massacre | 21,857[105][106] to 25,700[107] | Soviet NKVD executed Polish intelligentsia, POWs and reserve officers.[108][109] |
| 1941 | Soviet Union | NKVD prisoner massacres | c.100,000[110] | The Soviet People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs (Narodnyy Komissariat Vnutrennikh Del, or NKVD) executed tens of thousands of political prisoners in the initial stages of Operation Barbarossa.[110][111] |
| September 29, 1941 | Ukraine | Babi Yar massacre | more than 30,000[112] | Germans killed the Jewish population of Kiev.[112][113][114][115][116] |
| 1942 | Laha Airfield, Ambon Island | Laha massacre | ~300[117] | The Japanese killed surrendered Australian soldiers.[117][118] |
| March 26, 1942 | Lari near Nairobi, Kenya | Lari Massacre | ~150 | About 150 Kikuyu were killed by fellow tribesmen.[119][120] |
| June 10, 1942 | Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia | Lidice massacre | 340[121] | Nazis killed 192 men, and sent the women and children to Nazi concentration camps where many died.[121][122][123] |
| September 21, 1943 | Kefalonia, Greece | Massacre of the Acqui Division | c. 5000 | Wehrmacht troops executed POWs from the 33 Infantry Division Acqui |
| 1944 | Italy | Marzabotto massacre | c.700 to 1,800[124] | The SS killed Italian civilians in reprisal for support given to the resistance movement.[124][125] |
| 1944 | Oradour-sur-Glane, France | Oradour-sur-Glane massacre | 642[126] | The Waffen-SS killed 642 men, women and children without giving any specific reasons for their actions.[126] |
| December 1944 | the Battle of the Bulge, Belgium | Malmedy massacre | 88[citation needed] | German soldiers shot American POWs (43 escaped).[133] |
| February 28, 1947 | Taiwan | 228 Incident | 10,000-30,000 | |
| March 21, 1960 | Sharpeville, South Africa | Sharpeville massacre | 72 to 90[134] | South African police shot down black protesters.[135] |
| 1962 | Novocherkassk, Soviet Union | Novocherkassk massacre | 23 to 70[136] killed, over 40 wounded[137] | The MVD open fire on a crowd of protesters demonstrating against inflation.[138] |
| August 01, 1966 | Austin, Texas | University of Texas massacre | 16 | University of Texas was the site of a massacre by Charles Whitman, who killed his mother and wife at their homes before killing 14 and wounding 32 others at the University atop the university tower before the police killed him. |
| March 16, 1968 | South Vietnam | My Lai Massacre | 504[139] | US soldiers killed 504 unarmed South Vietnamese villagers ranging in ages from 1 to 81 years, mostly women and children.[139][140] |
| 1968 | Mexico City, Mexico | Tlatelolco massacre | 25 to 350[141][142] | Government troops massacred between 25 (officially) and 350 (according to human rights activists) students on the eve of the 1968 Summer Olympics taking place in Mexico City, and then tried to wash the blood away, along with evidence of the massacre. [142][143] |
| May 04, 1970 | Kent State University, Ohio | Kent State massacre | 4 [144] | 29 members of the Ohio National Guard opened fire on unarmed students protesting the expansion of the Vietnam War into Cambodia on the Kent State University college campus, killing 4 and wounding 9, one of whom was permanently paralyzed.[144][145][146] |
| May 30, 1972 | Lod, Israel | Lod Airport massacre | 26[147] | Three members of the Japanese Red Army, on behalf of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, killed 26 people and injured 80 others at Tel Aviv's Lod airport (now Ben Gurion International Airport).[147][148][149][150][151] |
| September 05, 1972 | Munich, Germany | Munich Massacre[152] | 12[153] | Members of the Israeli Olympic team were taken hostage and killed by the Palestinian Black September group. Also killed was a West German police officer. |
| May 15, 1974 | Ma'alot, Israel | Ma'alot massacre[154][155] | 29[155] | Members of the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine infiltrate Israel from Lebanon, shoot and kill a Christian Arab woman and a Jewish couple and their 4 year old son, and then take hostage and kill 22 high school students and three of their adult escorts.[155] |
| July 31, 1975 | Northern Ireland | Miami Showband massacre | 5[citation needed] | Members of the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) killed three members of pop group the Miami Showband in a gun and bomb attack. Two UVF members also died when the bomb exploded prematurely.[156][157][158][159][160] |
| 1976 | Northern Ireland | Kingsmill massacre | 10[161] | Irish republicans shot ten Irish Protestant workers dead outside the village of Kingsmill in County Armagh, Northern Ireland.[161][162] |
| 1976 | Lebanon | Damour massacre | 582[163] | Palestinian militia aligned with the Lebanese National Movement kill 582 civilians in the village of Damour during the Lebanese Civil War.[163][164] |
| March 11, 1978 | Israel | Coastal Road massacre | 35[165] | Palestinian Fatah members based in Lebanon land on a beach north of Tel Aviv, kill an American photographer, and hijack an inter-city bus driving along Israel's Coastal Highway. 35 civilians are killed and 80 wounded.[165][166][167][168] |
| 1979 | Mexico | Tula Massacre | 13 | 13 tortured bodies were found at Tula,Hidalgo,Mexico at the time of Arturo Durazo Moreno Administration |
| 1982 | Syria | Hama massacre | 30,000-40,000[169] | The Syrian Army kills an estimated 30,000 people in the city of Hama. Instances of mass execution and torture by the Syrian military were documented during the attacks.[170] |
| 1982 | Iraq | Dujail Massacre | 148[171] | Dujail was the site of an unsuccessful assassination attempt against then Iraqi president, Saddam Hussein, on July 8, 1982. Saddam Hussein ordered his special security and military forces to carry out a reprisal attack against the town, which resulted in 148 of the town's men being killed.[171][172] |
| September 1982 | Lebanon | Sabra and Shatila massacre | 700 to 3,500 | Refugees are killed by the Christian Lebanese Forces militia in refugee camps surrounded by Israel Defense Forces. The United Nations General Assembly condemned the massacre and declared it to be an act of genocide.[173][174][175] |
| August 14, 1985 | Peru | Accomarca massacre | 47[176], 69[177] or 74[178] | An army massacre of campesinos (including six children) in Accomarca, Ayacucho.[177] |
| August 19, 1987 | Hungerford, England | Hungerford massacre | 16[179] | A gunman armed with semi-automatic rifles and a handgun killed 16 people before committing suicide.[180] |
| March 16, 1988 | Belfast, Northern Ireland | Milltown massacre | 3[citation needed] | Ulster Freedom Fighters member Michael Stone kills three people and injures 60 others in a gun and grenade attack at the funeral of three IRA members being held in Milltown Cemetery, Belfast.[181][182] |
| June 04, 1989 | Tiananmen Square, Beijing | Tiananmen Square Massacre | 400 to 3,000[183] | Student pro-democracy protestors were killed by the Chinese military.[184][185] |
| December 06, 1989 | École Polytechnique, Montréal, Canada | École Polytechnique massacre[186] | 14[citation needed] | Marc Lépine, claiming to fight feminism, shot and killed 14 female students of the École Polytechnique de Montréal and wounded 14 other people before turning his gun on himself. The event led to stricter gun control laws[187] and changes in police tactical response to shootings in Canada.[188] |
| September 05, 1990 | Batticaloa District, Sri Lanka | Eastern University massacre, | 158 [189] | Eastern University massacre is the massacre of 158 minority Sri Lankan Tamil civilians by the Sri Lankan Army in the eastern Batticaloa District, Sri Lanka.[189][190][191] |
| September 09, 1990 | Batticaloa District, Sri Lanka | Sathurukondan massacre | 184 [192][193] | Sathurukondan massacre, also known as the 1990 Batticaloa massacre is the massacre of 184 minority Sri Lankan Tamil civilians by the Sri Lankan Army in the eastern Batticaloa District, Sri Lanka. [192][193][194][195][196] |
| October 16, 1991 | Killeen, Texas | Luby's massacre | 23[citation needed] | George Jo Hennard drove his pickup truck into a Luby's Cafeteria and shot and killed 22 people, wounded another 20 and then committed suicide by shooting himself. |
| 1991 | Croatia | Vukovar massacre | 264[citation needed] | Members of the Serb militias, aided by the Yugoslav People's Army, killed Croat civilians and POWs.[198][199][200][201] |
| February 26, 1992 | Khojaly, Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan | Khojaly Massacre | 613[202] | Armenian armed forces, reportedly with help of the Russian 366th Motor Rifle Regiment, captured the town of Khojaly. The death toll according to the Government of Azerbaijan was 613 civilians, of whom 106 were women and 83 were children.[203][204][205] |
| April 10, 1992 | Maraghar, Nagorno-Karabakh, Azerbaijan | Maraghar Massacre | 45[206] | Azerbaijani forces attacked the Armenian people ethnic Armenian town of Maraghar. According to Caroline Cox, who observed the damage and interviewed eyewitnesses, the Azerbaijani forces decapitated about forty five villagers, burned and looted much of the town, and kidnapped about one hundred women and children[207]. The inhabitants of Maraghar who were driven out after the attack were unable to return to their village after the ceasefire of 1994, as the area was still under Azeri control. |
| January 08, 1993 | Palatine, Illinois | Brown's Chicken massacre | 7 | Seven people were murdered at the Brown's Chicken and Pasta in Palatine[208] |
| October 30, 1993 | Greysteel, Northern Ireland | Greysteel massacre | 8[citation needed] | Ulster Freedom Fighters opened fire in a crowded bar using an AK-47 and automatic pistol [disambiguation needed].[209][210][211][212][213][214][215] |
| 1993 | Brazil | Yanomami Massacre | c.16[216] to 73[217] | Garimpeiros (illegal gold miners) killed Yanomami people. |
| 1994 | West Bank | Cave of the Patriarchs massacre[218][219]/Ibrahimi Mosque massacre[220] | 29[citation needed] | Baruch Goldstein opens fire with an assault rifle killing 29 Muslims and wounding 150 at prayer in the Ibrahimi Mosque before being subdued and beaten to death.[221][222] |
| January 22, 1995 | Israel | Beit Lid massacre | 22[223] | First suicide attack by Palestinian Islamic Jihad, killing 22 and wounding 69. Carried out by two bombers; the second waited until emergency crews arrived to assist the wounded and dying before detonating his bomb.[224][225][226][227] |
| 1995 | Bosnia and Herzegovina | Srebrenica massacre | c.8,000[228] | Units of the Army of the Republika Srpska killed male Bosniaks; the largest mass killing in Europe since World War II.[228][229] |
| March 13, 1996 | Scotland | Dunblane massacre | 17 [230] | A gunman opened fire in a primary school, killing sixteen children and one teacher before killing himself.[231][232][233] |
| April 29, 1996 | Port Arthur, Tasmania, Australia | Port Arthur massacre | 35.[234] | The Port Arthur massacre of 28 April 1996 was a killing spree which claimed the lives of 35 people and wounded 21 others mainly at the historic tourist site Port Arthur in south-eastern Tasmania, Australia. The massacre remains Australia's deadliest mass killing spree and remains one of the deadliest such incidents worldwide in recent times.[235] |
| 1996 | Lebanon | 1996 shelling of Qana, AKA: Qana Massacre[236][237] | 106[citation needed] | Israeli artillery struck the Unifil Headquarters in Qana which was providing shelter to approximately two hundred Lebanese civilians.[238] |
| April 20, 1999 | Littleton, Colorado | Columbine High School massacre | 15>[243][citation needed] | Two teenagers, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold open fire on their classmates on April 20, 1999 at Columbine High School, killing 12 students and one teacher before committing suicide. |
| July 27, 2000 | West Bengal, India | Nanoor massacre | 11[citation needed] | Killing of 11 landless labourers allegedly by activists of Communist Party of India (Marxist), a political party in India, in Suchpur, near Nanoor and under Nanoor police station, in Birbhum district in the Indian state of West Bengal.[244][245][246] |
| March 27, 2002 | Netanya, Israel | Passover massacre | 30[247] | Killing of 30 guests at the Park Hotel in Netanya, Israel, sitting down to the traditional Passover Seder meal. Another 143 were injured. Hamas claimed responsibility. [247][248][249][250][251] |
| September 01, 2004 | Beslan, Russian Federation | Beslan School Massacre | 334[citation needed] | Armed Chechen separatists[252] took more than 1,200 people hostage at a school. 334 civilians were killed, including 186 school children, and hundreds wounded.[253][254][255] |
[edit] See also
| Look up massacre in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
- Hamidian massacres
- List of Algerian massacres of the 1990s
- List of battles and other violent events by death toll
- List of mass murderers and spree killers by number of victims
- List of massacres at sea
- List of massacres of Indigenous Australians
- List of postal killings
- List of school-related attacks
- List of murderers by number of victims
- Mass murder
- School shooting
- Spree killer
[edit] Notes and references
- ^ Oxford English Dictionary, second edition, etymology for massacre, n.
- ^ Oxford English Dictionary Massacre, n.
- ^ Oxford English Dictionary Massacre, v.
- ^ John Julius Norwich (1989). Byzantium: The Early Centuries. New York: Knopf. pp. 112. ISBN 0394537785, OCLC 18164817., "…and 7,000 were dead by morning..." (Page 139)
- ^ Edward Gibbon, D. M. Low (1960). The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. New York: Harcourt Brace. pp. ch. 27 2:56. OCLC 402038.
- ^ Ann Williams (2003). Æthelred the Unready: The Ill-Counselled King. London: Hambledon and London. pp. 54. ISBN 1-85258-382-4, OCLC 51780838. "It is usually assumed that this story relates to the St Brice's Day massacre …" (Page 55)
- ^ Simon Hall (1998). The Hutchinson Illustrated Encyclopedia of British History. Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers. pp. 297. ISBN 1-57958-107-2. "1002 St Brice's Day massacre; Danes in England were killed on order of King Ethelred." (Page 340)
- ^ Staff. Saint Brices Day massacre, Encyclopædia Britannica, Accessed 26 December 2007
- ^ Lucien Gubbay (1999). Sunlight and Shadow: The Jewish Experience of Islam. New York: Other Press. pp. 80. ISBN 1-892746-69-7. " It should be noted though that the Granada massacre of 1066 was the first instance of persecution of Jews in Muslim Spain, which had enjoyed an almost unblemished record of tolerance for the preceding 350 years." (Page 80)
- ^ Norman Roth (1994). Jews, Visigoths, and Muslims in Medieval Spain: Cooperation and Conflict. Netherlands: E. J. Brill. pp. 110. ISBN 90-04-09971-9. " Assuming that he was at least ten years old, however, it is again surprising that no more personal recollection of the Granada massacre is found in his writing…" (Page 110)
- ^ [[Richard Gottheil |Gottheil, Richard]]; [[Meyer Kayserling |Kayserling, Meyer]], Granada, G (1906 ed. ed.), Jewish Encyclopedia, http://jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=412&letter=G&search=Granada "More than 1,500 Jewish families, numbering 4,000 persons, fell in one day, Ṭebet 9 (= Dec. 30), 1066."
- ^ Daud, Abraham Ibd (2007). "On Samuel Ha-Nagid, Vizier of Granada, 993-d after 1056". Medieval Sourcebook. Paul Halsall. http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/ha-nagid.html. Retrieved on 2009-03-11. He was proud to his own hurt, and the Berber princes were jealous of him, with the result that on the Sabbath, on the 9th of Tebet in the year 4827 [Saturday, December 30, 1066], he and the Community of Granada were murdered.
- ^ The Cambridge Illustrated History of the Middle Ages: 950-1250. Cambridge University Press. 1986. pp. 507-508. ISBN 0521266451.
- ^ Lane A. Beck (1995). Regional Approaches to Mortuary Analysis. New York: Plenum Press. pp. 231. ISBN 0-306-44931-5.
- ^ Michal Strutin (1999). A Guide to Contemporary Plains Indians. Tucson, Arizona: Southwest Parks and Monuments Association. pp. 37. ISBN 1-877856-80-0.
- ^ a b Staff. The Crow Creek Massacre www.nebraskastudies.org
- ^ Staff, Crow Creek Massacre, University of South Dakota
- ^ Change and Development in the Middle East: essays in honour of W.B. Fisher, John Innes Clarke, Howard Bowen-Jones, 1981, p.290
- ^ The Heritage of Armenian Literature, A. J. (Agop Jack) Hacikyan, Nourhan Ouzounian, Gabriel Basmajian, Edward S. Franchuk, 2000, p.777
- ^ "Turkey" by Edward Shepherd Creasy, Page 195
- ^ Eric Solsten, ed. Cyprus: A Country Study. Washington: GPO for the Library of Congress, 1991.
- ^ Alastair Armstrong (2003). France, 1500-1715. London: Heinemann Education Publishers. pp. 65. ISBN 0435327518.
- ^ Reinhard Bendix (1978). Kings Or People: Power and the Mandate to Rule. Tucson, Arizona: University of California Press. pp. 324. ISBN 0-520-04090-2.
- ^ a b Staff. Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre, Columbia Encyclopedia, Questia Online Library
- ^ Staff, Massacre of Saint Bartholomews Day (French history), Encyclopædia Britannica, Accessed 23 December 2007
- ^ Saint Bartholomew's Day Massacre, CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA
- ^ Janell Broyles, A Timeline of the Jamestown Colony, p. 22, The Rosen Publishing Group, 2004
- ^ Alfred Abioseh Jarrett, The Impact of Macro Social Systems on Ethnic Minorities in the United States, Page 29, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2000
- ^ Bolton history
- ^ Lonely Planet
- ^ John Tincey, Marston Moor 1644: The Beginning Of The End: Osprey Publishing (March 11, 2003) ISBN 1841763349 p 33 "the `massacre at Bolton' became a staple of Parliamentarian propaganda"
- ^ a b [Mícheál Ó Siochrú/RTÉ ONE, Cromwell in Ireland Part 1. Broadcast 9/9/2008]
- ^ Oxford English Dictionary Cites "a1715 BP. G. BURNET Hist. Own Time (1734) II. 156 The Massacre in Glencoe, made still a great noise." and "1957 ‘H. MACDIARMID’ Battle Continues 1 Franco has made no more horrible shambles Than this poem of Campbell's, The foulest outrage his breed has to show Since the massacre of Glencoe!"
- ^ a b Glencoe, engraved by W. Miller after J.M.W. Turner, Edinburgh University library
- ^ Zobel, The Boston Massacre, W.W.Norton and Co.(1970), 199-200.
- ^ Boston Massacre - Britannica Online Encyclopedia
- ^ Boston Massacre
- ^ Kenn Harper A Day in Arctic History: July 17, 1771 — Slaughter at Bloody Falls, Nunatsiaq News, 29 July 2005
- ^ Robin McGrath. Samuel Hearne And The Inuit Oral Tradition, University of New Brunswick, libraries Accessed 23 December, 2007
- ^ Staff, Samuel Hearne and David Thompson, trekking in the footsteps, HighBeam Research, (From: Manitoba History Society| Date: 6/1/2005| Author: Binning, Alexander)
- ^ Bloody Falls, The Canadian Encyclopedia
- ^ a b Wright, Kevin W.. "OVERKILL: Revolutionary War Reminiscences of River Vale". Bergen County Historical Society. http://www.bergencountyhistory.org/Pages/baylormassacre.html. Retrieved on 2008-10-31.
- ^ a b "Gnadenhutten Massacre". Ohio History Central. http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/entry.php?rec=499. Retrieved on June 5, 2009.
- ^ J. Goodwin, Lords of the Horizons, p. 244, 1998, Henry Holt and Company, ISBN 0-8050-6342-0
- ^ Historywiz.com
- ^ David Andress, The Terror: The Merciless War for Freedom in Revolutionary France, Chapter 4, Macmillan, 2006
- ^ Dwyer, Phillip and McPhee, Peter (2002). The French Revolution and Napoleon: A Sourcebook. Routledge. pp. 66. ISBN 978-0415199070.
- ^ a b c "New plaque for massacre memorial", BBC, 17 August 2007. Retrieved 19 February 2008.
- ^ a b National Centre for History Education (Australia)
- ^ "Frontier Conflict: The Australian Experience", Bruce Elder, Sydney Morning Herald, March 29, 2003
- ^ "Myall Creek Massacre", Parliament of New South Wales Hansard, June 8, 2000
- ^ FAQ "What was the Haun's Mill Massacre?" - Brigham Young University website (abstracted from "Haun's Mill Massacre," in Encyclopedia of Mormonism, ed. Daniel H. Ludlow, New York: Macmillan, 1992)
- ^ Historical Record, Jenson, Vol. 7 & 8, p 671.
- ^ History of the Church, Vol. III, pp 182–186.
- ^ Gardner, P.D. (2001), Gippsland massacres: the destruction of the Kurnai tribes, 1800-1860, Ngarak Press, Essay, Victoria ISBN 1-875254-31-5
- ^ a b Gippsland Settlers and the Kurnai Dead - Patrick Morgan - Quadrant Magazine
- ^ Afghan and Northwest Border Wars 1834 to 1897
- ^ Summary: the First Anglo-Afghan War, 1838-42
- ^ Massacre of Elphinstone's army
- ^ a b Staff. Snake River Massacre Account by One of the Survivors, Oregon Historical Society, 2002.
- ^ Shannon, Donald H. (2004). The Boise Massacre. pp 73-102. Caldwell, ID: Snake Country Publishing. ISBN 0-9635828-1-X
- ^ Carleton, James Henry (1859), (Special Report on the Mountain Meadows Massacre, Washington: Government Printing Office (published 1902), http://books.google.com/books?id=MBYiwjNst6EC.
- ^ Thompson, Jacob (1860), Message of the President of the United States: communicating, in compliance with a resolution of the Senate, information in relation to the massacre at Mountain Meadows, and other massacres in Utah Territory, 36th Congress, 1st Session, Exec. Doc. No. 42, Washington, D.C.: U.S. Dept. of the Interior, http://www.archive.org/details/messageofpreside00unitrich.
- ^
- Bagley, Will (2002), Blood of the Prophets: Brigham Young and the Massacre at Mountain Meadows, Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press, ISBN 0-8061-3426-7.
- Brooks, Juanita (1950), Mountain Meadows Massacre, Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press, ISBN 0-8061-2318-4.
- Denton, Sally (2003), American Massacre: The Tragedy at Mountain Meadows, New York: Alfred A. Knopf, ISBN 0-375-41208-5.
- ^ Roger A. Hall. Performing the American Frontier, 1870-1906, Published by Cambridge University Press, 2001, ISBN 0521793203. p 93
- ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1889), The Works of Hubert Howe Bancroft: History of Utah, 1540–1886, San Francisco: History Company, LCC F826.B2 1889, LCCN 07018413, http://books.google.com/books?id=2OwNAAAAIAAJ(Chapter XX. pp-562-563) (Internet Archive versions).
- ^ Unruh, John D (1993). The Plains Across the Overland Emigrants and Trans-Mississippi West 1840-1860. University of Illinois Press. pp. 195. ISBN 978-0252063602.
- ^ Shannon, Donald H. (2004). The Boise Massacre. pp 177-196. Caldwell, ID: Snake Country Publishing. ISBN 0-9635828-1-X
- ^ Unruh, John D (1993). The Plains Across the Overland Emigrants and Trans-Mississippi West 1840-1860. University of Illinois Press. pp. 195. ISBN 978-0252063602.
- ^ Shannon, Donald H. (2004). The Boise Massacre. pp 197-222. Caldwell, ID: Snake Country Publishing. ISBN 0-9635828-1-X
- ^ Paludan, Philip S. 1981. Victims: A True Story of the Civil War. Knoxville, TN: The University of Tennessee Press. 144 p.
- ^ William Quantrill and the Lawrence Massacre
- ^ Lawrence (Kansas, United States)
- ^ The Bloodiest Man In American History
- ^ Erastus D. Ladd's Description of the Lawrence Massacre, by Russell E. Bidlack, Summer 1963
- ^ Chapter 14: American Military History, Volume I
- ^ "Inquiry into the Sand Creek Massacre, November, 1864." The Wynkoop Family Research Library. Rootsweb.com: Freepages. Retrieved on 2008-02-19.
- ^ Hoig, Stan. (1977). The Sand Creek Massacre. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-1147-6
- ^ Greenway, Paul. (2002). Bulgaria: Centuries of History Ripe for Discovery. P141. Lonely Planet. ISBN 1864501480
- ^ Bousfield, Jonathan. (2002). The Rough Guide to Bulgaria. P352. Rough Guides. ISBN 1858288827
- ^ Crampton, R.J. (2007). Bulgaria. P92. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198205147
- ^ 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica: Bulgaria, History
- ^ Ostler, Jeffrey, Conquest and the State, 65 Pacific Hist. Rev. 217, 248 n.52 (1996)(collecting estimates)
- ^ National Historic Landmarks Program: Wounded Knee National Park Service. Retrieved on 19 February 2008.
- ^ The Wounded Knee Massacre
- ^ Mark Twain, Weapons of Satire, pp. 168-178, Syracuse University Press, Syracuse, NY 1992
- ^ American Troops Killing Muslims: A Massacre to Remember, by Christine Gibson, AmericanHeritage.com, March 8, 2006
- ^ Byler, Charles A. Pacifying the Moros; Military Review, May-June, 2005
- ^ a b Staff. Radio 4: This Sceptred Isle: Empire: Amritsar, Episode 83 - 07/06/06, BBC,
- ^ a b Massacre-of-Amritsar, Encyclopædia Britannica, Accessed 15 February 2008
- ^ a b T. Ryle Dwyer, The Squad and the intelligence operations of Michael Collins, Dublin, 2005
- ^ David Leeson, "Death in the Afternoon: The Croke Park Massacre, 21 November 1920," Canadian Journal of History, vol. 38, no. 1 (April 2003)
- ^ Brent Staples, Unearthing, New York Times, Dec. 19, 1999
- ^ Id.
- ^ Tim Madigan, The Burning: Massacre, Destruction, and the Tulsa Race Riot of 1921 (2003)
- ^ The Tulsa Massacre! (June 1921) (pamphlet distributed by the Communist Party)http://marxists.anu.edu.au/history//usa/parties/cpusa/1921/06/0600-cpa-tulsamassacre.pdf
- ^ Federal Bureau of Investigation - Freedom of Information Privacy Act
- ^ Al Capone: Chicago's Most Infamous Mob Boss - The Crime library
- ^ a b Habib, Irfan (September – October 1997). "Civil Disobedience 1930-31". Social Scientist 25 (9–10): 43–66. doi:.
- ^ a b Johansen, Robert C. (1997). "Radical Islam and Nonviolence: A Case Study of Religious Empowerment and Constraint Among Pashtuns". Journal of Peace Research 34 (1): 53–71. doi:.
- ^ Honda Katsuichi, The Nanjing Massacre, M.E. Sharp 1998
- ^ Fordham University webpage: Modern History Sourcebook
- ^ Matthew White Nanking Massacre, Accessed 17 December 2007. Cites eight sources directly and another ten indirectly. Lowest estimate Spence, The Search for Modern China: 42,000. Highest estimate Iris Chang, The Rape of Nanking (1997), citing James Yin & Shi Young: 400,000
- ^ Justin Harmon Student-Run Conference to Examine Nanking Massacre, Princeton University, November 12, 1997
- ^ John Earl Haynes and Harvey Klehr. In Denial: Historians, Communism, and Espionage. Encounter Books, 2003. ISBN 1-893554-72-4 p. 22
- ^ Aleksandr Shelepin's March 3, 1959 note to Khrushchev, with information about the execution of 21,857 Poles and with the proposal to destroy their personal files. Online
- ^ Beria's March 1940 proposal to shoot 25,700 Poles from Kozelsk, Ostashkov, and Starobels camps, and from certain prisons of Western Ukraine and Belarus bearing Stalin's signature (among others). proposal online
- ^ Fischer, Benjamin B., "The Katyn Controversy: Stalin's Killing Field", Studies in Intelligence, Winter 1999–2000
- ^ Staff, Katyn Massacre, Encyclopædia Britannica, Accessed 23 December 2007
- ^ a b Robert Gellately. Lenin, Stalin, and Hitler: The Age of Social Catastrophe. Knopf, 2007 ISBN 1400040051 p. 391
- ^ (English) Richard Rhodes (2002). Masters of Death: The SS-Einsatzgruppen and the Invention of the Holocaust. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0-375-40900-9.
- ^ a b Staff. The Holocaust Chronicle: Massacre at Babi Yar, The Holocaust Chronicle web site, Access 17 December 2007
- ^ Victoria Khiterer (2004). "Babi Yar: The tragedy of Kiev's Jews" (PDF). Brandeis Graduate Journal 2: 1–16. http://www.brandeis.edu/gsa/gradjournal/2004/khiterer2004.pdf. Retrieved on 2008-01-20.
- ^ "A survivor of the Babi Yar massacre". Heritage: Civilization and the Jews. Public Broadcasting System (PBS). http://www.pbs.org/wnet/heritage/episode8/documents/documents_13.html. Retrieved on 2008-01-20.
- ^ Wolfram Wette (2006). The Wehrmacht: History, Myth, Reality. p. 112. "The massacre at Babi Yar, near Kiev, which claimed the lives of more than thirty thousand Jewish victims on September 29 and 30, 1941, was the largest single mass killing for which the German army was responsible during its campaign against the Soviet Union."
- ^ Jill Dougherty and Jim Bittermann (2001-06-25). "Pope visits Jewish massacre site". CNN. http://edition.cnn.com/2001/WORLD/europe/06/25/pope.babiyar/index.html. Retrieved on 2008-01-20.
- ^ a b Saff Fall of Ambon: Massacred at Laha, Australia's War 1939-145 An Australian government website.
- ^ Peter Stanley The defence of the 'Malay barrier': Rabaul and Ambon, January 1942 principal historian to Australian War Memorial
- ^ Times dispatch (March 28, 1953), Mau Mau Massacres 150 Natives In Night Raid Near Kenya Capital, New York Times, http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F30614F9345E177B93CAAB1788D85F478585F9
- ^ Stephen Corradini (1999). Chief Luka and the Lari Massacre: Contrary Notions of Kikuyu Land Tenure and the Mau Mau War. University of Wisconsin-Madison. ISBN 0942615492. http://books.google.com/books?id=7eIUAAAACAAJ.
- ^ a b Katerina Zachovalova. War Crime To War Game, Time, September 17
- ^ David Vaughan. The Lidice massacre - atrocity and courage website of Czech Radio, 11 June 2002
- ^ Lidice memorial
- ^ a b Staff, Italy convicts Nazis of massacre BBC, 13 January 2007
- ^ Richard Owen. Ten convicted for 1944 massacre, The Times, 15 January 2007
- ^ a b Oradour Info - Oradour-sur-Glane 10th June 1944
- ^ The Oradour-sur-Glane Massacre
- ^ The Second World War - The massacre at Oradour-sur-Glane
- ^ - Robin Mackness's book, 'Oradour Massacre and Aftermath'
- ^ Amazon - Massacre at Oradour - by Robin Mackness - ISBN 978-0394570020
- ^ Oxford Journals - Massacre at Oradour, France, 1944 by Stephanie Hare-Cuming
- ^ Martyred Village: Commemorating the 1944 Massacre at Oradour-sur-Glane. Sarah Farmer, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999. xvii + 300 pp. ISBN 978-0-520-21186-5.
- ^ The Malmedy Massacre Revisited - Henri Rogister, Joseph Dejardin et Emile Jamar - Website du C.R.I.B.A. (Centre de Recherches et d'Informations sur la Bataille des Ardennes) [1]
- ^ The Sharpeville Massacre - TIME
- ^ The Sharpeville Massacre - A watershed in South Africa
- ^ Alessandra Stanley, Russian General Campaigns On Old-Time Soviet Values The New York Times, 13 October 1995
- ^ Alexander Nikolaevich Yakovlev. A Century of Violence in Soviet Russia. Yale University Press, 2002. ISBN 0300087608 p. 228
- ^ Alexander Nikolaevich Yakovlev. A Century of Violence in Soviet Russia. Yale University Press, 2002. ISBN 0300087608 p. 226
- ^ a b Staff. Murder in the name of war - My Lai, BBC, 20 July 1998
- ^ Staff. The My Lai Massacre, PBS Online, 29 March 2005
- ^ Former Mexican president sheds light on 1968 massacre, CNN, 4 February 1998
- ^ a b Mexican Court Issues Warrant for Former President
- ^ Mexico Digs at Last for Truth About 1968 Massacre
- ^ a b John Lang (2000-05-04). "The day the Vietnam War came home". Scripps Howard News service. http://archive.southcoasttoday.com/daily/04-00/04-30-00/a09wn031.htm. Retrieved on 2007-11-09.
- ^ "These would be the first of many probes into what soon became known as the Kent State Massacre. Like the Boston Massacre almost exactly two hundred years before (March 5, 1770), which it resembled, it was called a massacre not for the number of its victims but for the wanton manner in which they were shot down." Philip Caputo (2005-05-04). "The Kent State Shootings, 35 Years Later". NPR. http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4630596. Retrieved on 2007-11-09.
- ^ Rep. Tim Ryan (2007-05-04). "Congressman Tim Ryan Gives Speech at 37th Commemoration of Kent State Massacre". Congressional website of Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio). http://timryan.house.gov/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=160&Itemid=48. Retrieved on 2007-11-09.
- ^ a b "In what became known as the Lod Airport Massacre three members of the terrorist group, Japanese Red Army, arrived at the airport aboard an Air France flight from Paris. Once inside the airport they grabbed automatic firearms from their carry-on cases and fired at airport staff and visitors. In the end, 26 people died and 80 people were injured." CBC News, The Fifth Estate, "Fasten Your Seatbelts: Ben Gurion Airport in Israel", 2007. Accessed June 2, 2008.
- ^ "The short-term impact of the Lod Airport massacre as a precursor to Munich..." Stephen Sloan, John C. Bersia, J. B. Hill. Terrorism: The Present Threat in Context, Berg Publisher, 2006, p. 50. ISBN 1845203445
- ^ "Two years later, just before the Lod Airport massacre, authorities uncovered the bodies of 14 young men and women on remote Mount Haruna, 70 miles northwest of Tokyo." "Again the Red Army", TIME, August 18, 1975.
- ^ "Those named by Lebanese officials as having been arrested included at least three Red Army members who have been wanted for years by Japanese authorities, most notably Kozo Okamoto, 49, the only member of the attacking group who survived the Lod Airport massacre." "Lebanon Seizes Japanese Radicals Sought in Terror Attacks", The New York Times, February 19, 1997.
- ^ "They were responsible for the Lod Airport massacre in Israel in 1972, which was committed on behalf of the PFLP." Jeffrey D. Simon, The Terrorist Trap: America's Experience with Terrorism, Indiana University Press, p. 324. ISBN 0253214777
- ^ CBS News (2002-09-05), Munich Massacre Remembered, http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/09/05/world/main520865.shtml.
- ^ Wolff, Alexander (2002), "When The Terror Began", Time Magazine (Sep. 2, 2002), http://www.time.com/time/europe/magazine/2002/0902/munich/index.html.
- ^ Sources describing the event as a "massacre":
- "The day after the Ma'alot massacre, condemned by Pope Paul VI and most Western leaders as "an evil outrage," ..." Frank Gervasi. Thunder Over the Mediterranean, McKay, 1975, p. 443.
- "The previous day Israel had been traumatized by the Ma'alot massacre, which had resulted in the deaths of numerous schoolchildren." William B. Quandt. Peace Process: American Diplomacy and the Arab-Israeli Conflict Since 1967, Brookings Institution Press, 2001, p. 432.
- "Faced with a public outcry over the Ma'alot massacre, they demanded of Syria a pledge to forbid terrorist to cross the Golan into Israel." Milton Viorst. Sands of Sorrow: Israel's Journey from Independence, I.B.Tauris, 1987, p. 192.
- "...Organization (PLO) crimes, like the massacre of Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympic Games in 1972 and the Ma'alot massacre of children in 1974." Richard J. Chasdi. Tapestry of Terror: A Portrait of Middle East Terrorism, 1994-1999, Lexington Books, 2002, p. 6.
- "The PFLP was responsible for the Ma'alot massacre on May IS, 1974 during which 22 Israeli children were killed." Alex Peter Schmid, A. J. Jongman, Michael Stohl. Political Terrorism: A New Guide to Actors, Authors, Concepts, Data Bases, Theories, & Literature, Transaction Publishers, 2005, p. 639.
- "On 22 November 1974, six months after the Ma'alot massacre, the United Nations General Assembly voted to accept the Palestine Liberation Organisation as an..." Martin Gilbert. The Jews in the Twentieth Century: An Illustrated History, Schocken Books, 2001, p. 327.
- ^ a b c Khoury, Jack. "U.S. filmmakers plan documentary on Ma'alot massacre", Haaretz, March 07, 2007.
- ^ Donna Carton (11 December 2005). "Miami Showband massacre files to stay under wraps". Sunday Mirror. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4161/is_20051211/ai_n15919127. Retrieved on 2008-02-05.
- ^ "Miami Showband massacre remembered". BreakingNews.ie. 30 July 2005. http://archives.tcm.ie/breakingnews/2005/07/30/story214127.asp. Retrieved on 2008-02-05.
- ^ "Miami Showband Memorial Unveiled". 4NI.co.uk. 10 December 2007. http://www.4ni.co.uk/northern_ireland_news.asp?id=69567. Retrieved on 2008-02-05.
- ^ "Ahern unveils Miami Showband memorial". The Irish Times. 10 December 2007. http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/breaking/2007/1210/breaking46.html. Retrieved on 2008-02-05.
- ^ Dillon, Martin (1991). The Dirty War. Arrow Books. pp. 174. ISBN 978-0099845201.
- ^ a b Staff. 1976: Ten dead in Northern Ireland ambush, BBC, On this days series (5 January) (Accessed 23 December 2007)
- ^ Sam Knight and agencies, Ulster lukewarm about unsolved murders probe, The Times, 20 January 2006
- ^ a b Staff. (Accessed 17 May 2009)
- ^ Friedman, New York Times, Sep 20, 21, 26, 27, 1982
- ^ a b "Among the most notorious attacks was the coastal road massacre in Israel in March 1978. The attack left 35 civilians dead and 80 wounded." Ben Gad, Yitschak. Politics, Lies, and Videotape, Shapolsky Publishers, 1991, ISBN 1561710156, p. 94.
- ^ "1978, March 11. The Coastal Road Massacre" Richard Ernest Dupuy, Trevor Nevitt Dupuy. The Encyclopedia of Military History from 3500 B.C. to the Present, Harper & Row, 1986, ISBN 0061812358, p. 1362.
- ^ "Operation Litani is launched in retaliation for that month's Coastal Road massacre." Gregory S. Mahler. Politics and Government in Israel: The Maturation of a Modern State, Rowman & Littlefield, 2004, ISBN 0742516113, p. 259.
- ^ "So did the Coastal Road massacre of 1978, in which a POLO hijacking of an intercity bus ended with the deaths of thirty-five Israeli hostages." Binyamin Netanyahu. A Durable Peace: Israel and Its Place Among the Nations, Warner Books, 2000, ISBN 0446523062, p. 218.
- ^ Yemeni father's school slaughter, The Independent (March 31, 1997)
- ^ Friedman, Thomas L., From Beirut to Jerusalem, (Macmillan, 1991), 76-105.
- ^ a b Rory Carroll. Saddam trial to open with village massacre, the Guardian, June 7, 2005
- ^ Staff. Documents Link Saddam To Massacre, Al Jazeera, March 3, 2006 cites source as Reuters
- ^ Robert Fisk Another war on terror. Another proxy army. Another mysterious massacre. And now, after 19 years, perhaps the truth at last..., The Independent 28 November, 2001
- ^ Cilina Nasser. Sharon role in massacre remembered, Al Jazeera, 5 March 2006
- ^ Amal Hamdan Remembering Sabra and Shatila, Al Jazeera, 16 September, 2003
- ^ Unofficial biography of Alan Garcia. Alan Garcia life and work. Alan Garcia contributions
- ^ a b Notorious Peruvian School of the Americas Graduates
- ^ RIGHTS-PERU: Time Is of the Essence in Extradition of War Criminal
- ^ Staff. On this day August 19: 1987: Gunman kills 14 in Hungerford rampage, BBC,
- ^ "'Ryan shot at me, then at my mother'". The Daily Telegraph. 7 December 2004. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml?xml=/arts/2004/12/07/fthung07.xml. Retrieved on 2008-02-19.
- ^ "Michael Stone: Loyalist icon". CNN. 24 November 2006. http://edition.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/europe/11/24/michael.stone/. Retrieved on 2008-03-06.
- ^ "Stone Murdered At Funeral". Sky News. 24 November 2006. http://news.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,30000-1241896,00.html. Retrieved on 2008-03-06.
- ^ CSN warns Americans about the AP's "climb down" on Tiananmen numbers, CSN, 18 May 2004
- ^ Kelly Barth (2003). The Tiananmen Square Massacre. Greenhaven Press. ISBN 0737711760. http://books.google.com/books?id=So8CAAAACAAJ.
- ^ Chu-Yuan Cheng (1990). Behind the Tiananmen Massacre: Social, Political, and Economic Ferment in China. Westview Press. ISBN 0813310474. http://books.google.com/books?id=-agVAgAACAAJ.
- ^ Buchignani, Walter (1989-12-08). "Amid the tragedy, miracles of survival". The Gazette, Montreal. pp. A3.
- ^ Rathjen, Heidi; Charles Montpetit (1999). December 6th: From the Montreal Massacre to Gun Control. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart. ISBN 0-771061-25-0.
- ^ Rakobowchuk, Peter (September 14, 2006). "Lessons learned from 1989 Montreal massacre help save lives at Dawson college". Canadian Press. http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Canada/2006/09/14/1839448-ap.html. Retrieved on 2006-12-28.
- ^ a b "UTHR(J) report on the Eastern University Massacre". http://www.uthr.org/Reports/Report7/chapter4.htm#h.
- ^ "Graveyard for Disappeared Persons – Statistic for Batticaloa district". http://www.disappearances.org/mainfile.php/frep_sl_ne/78/Cyberspace.
- ^ "HRW report - Sri Lanka". Human Rights Watch. http://www.hrw.org/wr2k2/asia10.html. Retrieved on 2007-02-02.
- ^ a b Hoole, Ranjan (2001). Sri Lanka: The Arrogance of Power : Myths, Decadence & Murder. University Teachers for Human Rights. ISBN 9-5594-4704-1. p.378-397
- ^ a b Lawrence, Patricia (2001). The Ocean of Stories; Children's Imagination, Creativity, and Reconciliation in Eastern Sri Lanka. International Centre for Ethnic Studies. ISBN 9-5558-0076-6. p.40
- ^ McDermott (edit), Rachel Fell (2008). Encountering Kali: In the Margins, at the Center, in the West. University of California Press. ISBN 0-5202-3240-2. p.121
- ^ Hoole, Ranjan. "The massacre at Sathurukondan: 9th September 1990". University Teachers for Human Rights. http://www.uthr.org/Reports/Report8/chapter2.htm#c. Retrieved on 2009-01-26.
- ^ Caron, Cynthia (March 15-21, 2003). "Floundering Peace Process: Need to Widen Participation". Economic and Political Weekly (Economic and Political weekly) 38 (11): 1029-1031. http://www.jstor.org/pss/4413336. Retrieved on 2009-01-26.
- ^ Hayes, Thomas C (1991-10-17). "Gunman Kills 22 and Himself in Texas Cafeteria". The New York Times. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=travel&res=9C04E3D8113BF934A25753C1A967958260. Retrieved on 2007-08-15.
- ^ Croatia massacre trial under way", BBC News, 11 October 2005
- ^ Vukovar massacre: What happened", BBC News, 13 June 2003
- ^ ICTY Indictment
- ^ New York Times: Serbian Court Finds 14 Guilty in '91 Massacre of Croatians
- ^ Letter from the Charge d'affaires a.i. of the Permanent Mission of Azerbaijan to the United Nations Office
- ^ Human Rights Watch / Helsinki. Azerbaijan: Seven Years of Conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh. New York. 1994.
- ^ Thomas De Waal, Black Garden: Armenia and Azerbaijan through Peace and War, NYU Press, 2004, ISBN 0-8147-1945-7. Chapter 11. August 1991 – May 1992: War Breaks Out.
- ^ TIME Magazine - Tragedy Massacre in Khojaly
- ^ Ethnic Cleansing in Progress, War in Nagorno Karabakh, by Caroline Cox and John Eibner, Institute for Religious Minorities in the Islamic World, Zurich, London, Washington, 1993
- ^ Christianity Today Article
- ^ http://www.google.com/search?q=%22brown%27s+chicken+massacre%22
- ^ Ian Starrett (2003-10-30). "Greysteel massacre turned trick or treat into a night of horror". The News Letter (Belfast, Northern Ireland). http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-109427409.html. Retrieved on 2008-01-28.
- ^ "'I feared my brother had been killed'- horror of Greysteel massacre recalled". Derry Journal. 2007-02-27. http://www.derryjournal.com/journal/39I-feared-my-brother-had.2081275.jp. Retrieved on 2008-01-28.
- ^ "Victims’ relatives criticise MLA". The Irish News. 2007-10-22. http://www.irishnews.com/page.asp?tser=ser&sid=570517. Retrieved on 2008-01-28.
- ^ "The leaders of one tribe now represent the hopes of another". Irish Examiner. 2007-03-13. http://archives.tcm.ie/irishexaminer/2007/03/13/story27578.asp. Retrieved on 2008-01-28.
- ^ Sales, Rosemary (1997). Women Divided: Gender, Religion and Politics in Northern Ireland. Routledge. pp. 192. ISBN 978-0415137652.
- ^ Lister, David and Jordan, Hugh (2004). Mad Dog: The Rise And Fall of Johnny Adair and 'C Company'. Mainstream Publishing. pp. 173. ISBN 978-1-84018-890-5.
- ^ McDonand, Henry and Cusack, Jim (2004). UDA: Inside The Heart of Loyalist Terror. Penguin Books. pp. 251. ISBN 978-1844880201.
- ^ Tom Hennigan, Tribe flees to escape contact with world, The Times, May 18, 2005
- ^ James Brooke, Brazil's Outrage Intensifies As Toll in Massacre Hits 73, The New York Times, August 23, 1993
- ^ Worldpress.org May 14, 2002
- ^ United Nations Report of the Special Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting the Human Rights of the Palestinian People and Other Arabs of the Occupied Territories, 23 September 2002
- ^ Aljazeera.net February 15, 2005
- ^ Piven, Jeremy S. (2002). Terror and Apocalypse Psychological Undercurrents of History, Volume II. Writer's Showcase Press. pp. 179. ISBN 978-0595218745.
- ^ Hoffman, Bruce (1999). Insider Terrorism. Columbia University Press. pp. 103. ISBN 978-0231114691.
- ^ "Members of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad Arrested, Charged with Racketeering and Conspiracy to Provide Support to Terrorists", United States Department of Justice, February 20, 2003. "...1995 murder of 22 people in a double suicide bombing at Beit Lid, Israel...".\
- ^ "But after the Beit Lid massacre, the government approved the construction and sale of 4000 units in occupied land around Jerusalem." Beyer, Lisa. "Can Peace Survive", Time, February 06, 1995.
- ^ "When Arafat called Rabin to express his condolences on the Beit Lid massacre, the prime minister was understandably furious." Karsh, Efraim, Arafat's War: The Man and His Battle for Israeli Conquest, Grove Press, 2003, p. 116. ISBN 0802117589
- ^ "The reaction of peace processors in Jerusalem and Washington to the Beit Lid massacre, in which Islamic suicide bombers wiped out a score of Israelis, has been shock, anger, sorrow -- but a determination that terrorist attacks not be allowed to stop the peace process." Safire, William. "Essay; Responding to Terror", The New York Times, January 26, 1995.
- ^ "President Ezer Weizman, a super-dove who initially supported the agreement wholeheartedly, called for a temporary suspension of talks following the Beit Lid massacre on January 22 and again after the February 6 killing in Gaza." Bar-Ilan, David. "Rain of terror - Israeli politics", National Review, March 6, 1995, p. 2.
- ^ a b Udo Ludwig and Ansgar Mertin, Srebrenica Massacre Survivors Sue Netherlands, United Nations Der Spiegel, June 5, 2007.
- ^ Marlise Simons, Court Declares Bosnia Killings Were Genocide The New York Times, February 26, 2007. A copy of the ICJ judgement can be found here
- ^ "BBC news article, on this day (13th March)". http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/march/13/newsid_2543000/2543277.stm.
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- ^ a b "Alleged Passover massacre plotter arrested", CNN, March 26, 2008.
- ^ Ohad Gozani, "Hotel blast survivors relive the Passover massacre", The Daily Telegraph, 29/03/2002.
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- ^ "They faced stiff resistance from Palestinian gunmen who began preparing the camp's defenses as early as the Passover massacre in Netanya..." Todd C. Helmus, Russell W. Glenn. Steeling the Mind: Combat Stress Reactions and Their Implications for Urban Warfare Rand Corporation, 2005, ISBN 0833037021, p. 58.
- ^ "It can therefore be asked whether the 'human bomb' offensive starting with the Passover massacre on 27 March 2002..." Brigitte L. Nacos, "The Terrorist Calculus Behind 9-11: A Model for Future Terrorism?" in Gus Martin. The New Era of Terrorism: Selected Readings, Sage Publications Inc, 2004, ISBN0761988734, p. 176.
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- ^ BBC NEWS | Europe | Beslan mothers' futile quest for relief

