Category
page 117th-century rebels
James Scott, 1st Duke of Monmouth
English nobleman and soldier (1649–1685)

Zumbi
Zumbi ( – November 20, 1695), also known as Zumbi dos Palmares (), was a Brazilian quilombola leader and one of the pioneers of resistance to enslavement of Africans by the Portuguese in colonial Brazil. He was also the last of the kings of the Quilombo dos Palmares, a settlement of Afro-Brazilian people who liberated themselves from enslavement in the present-day state of Alagoas, Brazil. He is revered in Afro-Brazilian culture as a symbol of African freedom.

Masaniello
thumb|200px|Masaniello is one of the most popular figures in Neapolitan tradition. Contemporary portrait by Onofrio Palumbo
Ivan Bolotnikov
Russian rebellion leader
Ganga Zumba
King of Quilombo dos Palmares
Dandara dos Palmares
17th-century Brazilian freed slave and warrior
Felim O'Neill of Kinard
Irish nobleman, a leader of the Irish Rebellion of 1641
Aleksander Kryczyński
Henrietta Wentworth, 6th Baroness Wentworth
British Baroness (1660-1686)
Benkos Biohó
slave rebel of the Kingdom of New Granada

Zacimba Gaba
african princess, quilombola leader
Tamblot
Tamblot ( 1621–1622) was the name given to a babaylan (a Visayan term for mediums and religious leaders in the Philippines' pre-colonial and early colonial periods) who incited a series of uprisings against Spanish colonial rule in the island of Bohol. Indigenous religions and beliefs played a huge part behind the revolts' inception as Roman Catholicism spread throughout the Philippine archipelago, a process which many of its inhabitants rejected in favor of their local customs. A few uprisings in the early colonial era such as this one were thus motivated in part by resistance against the pre