Yonderian Peasants' War: Difference between revisions

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=== In culture ===
=== In culture ===
The Yonderian Peasants' War has featured heavily in Yonderian culture, particularly after the advent of Yonderian national romanticism in the nineteenth century. The marching songs of the rebels remain popular drinking songs in Gothic-speaking [[Yonderre]] in particular. Notably, [[Dom Martinez]] recorded ''Don Martinez sings rebel songs of the Peasants' War'' in 1953 which became a cultural phenomenon in [[Yonderre]] and rekindled interest in the conflict in the general public. Many films and TV series have been made about the Yonderian Peasants' War. The rebel leaders and particularly [[Fabian Löwenschiold]] are paradoxically revered as martyrs to the causes of both the far left Yonderian Workers' Party and the far right Gothic People's Party.
The Yonderian Peasants' War has featured heavily in Yonderian culture, particularly after the advent of Yonderian national romanticism in the nineteenth century. The marching songs of the rebels remain popular drinking songs in Gothic-speaking [[Yonderre]] in particular. Notably, [[Dom Martinez]] recorded ''Don Martinez sings rebel songs of the Peasants' War'' in 1953 which became a cultural phenomenon in [[Yonderre]] and rekindled interest in the conflict in the general public. Many films and TV series have been made about the Yonderian Peasants' War. The rebel leaders and particularly [[Fabian Löwenschiold]] are paradoxically revered as martyrs to the causes of both the far left Yonderian Workers' Party and the far right Gothic People's Party. Playwright [[Hieronymus d'Olbourg]] wrote ''Löwenschiold'' in 1835 during the [[Yonderian Golden Age]], a play centred on the events of the Yonderian Peasants' War with Löwenschiold as the protagonist.


Communist thinker [[Thibaut de Berre]] interpreted the war as a case in which an emerging proletariat urban class failed to assert a sense of its own autonomy in the face of dukely power and left the rural classes to their fate. From this he extrapolated that the war was in fact a very early example of a communist uprising, albeit a failed one and one that caused great damage to the cause.
Communist thinker [[Thibaut de Berre]] interpreted the war as a case in which an emerging proletariat urban class failed to assert a sense of its own autonomy in the face of dukely power and left the rural classes to their fate. From this he extrapolated that the war was in fact a very early example of a communist uprising, albeit a failed one and one that caused great damage to the cause.
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