Online Encyclopedia

REBECCA RIOTS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 950 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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REBECCA RIOTS  , the name given to some disturbances which occurred in 1843 in the counties of

Pembroke, Carmarthen, Glamorgan, Cardigan and Radnor, after a slight outbreak of the same nature four years previously . During a period of exceptional
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distress the rioting was caused mainly by the heavy charges at the toll-gates on the public roads in South Wales, and the rioters took as their motto the words in Genesis
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xxiv . 6o, " And they blessed Rebekah, and said unto her, Thou
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art our
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sister, be thou the
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mother of thousands of millions, and let thy seed possess the
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gate of those which hate them." Many of the rioters were disguised as
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women and were on horseback; each
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band was led by a captain called " Rebecca," his followers being known as " her daughters." They destroyed not only the gates but also the toll-houses, and the
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work was carried out suddenly and at
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night, but usually without violence to the toll-keepers, who were allowed to depart with their belongings . Emboldened by success, a large band of rioters marched into the
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town of Carmarthen on the loth of
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June and attacked the workhouse, but on this occasion they were dispersed by a troop of cavalry which had hurried from
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Cardiff . The Rebeccaites soon became more violent and dangerous . They turned their attention to other grievances, real or fancied, connected with the
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system of
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land-holding, the administration of justice and other matters, and a state of terrorism quickly prevailed in the
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district . Under these circumstances the government despatched a large number of soldiers and a strong
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body of
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London police to South Wales, and the disorder was soon at an end . In
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October a commission was sent down to inquire into the causes of the riots . It was found that the grievances had a genuine basis;
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measures of
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relief were introduced, and South Wales was relieved from the burden of toll-gates, while the few rioters who were captured were only lightly punished .

End of Article: REBECCA RIOTS
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REBEC, or REBECK (Med. Fr. rubebe, rebelle, rebec, ...
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