Massacre
433. Massacre (See also Genocide.)
- Acre after conquering city, Richard I executed 2700 Muslims (1191). [Eur. Hist.: Bishop, 83–84]
- Armenian Massacre Turks decimated Armenian population, dispersed survivors (1896). [Eur. Hist.: EB, I: 525]
- Bloody Sunday seeking audience with Czar, workers receive bullets instead (1905). [Russ. Hist.: EB, II: 93]
- Boston Massacre skirmish between British troops and Boston crowd (1770). [Am. Hist.: EB, II: 180]
- Charge of the Light Brigade Russians massacre English cavalry at Balaklava (1854). [Eur. Hist.: NCE, 212; Br. Lit.: Benét, 186]
- Fetterman Massacre party of 80 frontiersmen ambushed by Indians (1886). [Am. Hist.: NCE, 942]
- Goliad 300 slain by Santa Ana in wake of Alamo (1836). [Am. Hist.: Van Doren, 155]
- Guernica bombing of Guernica (1937); memorialized by Picasso’s painting. [Span. Hist.: NCE, 1158; Art Hist.: Osborne, 867]
- Holy Innocents infant boys massacred in Bethlehem under Herod. [O.T.: Matthew 2:16–18]
- jawbone of ass with this, Samson kills 1000 men. [O.T.: Judges 15:15]
- Katyn Massacre mass murder of 4250 Polish officers during WWII (c. 1939). [Polish Hist.: NCE, 1457]
- Lawrence, Kansas Union stronghold where Quantrill’s Confederate band killed more than 150 people (1863). [Am. Hist.: EB, VIII: 338]
- Massacre of Glencoe treated hospitably, king’s men attempt annihilation of MacDonald clan (1692). [Br. Hist.: Brewer Note-Book, 567]
- Munich Olympics ‘72 Arab terrorists brutally killed 11 Israeli athletes. [Jew. Hist.: Wigoder, 462]
- My Lai Massacre murder of 22 Vietnamese villagers by American troops under Lt. William Calley, Jr. (1968). [Am. Hist.: Facts (1973) 145]
- ox-goad using this weapon, Shamgar slew 600 Philistines. [O.T.: Judges 3:31]
- Sicilian Vespers massacre of French (Angevins) by Sicilian nationals (1282). [Ital. Hist.: NCE, 2511]
- St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre thousands of French Huguenots murdered for their faith (1572). [Fr. Hist.: EB, VII: 775]
- St. Valentine’s Day Massacre murder of seven members of a gang of bootleggers in Chicago (1929). [Am. Hist.: EB, VII : 797]
- third of May (1808) Murat’s squads executed hundreds of Spanish citizens; memorialized in Goya’s painting. [Sp. Hist. and Sp. Art: Daniel, 220]
- Whitman Massacre murder of missionary Marcus Whitman and family by Cayuse Indians (1847). [Am. Hist.: NCE, 2972]
- Wounded Knee scene of the slaughter of 200 Sioux Indians (1890). [Am. Hist.: Van Doren, 306]
- Wyoming Massacre colonial militia butchered by Tory-Indian force (1776). [Am. Hist.: Jameson, 564]
massacre
mas·sa·cre / ˈmasikər/ • n. an indiscriminate and brutal slaughter of people: the attack was described as a cold-blooded massacre | she says he is an accomplice to massacre. ∎ inf. a heavy defeat of a sports team or contestant.• v. [tr.] deliberately and violently kill (a large number of people). ∎ inf. inflict a heavy defeat on (a sports team or contestant).
massacre
See also Massacre of St Bartholomew, Massacre of Glencoe, Peterloo massacre.
Massacre
Massacre ★½ 1934
That would be what the cavalry frequently did to the Indians. Joe Thunder Horse (miscast Barthelmess) is a Sioux who has been appearing in a Wild West show. He learns his father is dying and returns to the reservation, only to see how his people have been mistreated by the corrupt agents of the Bureau of Indian Affairs. So he goes to Washington to protest. 70m/B VHS . Richard Barthelmess, Ann Dvorak, Dudley Digges, Sidney Toler, Claire Dodd, Henry O'Neill, Robert Barrat, Arthur Hohl; D: Alan Crosland; W: Ralph Block, Sheridan Gibney; C: George Barnes.