Aden Emergency
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Aden Emergency
Summary
Aden Emergency is an insurgency[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 15 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Aden Emergency's instance of is recorded as insurgency[3].
- Aden Emergency's instance of is recorded as rebellion[4].
- The location of Aden Emergency was Federation of South Arabia[5].
- The location of Aden Emergency was Protectorate of South Arabia[6].
- Aden Emergency is part of Cold War[7].
- Aden Emergency's Commons category is recorded as Aden Emergency[8].
- Aden Emergency began on October 14, 1963[9].
- Aden Emergency ended on November 30, 1967[10].
- Aden Emergency occurred on November 30, 1967[11].
- Among those involved in Aden Emergency was Federation of South Arabia[12].
- Among those involved in Aden Emergency was British Empire[13].
- Among those involved in Aden Emergency was National Liberation Front[14].
- A participant in Aden Emergency was Front for the Liberation of Occupied South Yemen[15].
- A participant in Aden Emergency was Egypt[16].
- Among those involved in Aden Emergency was Harold Wilson[17].
- A participant in Aden Emergency was Colin Campbell Mitchell[18].
- Among those involved in Aden Emergency was Michael Beetham[19].
- Among those involved in Aden Emergency was Yemen Republic[20].
- Among those involved in Aden Emergency was Qahtan al-Shaabi[21].
- Among those involved in Aden Emergency was Michael Le Fanu[22].
- Among those involved in Aden Emergency was Gamal Abdel Nasser[23].
- Aden Emergency's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Aden Emergency[24].
- Aden Emergency resulted in {'amount': '+2096'} deaths[25].
Body
When and Where
Aden Emergency occurred on November 30, 1967[11]. It began on October 14, 1963[9]. It ended on November 30, 1967[10]. Recorded location include Federation of South Arabia[5] and Protectorate of South Arabia[6].
Context
Aden Emergency is part of Cold War[7]. Recorded instance of include insurgency[3] and rebellion[4].
Participants
Recorded participant include Federation of South Arabia[12], British Empire[13], National Liberation Front[14], Front for the Liberation of Occupied South Yemen[15], Egypt[16], and Harold Wilson[17].
Outcome and Impact
Aden Emergency resulted in {'amount': '+2096'} deaths[25].
Why It Matters
Aden Emergency has Wikipedia articles in 15 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2] It is known by 6 alternative names across languages and contexts.[26]