Bloody Sunday
Bloody Sunday and Bloody Sunday is the following historical events
in Central Europe:
- 1909 - Blood Sunday in Hanover after demonstrations by the workers against the three-class suffrage in January 1909
- 1919 - Blood Sunday in Marburg
- 1921 - Blood Sunday in Bolzano (South Tyrol)
- 1923 - Blood Sunday in Düsseldorf
- 1924 - Blood Sunday in Halle
- 1926 - Bloody Sunday (Colmar)
- 1930 - Bloody Sunday (Bonn)
- 1932 - Blood Sunday in Altona
- 1932 - Simmering Bloody Sunday
- 1933 - Eisleber Bloody Sunday
- 1939 - Bloody Sunday in Bydgoszcz (Poland)
- 1941 - Bloody Sunday of Stanislau (Eastern Galicia, now Western Ukraine)
- 1945 - Aussiger Bloody Sunday (Northern Bohemia, now the Czech Republic)
- 1952 - Essen Blood Sunday
in Great Britain and Ireland:
- 1887 - Bloody Sunday (London)
- 1920 - Bloody Sunday (Ireland 1920) in Dublin
- 1921 - Bloody Sunday in Belfast, Northern Ireland, see Belfast Riots 1920–1922
- 1972 - Bloody Sunday (Northern Ireland 1972) in Derry
in other regions:
- 1905 - Blood Sunday in Petersburg (Russia)
- 1965 - Bloody Sunday in Alabama, see Selma to Montgomery Marches #The First March
- 1969 - Bloody Sunday (Turkey)
- 1991 - Blood Sunday in Vilnius (Lithuania)
as film title:
- Bloody Sunday , alternative title from Ultrà , Italian film (1990), see Ultra (film)