Battle of the Lucky Luiyk: Difference between revisions

From AnarWiki
m (Text replacement - "<references />" to "")
m (Text replacement - "\{\{Infobox_event(.*?)\}\}" to "")
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Infobox_event|title = Battle of the Lucky Luiyk|image = Krakersellen.JPG|imagecaption = Tram 10 caught fire during the riots after the evacuation of the 'Lucky Luyck' on Jan Luyckenstraat, credit to Maurice Boyer Photographer|date = October 1980|location = Amsterdam, Netherlands}}The '''Battle of the Lucky Luiyk''' was a [[List of Libertarian Socialist Revolutions|squatter uprising]] led by the [[kraakers]] in Amsterdam, [[Netherlands]] in [[Timeline of Libertarian Socialism in Western Europe|1980]]. Squatters fought against police and neo-fascists in the streets, and while able to successfully repel the fascists, the police succeeded in evicting them. The notable arson of a [[Transportation|streetcar]] began to set public opinion against the previously popular kraakens.<ref>[[Georgy Katsiaficas]], [[The Subversion of Politics]], pages 112</ref>
The '''Battle of the Lucky Luiyk''' was a [[List of Libertarian Socialist Revolutions|squatter uprising]] led by the [[kraakers]] in Amsterdam, [[Netherlands]] in [[Timeline of Libertarian Socialism in Western Europe|1980]]. Squatters fought against police and neo-fascists in the streets, and while able to successfully repel the fascists, the police succeeded in evicting them. The notable arson of a [[Transportation|streetcar]] began to set public opinion against the previously popular kraakens.<ref>[[Georgy Katsiaficas]], [[The Subversion of Politics]], pages 112</ref>


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 18:17, 2 April 2024

The Battle of the Lucky Luiyk was a squatter uprising led by the kraakers in Amsterdam, Netherlands in 1980. Squatters fought against police and neo-fascists in the streets, and while able to successfully repel the fascists, the police succeeded in evicting them. The notable arson of a streetcar began to set public opinion against the previously popular kraakens.[1]

References