Tax riot
Tax riots are a form of popular protest that was common during the Ancien Régime,, and the 19th century. They were characterized by direct collective action to prevent the collection of taxes.
Characteristics
The form and contents of tax riots varied depending on the type of tax levying that the rioters were resisting. The most common were defensive riots against tax, either from the absolutist state or from the new centralized states of the Napoleonic system in the 19th century. People frequently identified innovation with illegitimacy, and opponents of the regime could allege that the innovations were designed to increase the tax burden.There have also been tax rebellions in which the population took advantage of a revolutionary situation to attack offensively and en masse, for example, the manorial records in which feudal tax obligations were recorded. Such actions were frequent during the Reign of Terror in the French Revolution. Sometimes, rebellions with anti-tax components, such as the Boston Tea Party, provoked or emerged from more general revolutionary processes.