In 1806 the soldiers of the Vellore cantonment rebelled when William Bentinck, the Governor of Madras decreed that the native soldiers should abandon all caste marks.
In the weeks leading up to coup, Saprang openly mobilised soldiers and northern residents to rebel against the government.
In response, the citizens and soldiers of Ravenna rebelled, making one George the son of Johannicus their leader, whose father was one of the captives taken to Constantinople.
After his soldiers rebelled against him in 1820, in failing health and fearing assassination, Christophe committed suicide.
Reflecting military unrest, 60 soldiers rebelled in January, briefly seizing the commander of Venezuela's military police as a hostage.
When Phocion decided to attack them, the Athenian soldiers had already rebelled against his command as strategos.
Housing Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer, also a reserve general, said they incite soldiers to "rebel against the Government."
But as trials began to reach further down the chain of command, soldiers rebelled.
His own soldiers would rebel against such a command.
White police officers and soldiers have not rebelled.