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Outlaw



 
 
An outlaw or bandit is a person living the lifestyle of outlawry; the word literally means "outside the law
LAW

LAW may refer to:* Anti-tank warfare, e.g. the US Army M72 LAW or the British Army LAW 80*Palestinian Society for the Protection of Human Rights ...
", by folk-etymology from the original meaning "laid outside" of the Old Norse word útlagi, from which the word outlaw was borrowed into English.

In the common law
Common law

Common law refers to law and the corresponding Legal systems of the world developed through legal opinion of courts and similar tribunals , rather than through statute law or Executive ....
 of England, a judgment declaring someone an outlaw, known as a "Writ of Outlawry", was one of the harshest penalties in the legal system, since the outlaw could not use the legal system to protect himself if needed, such as from mob justice.

Though the judgment of outlawry is now obsolete (even though it inspired the pro forma Outlawries Bill
Outlawries Bill

The Outlawries Bill is customarily introduced in the United Kingdom's British House of Commons at the start of each session of Parliament of the United Kingdom....
 which is still to this day introduced in the British House of Commons
British House of Commons

The House of Commons is the lower house of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, which also comprises the British monarchy and the House of Lords ....
 during the State Opening of Parliament
State Opening of Parliament

In the United Kingdom, the State Opening of Parliament is an annual event held usually in late October or November that marks the commencement of a session of the Parliament of the United Kingdom....
), romanticised outlaws became stock character
Stock character

A stock character is one which relies heavily on cultural types or names for his or her personality, manner of speech, and other characteristics....
s in several fictional settings, particularly in Western movies.






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An outlaw or bandit is a person living the lifestyle of outlawry; the word literally means "outside the law
LAW

LAW may refer to:* Anti-tank warfare, e.g. the US Army M72 LAW or the British Army LAW 80*Palestinian Society for the Protection of Human Rights ...
", by folk-etymology from the original meaning "laid outside" of the Old Norse word útlagi, from which the word outlaw was borrowed into English.

In the common law
Common law

Common law refers to law and the corresponding Legal systems of the world developed through legal opinion of courts and similar tribunals , rather than through statute law or Executive ....
 of England, a judgment declaring someone an outlaw, known as a "Writ of Outlawry", was one of the harshest penalties in the legal system, since the outlaw could not use the legal system to protect himself if needed, such as from mob justice.

Though the judgment of outlawry is now obsolete (even though it inspired the pro forma Outlawries Bill
Outlawries Bill

The Outlawries Bill is customarily introduced in the United Kingdom's British House of Commons at the start of each session of Parliament of the United Kingdom....
 which is still to this day introduced in the British House of Commons
British House of Commons

The House of Commons is the lower house of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, which also comprises the British monarchy and the House of Lords ....
 during the State Opening of Parliament
State Opening of Parliament

In the United Kingdom, the State Opening of Parliament is an annual event held usually in late October or November that marks the commencement of a session of the Parliament of the United Kingdom....
), romanticised outlaws became stock character
Stock character

A stock character is one which relies heavily on cultural types or names for his or her personality, manner of speech, and other characteristics....
s in several fictional settings, particularly in Western movies. Thus, "outlaw" is still commonly used to mean those violating the law or, by extension, those living that lifestyle, whether actual criminals evading the law or those merely opposed to "law-and-order" notions of conformity and authority (such as the "outlaw country
Outlaw country

Outlaw country was a significant trend in country music during the late 1960s and the 1970s , commonly referred to as The Outlaw Movement or simply Outlaw music....
" music movement in the 1970s).

A feature of older legal systems

In English
English law

English law is the Legal systems of the world of England and Wales, and is the basis of common law legal systems used in most Commonwealth of Nations countriesand the United States ....
 common law
Common law

Common law refers to law and the corresponding Legal systems of the world developed through legal opinion of courts and similar tribunals , rather than through statute law or Executive ....
, an outlaw was a person who had defied the laws of the realm, by such acts as ignoring a summons
Summons

A summons is a legal document issued by a court or by an administrative agency of government for various purposes....
 to court, or fleeing instead of appearing to plead when charged with a crime
Crime

Societies define Crime as the breach of one or more rules or laws for which some Government or force may ultimately prescribe a punishment.The word crime originates from the Latin crimen , from the Latin root cerno and Greek ????? = "I judge"....
. In the earlier law of Anglo-Saxon England, outlawry was also declared when a person committed a homicide
Homicide

Homicide refers to the act of killing another human being. It can also describe a person who has committed such an act, though this use is rare in modern English....
 and could not pay the weregild
Weregild

Weregild was a reparational payment usually demanded of a person guilty of homicide or other wrongful death claim, although it could also be demanded in other cases of serious crime....
, the blood-money, that was due to the victim's kin.

Outlawry also existed in other legal codes of the time, such as the ancient Norse
Norsemen

Norsemen is used to refer to the group of people as a whole who speak one of the North Germanic languages as their native language. The meaning of Norseman was "people from the North" and was applied primarily to Nordic people originating from southern and central Scandinavia....
 and Iceland
Iceland

Iceland, officially the Republic of Iceland , is an island country located in the North Atlantic Ocean between mainland Europe and Greenland....
ic legal code. These societies did not have any police force or prisons and criminal sentences were therefore restricted to either fines or outlawry.

To be declared an outlaw was to suffer a form of civil
Civil death

Civil death is a term that refers to the loss of all or almost all civil rights by a person due to a conviction for a felony or due to an act by the government of a country that results in the loss of civil rights....
 or social
Social death

Social death is a term used to describe the condition of people not accepted as fully human by wider society. Used by sociologists like Zygmunt Bauman and historians of the holocaust to describe the part played governmental and social segregation in that process....
 death. The outlaw was debarred from all civilized society. No one was allowed to give him food, shelter, or any other sort of support — to do so was to commit the crime of aiding and abetting, and to be in danger of the ban oneself.

An outlaw might be killed with impunity; and it was not only lawful but meritorious to kill a thief flying from justice — to do so was not murder
Murder

Murder as defined in common law countries, is the unlawful killing of another human being with intent , and generally this state of mind distinguishes murder from other forms of unlawful homicide....
. A man who slew a thief was expected to declare the fact without delay, otherwise the dead man’s kindred might clear his name by their oath and require the slayer to pay weregild as for a true man. Because the outlaw has defied civil society, that society was quit of any obligations to the outlaw —outlaws had no civil rights, could not sue in any court on any cause of action, though they were themselves personally liable.

In the context of criminal law
Criminal law

The term criminal law, sometimes called penal law, refers to any of various bodies of rules in different jurisdictions whose common characteristic is the potential for unique and often severe impositions as punishment for failure to comply....
, outlawry faded not so much by legal changes as by the greater population density of the country, which made it harder for wanted fugitives to evade capture; and by the international adoption of extradition
Extradition

Extradition is the official process by which one nation or state requests and obtains from another nation or state the surrender of a suspected or convicted criminal....
 pacts. In the civil context, outlawry became obsolescent in civil procedure
Civil procedure

Civil procedure is the body of law that sets out the rules and standards that courts follow when adjudication Civil law lawsuits . These rules govern how a lawsuit or Legal case may be commenced, what kind of service of process is required, the types of pleadings or statements of case, motion s or applications, and court orders allowed in c...
 by reforms that no longer required summoned defendant
Defendant

A defendant or defender is any party who is required to answer the complaint of a plaintiff or pursuer in a civil lawsuit before a court, or any party who has been formally indictment or accused of violating a crime statute....
s to appear and plead.

Still, the possibility of being declared an outlaw for derelictions of civil
Civil law (common law)

Civil law, as opposed to criminal law, refers to that branch of law dealing with disputes between individuals and/or organizations, in which damages may be awarded to the victim....
 duty continued to exist in English law until 1879 and in Scots law
Scots law

Scots law is a unique Legal systems of the world with an ancient basis in Roman law. Grounded in Codification Civil law dating back to the Corpus Juris Civilis, it also features elements of common law with Legal institutions of Scotland in the High Middle Ages sources....
 until the late 1940s. The Third Reich made extensive use of the concept. Prior to the Nuremberg Trials
Nuremberg Trials

The Nuremberg Trials were a series of trials, or tribunals, most notable for the prosecution of prominent members of the political, military, and economic leadership of Nazi Germany after its defeat in World War II....
, the British jurist Lord Chancellor
Lord Chancellor

The Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain, or Lord Chancellor, is a senior and important functionary in the government of the United Kingdom....
 Lord Simon
John Simon, 1st Viscount Simon

John Allsebrook Simon, 1st Viscount Simon Order of the Star of India Royal Victorian Order Order of the British Empire Privy Council of the United Kingdom was a British politician and statesman....
 attempted to resurrect the concept of outlawry in order to provide for summary executions of captured Nazi
Nazism

Nazism, officially National Socialism , refers to the ideology and practices of the National Socialist German Workers? Party under Adolf Hitler, and the policies adopted by the dictatorial government of Nazi Germany from 1933 to 1945....
 war criminals. Although Simon's point of view was supported by Winston Churchill
Winston Churchill

Sir Winston Leonard Spencer-Churchill, Order of the Garter, Order of Merit, Order of the Companions of Honour, Territorial Decoration, Fellow of the Royal Society, Her Majesty's Most Honourable Privy Council, Queen's Privy Council for Canada was a Politics of the United Kingdom known chiefly for his leadership of the United King...
, American and Soviet attorneys insisted on a trial, and he was thus overruled.

Hobsbawm's Bandits

The colloquial sense of an outlaw as bandit or brigand is the subject of a colourful monograph by Eric Hobsbawm
Eric Hobsbawm

Eric John Ernest Hobsbawm Companion of Honour, FBA, is a United Kingdom historical materialism and author....
. According to Hobsbawm
The point about social bandits is that they are peasant outlaws whom the lord and state regard as criminals, but who remain within peasant society, and are considered by their people as heroes, as champions, avengers, fighters for justice, perhaps even leaders of liberation, and in any case as men to be admired, helped and supported. This relation between the ordinary peasant and the rebel, outlaw and robber is what makes social banditry interesting and significant...........Social banditry of this kind is one of the most universal social phenomena known to history.
Hobsbawm's book discusses the bandit as a symbol, and mediated idea, and many of the outlaws he refers to, such as Ned Kelly, Mr. Dick Turpin, and Billy the Kid, are also listed below..

Famous outlaws

The stereotype
Stereotype

A stereotype is a preconceived idea that attributes certain characteristics to all the members of class or set. The term is often used with a negative connotation when referring to an oversimplified, exaggerated, or demeaning assumption that a particular individual possesses the characteristics associated with the class due to his or her me...
 owes a great deal to English
England

native_name =|conventional_long_name = England|common_name = England|image_flag = Flag of England.svg|image_coat = England COA.svg|symbol_type = Royal Coat of Arms...
 folklore
Folklore

Folklore is the body of expressive culture, including tales, music, dance, legends, oral history, proverbs, jokes, superstitions, customs, and so forth within a particular population comprising the traditions of that culture, subculture, or group ....
 precedents, in the tales of Robin Hood
Robin Hood

Robin Hood is an archetype figure in English folklore, whose story originates from Middle Ages times but who remains significant in popular culture where he is known for robbing the rich to give to the poor and fighting against injustice and tyranny....
 and of gallant highwaymen
Highwayman

The word highwayman is first attested from the year 1617. The term "highwayman" is mainly applied to robbers who travelled on a horse, as opposed to those who robbed on foot ....
. But outlawry was once a term of art in the law
LAW

LAW may refer to:* Anti-tank warfare, e.g. the US Army M72 LAW or the British Army LAW 80*Palestinian Society for the Protection of Human Rights ...
, and one of the harshest judgment
Judgment

A judgment , in a legal context, is synonymous with the formal decision made by a court following a lawsuit. At the same time the court may also make a range of court orders, such as imposing a sentence upon a Guilt y defendant in a Criminal law matter, or providing a Legal remedy for the plaintiff in a civil law matter....
s that could be pronounced on anyone's head.

The outlaw is familiar to contemporary readers as an archetype in Western movies, depicting the lawless expansionism
Expansionism

In general, expansionism consists of expansionist policies of government. While some have linked the term to promoting economic growth , more commonly expansionism refers to the doctrine of a nation's expanding its territorial base usually by means of military aggression....
 period of the United States in the late 19th century. The Western outlaw is typically a criminal who operates from a base in the wilderness
Wilderness

Wilderness or wildland is a natural environment on Earth that has not been significantly modified by human activity. It may also be defined as: "The most intact, undisturbed wild natural areas left on our planet - those last truly wild places that humans do not control and have not developed with roads, pipelines or other industrial i...
, and opposes, attacks or disrupts the fragile institutions of new settlements. By the time of the Western frontier, many jurisdictions had abolished the process of outlawry, and the term was used in its more popular meaning.

American Western

  • Joaquin Murietta
  • The Sundance Kid
  • William Quantrill
    William Quantrill

    William Clarke Quantrill , was a Confederate States of America Guerrilla warfare in the American Civil War leader during the American Civil War....
  • Jim Miller
    Jim Miller (outlaw)

    James B. "Killer" Miller, was also known as Deacon Jim because he regularly attended the Methodist Church and because he did not smoke or drink....
  • Sam Bass
    Sam Bass

    Sam Bass was a nineteenth-century American Train robbery and outlaw....
  • Kid Curry
  • Butch Cassidy
    Butch Cassidy

    Butch Cassidy , born Robert LeRoy Parker, was a notorious United States train robbery robber, bank robber and leader of the Hole in the Wall Gang....
  • Billy the Kid
    Billy the Kid

    Henry McCarty , better known as Billy the Kid, but also known by the aliases Henry Antrim and William H. Bonney, was a 19th-century American frontier outlaw and gunman who participated in the so-called Lincoln County War....
  • John Wesley Hardin
    John Wesley Hardin

    File:John Wesley Hardin.gifJohn Wesley Hardin was an outlaw and gunslinger of the American Old West. He was born in Bonham, Texas, Fannin County, Texas, Texas....
  • Jesse James
  • Frank James
    Frank James

    Alexander Franklin James was an American Old West outlaw and older brother of Jesse James....
  • Cole Younger
    Cole Younger

    Thomas Coleman Younger was a famous Confederate States of America Guerrilla warfare in the American Civil War and an outlaw after the American Civil War....
  • Marlow Brothers
  • Belle Starr
    Belle Starr

    Myra Maybelle Shirley Reed Starr, better known as Belle Starr , was a famous United States female outlaw....
  • Black Jack
    Tom Ketchum

    Thomas Edward Ketchum, known as Black Jack Ketchum , was a cowboy and cattle driver who later turned to a life of crime. He was hanged in 1901 for attempted train robbery....
  • Black Bart
    Charles Bolles

    'Charles Earl Bolles' , pseudonym 'Black Bart', was an American Old West outlaw noted for his poetic messages left after each robbery. He was also known as Charles E....
  • John Daly
    John Daly (outlaw)

    John Daly was an Old West outlaw and leader of the "Daly Gang"....
  • Tiburcio Vasquez
    Tiburcio Vasquez

    Tiburcio V?squez was a Californio Outlaw#Bandits who was active in California from 1857 to 1874. The Vasquez Rocks, 40 miles north of Los Angeles, California, were one of his many hideouts and are named for him....
  • Reno Gang
    Reno Gang

    The Reno Brothers Gang, also known as the Renos or the Reno Gang, was a group of criminals that operated in the Midwestern United States during and just after the American Civil War....


American Great Depression
Great Depression

File:International depression.pngThe Great Depression was a worldwide economic Recession starting in most places in 1929 and ending at different times in the 1930s or early 1940s for different countries....
 

  • John Dillinger
    John Dillinger

    John Herbert Dillinger was a Bank robbery in the midwestern United States during the 1930s. Some considered him a dangerous criminal, while others idolized him as a present-day Robin Hood....
  • Bonnie and Clyde
    Bonnie and Clyde

    Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow were notorious outlaws, robbers, and criminals who, with their gang, traveled the Central United States during the Great Depression....
  • Ma Barker
    Ma Barker

    Kate "Ma" Barker was a legendary United States criminal from the "Public enemy era", when the exploits of gangs of criminals in the Midwest gripped the American people and press....
  • Pretty Boy Floyd
    Pretty Boy Floyd

    Charles Arthur "Pretty Boy" Floyd was an United States bank robbery and alleged killer, romanticized by the press and by folk singer Woody Guthrie in his song "Pretty Boy Floyd"....
  • Baby Face Nelson
    Baby Face Nelson

    Lester Joseph Gillis , known under the pseudonym George Nelson, was a bank robbery in the 1930s better known as Baby Face Nelson due to his youthful appearance and small stature....


Argentinian

  • Juan Bautista Bailoretto
    Juan Bautista Bailoretto

    Juan Bautista Bailoretto or J.B. Vailoretto , son of Italy immigrants to Argentina, was born in Santa Fe, Argentina. Bailoretto escaped from justice after killing a sheriff because of "lover matters" with a prostitute in Castex city, a little town in La Pampa Province, this outlaw bandit who robbed the rich to help the poor, and probably for...
  • Mate Cocido
    Mate Cocido

    Segundo David Peralta, also known as Mate Cocido, born in 1897 in Tucuman's environs, was a redoubtable Argentine outlaw robber of trains, banks and rural bandit in northern Argentina....
     (Segundo David Peralta)
  • Gaucho Gil


Australian

In Australia two gangs of bushranger
Bushranger

Bushrangers, or bush rangers, were outlaws in the early years of the History of Australia who had the survival skills necessary to use the Australian The Bush as a refuge to hide from the authorities....
s have been made outlaws - that is they were declared to have no legal rights and anybody was empowered to shoot them without the need for an arrest followed by a trial.
  • Ben Hall
    Ben Hall

    Ben Hall was a noted Australian bushranger of the 19th century....
     - the New South Wales colonial government passed a law in 1865 which outlawed the gang (Hall, John Gilbert
    John Gilbert (bushranger)

    Johnny Gilbert was an Australian bushranger shot dead by the police at the age of 25 near Binalong, New South Wales in 1865.Early life ...
     and John Dunn
    John Dunn

    John Dunn may refer to:*Jack Dunn , minor league baseball owner and manager*Jack Dunn , British figure skater*John Dunn , Scottish settler in South Africa...
    ) and made it possible for anyone to shoot them. There was no need for the outlaws to be arrested and for there to be a trial.
  • Ned Kelly
    Ned Kelly

    Edward "Ned" Kelly was an Australian bushranger, and, to some, a folk hero for his defiance of the Colony authorities. Kelly was born in Victoria to an Irish Convictism in Australia father, and as a young man he clashed with the police....
     - The Victorian colonial government passed a law on 30 October 1878 to make the Kelly gang outlaws: they no longer had any legal rights and they could be shot by anyone. The law was modelled on the 1865 legislation passed against the gang of Ben Hall. As well as Ned Kelly, his brother Dan Kelly
    Dan Kelly (bushranger)

    Dan Kelly was the youngest brother of Australian Bushranger Ned Kelly. He was a member of the Kelly Gang and was killed at the siege of Glenrowan....
     was subject to the warrant as well as Joe Byrne
    Joe Byrne

    Joseph Byrne also known as Joe Byrne was an Australian bushranger known as the lieutenant of the Ned Kelly. He died in the siege of Glenrowan, Victoria which is one of the most famous events in History of Australia....
     and Steve Hart
    Steve Hart

    Steve Hart was an Australian bushranger renowned for his membership in the Kelly Gang....
    .
  • Martin Cash
    Martin Cash

    Martin Cash was a notorious convict bushranger known for escaping twice from Port Arthur, Tasmania, Van Diemen's Land. His 1870 autobiography The Adventures of Martin Cash, ghostwritten by the former convict James Lester Burke became a best seller in Australia....
  • Frederick Wordsworth Ward also known as Captain Thunderbolt
    Captain Thunderbolt

    Frederick Wordsworth Ward ) was an Australian bushranger renowned for escaping from Cockatoo Island, New South Wales with the help of his wife Mary Ann Bugg, and for committing over 200 crimes over six and a half years across the northern section of the state of New South Wales....
  • Dan Morgan
    Dan Morgan (bushranger)

    John Fuller was an Australian bushranger.Fuller was born in Appin, New South Wales, New South Wales, Australia around 1830 to George Fuller and Mary Owen....
  • Jack the Rammer
    Jack the Rammer

    Jack the Rammer aka Billy the Rammer was a bushranger in the Monaro District near Cooma in New South Wales during the latter half of 1834. His real name was probably Billy Roberts....
  • Mary Ann Bugg
    Mary Ann Bugg

    Mary Ann Bugg , was one of two notable female bushrangers in mid 19th century Australia.Bugg's influence on her husband Frederick Wordsworth Ward, the bushranger known as Captain Thunderbolt, is cited as the reason he was able to sustain a prolonged evasion of law enforcement....
  • Moondyne Joe
    Moondyne Joe

    Joseph Bolitho Johns , better known as Moondyne Joe, was Western Australia's best known bushranger....
  • William Westwood also known as Jackey Jackey
    Jackey Jackey

    William Westwood Jackey Jackey was often referred to as a "gentleman bushranger" because of his dress and respect for his victims....


British

  • Hereward the Wake
    Hereward the Wake

    Hereward the Wake , known in his own times as Hereward the Outlaw or Hereward the Exile, was an 11th-century Anglo-Saxons leader involved in resistance to the Norman conquest of England....
     - Saxon outlaw during the Norman conquest of England
  • John Nevison
    John Nevison

    John Nevison was one of Britain's most notorious highwayman, a gentleman-rogue supposedly nicknamed Swift Nick by Charles II of England after a renowned 200 mile dash from Kent to York to establish an alibi for a robbery he had committed earlier that same day....
     - 17th century highwayman
    Highwayman

    The word highwayman is first attested from the year 1617. The term "highwayman" is mainly applied to robbers who travelled on a horse, as opposed to those who robbed on foot ....
  • Dick Turpin
    Dick Turpin

    For other meanings see Dick Turpin .Richard Turpin The Highwayman was a legendary England rogue and highwayman. Turpin engaged in poaching, burglary, cattle rustling, horse theft, highway robbery and murder before being executed in York....
     - 18th century highwayman
  • James MacLaine
    James MacLaine

    "Captain" James MacLaine was a notorious highwayman with his accomplice William Plunkett . He was known as the "Gentleman Highwayman" as a result of his courteous behaviour during his robberies....
     - Scottish highwayman
  • William Plunkett - British highwayman
  • Tom King
    Tom King (highwayman)

    Tom King was an England highwayman who operated in the Essex and London areas.King was a close associate of fellow highwayman Dick Turpin; however unlike Turpin, who is often seen by historians a mere rogue, King was the kind of swashbuckling, charming, devil-may-care character into which legend would later transform Turpin....
     - English highwayman
  • Sawney Beane - Scottish outlaw
  • Edgar the Outlaw
    Edgar Ćtheling

    Edgar ?theling, also known as Edgar the Outlaw was the last male member of the West Saxon royal house of Cerdic of Wessex....
     - English king
  • Robin Hood
    Robin Hood

    Robin Hood is an archetype figure in English folklore, whose story originates from Middle Ages times but who remains significant in popular culture where he is known for robbing the rich to give to the poor and fighting against injustice and tyranny....
     - Legendary Medieval English
    England

    native_name =|conventional_long_name = England|common_name = England|image_flag = Flag of England.svg|image_coat = England COA.svg|symbol_type = Royal Coat of Arms...
     outlaw
  • Eustace Folville
    Eustace Folville

    Eustace Folville was the leader of a robber band active in Leicestershire and Derbyshire in the first half of the 14th century. With four of his younger brothers, he was responsible for two of the most notorious crimes of early 14th century England: no mean achievement, considering the same period saw Richard of Pudlicott ransack the royal...
     - English outlaw and soldier
  • Adam the Leper
    Adam the Leper

    Adam the Leper was the leader of a fourteenth-century robber band, operating in the south west of England in the 1330s and 1340s. Like the north Midlands bandits Eustace Folville and James Cotterel, he and his gang specialised in theft and kidnap....
     - Fourteenth-century English gang-leader
  • William Wallace
    William Wallace

    William Wallace was a Scotland knight and landowner who is known for leading a resistance during the Wars of Scottish Independence and regarded as a patriot and national hero....
     - Leader of the Scottish resistance to Edward I
    Edward I of England

    Edward I , popularly known as Longshanks, the English Justinian, and the Hammer of the Scots , was a House of Plantagenet King of England who achieved historical fame by conquering large parts of Wales and almost succeeding in doing the same to Scotland....
    .
  • Rob Roy MacGregor - Scottish Chieftain.
  • Twm Siôn Cati
    Twm Siôn Cati

    Twm Si?n Cati is a figure in Wales folklore, often described as the Welsh Robin Hood....
     - Welsh Outlaw from Tregaron in Tudor times, ended up mayor of Brecon
    Brecon

    Brecon is an historic market town in southern Powys, mid Wales, with a population of roughly 8,000 with around 6,000 in the surrounding area. It was the county town of the Historic counties of Wales county of Brecknockshire; although its role as such was eclipsed with the formation of Powys it remains an important local centre....
  • James Hind
    James Hind

    Captain James Hind was a 17th century highwayman and Cavalier rabble rouser during the English Civil War. He was hanged at Worcester in 1652....
     - 17th century highwayman
  • John Clavell
    John Clavell

    John Clavell was a "highwayman, author, and quack doctor" in England and Ireland in the first half of the seventeenth century.Clavell matriculated at Brasenose College, Oxford in 1619, but left without taking a degree....
     - English highwayman, author, and lawyer
  • Claude Duval
    Claude Duval

    Claude Du Vall was a France-born gentleman highwayman in post-Restoration Great Britain....
     - French
    France

    France , officially the French Republic , is a country whose Metropolitan France is located in Western Europe and that also comprises various Overseas departments and territories of France....
    -born highwayman in England


Croatian

  • Mijat Tomic - hajduk
    Hajduk

    Hajduk is a term most commonly referring to outlaws, highwayman or freedom fighters in the Balkans.Forms of the word in various languages include:...
  • Andrijica Šimic
    Andrijica Šimic

    Andrijica ?imic was a hajduk from Herzegovina.Andrija ?imic was born in Grude, in a Croats family of seven children: he had a brother and five sisters....
  • Ivan Bušic Roša -hajduk
    Hajduk

    Hajduk is a term most commonly referring to outlaws, highwayman or freedom fighters in the Balkans.Forms of the word in various languages include:...


East Asian

  • Zhang Xianzhong
    Zhang Xianzhong

    Zhang Xianzhong or Chang Hsien-chung , nicknamed Yellow Tiger, was a China rebel leader who conquered Sichuan in the middle of the 17th century....
     - nicknamed Yellow Tiger, was a Chinese bandit and rebel leader who conquered Sichuan Province in the middle of the 17th century.
  • Lao Pie-fang
    Lao Pie-fang

    Lao Pie-fang, known as a Hun-hutze , he was a bandit chieftain in western Liaoning. He led several thousand followers to attack Japanese garrisons the southern portion of the South Manchurian Railroad mainline in early 1932, during the pacification of Manchukuo....
     - known as Hun-hutze (red beard), was a bandit chieftain in western Liaoning
    Liaoning

    is a Northeast China political divisions of China of the People's Republic of China. Its one-Chinese character abbreviation is Liao ."Li?o" is an ancient name for this region, which was adopted by the Liao Dynasty which ruled this area between 907 and 1125....
    .
  • Wang Delin
    Wang Delin

    Wang Delin or Wang Teh-ling, Wang Delin was born in October 1875. He became a bandit in Manchuria after the Russian invasion in July 1900 when Tsarist forces were sent to Northeast China, to protect the Russian-owned Chinese Eastern Railway or CER....
     - bandit, soldier and leader of the National Salvation Army
    Anti-Japanese Volunteer Armies

    After the Invasion of Manchuria, and until 1933, large volunteer armies waged war against Empire of Japan and Manchukuo forces over much of Northeast China....
     resisting the Japanese pacification of Manchukuo
    Pacification of Manchukuo

    The Pacification of Manchukuo, was a campaign to pacification the resistance to the newly established puppet state of Manchukuo between the Anti-Japanese Volunteer Armies of Manchuria and later the Chinese Communist Party Northeast Anti-Japanese United Army and the Imperial Japanese Army and the forces of Manchukuo during the Second Sino-J...
    .
  • Song Jiang
    Song Jiang

    Song Jiang was the leader of a bandit group in the 12th century, during the Song Dynasty. His group was active in the present-day provinces of Shandong and Henan, before surrendering to government troops....
     - Historical Chinese outlaw immortalised in the classic Water Margin
    Water Margin

    Water Margin is one of the Four Great Classical Novels of Chinese literature. Attributed to Shi Naian, whom some believe to be Luo Guanzhong, the novel details the trials and tribulations of 108 outlaws during the mid Song Dynasty....
  • Hong Gildong - Historical/legendary Korean outlaw
  • Ishikawa Goemon
    Ishikawa Goemon

    was a legendary ninja warrior and bandit hero who stole gold and valuables and gave them to the poor. There is little historical information on Goemon's life, and thus he has become a folk hero, whose background and origins have been widely speculated upon....
     - Legendary Japanese thief featured in kabuki plays
  • Nezumi Kozo
    Nezumi Kozo

    Nezumi Kozo was the nickname of one Jirokichi , a Japanese people thief and folk hero who lived in Edo during the Edo period....
     - Japanese thief
  • Wong Fei Hung
    Wong Fei Hung

    Wong Fei Hung was a martial artist, a practitioner of traditional Chinese medicine, and revolutionary who became a Han Chinese folk hero and the subject of numerous television series and films....
     - Famous Chinese herbalist considered an outlaw hero in Chinese folklore
  • Saigo Takamori
    Saigo Takamori

    =Early lifeBorn lunar calendar December 7, the 10th year of Bunsei era , in Kagoshima in Satsuma domain , Saigo served as a low-ranking samurai official in his early career....
     - the last true Samurai
    Samurai

    is the term for the military nobility of Pre-industrial society Japan. According to translator William Scott Wilson: "In Chinese, the character ? was originally a verb meaning to wait upon or accompany a person in the upper ranks of society, and this is also true of the original term in Japanese, saburau....
    , he led the Satsuma Rebellion
    Satsuma Rebellion

    The , was a revolt of Satsuma han ex-samurai against the Meiji government from January 29, 1877 to September 24,1877, 11 years into the Meiji Era. It was the last, and the most serious, of a series of armed uprisings against the new government....


Irish

  • Grace O'Malley
    Grace O'Malley

    Gr?inne N? Mh?ille , also known as Granuaile or Gr?inne Mhaol, known in English language as Grace O'Malley , is an important figure in Irish folklore, but was in fact a larger-than-life real person from 16th century Early Modern Ireland 1536-1691....
  • Redmond O'Hanlon
    Redmond O'Hanlon (outlaw)

    Redmond O'Hanlon was a 17th-century Irish t?raidhe or rapparee , and an important figure in the Irish Rebellion of 1641....
  • Neesy O'Haughan
    Neesy O'Haughan

    Naoise O'Haughan, also known as Neesy, Ness and Nessie was a highwayman in County Antrim, Ireland in the late 17th and early 18th centuries....
  • Tiger Roche
    Tiger Roche

    "Tiger" Roche, was a celebrated soldier, duellist and adventurer, variously hailed as a hero and damned as a thief and a murderer at many times during his stormy life....
  • Captain Gallagher
    Captain Gallagher

    Captain Gallagher was an Irish highwayman who, as one of the later Irish Rapparees, led a bandit group in the hills of the Irish countryside during the late 18th century....


Italian

  • Carmine Crocco
    Carmine Crocco

    Carmine Crocco, known as Donatelli was an Italy brigand. Despite his controversial deeds and behaviour, many people consider him a folk hero....
     (1830-1905) - Italian bandit and folk hero
  • Salvatore Giuliano
    Salvatore Giuliano

    Salvatore Giuliano was a Sicily peasant. The millennial subjugated social status of his class led him to become a bandit and separatist who has been mythologised during his life and after his death....
     (1922-1950) - Sicilian bandit and separatist
  • Giuseppe Musolino
    Giuseppe Musolino

    Giuseppe Musolino, better known as the "Brigante Musolino" or the "King of Aspromonte" , was an Italy brigand and folk hero....
     (1876-1956) - Calabrian outlaw and folk hero
  • Nicola Napolitano
    Nicola Napolitano (brigand)

    Nicola Napolitano , also known by the nickname Caprariello, a nickname derived from his activity of goats shepherd, was born in Nola from the peasants Sabato and Carmela from Napoli....
     (1838-1863) - Italian bandit
  • Gaspare Pisciotta
    Gaspare Pisciotta

    Gaspare Pisciotta was a companion and close friend of the Sicily bandit Salvatore Giuliano, and considered to be the co-leader of his outlaw band....
     (1924-1954) - Sicilian bandit and separatist
  • Rinaldo Rinaldini - Italian outlaw and folk hero
  • Marco Sciarra - famous Neapolitan brigand chief
  • Francesco Paolo Varsallona
    Francesco Paolo Varsallona

    Francesco Paolo Varsallona or Varsalona was a Sicily outlaw who operated on the island around the turn of the 20th century. He is considered to be the last great bandit of the pre-Italian Fascism....
     - notorious Sicilian bandit leader


Central Asian

  • Timur
    Timur

    Timur , among his other names, commonly known as Tamerlane in the West, was a 14th century Turko-Mongol conqueror of much of western and Central Asia, and founder of the Timurid dynasty in Central Asia, which survived until 1857 as the Mughal Empire of India....
     - conqueror of much of western and Central Asia
    Central Asia

    Central Asia is a region of Asia from the Caspian Sea in the west to central China in the east, and from southern Russia in the north to northern India in the south....
     began his life as a bandit leader in what is now Uzbekistan
    Uzbekistan

    Uzbekistan, officially the Republic of Uzbekistan , is a Landlocked_country#Doubly_landlocked_country country in Central Asia, formerly part of the Soviet Union....
    .
  • Togtakhu Taiji - most famous bandit chief in Inner Mongolia
    Inner Mongolia

    Inner Mongolia is the Mongols autonomous region of China of the People's Republic of China, located in the country's north.Inner Mongolia borders, from east to west, the provinces of Heilongjiang, Jilin, Liaoning, Hebei, Shanxi, Shaanxi, Ningxia, and Gansu, while to the north it borders Mongolia and Russia....
    , active before World War I.


Middle Eastern and Indian

  • Fudayl ibn Iyad - famous highwayman of Khurasan who repented and traveled in search of knowledge. He is revered by Muslims as a major figure of early Sufism.
  • Ya'qub-i Laith Saffari - rose from a bandit to the rule of much of modern Iran
    Iran

    Iran , officially the Islamic Republic of Iran and formerly known internationally as Persian Empire until 1935, is a country in Central Eurasia, located on the northeastern shore of the Persian Gulf and the southern shore of the Caspian Sea....
    , Afghanistan
    Afghanistan

    Afghanistan , officially the Islamic republic of Afghanistan, is a landlocked country that is located approximately in the center of Asia....
     and Pakistan
    Pakistan

    Pakistan , officially the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, is a country located in South Asia and borders Central Asia and the Middle East. It has a 1,046 kilometre coastline along the Arabian Sea and Gulf of Oman in the south, and is bordered by Afghanistan and Iran in the west, India in the east and People's Republic of China in th...
    .
  • Simko Shikak
    Simko Shikak

    Simko Shikak also Ismail Agha Shikak , was an Iranian Kurdish people politician and nationalist. He was born into a prominent Kurdish feudal family based in Cahriq castle located near Baranduz river in Urmia region in northwestern Iran....
     - Kurdish
    Kurdish people

    The Kurds are an Iranian peoples ethnolinguistic group mostly inhabiting a region that includes adjacent parts of Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Turkey and which is known as Kurdistan....
     bandit and rebel leader
  • Nirushan Tharmachandran - famous Bandit of southern Asia who was never caught by police. Stopped killing in 1930 and was never heard from again. Recent studies found that he killed under the code name, Pundai.
  • Dulla Bhatti
    Dulla Bhatti

    Dulla Bhatti was a famous legendary hero of Punjab region, who led a rebellion against the famous Mughal Empire king Akbar. There is a kind of Epic poetry in Punjabi language called Dulle di var, which narrates the battle events of Dulla Bhatti....
     - was a Punjabi
    Punjabi people

    The Punjabi people are an Indo-Aryans ethnic group from South Asia . They originate from the Punjab region, which has been host to some of the oldest civilizations in the world including one of the world's first and oldest civilizations, Indus Valley Civilization....
     who led a rebellion against the Mughal emperor Akbar. His act of helping a poor peasant's daughter to get married led to a famous folk take which is still recited every year on the festival of Lohri
    Lohri

    Lohri is an extremely popular harvest festival in India, especially North India. Come January, and the fields of Punjab region are filled with the golden harvest of wheat and farmers celebrate Lohri during this rest period before the harvesting and gathering of crops....
     by Punjabis.
  • Veerappan
    Veerappan

    Koose Muniswamy Veerappan was a most infamous and notorious Outlaw of India. He resided and carried out his activities in the Bilgiri Hills and Male Mahadeshwara Betta and Sathyamangalam and Gundiyal forests, covering 6,000 km? in the states of Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu....
    , South India
    South India

    South India is the area encompassing India's states of Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu as well as the Union territories of India of Lakshadweep and Pondicherry, occupying 19.31% of area....
    's most famous bandit, Elephant poacher, sandalwood smuggler
  • Phoolan Devi
    Phoolan Devi

    Phoolan Devi , popularly known as "The Bandit Queen", was an Indian dacoit, who later turned politician. She created a great furore across India during her period as bandit....
     - one of India
    India

    India, officially the Republic of India , is a country in South Asia. It is the List of countries and outlying territories by total area country by geographical area, the List of countries by population country, and the most populous liberal democracy in the world....
    's most famous dacoits ("armed robber").
  • Shiv Kumar Patel
    Shiv Kumar Patel

    Shiv Kumar Patel , also known as Dadua, was notorious dacoit who operated in ravines and forests on the borders between the Indian states of Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh....
     - led one of the few remaining bands of outlaws that have roamed central India for centuries.
  • Hashshashin
    Hashshashin

    The Hashshashin from which the word Assassinations is thought to originate, was the Persian Empire derived designation of the Nizari branch of the Ismailism Shia Islam during the Middle Ages....
     - militant Ismaili
    Ismaili

    Ismailism is a branch of the Islam, and is the second largest part of the Shia Islam community, after the mainstream Twelvers . The Ismaili get their name from their acceptance of Ismail bin Jafar as the divinely appointed spiritual successor to Jafar al-Sadiq, wherein they differ from the Twelvers, who accept Musa al-Kazim, younger bro...
     Muslim sect, active from the 8th to the 14th centuries.
  • Thuggee
    Thuggee

    Thuggee is the term for a particular format for the murder and robbery of travellers in History of India.The modern word "wikt:thug" derives from this term....
     - Indian
    History of India

    The known history of India begins with the Indus Valley Civilization, which spread and flourished in the north-western part of the Indian subcontinent, from c....
     network of secret fraternities engaged in murdering and robbing travellers.


Canadian

  • Simon Gunanoot
    Simon Gunanoot

    Simon Gunanoot was a prosperous Gitxsan man and a merchant in the Kispiox Valley region of Hazelton, British Columbia, British Columbia, Canada....
  • Slumach
    Slumach

    Slumach an elderly man who once lived in a Katzie settlement at the south end of Pitt Lake is said to have discovered one of the richest Pitt Lake Gold in British Columbia history....
  • Allan McLean
  • Bill Miner
    Bill Miner

    Ezra Allen Miner , more popularly known as Bill Miner, was a noted United States criminal, originally from Bowling Green, Kentucky, who served several prison terms for stagecoach robbery....


German

  • Eppelein von Gailingen
    Eppelein von Gailingen

    Eppelein von Gailingen was a famous Germans robber baron in the Middle Ages.In 1369 he was indicted for his robberies in the Nuremberg region....
  • Johannes Bückler, nicknamed Schinderhannes
  • Lips Tullian
  • Nickel List
  • Matthias Klostermayr, aka Bavarian Hiasl, aka Hiasl of Bavaria, aka der Bayerische Hiasl, aka da Boarische Hiasl
  • Martin Luther
    Martin Luther

    Martin Luther was a Germans monk, theology, university professor, priest, father of Protestantism, and Protestant Reformers whose ideas started the Protestant Reformation and changed the course of Western culture....
     was outlawed in 1521 with the Edict of Worms


Norse
Norsemen

Norsemen is used to refer to the group of people as a whole who speak one of the North Germanic languages as their native language. The meaning of Norseman was "people from the North" and was applied primarily to Nordic people originating from southern and central Scandinavia....
 

  • Erik the Red
    Erik the Red

    Erik the Red founded the first Nordic countries colonization in Greenland. Born in the J?ren district of Rogaland, Norway, as the son of ?orvaldr ?svaldsson , he therefore also appears, patronymically, as Erik Thorvaldsson ....


Icelandic
Icelanders

Icelanders are the national or ethnic group of Iceland descended primarily from Norsemen of Scandinavia, and Celts. Historical and DNA record indicate that about 20% of those who settled in Iceland were from the British Isles and 80% were from Scandinavia....
 

  • Gísli Súrsson
  • Grettir Ásmundarson
    Grettis saga

    Grettis saga is one of the Icelanders' sagas. It details the life of Grettir ?smundarson, an Icelandic warrior who became an outlaw....


Russian

  • Nightingale the Robber - myth
  • Yermak Timofeyevich
    Yermak Timofeyevich

    Yermak Timofeyevich , Cossack leader and explorer of Siberia. His exploration of Siberia marked the beginning of the expansion of Russia towards this region and its colonization....
     - 16th century Cossack
    Cossack

    The term Cossacks is applied to specific militaristic communities of various ethnicities living in the southern steppe regions of Ukraine and Russia....
     outlaw and explorer
  • Stenka Razin
    Stenka Razin

    Stepan Timofeyevich Razin was a Cossack leader who led a major uprising against the nobility and Tsar's bureaucracy in South Russia....
     - Cossack leader
  • Yemelyan Pugachov - pretender to the Russian throne


Spanish

  • Perot Rocaguinarda, Catalan
    Catalan people

    The Catalans are the people from Catalonia, an Autonomous Community of Spain, including people originating in that region but living elsewhere. The inhabitants of the adjacent portion of southern France ? known in Catalonia proper as Catalunya Nord , and in France as the Pays Catalan ? are often included in this definition....
     bandit
  • Sanchicorrota, Navarre
    Navarre

    Navarre is a region in northern Spain, constituting one of its autonomous communities in Spain - the "Foral Community of Navarre" ....
    se late Middle Age bandit
  • El Tempranillo, Andalusia
    Andalusia

    Andalusia is a country in the Spanish State. It is the most populous and the second largest, in terms of land area, of the seventeen autonomous communities of the Spain....
    n bandolero
  • El Pernales, Andalusia
    Andalusia

    Andalusia is a country in the Spanish State. It is the most populous and the second largest, in terms of land area, of the seventeen autonomous communities of the Spain....
    n bandolero


Turkish

  • Ince Memed
    Ince Memed tetralogy

    The Ince Memed tetralogy is a series of four Epic poetry novels written by the Turkish people novelist Yasar Kemal. The novels follow the life and career of Memed, the only son of a poor widow who escapes from his village in the Anatolian highlands and transforms himself into a legendary, Robin Hood-like figure, championing the landless peasa...
    , a legendary fictional character by Yasar Kemal
    Yasar Kemal

    Yasar Kemal is one of Turkey's leading writers. He has long been a candidate for the Nobel Prize in Literature, on the strength of Memed, My Hawk....
  • Atçali Kel Mehmet Efe
    Atçali Kel Mehmet Efe

    At?ali Kel Mehmet Efe was a Zeybek, who led a local revolt against Ottoman Empire authority and established control of the Aydin region for a short period between 1829 and 1830 ....
    , an outlaw who led a local revolt against Ottoman Empire
    Ottoman Empire

    The Ottoman Empire , also known by its contemporaries as the Turkish Empire or Turkey , was an empire that lasted from 1299?1923. It was Treaty of Lausanne by the Republic of Turkey, which was officially proclaimed on October 29, 1923....
  • Çakircali Mehmet Efe
    Çakircali Mehmet Efe

    ?akircali Mehmet Efe was a Zeybek, who was active as an outlaw in the region enclosing Izmir, Aydin, Denizli, Mugla and Antalya in modern western Turkey, from 1893 to 1910....
    , one of the most powerful outlaws of late Ottoman
    Ottoman Empire

    The Ottoman Empire , also known by its contemporaries as the Turkish Empire or Turkey , was an empire that lasted from 1299?1923. It was Treaty of Lausanne by the Republic of Turkey, which was officially proclaimed on October 29, 1923....
     era


New Zealander

  • James Mckenzie
    James Mckenzie

    James Mckenzie, possibly born in Ross-shire, Scotland, in 1820 was a New Zealand outlaw who has become one of the country's most enduring folk heroes....
      Shepherd, drover, sheep rustler
  • Te Kooti
    Te Kooti

    Te Kooti Arikirangi Te Turuki was a Maori leader, the founder of the Ringatu religion and Guerrilla warfare.While fighting alongside government forces against the Hauhau in 1865, he was accused of spying....
      Maori warrior & leader


Serbian

  • Jovo Stanisavljevic Caruga
    Jovo Stanisavljevic Caruga

    Jovo Stanisavljevic, called Caruga was an outlaw, or hajduk, in Slavonia in the early 20th century.Stanisavljevic was born of Serbs parentage in the village of Bare ....
    , Serb
  • Joco Udmanic, Serb


Others

  • Alexander Friedman (German
    Germany

    Germany , officially the Federal Republic of Germany , is a country in Central Europe. It is bordered to the north by the North Sea, Denmark, and the Baltic Sea; to the east by Poland and the Czech Republic; to the south by Austria and Switzerland; and to the west by France, Luxembourg, Belgium, and the Netherlands....
     bandit)
  • Michael Monafis (Greek
    Greece

    Greece , officially the Hellenic Republic , is a country in southeastern Europe, situated on the southern end of the Balkans. It has borders with Albania, Bulgaria and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia to the north, and Turkey to the east....
     outlaw)
  • Lampiăo
    Lampiăo

    Lampi?o was the nickname of "Captain" Virgulino Ferreira da Silva, the most famous leader of a Canga?o band ....
     (Brazil
    Brazil

    Brazil , officially the Federative Republic of Brazil , is a country in South America. It is the List of countries and outlying territories by total area country by geographical area, occupying nearly half of South America, the List of countries by population country, and the fourth most populous democracy in the world....
    )
  • Jack the Robber (Roma
    Rome

    Rome is the capital city of Italy and Lazio, and is Italy's largest and most populous city, with 2,724,347 residents in an urban area of some ....
    )
  • Juraj Jánošík
    Juraj Jánošík

    Juraj J?no??k , baptised January 25, 1688, died March 17, 1713, was a famous Slovak people outlaw.J?no??k has been topic of many Slovak people and Poland legends, books and films....
     (Slovakia
    Slovakia

    Slovakia . It was amended in September 1998 to allow direct election of the president and again in February 2001 due to EU admission requirements....
    )
  • Václav Babinský (Czech
    Czech Republic

    The Czech Republic , is a landlocked country in Central Europe. The country borders Poland to the northeast, Germany to the west, Austria to the south and Slovakia to the east....
     outlaw)
  • Johann Georg Grasel
    Johann Georg Grasel

    Johann Georg Grasel was a leader of robber's gang. His name is used in Czech language as common term for rascal or villain until now.Grasel was born into poor family of a knacker....
     (Moravia
    Moravia

    Moravia is a Historical regions of Central Europe in the east of the Czech Republic, one of the former Czech lands. It takes its name from the Morava River, Central Europe which rises in the northwest of the region....
    )
  • Michael Labedzki (Polish
    Poland

    Poland , officially the Republic of Poland , is a country in Central Europe. Poland is bordered by Germany to the west; the Czech Republic and Slovakia to the south; Ukraine, Belarus and Lithuania to the east; and the Baltic Sea and Kaliningrad Oblast, a Russian Enclave and exclave, to the north....
     rebel leader and bandit)
  • Sobri Jóska (Hungarian
    Hungarian people

    Hungarians are an ethnic group primarily associated with Hungary. There are around 10 million Magyars in Hungary . Hungarians were the main inhabitants of the Kingdom of Hungary that existed through most of the second millennium....
     highwayman)
  • Rózsa Sándor
    Rózsa Sándor

    S?ndor R?zsa was a legendary Hungarian bandit from the Great Hungarian Plain. He is the best-know Hungarian highwayman, his life inspired numerous writers, notably Zsigmond M?ricz, Kr?dy Gyula....
     (the most famous Hungarian
    Hungarian people

    Hungarians are an ethnic group primarily associated with Hungary. There are around 10 million Magyars in Hungary . Hungarians were the main inhabitants of the Kingdom of Hungary that existed through most of the second millennium....
     highwayman)
  • Louis Dominique Cartouche
    Louis Dominique Bourguignon

    Louis Dominique Bourguignon, also known as Cartouche , was a highwayman who terrorized the roads around Paris during the R?gence until the authorities had him breaking wheel....
     (famous French
    French people

    French people can refer to:* The legal residents and citizens of France, regardless of ancestry. For a legal discussion, see French nationality law....
     bandit)
  • Heraclio Bernal
    Heraclio Bernal

    Heraclio Bernal was a outlaw from the Sinaloa region of Mexico. He is widely known as the "Thunderbolt of Sinaloa."...
     (Mexican bandit)
  • Cercyon (Greek), a bandit killed by Theseus
    Theseus

    For other uses, see Theseus Theseus was a legendary king of Athens, son of Aethra , and fathered by Aegeus and Poseidon, with whom Aethra lay in one night....
  • Ibrahim Ag Bahanga, Tuareg
    Tuareg

    The Tuareg are a nomadic pastoralist people. They are the principal inhabitants of the Saharan interior of North Africa. They call themselves variously Kel Tamasheq or Kel Tamajaq , Imuhagh, Imazaghan or Imashaghen , or Kel Tagelmust, i.e., "People of the Veil"....
     bandit and rebel leader
  • Kassa Hailu, later Emperor Tewodros II of Ethiopia
    Tewodros II of Ethiopia

    Tewodros II was the Emperor of Ethiopia from 1855 until his death.He was born Kassa Haile Giorgis, but was more regularly referred to as Kassa Hailu ....
  • Napoleon
    Napoleon I of France

    Napoleon Bonaparte later known as Emperor Napoleon I, was a military and political leader of France whose actions shaped European politics in the early 19th century....
     by the coalition in Vienna
  • When the government of the First Spanish Republic
    First Spanish Republic

    The First Spanish Republic started with the abdication as King of Spain on February 10 1873, of Amadeus I of Spain, following the Hidalgo Affair, when he had been required by the radical government to sign a decree against the artillery officers....
     was unable to reduce the Cantonalist rebellion centered in Cartagena, Spain
    Cartagena, Spain

    Cartagena is a Spanish Mediterranean city and Spanish Navy in the southeast of the Iberian Peninsula in the Region of Murcia.Cartagena has been the capital of the Naval Structure of the Spanish Navy in the New Millennium since the arrival of the House of Bourbon in the eighteenth century....
    , the Cartagena fleet was declared piratic, allowing any nation to prey on it.
  • Tońo Bicicleta (Bicycle Tony), A notorious bicycle-riding Puerto Rican
    Puerto Rico

    Puerto Rico , officially the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico , is a Autonomy Territories of the United States of the United States located in the northeastern Caribbean, east of the Dominican Republic and west of the Virgin Islands....
     criminal who became an element of local folklore.
  • Martin Luther
    Martin Luther

    Martin Luther was a Germans monk, theology, university professor, priest, father of Protestantism, and Protestant Reformers whose ideas started the Protestant Reformation and changed the course of Western culture....
     was declared an outlaw by the Diet of Worms
    Diet of Worms

    The Diet of Worms was a general assembly of Estates of the realm of the Holy Roman Emperor that took place in Worms, Germany, a small town on the Rhine located in what is now Germany....
  • Nelson Mandela
    Nelson Mandela

    Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela was the first President of South Africa of South Africa to be elected in a universal suffrage democratic election, serving in the office from 1994?99....


See also

  • American Old West
    American Old West

    For cultural influences and their development, see Western .The American Old West or Wild West comprises the history, geography, peoples, lore, and cultural expression of life in the Western United States , most often referring to the period of the latter half of the 19th century, between the American Civil War and the end of th...
  • Vigilante
    Vigilante

    A vigilante is a person who violates the law in order to exact what they believe to be justice from criminals, because they think that the criminal will not be caught or will not be sufficiently punished by the legal system....
  • Pirate
  • Buccaneer
    Buccaneer

    The buccaneers were Piracy who attacked Habsburg Spain and France shipping in the Caribbean Sea during the late 17th century.The term buccaneer is now used generally as a synonym for pirate....
  • Highwayman
    Highwayman

    The word highwayman is first attested from the year 1617. The term "highwayman" is mainly applied to robbers who travelled on a horse, as opposed to those who robbed on foot ....
  • Hajduk
    Hajduk

    Hajduk is a term most commonly referring to outlaws, highwayman or freedom fighters in the Balkans.Forms of the word in various languages include:...
  • Brigandage
    Brigandage

    Brigandage refers to the life and practice of brigands: highway robbery and plunder....
  • Thuggee
    Thuggee

    Thuggee is the term for a particular format for the murder and robbery of travellers in History of India.The modern word "wikt:thug" derives from this term....
     cult
  • Outlaw motorcycle club
    Motorcycle club

    A motorcycle club is an organized club of dedicated motorcyclists who join together for camaraderie, strength of numbers, companionship, education, rider training, and socialization....
  • Social bandits
    Social bandits

    Social bandit or social crime is a term invented by the historian Eric Hobsbawm in his 1965 classic study of popular forms of resistance, Primitive Rebels....
    , a term invented by Eric Hobsbawm
    Eric Hobsbawm

    Eric John Ernest Hobsbawm Companion of Honour, FBA, is a United Kingdom historical materialism and author....
  • Shanlin
    Shanlin

    The term shanlin ?? means literally "mountain and forest" in Chinese and was frequently used to describe bandits in Manchuria from the time of the Qing dynasty, because they knew the local wooded and mountainous terrain very well....
  • Honghuzi
    Honghuzi

    Honghuzi were armed robbers, bandits in the areas of the eastern Russia-China borderland: Southeastern Siberia, Russian Far East, and Northeast China ....
     ("red beards")
  • Thug
    Thug

    A thug in Modern English means a violent and/or anti-social person, including:...
  • Dacoit
  • Klepht
    Klepht

    Klephts , were bandits and warlike mountain folk who lived in the Greece countryside when Greece was a part of the Ottoman Empire. Due to the development of Turkish-Greek relations, though the word still means literally "thieves", it assumed a positive meaning for Greeks...