| HOTSPUR | Harry ---, nickname of Henry Percy, who led a rebellion against Henry IV in 1403 (7) |
| PERCY | Sir Henry ___, nicknamed Harry Hotspur, knight who led a rebellion against Henry IV in 1403 (5) |
| OWEN | Chieftain who led a revolt against Henry IV in Wales (4,9) |
| GLENDOWER | Chieftain who led a revolt against Henry IV in Wales (4,9) |
| CADE | Orphan lamb, hand-reared on a bottle; leader of a rebellion against Henry VI; a Mediterranean species of juniper; or, a barrel or cask (4) |
| SLEDGE | Percy who sang "When a Man Loves a Woman" |
| PONTIAC | Chief of the Ottawa Indians, who led a rebellion against the British (7) |
| EDICTOF | Law granting religious and civil liberties to French Protestants, enacted by Henry IV in 1598 and revoked by Louis XIV in 1685 (5,2,6) |
| LOLLARD | Opposed by Thomas Arundel, any one of John Wycliffe's followers whose revolt against Henry V in 1414 was led by John Oldcastle (7) |
| PRINCES | - in the Tower; Edward V and his brother Richard who disappeared aged 12 and 9 respectively after the death of their father Edward IV in 1483 (7) |
| RAEBURN | Portraitist knighted by George IV in 1822 and subsequently given the post of King's Limner in Scotland (7) |
| SPARTACUS | Thracian gladiator who led a rebellion against Rome |
| SHREWSBURY | The location of one of England's bloodiest battles, fought in 1403, in which Henry 'Hotspur' Percy d |
| OWENGLENDOWER | Anglicised name of the Welsh chieftain who led a revolt against Henry IV and Henry V between 1400 and 1415 (4,9) |
| MONTFORT | Simon de ---, 13th-Century Earl of Leicester who led the baronial rebellion against Henry III (8) |
| LANCASTER | Royal house that ruled England from the accession of Henry IV in 1399 to the deposing of Henry VI 1461 (9) |
| NAT | Turner who led a rebellion of enslaved people in Virginia |
| JACKCADE | English leader of the Kentish rebellion against Henry VI in 1450 (4,4) |
| TARENORERER | Known as Walyer by the Europeans against whom she led a rebellion in Tasmania in the 19th century (11) |
| COMPROMISER | "The Great ___" (nickname of Henry Clay owing to his prowess in appeasing slaveholding states; he died in 1852 during his fourth stint as a U.S. senator for Kentucky) |