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Что (кто) такое bushranger$509635$ - определение

AUSTRALIAN BUSHRANGERS
Thomas Clarke (bushranger); John Clarke (bushranger)
  • John Clarke shakes hands with the police after he and his brother are apprehended.
  • The "Bushrangers Tree" in Nelligen, which is believed to be the tree the Clarke brothers were chained to after their capture
  • The Clarke brothers apprehended in Braidwood Jail, May 1867. Thomas (right) is shot in the arm.
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John Francis (bushranger)         
AUSTRALIAN BUSHRANGER
George Francis (bushranger); George Melville (bushranger)
John Francis (c. 1825 - after 1853) was one of a party of bushrangers who held up the Melbourne Private Escort Company's regular escort of gold from the McIvor diggings at Heathcote, Victoria and Kyneton on the morning of 20 July 1853.
Musquito         
  • A retrospective portrait of Musquito, completed in the 1860s
AUSTRALIAN BUSHRANGER
Musquito (bushranger)
·noun ·see Mosquito.
Musquito         
  • A retrospective portrait of Musquito, completed in the 1860s
AUSTRALIAN BUSHRANGER
Musquito (bushranger)
Musquito (c. 1780, Port Jackson – 25 February 1825, Hobart) (also rendered Mosquito, Musquetta, Bush Muschetta or Muskito) was an Indigenous Australian resistance leader, latterly based in Van Diemen's Land.

Википедия

Clarke brothers

Brothers Thomas (c. 1840 – 25 June 1867) and John Clarke (c. 1846 – 25 June 1867) were Australian bushrangers from the Braidwood district of New South Wales. They committed a series of high-profile crimes which led to the enacting of the Felons' Apprehension Act (1866), a law that introduced the concept of outlawry in the colony and authorised citizens to kill bushrangers on sight. Thomas was proclaimed an outlaw on 31 May 1866.

Active in the southern goldfields from 1865 until their capture, Thomas and John were joined for a time by their brother James and several associates. They were responsible for a reported 71 robberies and hold-ups, as well as the death of at least one policeman; they are also suspected of killing a squad of four policemen looking to bring them in. The Clarkes also murdered one of their own gang members and a man they wrongly assumed was a police tracker, and shot several other victims. They were captured during a shoot-out in April 1867 and hanged two months later at Sydney's Darlinghurst Gaol. Their execution ended organised gang bushranging in New South Wales.

Some modern-day writers have described the Clarkes as the most bloodthirsty bushrangers of all, and according to one journalist, "Their crimes were so shocking that they never made their way into bushranger folklore — people just wanted to forget about them."