Revolutionary legacies are like the superpowers that stay with a group or person after they go through a big change, kind of like when you finish cleaning your room and it stays tidy for days, even though you’re not watching it anymore.
Like a family recipe passed down
Imagine your grandma teaches you how to make the best chocolate chip cookies. Even if she’s not around anymore, every time you bake those cookies, you feel her with you, that's a legacy.
Revolutionary legacies are like that, but for big groups of people who go through a major change, like when a country gets freedom or a new way of living.
The cookie jar never runs out
When a group has a revolution, they might win freedom or create something new. But even after the revolution is over, their hard work stays with them, kind of like how your grandma’s cookie recipe always makes you happy, no matter how many times you use it. That’s a legacy, and that's what revolutionary legacies are all about!
Examples
- A group of people start a revolution, and even after it's over, their ideas still shape how people live today.
- Like when one country fights for freedom, and that freedom inspires others to do the same later on.
- The way people remember a revolution can change its legacy over time.
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See also
- What Makes a ‘Revolution’ Last?
- What Makes a ‘Revolution’ Successful?
- How Can One Person Change a Whole Country?
- What Causes the ‘Boring’ Parts of History to Be Forgotten?
- How Did the Pharaohs of Ancient Egypt Rule for So Long?
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