The Angry Brigade
The Angry Brigade was an anarchist urban guerrilla group operating in Britain from the late 1960s to 1971, conducting a series of approximately 25 bombings against symbolic targets representing state power, capitalism, and imperialism, such as government offices, corporate buildings, and diplomatic premises.[1][2]
These attacks, which caused no fatalities but significant property damage, were claimed via typed communiqués distributed to media outlets, articulating grievances against industrial society, inequality, and authority in language influenced by situationist and libertarian socialist thought.[3][1] Rooted in the ferment of 1960s countercultural and anti-war activism, the group emerged as a loose network of militants disillusioned with reformist politics, viewing direct action through explosives as a means to provoke revolutionary consciousness amid economic stagnation and social unrest.[1][4]
Intensified police surveillance following high-profile incidents, including bombs at the homes of cabinet ministers, led to raids in March 1971 that uncovered bomb-making materials and ammunition in a Stoke Newington address, resulting in the arrests known as the Stoke Newington Eight.[4][5] The subsequent Old Bailey trial from May to December 1972—the longest conspiracy trial in English legal history—saw five defendants convicted of conspiracy to cause explosions based on forensic evidence linking them to devices and communiqués, with sentences ranging up to ten years, though debates persist over the extent of state fabrication in attributing all claimed actions to the group.[2][5][4]