Revere___________________________3977 the Gift and Estate Taxes. See FIN AN ri-:. PUBLIC; and for the principal sources of public revenue TARIFF; TAXATION; EXCISE TAXES; United States; reports of the United States Treasury; Social Security; publica- tions of the United States Chamber of Corn- Revere, Paul (1735-1818), American pa- triot, was born in Boston, Mass. He was one of the party that destroyed the tea in Boston Harbor, and he was at the head of a volunteer committee consisting of thirty young mechanics, who formed a secret so- ciety to watch the British. When it was known that the latter intended to move, Re- vere crossed over to Charlestown, and on April 18, 1775, the ight before Lexington and Concord, at a signal rode on to Lexing- ton and to Lincoln, rousing the minute men as he went; at Lincoln he was stopped, but a companion succeeded in reaching Con- cord. During the war he rose to lieutenant- colonel of artillery; afterward he returned to his goldsmith's work; and in 1801 founded the Revere Copper Company at Canton, Mass. Reverend (Latin reverendus, to be re- spected), a title given generally to the cler- gy of all denominations. In the Anglican Church deans are 'Very Reverend,' bishops 'Right Reverend/ and archbishops 'Most Reverend,' Reversing Layer, a stratum of incande- scent vapors enveloping the sun, by the ab- sorptive action of which the Fraunhofer lines are produced. Reversion, in law, denotes the residuary interest held by one who has granted a limited estate in certain property to another. A re- version is a proper legal estate which may be alienated by deed or will and descends to heirs. (See ESTATES.) Reversion, in heredity, a manifestation in which the characteristics of remote ancestors are more prominent than those of the im- mediate progenitors. See HEREDITY, Revetment is a sheathing, facing, or re- taining wall, as of masonry or other materi- als, for protecting a mass or bank of earth, etc., as in fortifications and river banks. Review, as a military term, signifies a for- mal or official inspection of troops or war vessels. Revised Statutes. See Statutes. Revival of Learning. See Renaissance. Revival of Religion, or Religious Re- vival, a name given to an emergence of spir- Revolution itual fervor and activity in a community or :listrict, speedily becoming epidemic, and re- claiming the indifferent and the immoral to divine grace and consecration. Such out- breaks of religious zeal as took place during the Middle Ages in connection with Montan- ism and the Crusades are fitly enough called revivals; while the Protestant Reformation of the sixteenth century, the greatest revival since the apostolic age, gave rise to the coun- ter-revival of the Jesuits in the Roman Catho- lic Church. The term 'revival,' however, was not commonly employed until after the wide- spread movement in the first half of the eighteenth century from which the Metho- dist churches originated. The revival wl.ich took place in New England and extended throughout the Atlantic Coast States, from about 1734 to 1750, under Jonathan Ed- wards, Bellamy, and the Tennents, was gen- erally designated the Great Awakening. In America there was a revival beginning in 1796 and culminating in 1800 in the Scotch- Irish revival of Kentucky. The great Ameri- can revival of 1857-61 began in New Eng- land, particularly in Connecticut and Massa- chusetts, and became so widespread as to at- tain a national character. Another remark- able revival in 1874-77 originated in the la- bors of two American evangelists, Moody and Sankey. Ilie Salvation Army carries on its work largely by metuods known as re- vivalistic. Contemporary revivals in Ameri- ca have been organized under the leadership of such evangelists as J. Wilbur Chapman, 'Gypsy Smith,' and the late William A. Sunday. The Oxford Group Movement un- der the leadership of Frank Buchman has spread with great rapidity during the last decade not only.in the United States and England but in many other countries. Revolution, a fundamental change in gov- ernment, or in the political constitution of a country, effected suddenly and violently, and mainly brought about by internal causes. Revolution, American, or the American War of Independence, the struggle (1775- ^783) by which the thirteen English colonies in America separated from Great Britain and became the United States of America. The fundamental causes of the Revolution were of two kinds, political and economic. There were three great differences: (i) a differing theory and practice of representation; (2) different ideas of the rights of the individual, or a disagreement as ^o the extent of govern- mental power over individuals; (3) conflict-