Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. "Roberto Farinacci" published on by null. (b. 18 Oct. 1892, d. 28 Apr. 1945).Italian Fascist He gained a degree in law and then became politically active as a moderate and pragmatic socialist. A supporter of Italy's entry into World War I, he co‐founded the Fascist movement in 1919 and organized the Fascist party in and around Cremona, which became his subsequent power base.

  2. Farinacci, Roberto (1893–1945. április 28.) Benito Mussolini egyik legkorábbi híve, a fasiszta párt antiszemita szárnyának vezetője, a cremonai fasiszták vezetője; 1921 májusától képviselő. 1925. február 12-től a Nemzeti Fasiszta Párt főtitkára, de Mussolini – belátva, hogy ~ brutális és arrogáns viselkedése árt rendszere tekintélyének – 1926 márciusában ...

  3. Roberto Farinacci (født 16. oktober 1892 i Isernia i regionen Molise i Italia, død 28. april 1945 i Vimercate i regionen Lombardia) var en italiensk fascistisk politiker på bevegelsens høyre fløy, og hørte til den mest kjente antisemitter ved siden av Interlandi og Preziosi.

  4. Roberto Farinacci 1930. Roberto Farinacci (* 16. Oktober 1892 in Isernia, Molise; † 28. April 1945 in Vimercate, Lombardei) war ein italienischer Rechtsanwalt, Journalist und faschistischer Politiker. Von 1925 bis 1926 war er Generalsekretär des Partito Nazionale Fascista.

  5. Fou director d’"Il Regime Fascista”, secretari general del partit feixista (1925-26), membre del gran consell (1935) i ministre d’estat (1938). De tendència radical, fou partidari de la collaboració amb Alemanya.

  6. Roberto Farinacci (16 October 1892 - 21 May 1955) was an Italian Fascist politician and a leading member of the National Fascist Party. He served as the first Duce of the Italian Social Republic, aligning the country with the interests of Nazi Germany. Shortly after the assassination of Benito Mussolini in 1937, Farinacci assumed control of the National Fascist Party and became Prime Minister ...

  7. Roberto Farinacci e il Partito Nazionale Fascista 1923-1926, (Rubbettino, Soveria Mannelli, 2008). Lorenzo Santoro Quoted as fundamental study on Early fascist regime in the most recent works on Fascism by Paul Corner, Paolo Pombeni, and in the International Bibliography of Historical Sciences 2008, Volume 77, edited by Massimo Mastrogregori, Walter de Gruyter, 2012.