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  • Falange Espanola

    In October 1933 José Antonio Primo de Rivera established the Falange Española (Spanish Falange). In its manifesto published later that year the Falange condemned socialism, ...

  • Falange - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    The Falange (or Phalange) is the name assigned to several political movements and parties dating from the 1930s, most particularly the original fascist movement in Spain.

  • Falange definition of Falange in the Free Online Encyclopedia.

    Falange (fälän`hā) [Span.,=phalanx], Spanish political party, founded in 1933 as Falange Española by José António Primo de Rivera, son of the former Spanish dictator.

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Falange

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Falange (Spanish, “phalanx”), Spanish political party, the Falange Española founded in 1933 by José Antonio Primo de Rivera, son of Miguel Primo de Rivera, Spain's dictator during the 1920s. Named after an ancient Greek military formation, the Falange glorified strength and force, favouring a dictatorship similar to that of Benito Mussolini of Italy. Rejecting republicanism, party politics, capitalism, Marxism, and the class war, the Falangists were originally also hostile to the Roman Catholic Church. In 1934 they merged with another fascist group, the Juntas de Ofensiva Nacional Syndicalista (Union of the Nation Syndicalist Offensive), and in the Spanish civil war (1936-1939) supported General Francisco Franco against the Spanish republic. In 1937, on Franco's orders, the Falange merged with the pro-Roman Catholic and monarchist Carlists. This composite group became the official party of the Franco dictatorship in its early years, and Primo de Rivera who had been killed during the civil war, was honoured as a national hero. After World War II, Franco curtailed the role of the Falange in his regime. In the 1950s it became part of the broader National Movement, which remained the official party until Franco's death.

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