- ****sm (/ˈnɑːtsɪzəm, ˈnæt-/ NA(H)T-siz-əm),
formally named National Socialism (NS; German: Nationalsozialismus, German: [natsi̯oˈnaːlzotsi̯aˌlɪsmʊs] )...
-
Catherine Ada
Kelly (12 July 1863 –
October 1898) was the
younger sister of
Australian bushranger and
outlaw Ned Kelly. Kate
Kelly was born in Beveridge...
- The
Right Club was a
small group of
antisemitic and
fascist sympathising renegades within the
British establishment formed a few
months before World War...
-
plural Mitläufer,
feminine Mitläuferin) is a
person tied to or p****ively
sympathising with
certain social movements,
often to
those that are prevalent, controversial...
-
proclaimed them outlaws.
Kelly and his gang, with the help of a
network of
sympathisers,
evaded the
police for two years. The gang's
crime spree included raids...
- numbers. The new Reichstag,
exclusively composed of
NSDAP members and
sympathisers,
convened on 12
December to
elect a
Presidium headed by
President of...
-
Europe and the
deepening Sino-Soviet split. That
congress recognised two
sympathising groups in Britain. One, the
Revolutionary Socialist League,
better known...
- the
Communist Party of
Germany (KPD).
Originally the
party remained a
sympathising member of the
Communist International. In 1922, the KAPD
split into two...
-
Brocket KStJ (4
August 1904 – 24
March 1967) was a
prominent British ****
sympathiser and
Conservative Party politician in the
United Kingdom. He was born...
-
revolutionary and
Jacobin leader Jean-Paul
Marat on 13 July 1793.
Corday was a
sympathiser of the Girondins, a
moderate faction of
French revolutionaries in opposition...