- Jean-François
Thiriart (French pronunciation: [ʒɑ̃ fʁɑ̃swa tiʁjaʁ]; 22
March 1922,
Brussels – 23
November 1992),
often known as Jean
Thiriart, was a Belgian...
-
after World War II at a time when
contemporaries such as Jean-François
Thiriart were also
becoming interested in Europeanism.
Attempts soon
followed to...
-
confused with Jeune-Europe
headed by
Thiriart),
directed by Yves Batille.
These organizations were a mix of
Thiriart's theses with a
Maoism adapted to the...
-
movement formed by Jean
Thiriart in Belgium.
Emile Lecerf, a
later editor of the
Nouvel Europe Magazine, was one of
Thiriart's ****ociates.
Following the...
- a
paradigm for
theorists of
National Bolshevism such as Jean-François
Thiriart, but
there was a
publicised connection between him and
Iosif Constantin...
- the film “was all but
dumped by its distributors,"
while Jean-Philippe
Thiriart, in a
report for
Ardenne magazine,
observed that Wild
Bunch had clearly...
- Elementy,
which initially began by
praising Franco-Belgian Jean-François
Thiriart,
belatedly a
supporter of a "Euro-Soviet
empire which would stretch from...
-
National Bolshevism. The
party was
initially formed in 1965 by Jean-François
Thiriart as a
political group to work
alongside his Europe-wide
movement Jeune Europe...
-
culture and
influenced 1960s
figures such as SS-veteran Jean-François
Thiriart.
Yockey was also fond of Arab nationalism, in
particular Gamal Abdel N****er...
- like
Aleksandr Dugin, François Duprat,
Julius Evola and Jean-François
Thiriart but also by
socialists such as
Louis Auguste Blanqui. It used the trident...