Eugène Deloncle (Q544548)

De Wikidata
Aller à la navigation Aller à la recherche
politicien français
  • Eugene Deloncle
modifier
Langue Libellé Description Également connu comme
français
Eugène Deloncle
politicien français
  • Eugene Deloncle
anglais
Eugène Deloncle
French politician (1890-1944)
  • Eugene Deloncle

Déclarations

Eugène Deloncle vers 1940.jpg
793 × 842 ; 111 kio
Eugène Deloncle vers 1940. (français)
0 référence
0 référence
Eugène Deloncle (français)
0 référence
0 référence
0 référence
1 référence
One of the leaders of the far right in France, in the tumultuous years leading up to the Second World War, was Eugène Deloncle, whom Brandon describes as a “clever and charismatic naval engineer whose hypnotic personal charm nullified his somewhat absurd appearance—short, plump, invariably bowler-hatted.” Deloncle ran what was essentially a terrorist group called La Cagoule, which conducted political assassinations, fired on a socialist demonstration, and set off two bombs near the Arc de Triomphe. He had a personal hit man, named Jean Filliol, who at one point tried to kill the French Prime Minister. After the German invasion of France in 1940, Deloncle formed a political party called the Mouvement Social Révolutionnaire, or M.S.R., which in Occupied France was one of the loudest voices favoring collaboration with the Nazis. Deloncle’s men marched through Paris in jackboots and tunics, cataloguing Jewish property for expropriation. In October of 1941, the M.S.R. blew up seven Paris synagogues with explosives provided by the Gestapo. Deloncle was a gangster, a thug, and a vicious anti-Semite, and Eugène Schueller was one of his biggest backers. (anglais)
Eugène Deloncle
0 référence

Identifiants

 
modifier
    modifier
      modifier
        modifier
          modifier
            modifier
              modifier
                modifier