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Action Française (French pronunciation: [aksjɔ̃ fʁɑ̃sɛːz], AF; English: French Action) was a French far-right monarchist and nationalist political movement. The name was also given to a journal associated with the movement, L'Action Française , sold by its own youth organization, the Camelots du Roi .
Action Française is a French royalist and nationalist political movement that restructured in 1947 after its pre-war iteration was disbanded following the Liberation of France. Revived under the leadership of Maurice Pujo , it launched the newspaper Aspects de la France and the counter-revolutionary organization Restauration Nationale .
The Fédération nationale des étudiants d'Action française (National Federation of Action Française Students) was an organization uniting student activists of the Action Française movement. The first Action Française Students' Association was created on December 8, 1905, in Paris by Lucien Moreau , [ 1 ] and was strengthened in 1913 with ...
Aspects de la France was established in 1947 as a monarchist publication aligned with the Action Française movement. Its creation by Georges Calzant was a response to the prohibition of the daily L'Action française following allegations of collaboration with the Vichy regime in 1944. [1]
L'Action française was a fierce opponent of the policies of the Third Republic, as well as of liberalism and democracy. Uniting collaborators from various nationalist and traditionalist movements, the newspaper became the crucible for the major currents of far-right ideology in France during the 1930s .
The King's Camelots, officially the National Federation of the King's Camelots (French: Fédération nationale des Camelots du Roi) was a far-right youth organization of the French militant royalist and integralist movement Action Française active from 1908 to 1936. It is best known for taking part in many right-wing demonstrations in France ...
He was an organizer and principal philosopher of Action Française, a political movement that is monarchist, anti-parliamentarist, and counter-revolutionary. Maurras also held anti-communist, anti-Masonic, anti-Protestant, and antisemitic views, while being highly critical of Nazism, referring to it as "stupidity".
The Institut d'Action française was a French political training institute founded by the Action Française movement. It was established in February 1906 in Paris at the initiative of Léon de Montesquiou and implemented by Louis Dimier. The institute aimed to study in detail major political, social, and religious issues.