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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 political organisation of the movement, the Ligue d'Action Française, was launched in the spring of 1905, as was the Action Française Federation of Students, directed by Lucien Moreau. [23] L'Institut d'Action française was created in 1906 as an alternative institute for higher education. [22]
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]
From left to right: Marcel Bucard, Paul Lafitte and J.-B. L'Herault (Jan. 1934) A decorated soldier who earned a reputation for bravery in World War I, [1] Bucard became active in politics after 1918, initially as a member of Action française, an integralist monarchist far-right group, and later as a member of the overtly-fascist and anti-Semitic Faisceau of Georges Valois.
The Restauration Nationale (often abbreviated as RN) is a French political movement rooted in the royalist tradition and aligned with the legacy of the Action française. Positioned on the far-right of the political spectrum, [ 2 ] [ 3 ] it was founded in 1955 during the early days of the Algerian War by Pierre Juhel and Louis-Olivier de Roux ...
The series follows the 2003 French film of the same name in which childhood sweethearts Constance and Martin, both married with children, reunite and leave their spouses for each other. The series begins three years later as the new couple, with their respective children, leave for a relaxing vacation at Martin's parents' house.
L'Action française 2000 remained faithful to the legacy of Aspects de la France and the Action française movement, adhering to the doctrine of integral nationalism championed by founding members such as Charles Maurras, Léon Daudet, and Jacques Bainville. The journal defended France’s independence and national identity while advocating for ...
L'Action française, organ of Integral nationalism, was a royalist French newspaper founded in Paris on 21 March 1908. [1] It was banned during the Liberation of France in August 1944. The newspaper succeeded the Revue d'Action française of Henri Vaugeois and Maurice Pujo .