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The Exhibition of the Fascist Revolution opened on October 28, 1932, on the tenth anniversary of the March on Rome. The anniversary was called the Decennale (evoking the ancient Roman Decennalia). The Exhibition was the propaganda centerpiece of the Decennale. [8] It was the largest official display organized by the Fascist regime to date.
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The museum's permanent exhibition contains material related to the nation's relationships to Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union. It also contains exhibits related to Hungarian organisations such as the fascist Arrow Cross Party and the communist ÁVH (similar to the Soviet KGB). Part of the exhibition takes visitors to the basement, where ...
About Wikipedia; Contact us; Contribute Help; ... Films about Fascist Italy (23 P) N. Films about Nazism (4 C, 22 P) S. ... (1950 film) V.
Benito Mussolini opened the Exhibition of the Fascist Revolution at the Palazzo delle Esposizioni in Rome, consisting of 15,000 different objects portraying the rise of Fascism from the beginning of the Great War in 1914 to the March on Rome in 1922. [51] Born: Harry Gregg, footballer and manager; in Magherafelt, Northern Ireland (d. 2020)
In Budapest in 1957, a year after the failure of the Hungarian uprising, Jung is a mid-level agent informing on many other citizens who come to report to him. He is in charge for an elaborate testing process to ascertain loyalty to Kádár's regime, but he does not realize that he is being watched and photographed too, by his superior and mentor, Marko.
1945 is a 2017 Hungarian drama film directed by Ferenc Török [2] and co-written by Török and Gábor T. Szántó.It concerns two Jewish survivors of the Holocaust who arrive in a Hungarian village in August 1945, and the paranoid reactions of the villagers, some of whom fear that these and other Jews are coming to reclaim Jewish property.
The Grand Anti-Masonic Exhibition (German: Anti-Freimaurer-Ausstellung, Serbian: Анти-масонска изложба) was the name of an antisemitic exhibition that was opened on October 22, 1941 during World War II in Belgrade, the capital of the Nazi Germany-established Militärverwaltung in occupied Serbia.