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Jean Jaures: The Inner Life of Social Democracy. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2014. Noland, Aaron. "Individualism in Jean Jaures' Socialist Thought." Journal of the History of Ideas (1961): 63–80. in JSTOR; Tolosa, Benjamin T. "The Socialist Legacy of Jean Jaures and Leon Blum." Philippine Studies (1992): 226–239.
Vive la France ("Jaurès is dead! Long live France"). La Bataille syndicaliste, a CGT organ, adopted the same tone. [8] At the Salle Wagram on August 2, at the Socialist Party meeting convened by Jaurès, Édouard Vaillant, the Commune's old revolutionary, declared: "In the face of aggression, socialists will do their duty. For the Fatherland ...
The SFIO was founded in 1905 as the French representative to the Second International, merging the Marxist Socialist Party of France led by Jules Guesde and the social-democratic French Socialist Party led by Jean Jaurès, who became the SFIO's leading figure.
University of Toulouse-Jean Jaurès was hastily conceived as a result of the saturation of the original buildings in the city centre and the events of May 1968.At that time it was decided to divide the University of Toulouse into three: The law faculty became Université Toulouse I, occupying all the old university buildings, the humanities faculty became Université de Toulouse II – Le ...
The paper's status was highest in the years after World War II, when the PCF was the dominant party of the French left and L'Humanité enjoyed a large circulation. Since the 1980s, however, the PCF has been in decline, mostly due to the rise of the Socialist Party, which took over large sections of PCF support; circulation and economic viability of L'Humanité have declined as well.
Raoul Villain. Raoul Villain (19 September 1885 – 17 September 1936) was a French nationalist.He is primarily remembered for his assassination of the French socialist leader Jean Jaurès on 31 July 1914, in Paris.
Louis and Jean Jaurès both studied at the Collège de Castres. [4] Louis was a good student, and won the second prize in geography. [ 6 ] In 1878 the Jaurès brothers were at an event in Castres where the sub-Prefect spoke in praise of the French nation but did not mention the Republic, and ended with " Vive la France! ". [ 7 ]
It was finally abolished in 1969, giving birth to the three current universities: Toulouse 1 Capitole University, University of Toulouse-Jean Jaurès and Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier University. The ComUE in the Toulouse region was known as Federal University of Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées .