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Topic: Giuseppi Fanelli


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In the News (Thu 24 Dec 09)

  
  anarchism in spain - Article and Reference from OnPedia.com
A middle-aged revolutionary named Giuseppi Fanelli came to Spain on a journey planned by Mikhail Bakunin in order to recruit members for the First International, an international organization that aimed to unify groups working for the benefit of the working class but which would soon be dominated by Marxists.
Fanelli spoke in French and Italian, so those present could only understand bits of what he was saying, except for one man, Tomás González Morago, who knew French.
The oppressed and marginalized working classes were very susceptible to an ideology attacking institutions they perceived to be oppressive, namely: the State with its corruption and brutality, capitalism with its gross divide between wretched poverty and grand wealth, and the supremely powerful and coercive institution of organized religion.
www.onpedia.com /encyclopedia/Anarchism-in-Spain   (6181 words)

  
 [No title]
He put Fanelli in touch with a group of workers with "very advanced ideas," and a small, intimate meeting was arranged in the guest room of one Rubau Donadeu.
If this is so, Fanelli showed excellent judgment: Anselmo Lorenzo was to live for many years, and he remained a dedicated revolutionary, earning the sobriquet "the grandfather of Spanish Anarchism." His contribution to the spread of Anarchist ideas in Barcelona and Andalusia over the decades ahead was enormous.
For Fanelli, revolution was a way of life, not merely a distant theoretical goal, and his latter years as a deputy were spent on the railways, preaching social revolution during the day in peasant villages throughout Italy, later returning to sleep in the train at night.
lemming.mahost.org /library/tsa/raw/tsa00.txt   (1127 words)

  
 Social Anarchism/The Spanish Anarchists
Bookchin energetically disputes the idea that Spanish Anarchists are the "amorphous mass" of primitive rebels "described by Brenan and Hobsbawm." (p.
159) He begins his history with Giuseppi Fanelli's visit to Spain in October/November 1868 bringing Bakunin's collectivist ideas to the already organized workers and peasants.
They fell on fertile ground, the "intense localism of Spanish social life: the patria chica...an almost untranslatable term that denotes the village and its immediate region -- in short, the living arena of the rural Spaniard's world....not merely a geographical or political unit, but the unit of society in every context".
library.nothingness.org /articles/all/all/display/347   (484 words)

  
 Anarchism in Spain   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
A middle aged revolutionary named Giuseppi Fanelli came to Spain on a journey planned by Mikhail Bakunin in order to recruit members for the First International.
He addressed a small group of workers, impressing them with his passion and hope for a better future.
A few dedicated anarchists who were probably first introduced to “the Idea” by Fanelli began holding meetings, giving speeches, and attracting new followers.
www.objectssearch.com /encyclopedia/en/wikipedia/a/an/anarchism_in_spain.html   (4679 words)

  
 Ancestry Message Boards - Message [ Cammarata ]
I am looking for information on Giuseppi Salllemi who married Maria Cammarata.
Giuseppi and one daughter, Vincenza, moved to Chicago, Il in 1916.
I am trying to tie Giuseppi to my g-grandmother Vincenza Sallemi m.
boards.ancestry.com /mbexec?htx=message&r=an&p=surnames.Cammarata&m=42   (62 words)

  
 Untitled
As Gerald Brenan explains with concision, the main source of conflict between these two formidable thinkers were their respective visions for the post-revolutionary state: "...whereas Marx wished to conquer political power for the proletariat, Bakunin wished the proletariat to destroy it" (132).
He was among those present at the first anarchist meeting organized by Giuseppi Fanelli in Barcelona, and throughout his career as a publisher served as director of several important anarchist periodicals, including La solidaridad (Madrid) and El productor (Barcelona).
Without a doubt, however, Lorenzo's single most important text are his memoirs, in which he colorfully describes the trajectory of the Spanish anarchist movement from its inception with Fanelli to its declines at the turn-of-the-century and after (El proletariado militante.
www.msu.edu /user/nappodan/pensafu.htm   (3302 words)

  
 anarchism_in_spain   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Therefore, from the start anarchism in Spain was associated with the labour movement (as Bakunin desired) and so anarchists had a...
The Growth of Anarchism in Spain An Italian by the name of Giuseppi Fanelli was instrumental in bringing the ideology of Anarchism to Spain.
Other chapters include a case study of anarchism in Spain, as well as some contemporary theory.
anarchism_in_spain.networklive.org   (285 words)

  
 The Growth of Anarchism   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
An Italian by the name of Giuseppi Fanelli was instrumental in bringing the ideology
A follower of the Russian anarchist Mikhail Bakunin, he traveled through Spain
Additional cittations are from Jose Peirats' book Anarchists n the Spanish Revolution, 1990.
recollectionbooks.com /bleed/Encyclopedia/ArchiveMirror/Spain1936/Growth.html   (436 words)

  
 Marriage Records - F
Fanelli, Carmine Joseph, County Clerk No. 24116, issued in 1917
Fanelli, Florence, County Clerk No. 1240, issued in 1926
Fanelli, Henry A., County Clerk No. 19506, issued in 1930
www.westchestergov.com /wcarchives/Online_Indexes/PersonalNameIndexes/marriagerecords/marriage_records_F.htm   (18807 words)

  
 Blow job milf Sexy Babes   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
However, the charges were dropped after the search which led to the indictment was ruled Anarchism, the political philosophy based on a libertarian society without centralized power, historically gained the most Mature lady Milf sample popularity and influence in Spain, in the seventy or so years before Franco's coup.
A middle aged revolutionary named Giuseppi Fanelli came to Spain on a journey planned by Mikhail Bakunin in order to recruit members for the First Free milf picture Bbw lesbian International.
A few dedicated anarchists who were probably first Bra busty in Mature babe introduced to “the Idea” by Fanelli began holding meetings, Blow
milf.milfhunter.cn /Milf_hunter/Blow_job_milf.html   (817 words)

  
 Spunk Library -- Image Index -- All titles
Direct Action magazine cover - issue 1 (gif)
Garrido, Fernando and Elias Reclus, Jose Maria Orense, Aristides Rey, and Giuseppi Fanelli
Grafiti: "no hay prision que pare la insumisio'n"
www.spunk.org /library/index/images.html   (178 words)

  
 The Daily Bleed: A Calendar Better Than Boiled Coffee! Timeline, Chronology, Labor, Radical, Arts, Literature, Authors, ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Staff: Elisee Reclus (Field Manager), Louise Michel (Coach), Albert Parsons (Coach), Dana Ward (Coach), Guiseppe Fanelli (General Manager)
Francisco Ferrer y Guardia - Ferrer #1 William Godwin - Engraving - Lampooned Group Photos - Group #1 Left to Right: Fernando Garrido, Elias Reclus, Jose Maria Orense, Aristides Rey, Giuseppi Fanelli.
THE PART PLAYED BY THE ANARCHISTS THE MAKHNOVTCHINA It had been relatively easy to liquidate the small, weak nuclei of anarchists in the cities, but things were different in the Ukraine, where the peasant Nestor Makhno had built up a strong rural anarchist organization, both economic and military.
recollectionbooks.com /bleed/Encyclopedia/MakhnoFromBleed.htm   (7446 words)

  
 Pie in the sky   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Anarchism was present in Spain since at least 1845, when the world's first anarchist journal, El Porvenir, came into being -- the work of one Ramón de la Sagra.
However, the explosion of anarchism in Spain can be dated quite precisely to a visit to Spain by one Giuseppi Fanelli in 1868.
His objective in visiting the country was to recruit workers for Bakunin and the First International.
www.nationalanarchist.com /pie.html   (17450 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
How did it happen that the spirit of liberty had such strong roots in Spain, that 8,000,000 of 12,000,000 people lived or worked in voluntary collectives in Loyalist Spain, without benefit of government decrees requiring compliance with regulations from above?
The libertarian labour movement was born in Spain in October, 1868, following a visit by Giuseppi Fanelli, an Italian comrade and supporter of Michael Bakunin in the fight within the First International Workingmen's Association between the authoritarian Karl Marx and the anarchist Bakunin.
A great ferment of opposition to the existing reactionary monarchist regime in Spain was developing.
fraternitelibertaire.free.fr /reserve/with_the_peasants_of_aragon.doc   (22152 words)

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