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Topic: Malatesta


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In the News (Mon 28 Dec 09)

  
  Errico Malatesta Page from the Daily Bleed's Anarchist Encyclopedia: A Gallery of Saints & Sinners; Labor, Radical, ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Malatesta was a wealthy man who put his entire fortune at the disposal of the cause.
Malatesta took part in the Xeres insurrection in Spain, in the General Strike of 1895 in Belgium, & spent years of exile & imprisonment in England, France, & Switzerland.
Convicted of belonging to a seditious organization, Malatesta is sentenced to imprisonment on the island of Lampedusa.
recollectionbooks.com /bleed/Encyclopedia/MalatestaErrico.htm   (1561 words)

  
  Errico Malatesta - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Malatesta was born in Santa Maria Capua Vetere in the Caserta province of southern Italy.
Malatesta was introduced to Mazzinian Republicanism while studying medicine at the University of Naples — however, he was expelled from those studies in 1871 for joining a demonstration.
Malatesta was a committed revolutionary: he believed that the anarchist revolution was coming soon, and that violence would be a necessary part of it since the state rested ultimately on violent coercion.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Errico_Malatesta   (1088 words)

  
 Libri La Baronata: Errico Malatesta - English Version
Malatesta is the prisoner of a radically optimistic anthropological premise that insists on the moral character of the divergence between anarchism and democracy, and which is reconciled through a different ethical conception of society.
30 - Errico Malatesta, Ancora sulla rivoluzione in pratica, in «Umanità Nova», 14 ottobre 1922.
34 - Errico Malatesta, Ancora sulla rivoluzione in pratica, in «Umanità Nova», 14 ottobre 1922.
www.anarca-bolo.ch /baronata/libri/malatesta/malatesta-en.html   (5425 words)

  
 Malatesta Biography
Max Nettlau, Errico Malatesta: The Biography of an Anarchist, New York, 1924.
Malatesta was found innocent and the thieves were killed in a police raid on their hideout.
Known as "Red Week", troops in the area fraternize with protesters while Malatesta and his fellow anarchists attempt to organize a revolt against the government.
dwardmac.pitzer.edu /Anarchist_Archives/malatesta/malatestabio.html   (802 words)

  
 Errico Malatesta -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Errico Malatesta (December 14, 1853 – July 22, 1932) was an (An advocate of anarchism) anarchist with an unshakable belief, which he shared with his friend (additional info and facts about Peter Kropotkin) Peter Kropotkin, that the anarchist (The overthrow of a government by those who are governed) revolution would occur soon.
Malatesta went back to Naples in 1884 -- while waiting to serve a three year prison term -- to nurse the victims of a (An acute intestinal infection caused by ingestion of contaminated water or food) cholera epidemic.
Malatesta was a committed revolutionary: he believed that the anarchist revolution was coming soon, and that (An act of aggression (as one against a person who resists)) violence would be a necessary part of it since the (The way something is with respect to its main attributes) state rested ultimately on violent coercion.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/e/er/errico_malatesta.htm   (1036 words)

  
 [No title]
Malatesta was one of the famous anarchists of the 19th century.
Errico Malatesta was born in Santa Maria Capua Vetere in the province of Caserta, Italy, on December 14, 1853.
Malatesta at 60 It is a sign of Malatesta's influence and inspiration, that he was able, at the age of sixty to start things going in Italy, from where he lived, in London WC1.
www.textfiles.com /politics/SPUNK/sp000710.txt   (2891 words)

  
 ERRICO MALATESTA   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Malatesta hatte zunächst Medizin studiert, aber schon früh den Entschluss gefasst, sein Leben ganz der sozialen Revolution zu widmen.
1877 führt Malatesta zusammen mit Andrea Costa und Carlo Cafiero einen bewaffneten Aufstand in zwei Dörfern in Campania.
1913 kehrte Malatesta freiwillig wieder nach Italien zurück, um an geplanten Demonstrationen gegen Staat und Kirche in Ancona teilzunehmen.
www.toonorama.com /encyclopedia/E/Errico_Malatesta   (982 words)

  
 Malatesta, Life and Ideas — Kate Sharpley Library
Malatesta, as an anarchist propagandist, was particularly concerned about the role anarchists should play in working class movements.
Nevertheless Malatesta believed that anarchists should involve themselves as much as possible with these movements as anarchists, endeavouring always to develop and nurture a true revolutionary consciousness in fellow workers, but never to dominate a union.
Malatesta and Kropotkin had been on very close terms prior to 1914, but their respective stands regarding the First World War ruptured this relationship.
www.katesharpleylibrary.net /malatesta.htm   (1275 words)

  
 Malatesta on Encyclopedia.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
With the expulsion of the family's Ghibelline rivals in 1295 the Malatesta rule in Rimini became well established, but papal investiture was made only in the following century.
The most famous was Sigismondo Pandolfo Malatesta (1417-68), a typical lord of the Italian Renaissance.
Although the Malatesta family returned for brief intervals in the early 16th cent., Rimini passed definitively to the Holy See in 1528.
www.encyclopedia.com /html/M/Malatest.asp   (467 words)

  
 [No title]
By the time of Malatesta's first meeting with Bakunin, which as I already said was in 1872, when Malatesta was 19, Malatesta's mother, father and a brother and sister had all died from chest complaints.
Malatestas membership was turned down on the grounds that he was too socialistic and that he would probably not last long, but would leave and join the International.
Malatesta wrote that when an uprising does take place: " the signori [ie, the aristos] if they have any sense can more easily control by distributing bread and throwing a few coppers to the clamouring mob from their balconies, than by ordering the carabineers to fire on them.
www.spunk.org /texts/groups/wsm/sp000710.txt   (2891 words)

  
 OPERA COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Malatesta arrives and, unable to dissuade his friend from his decision, claims to have found Don Pasquale a wife.
Malatesta divulges his plan to trick Don Pasquale into marrying Norina as his sister under a false contract.
Malatesta sends for a notary and dictates the terms of the marriage.
www.operaphilly.com /04-05/prod2-synopsis.shtml   (951 words)

  
 Errico Malatesta - Freepedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Errico Malatesta né en Italie, le 14 décembre 1853, mort le 12 juillet 1932, est un propagandiste et un révolutionnaire anarchiste trés actif tout au long de sa vie.
Malatesta développe dans ses différents écrits des principes révolutionnaires anarchistes, tels le volontarisme, le gradualisme révolutionnaire et bien d'autres principes.
Malatesta remarqua dans « la plateforme », des principes peu libertaires dans le fond, sur la responsabilité collective (par exemple), et quant au fonctionnement sur les prises de décisions peu claires, laissant le champ vide à de possibles prises de pouvoir...
fr.freepedia.org /Errico_Malatesta.html   (693 words)

  
 Don Pasquale
Malatesta soon leads in the shy, trembling girl -- Norina, heavily veiled and "in character" -- and Pasquale is transported.
Malatesta dictates to the "notary" the contract, which of course contains a clause by which Pasquale leaves half his property to "Sofronia." Pasquale eagerly signs it, and "Sofronia" is about to do so when a clamor outside makes her drop the pen.
Malatesta then hurries the "ceremony" along by having Ernesto sign as a witness, and the notary pronounces the couple husband and wife.
www.reginaopera.org /don.htm   (1556 words)

  
 Escritos Revolucionários - Errico Malatesta
Malatesta ataca os individualistas e os marxistas, o esponteneísmo de Kropotkin, insiste “sobre a necessidade de organizar o anarquismo em partido e propaga, pela primeira vez na Itália, o método sindical e a ação direta operária”.
Malatesta foge não sem declarar: “Continuaremos a preparar a revolução libertadora que deverá assegurar a todos a justiça, a liberdade e o bem-estar”.
Malatesta, aos sessenta e nove anos, retoma sua profissão de eletricista.
www.culturabrasil.pro.br /malatesta.htm   (13159 words)

  
 On Pound and Sigismondo Malatesta
Sigismondo Malatesta (1417-1468) is known to posterity for a single mission that he pursued for more than a decade: his sponsorship of the reconstruction of the church of San Francesco, often called the Tempio Malatestiano, in the town of Rimini.
By law the Malatestas were not the rulers of Rimini and the surrounding countryside but vicars of the church who, in return for an annual fee, were granted absolute control over all taxation and legal matters.
There was the founder of the dynasty, Malatesta da Verucchio: "He knows what he wants and he places his life as a pledge for his will." And the culmination was Sigismondo Malatesta, the "warrior" who had "the heart of a poet," a figure whose "desperate energy" and "passionateness" impressed itself in his every deed.
www.english.uiuc.edu /maps/poets/m_r/pound/poundandmalatesta.htm   (6823 words)

  
 Malatesta Covenant Charter
All Magi of the Covenant of Malatesta are entitled to the basic rights of the food and lodging required for good health, all mundane resources required for their ongoing studies, and the right to attend and speak at a meeting of the Council.
The Grog Captain shall be responsible for all of the grogs of Malatesta.
The Magi of Malatesta shall not attack or offend the grogs or Magi of other Covenants, unless their life is in danger or the matter is part of an official Wizard's War or March.
www.jugenstil.com /derry/arsmagica/malatesta/charter.shtml   (3571 words)

  
 Malatesta - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about Malatesta   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
During the struggles of the Guelphs and Ghibellines the Malatesta succeeded in becoming lords of Rimini and leaders of the Guelph cause.
Giovanni died in 1247 and was succeeded by his son, Malatesta, surnamed Malatesta da Verruchio (1212–1312).
In the 14 century the expansion of Rimini was halted by Pope Innocent VI and the Malatesta thereafter ruled in subordination to the papal see.
encyclopedia.farlex.com /Malatesta   (352 words)

  
 Errico Malatesta, 1877-1932 - libcom.org | history
Errico Malatesta, who coined the unambiguous phrase above, was born 150 years ago this month.
“Malatesta’s return from London was the signal for a reawakening of the anarchist movement in Ancona...
The “Red Week” occurred shortly after Malatesta’s return: armed battles with the police took place, a general strike was declared, and in many areas autonomous communes were proclaimed.
www.enrager.net /history/articles/1877-1932-errico-malatesta/index.php   (294 words)

  
 Errico Malatesta biographie   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Malatesta constitue un exemple remarquable de cohérence révolutionnaire.
Malatesta n'abandonnera jamais ce point de vue, et il relancera en différentes occasions l'idée d'organiser le parti anarchiste, toujours animé par un large sentiment de tolérance envers les autres courants de l'anarchisme.
Malatesta n'a pas tout fait, il n'a pas tout dit.
www.increvablesanarchistes.org /articles/biographies/malatesta_bio.htm   (1746 words)

  
 Los Gatos Weekly-Times | 0252 | Dec. 25, 2002
Malatesta already had some familiarity with this trade, as his father was a weaver who emigrated to the United States from Naples, Italy.
Malatesta lived in the Paterson area for 39 years, during which time he married wife Connie and had two children, Edward Jr.
Malatesta was preceded in death by his wife, Connie Malatesta; his son, Rev. Edward J. Malatesta, S.J.; and his daughter, Mary Ann Hazlett.
www.svcn.com /archives/lgwt/20021225/lg-obit2.shtml   (1410 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: House of Malatesta
The founder of their power was Malatesta da Verrucchio (died 1312), the leader of the Guelphs in Romagna, who in 1295 made himself master of Rimini by the slaughter of the chief members of the rival Ghibelline family, the Parcitati.
known, from his lameness, as Gianciotto, or Giovanni, lo Sciancato, was the eldest son of Malatesta da Verrucchio.
Sigismondo (born 1417; died 1468) was a son of Pandolfo di Galeotto Malatesta, the descendant of a half-brother of Gianciotto.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/09566a.htm   (811 words)

  
 Malatesta, Errico
Malatesta (1853-1932), italiensk anarkistisk agitator og propagandist, født i Santa Maria Capua Vetere i Italien.
Ved verdenskrigens udbrud polemiserede Malatesta ved flere anledninger mod «skyttegravsanarkisterne» (Kropotkin o.a.), som gik ind for at støtte de allierede.
I 1919 var Malatesta tilbage i Italien, redigerede dagbladet Umanità Nova, talte ved utallige møder og prøvede at organisere en forenet socialistisk modstandsbevægelse mod den voksende fascisme.
www.leksikon.org /art.php?n=1641   (505 words)

  
 Malatesta's Carnival Of Blood   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Malatesta’s Carnival Of Blood has finally been given a home video release for the first time on this DVD which was produced by the writer and director of the film, Christopher Speeth.
A younger lady named Vena and her parents move into the town where the carnival is situated and hope to join up as they own and operate a shooting gallery that would fit in quite nicely.
Much to the surprise of Vena and a few of the other people in and around the carnival (notice I said ‘a few’ and not ‘all’) there is a pack of cannibals living beneath the carnival in the caves that lay beneath the area it was built upon.
www.dvdmaniacs.net /Reviews/M-P/malatestas.html   (825 words)

  
 MALATESTA v. TUNICA COUNTY SHERIFF'S DEPT., 2:95CV119-B-O   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-26)
Upon leaving the casino, the plaintiffs struck a van in the parking lot as they were backing out of their parking space.
Malatesta claims that the officers physically abused him.
Malatesta was released without any charges being filed against him.
home.olemiss.edu /~llibcoll/ndms/sep96/96D0148P.html   (854 words)

  
 Malatesta - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The House of Malatesta, an Italian family which ruled over Rimini from the thirteenth to the fifteenth century
Errico Malatesta (1853 – 1932), an Italian anarchist
This is a disambiguation page, a list of pages that otherwise might share the same title.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Malatesta   (93 words)

  
 AZOpera Don Pasquale Synopsis
Malatesta enters with a discovery: he has found a bride for the lucky Pasquale, as the aria says -- "Bella siccome un angelo," lovely as an angel.
Malatesta is ordered to bring her at once, despite his warnings that Pasquale proceed slowly.
Of course, she is already there, and Malatesta explains the whole scheme.
www.evermore.com /azo/95season/dp_syn.php3   (1012 words)

  
 Italy - The Malatesta Novello Library: UNESCO-CI
The Library of Malatesta Novello, the last ancient library dating from immediately before the invention of printing, embodies the very concept of a humanist library.
The precious 343 codices are still in the place where they have lain for the past five centuries and are still linked to their original fifteenth-century chain on the same reading benches.
The Malatestiana, which started life as a gentleman’s library, was donated by Malatesta Novello to the local commune for public use and thus became one of the oldest public libraries in Europe.
portal.unesco.org /ci/en/ev.php-URL_ID=16448&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html   (356 words)

  
 Malatesta, Enrico --  Britannica Student Encyclopedia
Born in Santa Maria Capua Vetere, Kingdom of Naples (now in Italy), Malatesta promoted “the insurrectionary deed,” an act of terrorism done to change society.
More results on "Malatesta, Enrico" when you join.
Originating as feudal lords of the Apennine hinterland, the family became powerful in Rimini in the 13th century, when Malatesta da Verucchio (d.
www.britannica.com /ebi/article-9328937?tocId=9328937   (721 words)

  
 Errico Malatesta --  Encyclopædia Britannica
Errico also spelled Enrico Italian anarchist and agitator, a leading advocate of “propaganda of the deed,” the doctrine urged largely by Italian anarchists that revolutionary ideas could best be spread by armed insurrection.
Malatesta became politically active while still in his teens, joining the First International in 1871.
More results on "Errico Malatesta" when you join.
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9050285?tocId=9050285   (609 words)

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