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Croix-de-Feu

The Croix-de-Feu (French: [kʁwa də fø], Cross of Fire) was a nationalist French league of the Interwar period, led by Colonel François de la Rocque (1885–1946). After it was dissolved, as were all other leagues during the Popular Front period (1936–38), La Rocque established the Parti social français (PSF) to replace it.

Cross of Fire
French: Croix-de-Feu
LeaderFrançois de La Rocque
Founded11 November 1927
Dissolved10 January 1936
Succeeded byFrench Social Party
HeadquartersRue de Milan, Paris
NewspaperLe Flambeau
Student wingGroupes Universitaires
Youth wingFils et Filles de Croix-de-Feu
Women's wingSections Féminines
Paramilitary wingVolontaires Nationaux
Membership15,000 (1936 est.)
IdeologyFrench nationalism
Social corporatism
Proto-fascism
Political positionRight-wing to far-right
ReligionRoman Catholicism
Colours  Black

Beginnings (1927–1930) Edit

The Croix-de-Feu (CF) were primarily a group of veterans of the First World War, those who had been awarded the Croix de guerre 1914-1918. The group was founded on 26 November 1927 by Maurice d'Hartoy, who led it until 1929. The honorary presidency was awarded to writer Jacques Péricard. Also in 1929, the movement acquired its newspaper, Le Flambeau. At its creation, the movement was subsidized by the wealthy perfumer François Coty and was hosted in the building of Le Figaro.[citation needed]

It benefited from the Catholic Church's 1926 proscription of the Action Française, which prohibited Catholics from supporting the latter. Many conservative Catholics became members of the Croix-de-feu instead, including Jean Mermoz and the young François Mitterrand.[1]

Unlike the Unions latines, which had promoted algérianité (Algerianness) and gained the support of French settlers, the CF adopted a new approach. European settlers in Algeria tended to support authoritarian and imperialist governments over French republicanism. They were anti-Semitic and xenophobic. Believing that Algerian Europeans were a new race, they saw themselves as "youthful, virile and brutal" and Metropolitan France as "degenerate, effeminate and weak". They often resorted to the use of force against Muslim and Jewish Algerians.[2]

The Croix-de-feu had a massive propaganda campaign that won thousands of members in Constantine and Algiers. It proposed an alliance with local Muslims and attacked the left. Scholars see that as a tactic to funnel extreme and separatist frustrations caused by an economic disparity between European settlers and the local Algerian people. It used different propaganda in Oran, more similar to Jules Molle and the Union's latines, because Oran had fewer Muslims and was more anti-Semitic.[3]

Under La Rocque (1930–1936) Edit

Under Lieutenant-Colonel François de La Rocque, who took over in 1930, the Croix-de-Feu took its independence from François Coty and left the building of Le Figaro for rue de Milan. It organised popular demonstrations in reaction to the Stavisky Affair in the hope of overthrowing the Second Cartel des gauches, a left-wing coalition government. La Rocque quickly became a hero of the far right, which opposed the influences of socialism and "hidden Communism" but was sceptical about becoming counterrevolutionary.

Under la Rocque, the movement advocated a military effort against the "German danger" and supported corporatism and an alliance between capital and labour. It enlarged its base by creating several secondary associations, thus including non-veterans in its ranks. To counter the monarchist Action française and its slogan Politique d'abord! "Politics First!"), de la Rocque invented the motto Social d'abord! ("Social First!"). In his book, Le Service Public ("Public Service)", which was published in November 1934, he argued in favour of a reform of parliamentary procedures, cooperation between industries according to their branches of activities; a minimum wage and paid holidays; women's suffrage (also upheld by the monarchist Action française, which considered that women, often devout, would be more favourable to their conservative thesis) etc.[citation needed]

The Croix de Feu was one of the right-wing groups that pushed anti-Semitic politics in 1935. Along with Volontaires Nationaux and others, the Croix de Feu used the political developments in Metropolitan France like the election of Léon Blum, a Jewish Prime Minister, and the Popular Front to inflame anti-Semitic sentiment in the colony. The 1936 elections saw the victory of anti-Semitic municipal governments, boycotts against Jewish business (heavily promoted by the Radical Party newspaper Le Republicain de Constantine) and physical violence and attacks against Jews. The Croix de Feu acted in concert with other anti-Semitic parties, including the Rassemblement National d'Action Sociale led by Abbé Lambert, Action française and Parti Populaire français. Membership in Croix de Feu grew from 2500 in 1933 to 8440 in 1935 and 15000 in 1936.[4]

The Croix-de-Feu did not participate in the 1932 demonstrations organised by the Action française and the far-right leagues Jeunesses Patriotes against the debt payment to the United States. The Croix-de-feu, however, took part in the massive rally of 6 February 1934, which led to the toppling of the Second Cartel des gauches (Left-Wing Coalition). Still, La Rocque refused to riot, although parts of the Croix-de-Feu disagreed with him. It had circled the Palais Bourbon and remained grouped several hundred metres away from the others rioting leagues. As one of the most essential paramilitary associations and because of its anti-Semitic position, the Croix-de-Feu and La Rocque were considered by the political left to be among the most dangerous imitators of Mussolini and Hitler.[citation needed] However, as a result of La Roque's actions during the riots, it subsequently lost prestige among the far-right before it was dissolved by the Popular Front government on 18 June 1936.

Parti Social Français (1936–1940) Edit

La Rocque then formed the French Social Party (PSF) as a successor to the dissolved league. Moderate estimates place the membership for the PSF at 500,000 in the buildup to the Second World War, which would make it the first French conservative mass party. Although its slogan Travail, Famille, Patrie ("Work, Family, Fatherland") was later used by Vichy France to replace the Republican slogan Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité, the party remained eclectic. The party disappeared with the Fall of France without having had the opportunity to profit from its immense popularity.[citation needed]

Second World War Edit

During the occupation of France, La Rocque joined the French Resistance but was the subject of considerable controversy immediately after the war.[citation needed]

Political heritage Edit

The Parti Social Français was France's first major conservative party (1936–1940). He advocated a presidential regime to end the instability of the parliamentary regime, an economic system founded upon "organised professions" (corporatism) and social legislation inspired by Social Christianity.

Historians now consider that he paved the way for the French Christian democratic parties: the postwar Popular Republican Movement (MRP) and the Gaullist Rally for France. The historian William D. Irvine stated:

One of the very few things historians of fascism in France can agree upon is that the Croix de Feu and its successor the Parti Social Francais (PSF) are irrelevant to their subject.[5]

Continuing debate Edit

Historians have argued that the Croix-de-Feu were a distinctly-French variant of the European fascist movement. If the uniformed rightist "Leagues" of the 1930s did not develop into classical Fascism, it was because they represented a shading from conservative right-wing nationalism to extremist fascism, in membership and ideology, distinctive to French inter-war society.[6][7]

Most contemporary French historians (René Rémond, Pierre Milza and François Sirinelli in particular) do not classify the 1930s "leagues" as a native "French Fascism", particularly the Croix-de-Feu. The organisation is described by Rémond as completely secretive about its aims with an ideology kept "as vague as possible."[8] Rémond, the most famous and influential of these postwar historians, distinguishes "Reaction" and the far right from "revolutionary" fascism as an import into France which had few takers. In the 1968 third edition of "La droite en France", his major work[9] he defines fascism in Europe as a

revolt of the declassés, a movement of those on half-pay, civilian and military. Everywhere it came to power through social upheavals.... Although with a handful of fascists [in 1930s France], there was a minority of reactionaries and a great majority of conservatives.

Amongst these he places much smaller groups like the Faisceau, a tiny minority compared with the Croix-de-Feu, whose membership peaked at over a million.[10] The Israeli historian Zeev Sternhell, on the other hand, has argued for the existence of a native French fascism and for groups like the Cercle Proudhon of the mid-to-late 1910s being among the more important ideological breeding grounds of the movement. He, however, does not include the Croix de Feu in that category:

The 'centrist' right always had its own shock troops that served its own purposes, and took good care that they did not become confused with the fascists.[11]

Sternhell, interested in the Fascism as a "anti-material revision of Marxism" or an anti-capitalist, cultish, corporatist extreme nationalism,[12] points out that groups like the Jeunesses Patriotes, the revived Ligue des Patriotes and the Croix de Feu were derided by French fascists at the time. Fascist leaders in France saw themselves as destroyers of the old order, above politics, and rejecting the corruption of capitalism. To them the Leagues were a bulwark of this corrupt regime. Robert Brasillach called them "old cuckolds of the right, these eternal deceived husbands of politics.." and claimed that "the enemies of national restoration are not only on the left but first and foremost on the right.l".[13]

The American journalist John Gunther in 1940 described La Rocque as a "French Fascist No. 1, the chief potential French March-on-Romer" but added that he was "a rather pallid Fascist", did not attempt to seize power during the 6 February riots and peacefully complied with the government's ban of the Croix de Feu.[14] Other scholars, such as Robert Soucy and William D. Irvine, argue that the La Rocque and the Croix de Feu were in fact fascist and a particularly "French" fascism. La Rocque, however, if tempted by a paramilitary aesthetic and initially advocating collaboration with the Germans during the Second World War, finally came out against the more radical supporters of Nazi Germany.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Concerning François Mitterrand, see Pierre Péan, Une jeunesse française, pp. 23 à 35: Mitterrand arrived in Paris in autumn 1934, and the National Volunteers (Volontaires nationaux), a sub-section of the CF, were dissolved in June 1936
  2. ^ Kalman, Samuel (2013). French Colonial Fascism: The Extreme Right in Algeria 1919-1939. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 2.
  3. ^ Kalman, Samuel (2013). French Colonial Fascism: The Extreme Right in Algeria 1919-1939. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 56.
  4. ^ Roberts, Sophie B. (2012). "Anti-Semitism and municipal government in interwar French colonial Algeria". The Journal of North African Studies. 17 (5): 830–831. doi:10.1080/13629387.2012.723431. S2CID 154836306.
  5. ^ William D. Irvine, "Fascism in France and the Strange Case of the Croix de Feu." Journal of Modern History 63.2 (1991): 271-295. online
  6. ^ Passmore, Kevin (1995). "Boy Scouting for Grown-Ups? Paramilitarism in the Croix de Feu and the Parti Social Francais". French Historical Studies. 19 (2): 527–557. doi:10.2307/286787. JSTOR 286787. The title takes exception to René Rémond's dismissing of the Leagues as "adults' enthusiastic feeling for reliving their childhood by participating in a kind of boy scout game". Rémond, 1968, p. 290.
  7. ^ Soucy, Robert J. (1991). "French Fascism and the Croix de Feu: A Dissenting Interpretation". Journal of Contemporary History. 26 (1): 159–188. doi:10.1177/002200949102600108. S2CID 154884811.
  8. ^ 1968, p. 290
  9. ^ first published in 1954 and primarily concerned with the traditions of Bonapartist and royalist "Reaction",
  10. ^ (p.293,294. For the Faisceau, p. 277. For his focused examination of the Croix de Feu, see pp.285-297, passim. of "The Right in France", University of Pennsylvania Press, 1971 printing, ISBN 0-8122-7490-3
  11. ^ 1983/86, p.103
  12. ^ one restatement of this comes in pp. 101-108
  13. ^ cited by Sternhell, 1983/86, p. 225 Neither Right nor Left: Fascist Ideology in France, Princeton University Press, California (1986 translation of 1983 French work) ISBN 0-691-00629-6
  14. ^ Gunther, John (1940). Inside Europe. Harper & Brothers. pp. 204–206.

Further reading Edit

  • Campbell, Caroline. Political Belief in France, 1927-1945: Gender, Empire, and Fascism in the Croix de Feu and Parti Social Francais (2015) excerpt; also online review
  • Campbell, Caroline. "The Colonial Roots of Political Violence in France: The Croix de Feu, the Popular Front and the Riots of 22 March 1936 in Morocco." in Political Violence and Democracy in Western Europe, 1918–1940 (Palgrave Macmillan, London, 2015) pp. 127-143.
  • Demiaux, Victor. Croix de Feu, in: .
  • Irvine, William D. "Fascism in France and the Strange Case of the Croix de Feu." Journal of Modern History 63.2 (1991): 271-295. online
  • Jenkins, Brian, and Chris Millington, eds. France and Fascism: February 1934 and the Dynamics of Political Crisis (2015) excerpt
  • Passmore, Kevin (1995). "Boy Scouting for Grown-Ups? Paramilitarism in the Croix de Feu and the Parti Social Francais". French Historical Studies 19#2: 527–557. doi:10.2307/286787.
  • Soucy, Robert J. "French Fascism and the Croix de Feu: A Dissenting Interpretation". Journal of Contemporary History. (1991). 26#1: 159–188. doi:10.1177/002200949102600108.

croix, confused, with, cross, burning, belgian, military, medal, fire, cross, 1914, 1918, 1989, american, television, miniseries, cross, fire, french, kʁwa, cross, fire, nationalist, french, league, interwar, period, colonel, françois, rocque, 1885, 1946, afte. Not to be confused with Cross burning For the Belgian military medal see Fire Cross 1914 1918 For the 1989 American television miniseries see Cross of Fire The Croix de Feu French kʁwa de fo Cross of Fire was a nationalist French league of the Interwar period led by Colonel Francois de la Rocque 1885 1946 After it was dissolved as were all other leagues during the Popular Front period 1936 38 La Rocque established the Parti social francais PSF to replace it Cross of Fire French Croix de FeuLeaderFrancois de La RocqueFounded11 November 1927Dissolved10 January 1936Succeeded byFrench Social PartyHeadquartersRue de Milan ParisNewspaperLe FlambeauStudent wingGroupes UniversitairesYouth wingFils et Filles de Croix de FeuWomen s wingSections FemininesParamilitary wingVolontaires NationauxMembership15 000 1936 est IdeologyFrench nationalismSocial corporatismProto fascismPolitical positionRight wing to far rightReligionRoman CatholicismColours BlackPolitics of FrancePolitical partiesElections Contents 1 Beginnings 1927 1930 2 Under La Rocque 1930 1936 3 Parti Social Francais 1936 1940 4 Second World War 5 Political heritage 6 Continuing debate 7 See also 8 References 9 Further readingBeginnings 1927 1930 EditThe Croix de Feu CF were primarily a group of veterans of the First World War those who had been awarded the Croix de guerre 1914 1918 The group was founded on 26 November 1927 by Maurice d Hartoy who led it until 1929 The honorary presidency was awarded to writer Jacques Pericard Also in 1929 the movement acquired its newspaper Le Flambeau At its creation the movement was subsidized by the wealthy perfumer Francois Coty and was hosted in the building of Le Figaro citation needed It benefited from the Catholic Church s 1926 proscription of the Action Francaise which prohibited Catholics from supporting the latter Many conservative Catholics became members of the Croix de feu instead including Jean Mermoz and the young Francois Mitterrand 1 Unlike the Unions latines which had promoted algerianite Algerianness and gained the support of French settlers the CF adopted a new approach European settlers in Algeria tended to support authoritarian and imperialist governments over French republicanism They were anti Semitic and xenophobic Believing that Algerian Europeans were a new race they saw themselves as youthful virile and brutal and Metropolitan France as degenerate effeminate and weak They often resorted to the use of force against Muslim and Jewish Algerians 2 The Croix de feu had a massive propaganda campaign that won thousands of members in Constantine and Algiers It proposed an alliance with local Muslims and attacked the left Scholars see that as a tactic to funnel extreme and separatist frustrations caused by an economic disparity between European settlers and the local Algerian people It used different propaganda in Oran more similar to Jules Molle and the Union s latines because Oran had fewer Muslims and was more anti Semitic 3 Under La Rocque 1930 1936 EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Under Lieutenant Colonel Francois de La Rocque who took over in 1930 the Croix de Feu took its independence from Francois Coty and left the building of Le Figaro for rue de Milan It organised popular demonstrations in reaction to the Stavisky Affair in the hope of overthrowing the Second Cartel des gauches a left wing coalition government La Rocque quickly became a hero of the far right which opposed the influences of socialism and hidden Communism but was sceptical about becoming counterrevolutionary Under la Rocque the movement advocated a military effort against the German danger and supported corporatism and an alliance between capital and labour It enlarged its base by creating several secondary associations thus including non veterans in its ranks To counter the monarchist Action francaise and its slogan Politique d abord Politics First de la Rocque invented the motto Social d abord Social First In his book Le Service Public Public Service which was published in November 1934 he argued in favour of a reform of parliamentary procedures cooperation between industries according to their branches of activities a minimum wage and paid holidays women s suffrage also upheld by the monarchist Action francaise which considered that women often devout would be more favourable to their conservative thesis etc citation needed The Croix de Feu was one of the right wing groups that pushed anti Semitic politics in 1935 Along with Volontaires Nationaux and others the Croix de Feu used the political developments in Metropolitan France like the election of Leon Blum a Jewish Prime Minister and the Popular Front to inflame anti Semitic sentiment in the colony The 1936 elections saw the victory of anti Semitic municipal governments boycotts against Jewish business heavily promoted by the Radical Party newspaper Le Republicain de Constantine and physical violence and attacks against Jews The Croix de Feu acted in concert with other anti Semitic parties including the Rassemblement National d Action Sociale led by Abbe Lambert Action francaise and Parti Populaire francais Membership in Croix de Feu grew from 2500 in 1933 to 8440 in 1935 and 15000 in 1936 4 The Croix de Feu did not participate in the 1932 demonstrations organised by the Action francaise and the far right leagues Jeunesses Patriotes against the debt payment to the United States The Croix de feu however took part in the massive rally of 6 February 1934 which led to the toppling of the Second Cartel des gauches Left Wing Coalition Still La Rocque refused to riot although parts of the Croix de Feu disagreed with him It had circled the Palais Bourbon and remained grouped several hundred metres away from the others rioting leagues As one of the most essential paramilitary associations and because of its anti Semitic position the Croix de Feu and La Rocque were considered by the political left to be among the most dangerous imitators of Mussolini and Hitler citation needed However as a result of La Roque s actions during the riots it subsequently lost prestige among the far right before it was dissolved by the Popular Front government on 18 June 1936 Parti Social Francais 1936 1940 EditMain article French Social Party La Rocque then formed the French Social Party PSF as a successor to the dissolved league Moderate estimates place the membership for the PSF at 500 000 in the buildup to the Second World War which would make it the first French conservative mass party Although its slogan Travail Famille Patrie Work Family Fatherland was later used by Vichy France to replace the Republican slogan Liberte Egalite Fraternite the party remained eclectic The party disappeared with the Fall of France without having had the opportunity to profit from its immense popularity citation needed Second World War EditFurther information Vichy France and Revolution nationale During the occupation of France La Rocque joined the French Resistance but was the subject of considerable controversy immediately after the war citation needed Political heritage EditThe Parti Social Francais was France s first major conservative party 1936 1940 He advocated a presidential regime to end the instability of the parliamentary regime an economic system founded upon organised professions corporatism and social legislation inspired by Social Christianity Historians now consider that he paved the way for the French Christian democratic parties the postwar Popular Republican Movement MRP and the Gaullist Rally for France The historian William D Irvine stated One of the very few things historians of fascism in France can agree upon is that the Croix de Feu and its successor the Parti Social Francais PSF are irrelevant to their subject 5 Continuing debate EditHistorians have argued that the Croix de Feu were a distinctly French variant of the European fascist movement If the uniformed rightist Leagues of the 1930s did not develop into classical Fascism it was because they represented a shading from conservative right wing nationalism to extremist fascism in membership and ideology distinctive to French inter war society 6 7 Most contemporary French historians Rene Remond Pierre Milza and Francois Sirinelli in particular do not classify the 1930s leagues as a native French Fascism particularly the Croix de Feu The organisation is described by Remond as completely secretive about its aims with an ideology kept as vague as possible 8 Remond the most famous and influential of these postwar historians distinguishes Reaction and the far right from revolutionary fascism as an import into France which had few takers In the 1968 third edition of La droite en France his major work 9 he defines fascism in Europe as arevolt of the declasses a movement of those on half pay civilian and military Everywhere it came to power through social upheavals Although with a handful of fascists in 1930s France there was a minority of reactionaries and a great majority of conservatives Amongst these he places much smaller groups like the Faisceau a tiny minority compared with the Croix de Feu whose membership peaked at over a million 10 The Israeli historian Zeev Sternhell on the other hand has argued for the existence of a native French fascism and for groups like the Cercle Proudhon of the mid to late 1910s being among the more important ideological breeding grounds of the movement He however does not include the Croix de Feu in that category The centrist right always had its own shock troops that served its own purposes and took good care that they did not become confused with the fascists 11 Sternhell interested in the Fascism as a anti material revision of Marxism or an anti capitalist cultish corporatist extreme nationalism 12 points out that groups like the Jeunesses Patriotes the revived Ligue des Patriotes and the Croix de Feu were derided by French fascists at the time Fascist leaders in France saw themselves as destroyers of the old order above politics and rejecting the corruption of capitalism To them the Leagues were a bulwark of this corrupt regime Robert Brasillach called them old cuckolds of the right these eternal deceived husbands of politics and claimed that the enemies of national restoration are not only on the left but first and foremost on the right l 13 The American journalist John Gunther in 1940 described La Rocque as a French Fascist No 1 the chief potential French March on Romer but added that he was a rather pallid Fascist did not attempt to seize power during the 6 February riots and peacefully complied with the government s ban of the Croix de Feu 14 Other scholars such as Robert Soucy and William D Irvine argue that the La Rocque and the Croix de Feu were in fact fascist and a particularly French fascism La Rocque however if tempted by a paramilitary aesthetic and initially advocating collaboration with the Germans during the Second World War finally came out against the more radical supporters of Nazi Germany See also EditFar right leagues these groups in which the Croix de Feu are normally included range from the 1890s 1930s and range ideologically from Republican Nationalists to Monarchist to Fascist Camelots du Roi Paperboys of the King the Youth Militia arm of Action Francaise Ligue antisemitique de France Anti semitic League of France Mouvement Franciste French Nationalist Movement Parti Populaire Francais PPF French Popular Party Rassemblement National Populaire RNP National Popular Rally Rassemblement des gauches republicaines RGR Rally of the Left Wing Republicans A post 1945 organisation which traces its ideology to the Croix de Feu Nationalist Foreign VolunteersReferences Edit Concerning Francois Mitterrand see Pierre Pean Une jeunesse francaise pp 23 a 35 Mitterrand arrived in Paris in autumn 1934 and the National Volunteers Volontaires nationaux a sub section of the CF were dissolved in June 1936 Kalman Samuel 2013 French Colonial Fascism The Extreme Right in Algeria 1919 1939 Palgrave Macmillan p 2 Kalman Samuel 2013 French Colonial Fascism The Extreme Right in Algeria 1919 1939 Palgrave Macmillan p 56 Roberts Sophie B 2012 Anti Semitism and municipal government in interwar French colonial Algeria The Journal of North African Studies 17 5 830 831 doi 10 1080 13629387 2012 723431 S2CID 154836306 William D Irvine Fascism in France and the Strange Case of the Croix de Feu Journal of Modern History 63 2 1991 271 295 online Passmore Kevin 1995 Boy Scouting for Grown Ups Paramilitarism in the Croix de Feu and the Parti Social Francais French Historical Studies 19 2 527 557 doi 10 2307 286787 JSTOR 286787 The title takes exception to Rene Remond s dismissing of the Leagues as adults enthusiastic feeling for reliving their childhood by participating in a kind of boy scout game Remond 1968 p 290 Soucy Robert J 1991 French Fascism and the Croix de Feu A Dissenting Interpretation Journal of Contemporary History 26 1 159 188 doi 10 1177 002200949102600108 S2CID 154884811 1968 p 290 first published in 1954 and primarily concerned with the traditions of Bonapartist and royalist Reaction p 293 294 For the Faisceau p 277 For his focused examination of the Croix de Feu see pp 285 297 passim of The Right in France University of Pennsylvania Press 1971 printing ISBN 0 8122 7490 3 1983 86 p 103 one restatement of this comes in pp 101 108 cited by Sternhell 1983 86 p 225 Neither Right nor Left Fascist Ideology in France Princeton University Press California 1986 translation of 1983 French work ISBN 0 691 00629 6 Gunther John 1940 Inside Europe Harper amp Brothers pp 204 206 Further reading EditCampbell Caroline Political Belief in France 1927 1945 Gender Empire and Fascism in the Croix de Feu and Parti Social Francais 2015 excerpt also online review Campbell Caroline The Colonial Roots of Political Violence in France The Croix de Feu the Popular Front and the Riots of 22 March 1936 in Morocco in Political Violence and Democracy in Western Europe 1918 1940 Palgrave Macmillan London 2015 pp 127 143 Demiaux Victor Croix de Feu in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War Irvine William D Fascism in France and the Strange Case of the Croix de Feu Journal of Modern History 63 2 1991 271 295 online Jenkins Brian and Chris Millington eds France and Fascism February 1934 and the Dynamics of Political Crisis 2015 excerpt Passmore Kevin 1995 Boy Scouting for Grown Ups Paramilitarism in the Croix de Feu and the Parti Social Francais French Historical Studies 19 2 527 557 doi 10 2307 286787 Soucy Robert J French Fascism and the Croix de Feu A Dissenting Interpretation Journal of Contemporary History 1991 26 1 159 188 doi 10 1177 002200949102600108 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Croix de Feu amp oldid 1169598015, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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