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Equestrian statue of Matías Ramón Mella at the Monumento a los Héroes de la Restauracion, in Santiago, Dominican Republic. Mella was a major figure in the history of the Dominican Republic. Of the Founding Fathers of the Republic, Mella represented the militant and determined expression and the most adapted to the political activities of a ...
Ramón María Mella Brea (July 27, 1837 – March 21, 1868) was a Dominican independence activist. Son of the hero Matías Ramón Mella , he participated in the struggles against Spain in the 1860s. He was a martyr of the Six Years' War .
«Los niños de Rusia, historia del desarraigo», audio en Documentos RNE. Lista de los españoles caídos combatiendo en las filas del Ejército Rojo en la Segunda Guerra Mundial. Centro Español de Moscú. Imágenes del retorno de uno de los barcos. NO-DO. Los niños españoles evacuados a la Unión Soviética (1937). España: Ediciones de la ...
Juan_Vázquez_de_Mella,_en_Nuevo_Mundo.jpg (167 × 228 pixels, file size: 54 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
An informal Carlist Academia Vázquez de Mella existed in the 1940s, [265] but de Mella enjoyed a revival in the mid-1950s; a new generation of Traditionalist thinkers, mostly Elías de Tejada and Gambra, made his thought a point of departure for their own works [266] and elevated him to the status of an all-time Traditionalist great. [267]
Mellismo (Spanish:) was a political practice of Spanish ultra-Right of the early 20th century. Born within Carlism, it was designed and championed by Juan Vázquez de Mella, who became its independent political leader after the 1919 breakup.
Julio Antonio Mella McPartland (born Nicanor McPartland; 25 March 1903 – 10 January 1929) was a Cuban political activist, journalist, communist revolutionary, and one of the founders of the original Communist Party of Cuba. [1] Mella studied law at the University of Havana but was expelled in 1925.
La primera edición del texto en su totalidad fue impresa en 1899 en la Imprenta Cerdeira y Fariña, de Vigo. Posteriormente, una versión con algunas modificaciones hechas por Mella fue publicada en un tomo titulado Cuestiones Sociales, donde se recopilaban también otros textos del mismo autor. [3] A los campesinos. En defensa de la anarquía.