-
dominated by
Mellistas,
especially Peñaflor. With Don
Jaime hardly contactable in
Austria following outbreak of the
Great War, the
Mellistas took almost...
-
during a
showdown of
early 1919, he
joined the
rebels – to be
known as
Mellistas – and
broke away. In late 1919 he
agreed to
represent the
emerging new...
-
Catalan structures of the
breakaway Traditionalist grouping known as the
Mellistas. The
landowner Mas
family has been for
centuries related to Osona. Teodoro's...
-
Initially he was
active within Carlism, then he
joined the
breakaway Mellistas,
settled well in the
Primo de
Rivera regime,
emerged as a key Derecha...
- as “piñosos con boinas”. The
conflict climaxed in
early 1919, when the
Mellistas broke away to
build their own party.
Ampuero decided to join the dissenters;...
-
traditionalist spirit".
Within Carlism those who
showed more
enthusiasm were the
Mellistas, such as Víctor
Pradera or
Salvador Minguijón. Juan Vázquez de
Mella himself...
-
Politically he
initially supported the Carlists, then he
joined the
breakaway Mellistas, and
eventually he
engaged in
Primoriverrista structures. In the 1890s...
-
lowest common denominator. In the
early 1920s he
effectively left the
Mellistas; some
scholars consider him
paradigmatic for many
rebellious Carlists...
- January–February, the
Mellistas decided to
secede and form
their own organization. The
Lezamas joined the rebels,
known as the
Mellistas. In Biscay, the dissenters...
- Atlántico 26.11.87,
available here Juan Ramón de Andrés Martín, El
cisma mellista.
Historia de una ambición política,
Madrid 2000, ISBN 9788487863820, pp...