Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 A Sociology of Fascist Movements
- 2 Explaining the Rise of Interwar Authoritarianism and Fascism
- 3 Italy: Pristine Fascists
- 4 Nazis
- 5 German Sympathizers
- 6 Austro-Fascists, Austrian Nazis
- 7 The Hungarian Family of Authoritarians
- 8 The Romanian Family of Authoritarians
- 9 The Spanish Family of Authoritarians
- 10 Conclusion: Fascists, Dead and Alive
- Appendix
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
7 - The Hungarian Family of Authoritarians
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 A Sociology of Fascist Movements
- 2 Explaining the Rise of Interwar Authoritarianism and Fascism
- 3 Italy: Pristine Fascists
- 4 Nazis
- 5 German Sympathizers
- 6 Austro-Fascists, Austrian Nazis
- 7 The Hungarian Family of Authoritarians
- 8 The Romanian Family of Authoritarians
- 9 The Spanish Family of Authoritarians
- 10 Conclusion: Fascists, Dead and Alive
- Appendix
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION TO EASTERN EUROPE
Most discussions of fascism concentrate on Italy and Germany (occasionally extended to include its Austrian Ostmark). Yet no analysis can be complete without Eastern Europe where fascism diffused widely – not only as a distinct movement, but also as a corrosive radical force within more conservative authoritarian regimes. For authoritarians here remained through the interwar period as a fractious family whose reactionary, corporatist, and fascist members struggled noisily for overall dominance. Here also economies were less developed and old regimes survived well. Here most states and nations also had problematic boundaries, encouraging rival versions of organic nationalism. How different were these Eastern families? Might we consider them as late economic development strategies, as resistance to exploitation by more advanced countries, or as the product of local ethnic rivalries? Would we here find the same core fascist constituencies? I answer these questions with chapters on Hungary and Romania, the countries with the most significant fascist movements.
Both movements were large. The Hungarian Arrow Cross movement had around 250,000 members during 1939–40, 2.7 percent of the national population (Szöllösi-Janze 1989: 128–33). The Romanian Legion of the Archangel Saint Michael (sometimes called the Iron Guard) had 272,000 members in 1937 and 300,000 to 500,000 in 1941 – 1.5 to 2.8 percent of the Romanian population (Heinen 1986: 382, 454; Ioanid 1990: 72). These are higher percentages than the 1.3 percent attained by German Nazism and the 1.0 percent by the Italian PNF before their seizures of power.
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- Fascists , pp. 237 - 260Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004
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