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  1. David Irving

    David John Cawdell Irving is a British writer specializing in the military history of World War II. He is the author of 30 books, including "The Destruction of Dresden" (1963), "Hitler's War" (1977), "Uprising!" (1981), "Churchill's War" (1987), and "Goebbels — Mastermind of the Third Reich" (1996).

  2. Brigitte Bardot

    Brigitte Bardot (born September 28, 1934) is a French actress, former fashion model, singer, known nationalist, animal rights activist, and considered the embodiment of the 1950s and 1960s sex kitten. In the 1970s after her retirement from the entertainment industry, Bardot established herself as an animal rights activist, which she continues today. During the 1990s she was outspoken about her political views on such issues as immigration, Islam in France, miscegenation, …

  3. Pim Fortuyn

    Wilhelmus Simon Petrus (Pim) Fortuyn, (February 19, 1948 – May 6, 2002), was a controversial, openly gay, charismatic populistic right-wing politician in the Netherlands who formed his own party "Lijst Pim Fortuyn" (List Pim Fortuyn or LPF). He was assassinated during the 2002 Dutch national election campaign by animal rights activist Volkert van der Graaf, …

  4. Guillaume Faye

    Guillaume Faye is a French far right journalist and writer. With a PhD from Science-Po, Guillaume Faye was one of the major theorists of the French New Right Nouvelle Droite in the 1970-1980’s. A former member of Alain de Benoist’s new-right organisation GRECE, he took part in the splitting of the organization in 1986 alongside Yann-Ber Tillenon, Tristan Mordrelle, and Goulven Pennaod. At that time he was close to the heathen and anti-Christian far-right circles.

  5. Paul Fromm

    Frederick Paul Fromm (born January 3, 1949), known as Paul Fromm, is a Canadian far-right political figure. Fromm has been identified as a neo-Nazi

  6. Filip Dewinter

    Philip Michel Frans "Filip" Dewinter (born September 11, 1962, Bruges) is a Flemish politician in Belgium. He is one of the leading members of Vlaams Belang, a right-wing Flemish nationalist and secessionist political party. This party is the ideological and juridical successor of the Vlaams Blok, which, lacking legal personality, was indirectly condemned and fined for racism in 2004 in a trial against three moral persons that constituted the Blok's financial hardware.

  7. Julius Evola

    Julius Evola born Giulio Cesare Andrea Evola, aka Baron Evola (May 19, 1898-June 11, 1974), was an Italian esotericist and occult author, who wrote extensively on Hermeticism, the metaphysics of sex, Tantra, Buddhism, Taoism, mountaineering, the Holy Grail, militarism, aristocracy, on matters political, philosophical, historical, racial, religious, as well as the essence and history of civilizations, …

  8. Christian Bouchet

    Christian Bouchet is a French far right journalist and politician. An exponent of the Third Position, with sympathies to National Bolshevism, he has led the groups Troisième Voie, Nouvelle Résistance and Unité Radicale, as well as the study group Réseau Radical. He has also led the 'radical' tendency within the National Republican Movement and has sat on its national council.

  9. Roberto Fiore

    Roberto Fiore (born April 15 1959 in Rome) has been a leading neo-fascist in the post-war era, both in Italy and across Europe. He has long been a disciple of Julius Evola and helped to develop the Third Position stance on the far right. As a leader of Terza Posizione, Fiore (along with other various neo-fascist activists, notably Massimo Morsello) became a wanted man in Italy after the 1980 bombing of Bologna train station which left 85 people dead and over 200 wounded.

  10. John Bean

    John Bean is a veteran of the far right scene in Britain, who has served in a number of movements down the years.

  11. Louis Beam

    Louis Beam, born 1946, is a Texas white nationalist. He started as a Klansman, then became active with Aryan Nations in the early 1980s. He is considered to be the first important proponent to the strategy of Leaderless resistance a theory for resistance to state sponsored tyranny. In recent years, Beam has maintained a significantly lower profile.

  12. Keith Thompson

    Keith Thompson was a leading member of the Union Movement, which he joined in the 1960s whilst completing his National service. An Odinist, Thompson went on to become a leading figure in the Action Party, when the UM changed its name to that in 1973 after pressure from Thompson, Fred Shepherd et al. It soon after reverted to the name of Union Movement after Thompson resigned.

  13. Eddy Morrison

    Eddy Morrison is a neo-Nazi political figure in Britain, who has been involved in a number of movements throughout his career. Morrison was involved with both the British Movement (BM) and the National Front (NF) during the 1970s (he published two newsletters, both called "British News", during the period; the first supported the BM and the second, for a time, the NF), as well as briefly organising a group called the British National Party in his Leeds base.

  14. John O'Brien

    John O'Brien was a leading figure on the far right of British politics during the early 1970s. A fruit farmer by trade, O'Brien had initially been a member of the Conservative Party in Shrewsbury. A supporter of Enoch Powell, he attempted to organise a 'Powell for Premier' movement following the Rivers of Blood speech. When this failed to get off the ground he briefly joined the National Democratic Party before emerging as a member of the National Front.

  15. Ray Hill

    Ray Hill was a leading figure in the British far right who went on to become a well-known informant. Born in Lancashire, he spent three years in the army before making his first steps in the far right with the Racial Preservation Society in Leicester in the late 1960s. From here he met Colin Jordan and soon became a member of the British Movement, being appointed Organiser for Leicester in 1968. He emigrated to South Africa the following year, …

  16. Richard Edmonds

    Richard Edmonds is a veteran on the British far right and was a long-term supporter of John Tyndall. Edmonds began his political career as a member of the National Front, where he held a number of positions during Tyndall's leadership. In the October 1974 general election he was NF candidate at Deptford, polling 1731 votes (4.5%). At this time, he was employed as a maths teacher at Tulse Hill, a school which contained many black pupils.

  17. Jane Birdwood

    Lady Jane Birdwood (May 18 1913-June 28 2000) was the wife of a British aristocrat and leading figure on the far right in the United Kingdom who took part in a number of movements.

  18. Lauch Faircloth

    Duncan McLauchlin "Lauch" Faircloth (born 14 January 1928), served one term as a Republican U.S. Senator from North Carolina. Before his Senate service, Faircloth was a prominent and wealthy hog farmer. One impetus for his political activism was his disagreement with the increasing regulations targeting large hog farming operations such as his, fueled by an environmentalist and populist backlash. Faircloth was for many years an active Democrat, …

  19. Michael McLaughlin

    Michael McLaughlin was, for a time, a leading figure on the British far right. Born in Liverpool, he was the son of an Irish republican and socialist who was a veteran of the International Brigades. For a time McLaughlin worked as a milkman, and as a result he was known as "The Milkman" in right wing circles, where he was seen as a largely unassuming figure. His first involvement with politics came when he joined the British Movement in 1968.

  20. Mircea Eliade

    Mircea Eliade was a Romanian historian of religion, fiction writer, philosopher, and professor at the University of Chicago. He was a leading interpreter of religious experience, who established paradigms in religious studies that persist to this day. His theory that "hierophanies" form the basis of religion, splitting the human experience of reality into sacred and profane space and time, has proved influential.

  21. Neal Horsley

    Otis O'Neal Horsley (born 1944) is an American political figure of the far right. He is the author of christiangallery.com, a website devoted to his advocacy of militant pro-life, secessionist, and anti-gay views.

  22. Volen Siderov

    Volen Siderov (born 19 April 1956) is a controversial Bulgarian politician and chairman of the far right nationalist party Attack. He is famous for his hard-line attitude towards minorities in Bulgaria, especially Roma and Turks. __TOC_

  23. Herbert Kitschelt

    Herbert Kitschelt is a political science scholar, mostly responsible for his contribution to the redifining of the competitive space for political parties in Western Europe in the 1980s. Kitschelt claims that during this period the traditional spectra such as "authoritarian - libertarian" and "social deomocratic - capitalist", where parties were usually aligned along the later, …

  24. Pino Rauti

    Giuseppe Umberto "Pino" Rauti (born in Cardinale near Catanzaro, 1926) has been a leading figure on the Italian far right for many years.

  25. Adolf von Thadden

    Adolf von Thadden was a leading far right German politician. Born into a leading Pomeranian landowning family, he was the brother of Elisabeth von Thadden, a prominent critic of the Nazis. After serving in the Wehrmacht during World War II and spending a brief spell as a prisoner of war, von Thadden entered politics as a member of the Deutsche Rechtspartei and its successor the German Empire Party.

  26. James Wickstrom

    James P. Wickstrom (b. 1942) is a far right radio talk-show host as well as a purported Christian Identity minister, who resides in Rhodes, Michigan. He is known for his strong opinions on racial issues, globalization, and Jews. He is also noted to be intensely anti-communist.

  27. Andrew Brons

    Andrew Brons (born 1947) was a veteran of far right politics in Britain. He began his political career as a member of the National Socialist Movement until he was seventeen then joined John Bean's British National Party which merged with the League of Empire Loyalists to form the National Front in 1967. He contested Harrogate for the NF in both 1974 general elections, polling 1186 votes (2.3%) in February and 1030 (2.3%) in October.

  28. Anthony Hancock

    Anthony Hancock has been a member of various far right groups in the United Kingdom and, as a publisher, has produced literature for almost all of Britain's right-wing extremists. Based in Brighton, where he owned a hotel called the Heidelberg, Anthony Hancock was the son of Alan Hancock, a veteran of the British Union of Fascists who first set up the publishing firm.

  29. Andrew Fountaine

    Andrew Fountaine (1918-1997) was a veteran of the far right scene in British politics. Born into a land-owning Norfolk family, Fountaine was educated at the Army College in Aldershot. After fighting for Francisco Franco during the Spanish Civil War, he became a naval Lieutenant-Commander during the Second World War, serving in the Pacific before being invalided out. Fountaine then took a chemistry degree at Cambridge.

  30. Robert Relf

    Robert Relf is a far right British 'race martyr' who briefly became a cause célèbre for the tabloid press in the 1970s. Relf first came to national attention in 1976 when he advertised his house in Leamington Spa as being 'For Sale - to a white family only'. Relf was found to be in breach of the Race Relations Act and was jailed for contempt of court when he refused to take it down.

  31. Denis Pirie

    Denis Pirie was a veteran of the British far right scene who took a leading role in a number of movements. Pirie began his career as a member of the British National Party and was appointed a member of the party's national council not long after its foundation. He soon became associated with the more openly Nazi wing under Colin Jordan and took an active role in the his and John Tyndall's attempts to set up a paramilitary wing 'Spearhead'.

  32. John Graeme Wood

    John Graeme Wood has been on the nationalist scene in Britain since the late 1950s. Wood was a member of Sir Oswald Mosley's Union Movement and became a Branch Leader. As well as being a member of UM he also recognised as a personal friend and confidant of Mosley and remained in the UM until 1964 when he joined the British National Party. Remaining with the BNP, Wood became a founder member of the British National Front when it was formed in 1967.

  33. Friedhelm Busse

    Friedhelm Busse is a leading German neo-Nazi. The son of an SA Sturmbannführer, Busse served in the 12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend in 1945. After the war he became active in "Reichsjugend", the youth wing of the Socialist Reich Party and later the Deutsche Reichspartei. During the early 1960s he took an active role in South Tyrol, and was arrested in 1963 for possession of dynamite.

  34. David McCalden

    William David McCalden (20th September 1951-15th October 1990) was a figure in the British far right who went on to become a leading international Holocaust denier. McCalden was born in Belfast, but left in 1972 to study at Goldsmiths College in London. He first became involved in politics as a member of the National Front, where he became editor of the party newspaper "Nationalist News".

  35. Alain Soral

    Alain Soral is a French sociologist, essayist, and film maker, author of several polemical essays. He is the brother of actress Agnès Soral. He lives in the Basque Country and since June 2004, is also Federal Instructor in boxing.

  36. Michael Kühnen

    Michael Kühnen was a leader in the German neo-Nazi movement. He was one of the first post-World War II Germans to openly embrace Nazism and openly call for the formation of the Fourth Reich. He notably instigated a policy of setting up a plethora of differently-named groups in an effort to confuse German authorities attempting to close his organizations. Kühnen's homosexuality was made public in 1986, and he died of HIV-related complications in 1991.

  37. Armin Mohler

    Armin Mohler was a Swiss-born far right political writer and philosopher associated with the Neue Rechte phenomenon. Mohler's ideas owed more to the Nouvelle Droite strain associated with GRECE than the Ostpolitik-derived ideas of a strong German state associated with contemporaries such as Robert Spaemann and Gerd-Klaus Kaltenbrunner

  38. Martin Mussgnug

    Martin Mussgnug (born February 22, 1936 in Heidelberg, died February 2, 1997 in Singen (Hohentwiel)) was a German politician and former leader of the National Democratic Party of Germany (NPD). He first came to prominence in 1956 when he set up the "Bund Nationaler Studenten", a far right student organisation that was banned in 1963. Whilst leading this group he became involved with the Deutsche Reichspartei, …

  39. A. C. Cuza

    A. C. Cuza (Alexandru C. Cuza; November 8 1857-1947) was a Romanian far right politician and theorist.

  40. François Duprat

    François Duprat was a French far right politician, who introduced negationist thesis in France. He was in 1972 one of the founding members of the far right National Front led by Jean-Marie Le Pen, and was part of its political bureau until his assassination in 1978.

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