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Europe a Nation : ウィキペディア英語版 | Europe a Nation
Europe a Nation was a policy developed by British Fascist politician Oswald Mosley as the cornerstone of his Union Movement. It called for the integration of Europe into a single entity. Although the idea failed to gain widespread support for the Union Movement it nonetheless proved highly influential on far right thinking in Europe. ==Origins== The idea of a united Europe began to develop in the final days of the Second World War. Concepts such as ''Nation Europa'' and ''Eurafrika'', both of which looked for an ever close union between European countries, gained some currency in the German far-right underground in the immediate aftermath of the Second World War. Mosley, who towards the end of the war had learned to read the German language, read a number of pamphlets discussing these ideas and was strongly influenced by them.〔Thurlow, p. 238〕 Another important influence was the Benito Mussolini's manifesto of the Italian Social Republic, which included a call for the establishment of a European Community.〔〔Thurlow, p. 239〕 For his part Mosley would later claim that he had first advocated something akin to Europe a Nation in speeches as early as 1936.〔Oswald Mosley, ''My Life'', Nelson, 1970, p. 382〕 It was not, however, British Union of Fascists policy at any time.
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