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・ Fathers of the Holy Sepulchre
・ Fathers Rights-Responsibility Party
・ Fathers' Day (film)
・ Fathers' rights movement
・ Fathers' rights movement by country
・ Fathers' rights movement in Australia
・ Father of the Bride (1991 film)
・ Father of the Bride (novel)
・ Father of the Bride (TV series)
・ Father of the Bride Part II
・ Father of the Chapel
・ Father of the Country
・ Father of the Dáil
・ Father of the House
・ Father of the House (New Zealand)
Father of the Nation
・ Father of the Pride
・ Father of the Year
・ Father of Victory
・ Father Pandosy
・ Father Panik Village
・ Father Pat Noise
・ Father Patrick Mercredi Community High School
・ Father Radetzky
・ Father Raskin
・ Father Ray Foundation
・ Father Ray Mukada
・ Father Ray's Sponsor a Child Foundation
・ Father Roquelaure
・ Father Ryan High School


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Father of the Nation : ウィキペディア英語版
Father of the Nation

Father of the Nation is an honorific title given to a man considered the driving force behind the establishment of his country, state, or nation.
== Usage ==
Pater Patriae (plural Patres Patriae), also seen as ''Parens Patriae'', was a Roman honorific meaning "Father of the Fatherland", bestowed by the Senate on heroes, and later on emperors.
The founding myths of many nations regard all the people as descendants of a progenitor, who is often eponymous, such as Lusus for Portugal (''Lusitania''), or Lech, Czech and Rus for Poland (''Lechia''), the Czech lands, and Rus'.
In monarchies, the monarch was often considered the "father/mother of the nation" or as a patriarch to guide his family. This concept is expressed in the Divine Right espoused in some monarchies, while in others it is codified into constitutional law as in Spain, where the monarch is considered the personification and embodiment, the symbol of the unity and permanence of the nation. In Thailand, the monarch is given the same recognition, and demonstrated loyalty is enforced with severe criminal statutes.
Many dictators bestow titles upon themselves, which rarely survive the end of their regime. Gnassingbé Eyadéma of Togo's titles included "father of the nation", "older brother", and "Guide of the People". Mobutu Sese Seko of Zaire's included "Father of the nation", "the Guide", "the Messiah", "the Helmsman", "the Leopard", "the Sun-President", and "the Cock who Jumps on Anything That Moves".
In postcolonial Africa, "father of the nation" was a title used by many leaders both to refer to their role in the independence movement as a source of legitimacy, and to use paternalist symbolism as a source of continued popularity. On Joseph Stalin's seventieth birthday in 1949, he was bestowed with the title "Father of Nations" for his establishment of "people's democracies" in countries occupied by the USSR after World War II.〔

The title "Father of the Nation" is sometimes politically contested. The 1972 Constitution of Bangladesh declared Sheikh Mujibur Rahman to be "father of the nation". The BNP government removed this in 2004, to the protests of the oppostition Awami League, led by Rahman's daughter Sheikh Hasina. A motion in the Parliament of Slovakia to proclaim controversial pre-war leader Andrej Hlinka "father of the nation" nearly passed in September 2007.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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