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・ Jan Rudolph Slotemaker de Bruïne
・ Jan Ruff O'Herne
・ Jan Ruhtenberg
・ Jan Ruiter
・ Jan Rulewski
・ Jan Ruml
・ Jan Rune Grave
・ Jan Rusinek
・ Jan Russ
・ Jan Rustem
・ Jan Rutta
・ Jan Ruzicka
・ Jan Rybkowski
・ Jan Rychlík
・ Jan Rypka
Jan Rys-Rozsévač
・ Jan Rzewuski
・ Jan Rzymełka
・ Jan Rządkowski
・ Jan S. Levy
・ Jan Saenredam
・ Jan Sagedal
・ Jan Sahara Hedl
・ Jan Sahl
・ Jan Salter
・ Jan Samuel Chrzanowski
・ Jan Sandee
・ Jan Sanders van Hemessen
・ Jan Sandmann
・ Jan Sandström


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Jan Rys-Rozsévač : ウィキペディア英語版
Jan Rys-Rozsévač
Jan Rys-Rozsévač (November 1, 1901 in Bílsko u Hořic, Kingdom of Bohemia - June 27, 1946 in Pankrác Prison in Prague) was a Czechoslovakian journalist and politician and leader of fascist organisation Vlajka.
Jan Rozsévač began to study medicine at a university but didn't finish his studies. In 1936 he joined Vlajka (in Czech ''the flag''), a nationalistic organisation founded in 1930. At the time he adopted pen name Jan Rys. Under this name he published books "Židozednářství - metla lidstva" (''Jewish freemasonry - the scourge of humankind'', 1938) and "Hilsneriáda a TGM" (''Hilsner Affair and Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk'', 1939). After the Munich Agreement in 1938, Vlajka was officially disbanded and Rys-Rozsévač imprisoned. He was released just before the rest of Czechoslovakia was occupied (March 15, 1939) to became leader of Vlajka.
Rys-Rozsévač attempted to establish a mass fascist organization and helped to move Vlajka from traditional anti-German chauvinism to collaboration with Nazis and Gestapo. During 1939 - 1940 Vlajka organized mass meetings against politicians of the First Republic of Czechoslovakia as represented by Masaryk and Beneš. The German occupational authorities nevertheless decided to support a group of collaborators around Emanuel Moravec, his political competitor. Because of constant propaganda attacks on Moravec, Vlajka was disbanded at the end of 1942 and the leaders, including Rys-Rozsévač, were sent as privileged prisoners into the Dachau concentration camp and transferred to Tyrol at the end of the war, where he was liberated in early May 1945.〔Peter Koblank: ''(Die Befreiung der Sonder- und Sippenhäftlinge in Südtirol )'', Online-Edition Mythos Elser 2006 〕
After the war Rys-Rozsévač and three his coworkers (Josef Burda, Jaroslav Čermák and Otakar Polívka) were sentenced to death, and several others to were sentenced to long term imprisonment. Rys-Rozsévač was hanged in Pankrác Prison.
== References ==


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