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:''For the 15th-century cardinal, see Juan de Mella (1397-1467).'' Juan Vázquez de Mella y Fanjul (Cangas de Onís, Asturias, 8 June 1861, Madrid 26 February 1928) was a Spanish scholar and politician, closely associated with the Spanish legitimist and traditionalist movement known as Carlism. ==Career== Mella was a convert to Carlism, and in 1885 began to write for the Carlist and traditionalist newspapers El Pensamiento Galaico and La Restauración. From 1889 to 1919, Mella wrote for the major national Carlist daily, Madrid-based El Correo Español. After his break with the Carlists in 1919, he had his own national periodical, El Pensamiento Español.〔Cathey 2003, 28-29.〕 Mella was most famous as an orator. He was a charismatic speaker whose speeches attracted thousands of observers (one Carlist historian claimed that 40,000 people attended one particularly large rally).〔Cathey 2003, 29-30.〕 Mella served as a Carlist deputy in the Cortes. He twice turned down the opportunity to become a minister, in his youth under Cánovas and later in life under Antonio Maura.〔Vázquez Mella 1953, 6.〕 He broke with Carlist claimant Don Jaime I in 1919 over Jaime’s support for the French in World War I, as well as personal conflicts with the “King” and his advisors. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Juan Vázquez de Mella」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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