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By pelekys.com

Metaxas Jugend

This book is a picture album featuring over 400 pictures of the Greek Fascist Youth Organization EON (Εθνική Οργάνωση Νεολαίας). These pictures, some of them very rare, provide a straight and completely visual insight into a massive youth organization that reached 1,250,000 members - by 1941 over one sixth of the entire Greek population wore the dark blue uniform of the EON.

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The Greek pavilion at the 1939 New York World’s Fair

This 32-pages long booklet explores the Greek pavilion at the 1939 New York's World Fair. The pavilion is specially interesting because it is one of the few instances the Metaxas quasi-fascist regime introduced itself to the outer world on a large-scale basis. The booklet analyzes how the pavilion expressed the Metaxas dictatorship's ideological propaganda, and provides very interesting pictures of the pavilion from both the outside and the inside, as well as rare images of the Metaxian propaganda brochures.

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Introduction Au Fascisme Grec

Ce livre se concentre sur l’histoire et la philosophie du régime fasciste qui exista en Grèce dans les années 1930, une dictature appelé «Régime du Quatre Août» et qui fut dirigé par le général Ioánnis Metaxás. Ce livre contient cinq articles écrits par Andreas Markessinis au sujet de la période très peu connue de la Grèce Fasciste et une collection d’annexes qui jamais n’ont été traduites au Français.

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La Grecia Fascista (1936-1941)
Metaxas Book Fascist Greece

Este el primer libro en lengua castellana centrado exclusivamente en analizar en profundidad el régimen de Metaxas, el general que convirtió buena parte de los años 30 de Grecia en una especie de versión griega del Tercer Reich. Contiene más de 300 fotografías, muchas de ellas nunca publicadas.

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John Metaxas

From Wikipedia

John Metaxas (Greek Ιωάννης Μεταξάς, April 12, 1871 – January 29, 1941) was a Greek General and the Prime Minister of Greece from 1936 until his death.

Born in Ithaca, John Metaxas was a career soldier, first seeing action in 1897 fighting the Turkish army in the Thessalian campaign. Following studies in Germany, he returned to join the General Staff and was part of the modernizing process of the Greek Army before the two Balkan Wars (1912 and 1913). He was made Chief of the Greek General Staff in 1913 and was promoted to General.

A staunch monarchist, he supported Constantine I and opposed Greek entry into World War I. Eleftherios Venizelos, the prime minister, resigned over the refusal to aid the Dardanelles campaign and used the war as the major issue in the elections. When Venizelos won the March 1915 elections he mobilised the army but was dismissed by the king. In June 1917, with Allied support and 60,000 Cretan soldiers, the king was deposed and Venizelos empowered, declaring war on June 29, 1917.

John Metaxas left Greece with the king, neither returning until 1920. When the monarchy was displaced in 1922 Metaxas moved into politics and founded the Party of Free Opinion in 1923.After a disputed plebiscite George II, son of Constantine I, returned to take the throne in 1935. The elections of 1936 produced a deadlock between Panagis Tsaldaris and Themistoklis Sophoulis. The political situation was further polarized by the gains made by the Communist Party of Greece (KKE). Disliking the Communists and fearing a coup, George II appointed Metaxas, then minister of war, to be interim prime minister.

Widespread industrial unrest in May allowed John Metaxas to declare a state of emergency. He suspended the parliament indefinitely and annulled various articles of the constitution. By August 4, 1936 Metaxas was effectively dictator. Patterning his regime on other authoritarian European governments (most notably Mussolini’s and Hitler’s fascist regimes), Metaxas banned political parties, arrested his opponents (around 15,000 Greeks were imprisoned and tortured or exiled for political offences by the Metaxas regime), criminalized strikes and introduced widespread censorship of the media. But he did not have great popular support or a strong ideology.

The Metaxas government sought to pacify the working classes by raising wages, regulating hours and working to improve working conditions. For rural areas agricultural prices were raised and farm debts were taken on by the government. Despite these efforts the Greek people generally moved towards the political left, without actively opposing Metaxas though.In foreign policy John Metaxas was caught in a dilemma. He saw Germany and Italy as ‘natural’ allies but in the Mediterranean the British and their fleet were a major force while the expansionist dreams of Mussolini were clearly threatening to Greece.

The uncertain line between the opposing forces was decisively broken by the blunt demands of Mussolini in October 1940. He demanded occupation rights to strategic Greek sites and was met with the single-word reply “no”. Italy invaded Greece from Albania on October 28, 1940.The Greeks, leaded by Metaxas himself, were able to mount a successful defense, forcing the Italians back into Albania and occupying large parts of Northern Epirus (Southern Albania). Metaxas died in Athens on January 29 of a phlegmon of the pharynx which subsequently led to uncurable toxaemia, but there are historians who question Metaxas’ natural death and point to the British secret service. He was succeeded by Alexandros Korizis, who little after allowed British troops to land on Greece.

John Metaxas is a controversial figure in Greek history. He is reviled by some for his dictatorial state, and admired by others for his “No” stance, the economic boom Greece enjoyed and his military victory against Italy.