sympathizer$81019$ - significado y definición. Qué es sympathizer$81019$
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Qué (quién) es sympathizer$81019$ - definición

INTERNATIONAL DIPLOMATIC INCIDENT THAT OCCURRED DURING THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR
Vernon Guyon Locke; George Wade (Confederate Sympathizer)
  • John C. Braine
  • USS ''Malvern''

fellow-traveller         
PERSON WHO SYMPATHIZES AND CO-OPERATES WITH A POLITICAL ORGANIZATION WITHOUT BEING A FORMAL MEMBER
Fellow-traveller; Fellow-traveler; Fellow travelers; Fellow travellers; Communist sympathizer; Communist sympathizers; Comsymp; Fellow traveler; Fellow-traveling; Fellow Travellers
¦ noun a sympathizer with, but non-member of, the Communist Party.
Derivatives
fellow-travelling adjective
Fellow traveller         
PERSON WHO SYMPATHIZES AND CO-OPERATES WITH A POLITICAL ORGANIZATION WITHOUT BEING A FORMAL MEMBER
Fellow-traveller; Fellow-traveler; Fellow travelers; Fellow travellers; Communist sympathizer; Communist sympathizers; Comsymp; Fellow traveler; Fellow-traveling; Fellow Travellers
The term fellow traveller (also fellow traveler) identifies a person who is intellectually sympathetic to the ideology of a political organization, and who co-operates in the organization's politics, without being a formal member of that organization.Bullock, Alan; Trombley, Stephen, Editors (1999), The New Fontana Dictionary of Modern Thought Third Edition, p.
Nazi         
  • [[Arthur de Gobineau]], one of the key inventors of the theory of the "[[Aryan race]]"
  • Berlin memorial to homosexual victims of the Holocaust: ''Totgeschlagen – Totgeschwiegen'' (Struck Dead – Hushed Up)
  • Anti-communist, antisemitic propaganda poster in Nazi Germany
  • A wagon piled high with corpses outside the crematorium in [[Buchenwald concentration camp]]
  • monarchist]] [[German National People's Party]] (DNVP) during the brief NSDAP–DNVP alliance in the [[Harzburg Front]] from 1931 to 1932
  • German Christians]] organisation celebrating Luther Day in Berlin in 1933. A speech is given by Bishop Hossenfelder.
  • ''Deutsches Volk–Deutsche Arbeit:'' German People, German Work (1934) – an example of [[reactionary modernism]]
  • A "poster information" from the exhibition "''Miracle of Life''" in Berlin in 1935
  • [[Houston Stewart Chamberlain]], whose book ''The Foundations of the Nineteenth Century'' would prove to be a seminal work in the history of German nationalism
  • The [[Marinebrigade Erhardt]] during the [[Kapp Putsch]] in Berlin, 1920<ref>German Federal Archive image description</ref> (The Marinebrigade Erhardt used the [[swastika]] as its symbol, as seen on their helmets and on the truck, which inspired the Nazi Party to adopt it as the movement's symbol.)
  • Nazi Party rally]] in [[Nuremberg]], 1936
  • [[Oswald Spengler]], a philosopher of history
  • central Poland]], 1939
  • The book ''[[Das Dritte Reich]]'' (1923), translated as "The Third Reich", by [[Arthur Moeller van den Bruck]]
  • Topographical map of Europe: the Nazi Party declared support for ''[[Drang nach Osten]]'' (expansion of Germany east to the Ural Mountains), that is shown on the upper right side of the map as a brown diagonal line.
  • Flag of the [[Nazi Party]], similar but not identical to the national [[flag of Nazi Germany]] (1933–1945), in which the [[swastika]] is slightly off-centred
  • [[Johann Gottlieb Fichte]], considered one of the fathers of [[German nationalism]]
  • Hitler in 1935 with [[Cesare Orsenigo]], the [[Catholic Church]]'s [[nuncio to Germany]]
  • Obligations of Polish workers in Germany, warning them of the death penalty for any sexual relations between Germans and Poles
  • language=lt}}</ref>
  • [[Georg Ritter von Schönerer]], a major exponent of Pan-Germanism in Austria
  • Left to right: [[Adolf Hitler]], [[Hermann Göring]], Minister of Propaganda [[Joseph Goebbels]], and [[Rudolf Hess]]
FASCIST, ANTISEMITIC, NATIONALIST, ANTI-COMMUNIST, TOTALITARIAN IDEOLOGY OF THE REGIME THAT RULED GERMANY FROM 1933 TO 1945
NationalSocialism; Nazi; National Socialist; Nazis; Naziism; Nazy; National socialist; Hitlerism; National Socialists; Nationalsozialismus; National socialists; German Nazism; Nazi Origin; Nazist; NAZI; Nazi philosophy; National socialism; Nazists; Natzi; Nationalsocialism; Nazi ideology; Nacism; Nazi's; NAZIs; German Fascism; German National Socialism; Natzy; NAZISM; Hitlerite; Nazi policies; German fascism; National Socialist Ideology; Nasism; Nationalsocialist; Nazisem; Nasisem; National Socialist movement; Natsy; National Socialism (ideology); Hitlerites; National-socialism; Völkisch nationalism; Nazi sympathizer; Paleo-Nazism; National Socialism; Nazidom; Economic Nazism; Economic National Socialism; Racial Socialism; Racial Socialist; Racist Socialist; Nazi people; Nazi movement; Nazi fascism; Nazi sympathiser; Nazziism; Nazzism; Nazisam; Ideology of the Nazi Party; Nazi imperialism; German fascist; Ideology of Nazi Germany; Ideology of the Nazis; Hitlerist; Hitlerfaschismus
['n?:tsi]
¦ noun (plural Nazis)
1. historical a member of the National Socialist German Workers' Party.
2. derogatory a person with extreme racist or authoritarian views.
Derivatives
Nazidom noun
Nazify verb (Nazifies, Nazifying, Nazified).
Naziism noun
Nazism noun
Origin
Ger., abbrev. representing the pronunciation of Nati- in Nationalsozialist 'national socialist', prob. by analogy with Sozi from Sozialist 'socialist'.

Wikipedia

Chesapeake Affair

The Chesapeake Affair was an international diplomatic incident that occurred during the American Civil War. On December 7, 1863, Confederate sympathizers from the Maritime Provinces captured the American steamer Chesapeake off the coast of Cape Cod. The expedition was planned and led by Vernon Guyon Locke (1827–1890) of Nova Scotia and John Clibbon Brain (1840–1906). When George Wade of New Brunswick killed one of the American crew, the Confederacy claimed its first fatality in New England waters.

The Confederate sympathizers had planned to re-coal at Saint John, New Brunswick, and head south to Wilmington, North Carolina. Instead, the captors had difficulties at Saint John; so they sailed further east and re-coaled in Halifax, Nova Scotia. U.S. forces responded to the attack, violating British sovereignty by trying to arrest the captors in Nova Scotian waters. International tensions rose. Wade and others were able to escape through the assistance of William Johnston Almon, a prominent Nova Scotian and Confederate sympathizer.

The Chesapeake Affair was one of the most sensational international incidents that occurred during the American Civil War. The incident briefly threatened to bring the British Empire into the war against the North.