Carloctavismo
Carloctavismo (Spanish: [kaɾloktaˈβizmo]; the name appears also as carlosoctavismo, carlooctavismo, carlos-octavismo, carlo-octavismo, or octavismo) is a branch of Carlism, particularly active in the 1943–1953 period. In terms of dynastical allegiances it advanced the claim to the Spanish throne of Carlos Pio de Habsburgo-Lorena y de Borbón, styled as Carlos VIII, and his relatives. In terms of political line it collaborated very closely with Francoism.
Antonio Iturmendi BañalesArchduke Karl Pius of Austria, Prince of TuscanyCarlismCarlo-francoismDominic von HabsburgEsteban de Bilbao EguíaFrancisco Elías de Tejada y SpínolaInfanta Blanca of SpainInfante Jaime, Duke of MadridJaime del Burgo TorresJesús Comín SagüésJesús Cora y LiraJoaquín Bau NollaJosé Luis de Oriol y UrigüenList of Knights of the Golden FleeceLuis Hernando de Larramendi y RuizManuel Fal CondeMaría Rosa Urraca PastorMaurici de Sivatte i de BobadillaMelchor Ferrer DalmauRafael Gambra CiudadRamón Massó TarruellaRequetésTomás Domínguez ArévaloTraditionalism (Spain)
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
seeAlso
primaryTopic
Carloctavismo
Carloctavismo (Spanish: [kaɾloktaˈβizmo]; the name appears also as carlosoctavismo, carlooctavismo, carlos-octavismo, carlo-octavismo, or octavismo) is a branch of Carlism, particularly active in the 1943–1953 period. In terms of dynastical allegiances it advanced the claim to the Spanish throne of Carlos Pio de Habsburgo-Lorena y de Borbón, styled as Carlos VIII, and his relatives. In terms of political line it collaborated very closely with Francoism.
has abstract
Carloctavismo (Spanish: [kaɾlo ...... d very closely with Francoism.
@en
Link from a Wikipage to an external page
Wikipage page ID
50,125,029
page length (characters) of wiki page
Wikipage revision ID
989,739,671
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
cHeight
Description
Location
left
@en
wikiPageUsesTemplate
subject
comment
Carloctavismo (Spanish: [kaɾlo ...... d very closely with Francoism.
@en
label
Carloctavismo
@en