- Eugène Deloncle
Eugène Deloncle (
June 20 1890 , Brest—January 17 1944 ,Paris ) was a French engineer and Fascist leader, and the adoptive father ofJacques Corrèze .A graduate of the
École Polytechnique , Deloncle worked for theFrench Navy , and enrolled inWorld War I as anartillery officer. Wounded on the Champagne frontline, he was awarded theLegion of Honor .Initially supportive of the integralist "
Action Française ", he left the movement in 1935, in order to found his own group - the "Comité Secret d'Action Révolutionnaire" (CSAR), usually known as "La Cagoule " (a name given by the press). Cagoule kept theOrleanist and strongly anti-republican line of the Action Française, but added the rhetoric of Fascism.With
World War II , theFall of France , and the German period of occupation, Deloncle created a movement backingVichy France andPhilippe Pétain , the "Mouvement Social Révolutionnaire " (MSR, Social Revolutionary Movement). MSR, a more radical form of the Cagoule, strongly supported Pétain'straditionalism , as well as the political experiment engineered in Southern France. Afterwards, he approached theRassemblement National Populaire ofMarcel Déat , but conflicts with the latter got him expelled in May 1942.Deloncle's involvement with the
Abwehr made him an enemy of theGestapo , who assassinated him and one of his sons.
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