Carlist Mass Meeting & Anti-Franco Demonstration | Defy Spanish Government Ban | May 1969
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- Опубликовано: 21 сен 2024
- Sunday, May 4th 1969.
Footage of a mass meeting by followers of the Carlist Movement which also led to demonstrations against General Franco.
The meeting, an annual commemoration of those Carlists who died fighting on the Nationalist side during the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939), took place at the foot of Montejurra Mountain near Estella in the Province of Navarre.
The gathering had been banned because it was expected to turn into a protest demonstration in favour of the return of Prince Xavier of Bourbon-Parma, the 79-year-old Carlist Pretender who was exiled to France the previous year.
After the ceremonies, they headed for the town's main square where chants of "FRANCO MURDERER" and "LONG LIVE KING XAVIER" were heard. There were also banners which called on Franco to resign as General de Gaulle had. The Spanish Civil Guard were present and although there were some "honour confrontations" there was no violence.
The Carlist waged unsuccessful dynastic wars during the 19th Century.
Princess María Teresa of Bourbon-Parma was present. She represented the modern shift of Carlism from a force of conservative Roman Catholic thinking to a liberal socialist ideological school of thought.
She was an active supporter of the secessionist State of Biafra.
Source: Reuters News Archive.
I am a carlist. But I will always defend El Generalisimo. He has done more for Catholicism and Spain than many others. While he did do wrong by us carlists he preserved the Catholic Unity of Spain.
Pure facts
Tu no eres carlista, eres "carlista", no tienes ni puta idea de los ideales del carlismo... Solo eres un franquista con purpurina de requeté.... Si defiendes a Franco jamás has defendido los ideales carlistas, que Manuel Fal conde defendió hasta que Franco le exilió.
Así es.
Pero es nacionalista y el nacionalismo es una visión liberal protestante
And he gave us Juan Carlos 🤣
¡Viva Cristo Rey!
el único rey
Franco must've really had a tough job. He had to ensure that he'd control Spain with him as the Caudillo, he had to deal with tons of people with different and opposing views stopping each one of them from causing another civil war. To top it all worse, the Nazis and the Allies hated him.
Nazis supported him and Allies let him be
Franco instituted a bloody dictatorship.
This is a protest against it and its violence
@@mareksicinski3726 they didnt and the allies wanted to remove him after ww2
Viva España!! Viva Cristo Rey!! Dios, Patria y Rey!! 🇪🇸 🇲🇽 ✝️ ❤️
Si no hubiera sido por Franco los boinas rojas no hubieran entrado nunca en Madrid.
Los Carlistas y Franco tienen que estar unidos
Los requetés tienen más experiencia en guerras que Franco en toda su historia, los carlistas llevan luchando desde antes de que naciera el abuelo del miss islas Canarias 1939. Lávate la boca tu y el otro iluminado antes de hablar de los requetés del norte ; los originales, para decir tal brabuconería.... Tu debes de ser hijo de "requetes" del sur / mediterráneo, eres igual de moro que la guardia mora del unihuevo.
Gora Jainko maite maitea. Zagun denon jabe.
Gora España ta Euskalerriata, bidezko errege
If it wasn't for Franco the Carlists would have entered Madrid and you would have a real King on the throne. You and your family would also be practicing Catholics instead of hating it.
They are for the King right ?
Yes
For a branch of the Royal Family that doesn’t exist anymore and lost the throne in 1840
Utterly ridiculous
@@TheJalipa 🤡
It does exist, and is the rightful heir!
The legitimate King
Swag gear!
They do got the drip beret tho
Abajo el Fascismo, Viva Cristo Rey.
Franco no era fascista
El principio del fin. Con la excusa de ir contra Franco, unos jóvenes que no tenían nada de carlistas lo que atacaban era la Tradición.
Franco no es que fuera la Tradición...
Dios patria, rey y fueros
I thought the Carlists supported the Caudillo
Los carlistas son monárquicos y patriotas.
Franco pretty much betrayed them, he exiled Fal Conde during the Civil War and exploited Carlist infighting to secure his own ascendancy
During the war, yes. But after defeating the commies he ignored them and eventually installed the Liberal King Juan Carlos of the line of Isabel II rather than any of the legitimate Carlist claimants
Franco exiled the King in 1968 and this was the Carlist response.
@@Sam-nx9ec Franco no quería que se repitieran las guerras carlistas del siglo 19 pero Juan Carlos resultó TRAIDOR Y PERJURO.
Bueno, pues la historia puso a cada cual en su sitio. Franco murió, su dictadura acabó y el Movimiento Nacional se deshizo en sus diferentes grupos... ¿Y dónde está el Carlismo ahora? ¿Cuántos diputados requetés hay en el Congreso? ¿Cuántos senadores con boina roja vemos en el Senado?
Si alguna vez el Carlismo tuvo poder en España y pudo ver restaurados sus ideales de Dios y Patria fue con Franco.
Y punto si señor igual que la falange
Juan Carlos es Traidor y Perjuro al sevicio de la ma so ne ría inglesa de York igual que Felipe sexto, los Españoles les importamos una higa.
That depends on what do you think about “carlism”
Also, the idea that there is no higher value than having “your people” on the chair as opposed to having any values
yes
🫡🫡🫡🫡🫡🫡🫡🫡🫡🫡🫡🫡🫡🫡🫡🫡arriba españa 🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸
Los Carlistas quieren otro rey Borbón pero ¿ si les vuelve a hacer lo mismo,si es otro Traidor qué cara van a poner?
🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷🇫🇷...
Utterly ridiculous that there a Carlists a over hundred years since they lost the throne
@@navarrenavarre
Direct descent from Don Carlos has died out
There are now several* claimants - all through female descent - which undermines the whole point of Carlism
The Duke of Parma - who is one main claimants - was a Socialist.
* the current King of Spain is also of Carlist Descent
@@navarrenavarre
erm Don Carlos certainly subscribed to Salic Law.....that’s why he rebelled against Isabella in the first place.
You’ve moved from reality to fantasy (good metaphor for Carlism generally)
@@TheJalipa The Carlist movement may be dead but I don't think it had a bad philosophy at all. It can still be utilised and learnt from. It stood for the best of the feudal system. If Marxist analysis is focused on labour and alienation, what is the cause of alienation? The loss of meaning, the Meaning Crisis in modern philosophy. Most Carlist soldiers were Basque or Catalan rural artisans who had lost their livelihood when guilds were abolished. The guild system gave workers meaning through shared community towards God, La communion. And fueros was local laws that Basque and Catalan people enjoyed given to them by the King, so Carlism stood for a patrimonial state not an absolutist state, it was precisely anti-liberalism because like absolute monarchy, the age of Liberalism heralded the centralisation of language, culture and customs.
When something is right, it continues to be right.
@@TheJalipa Wrong, they opposed Isabella because she took a big shit all over Spanish tradition, not because they were supporters of Salic Law. They either could have abided by Spanish tradition proximally and allowed her to rightfully (technically) take the throne, or defied it in this instance to preserve it long term. Abiding by their tradition would have meant supporting the destruction of that tradition in doing so.
¡Viva Cristo Rey!