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  1. Eoin O'DuffyEoin Ó Dubhthaigh »), né le 20 octobre 1892 et mort le 30 novembre 1944, est un homme politique irlandais.Figure du fascisme irlandais des années 1930 [1], il sera successivement teachta Dála (TD), commandant en chef de l'IRA, second commissaire de la Garda Síochána, leader de l'Army Comrades Association, premier président du Fine Gael (1933–34) et fondateur du ...

  2. Eoin O'Duffy was born in Laragh, Ireland in 1892. As a young man he worked as an engineer, architect and auctioneer in Wexford and Monaghan. O'Duffy joined the Irish Republican Army (IRA) and by the end of the First World War was commander of the Monaghan Brigade. On 14th February, 1920, O'Duffy's unit successfully captured the R.U.C. barracks ...

  3. O’Duffy had pledged Blueshirt volunteers to Benito Mussolini’s forces after Il Duce invaded Abyssinia in the autumn of 1935. This article will examine Eoin O’Duffy’s involvement in international fascism during the mid-1930s before turning to his promise to Mussolini of 1,000 Blueshirts in the Italo-Ethiopian war.

  4. 22 de sept. de 2005 · Eoin O'Duffy was one of the most controversial figures of modern Irish history. A guerrilla leader and protégé of Michael Collins, he rose rapidly through the ranks of the republican movement. By 1922 he was chief of staff of the IRA, a member of the Irish Republican Brotherhood's Supreme Council, and a Sinn Féin deputy in Dáil éireann.

  5. Eoin O’Duffy came to prominence as a Gaelic Athletic Association activist in Monaghan, leading the IRA there during the War of Independence. A protégé of Michael Collins, he rose rapidly within the IRA, ending up chief of staff in 1922. He ran the police during the first decade of the Irish Free State and, after his dismissal, became leader ...

  6. 24 de oct. de 2018 · Eoin O’Duffy, of Fine Gael fame, mustered 700 troops into his ‘Irish Brigade’ to fight alongside General Franco in what they claim was religiously motivated in defence of the Catholic Church. In reality O’Duffy’s band of blueshirts were overtly fascist group who were delusional in fighting against their own class interests in many respects.

  7. www.historyireland.com › violence-citizenship-andHistory Ireland

    Violence, citizenship and virility: The making of an irish fascist. Eoin O’Duffy c. mid-1920s—one of the many portraits to appear in Garda periodicals. (National Library of Ireland) Gael, revolutionary, soldier, chief of police, founding president of Fine Gael: during his short and controversial public life General Eoin O’Duffy played ...