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  1. La Línea Metaxás fue una cadena de fortificaciones griegas construidas en la frontera entre el Reino de Grecia y el Reino de Bulgaria ( Macedonia oriental) en la década de 1930, previo a la Segunda Guerra Mundial, con el objetivo de proteger el país heleno de una posible invasión búlgara. Fue llamada así, posteriormente, en homenaje al ...

  2. Metaxas, Ioannis. Greek army officer and statesman. Born 12 April 1871 in Ithaca, Greece. Died 29 January 1941 in Athens, Greece. Ioannis Metaxas was a conservative army officer and politician, who influenced decision-making in Greece during World War I by collaborating with King Constantine I. In 1936 he became head of an oppressive ...

  3. Popular autocracy in Greece, 1936-41 : a political biography of general Ioannis Metaxas by P. J Vatikiotis ... Ioannis Metaxás político grego.

  4. Biographie. Ioannis Metaxas est né dans l'île de Céphalonie. Il fit une carrière de militaire et servit dans la guerre gréco-turque de 1897. Il suivit une formation d'officier supérieur en Allemagne et combattit comme officier d'état-major lors de la guerre des Balkans (1912-1913). Il fut ensuite chef d'état-major, mais il fut exilé en ...

  5. Ioánnis MetaxásΙωάννης Μεταξάς. Ioánnis Metaxas (a görög : Ιωάννης Μεταξάς ), született Ithaca on 1871. április 12 és meghalt a 1941. január 29 A Athens , egy görög katonai és politikus . Ő volt miniszterelnök a Görög Királyság re 1936 -től haláláig időszakában diktatúra néven a 4-augusztusi ...

  6. Liked by Ioannis Metaxas. Certified Six Sigma Green Belt, Supply Chain and Logistics Professional having 21+ years of experience in Europe and Middle East of managing complex supply chain projects from inception through implementation in challenging environments within various industries including EPC, FMCG, Retail, e-commerce, high-tech and ...

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  7. The Ioannis Metaxas’ regime, from August 1936 to January 1941, is most often brought closer to the authoritarian and paternalistic model of Salazar’s Portugal – or Franco’s Spain- than to fascism or nazism stricly speaking. This article focuses on a critical aspect of the « 4th August Regime » : its relationships with religion.