Fascist symbolism
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Fascist symbolism is the use of certain images and symbols which are designed to represent aspects of fascism. These include national symbols of historical importance, goals, and political policies.[1] The best-known are the fasces, which was the original symbol of fascism, and the swastika of Nazism.
Common symbols of fascist movements
Organized fascist movements have
The use of symbols, graphics, and other artifacts created by fascist, authoritarian, and totalitarian governments has been noted as a key aspect of their propaganda.[2] Most fascist movements adopted symbols of Ancient Roman or Greek origin, for example, the German use of Roman standards during rallies and the Italian adoption of the fasces symbol. The Spanish Falange took its name from the Spanish word for the Greek phalanx.
Militarist uniforms with nationalist insignia
Organized fascist movements typically use military-like uniforms with the symbol of their movement on them.
In Italy, the Italian Fascist movement in 1919 wore black military-like uniforms and was nicknamed Blackshirts. In power, uniforms during the Fascist era extended to both the party and the military which typically bore fasces or an eagle clutching a fasces on their caps or on the left arm section of the uniform.
In Germany, the fascist Nazi movement was similar to the Italian Fascists in that they initially used a specifically colored uniform for their movement, the tan-brown colored uniform of the SA paramilitary group earned the group and the Nazis themselves the nickname of the Brownshirts. The Nazis used the swastika for their uniforms and copied the Italian Fascists' uniforms, with an eagle clutching a wreathed swastika instead of a fasces, and a Nazi flag arm sash on the left arm section of the uniform for party members.
Other fascist countries largely copied the symbolism of the Italian Fascists and German Nazis for their movements. Like them, their uniforms looked typically like military uniforms with Nationalist-type insignia of the movement. The Spanish Falange adopted dark blue shirts for their party members, symbolizing Spanish workers, many of whom wore blue shirts. Berets were also used, representing their
Fascist use of heraldry
Fascist governments often saw the need to change the heraldry of their nations; in Germany, the arms of Coburg, featuring the head of Saint Maurice, was looked down upon for its religious and un-Aryan nature. It was replaced in 1934 with a coat of arms featuring a sword and swastika. Thuringia also saw the need to support the Nazi regime by adding a swastika to the paws of the lion on its coat of arms.[3] In Italy, the chief of a coat of arms is often used to indicate political allegiance. Under the government of Mussolini, many families and locales adopted a red chief charged with a fasces to indicate allegiance to the National Fascist Party; this chief was called the capo del littorio.[4] Francisco Franco, Chief of State of Francoist Spain, used a personal coat of arms featuring the Royal Bend of Castile, a heraldic symbol used by the Crown of Castile.[5][6]
Italy
The original symbol of fascism in Italy under Benito Mussolini was the fasces. This is an ancient Imperial Roman symbol of power carried by lictors in front of magistrates; a bundle of sticks featuring an axe, indicating the power over life and death. Before the Italian Fascists adopted the fasces, the symbol had been used by Italian political organizations of various political ideologies, called Fasci ("leagues") as a symbol of strength through unity.
Italian Fascism utilized the color black as a symbol of their movement, black being the color of the uniforms of their paramilitaries, known as Blackshirts. The blackshirt derived from Italy's daredevil elite shock troops known as the Arditi, soldiers who were specifically trained for a life of violence and wore unique blackshirt uniforms.[7] The colour black, as used by the Arditi, symbolized death.[8]
Other symbols used by the Italian Fascists included the aquila, the Capitoline Wolf, and the SPQR motto, each related to Italy's ancient Roman cultural history, which the Fascists attempted to resurrect.
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Flag of the National Fascist Party, bearing the fasces, which was the primary symbol of Italian Fascism.
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A perched eagle clutching a fasces was a common symbol used on Italian Fascist uniforms.
Germany
The nature of German fascism, as encapsulated in
As the Italian Fascists adapted elements of their ethnic heritage to fuel a sense of Nationalism by use of symbolism, so did Nazi Germany. Turn-of-the-century
The black-white-red tricolor of the
Other historical symbols that were already in use by the German Army to varying degrees prior to the Nazi Germany, such as the Wolfsangel and Totenkopf, were also used in a new, more industrialized manner on uniforms and insignia.
Although the swastika was a popular symbol in art prior to the regimental use by Nazi Germany and has a long heritage in many other cultures throughout history - and although many of the symbols used by the Nazis were ancient or commonly used prior to the advent of Nazi Germany - because of association with Nazi use, the swastika is often considered synonymous with Nazism and some of the other symbols still carry a negative post-World War II stigma in Western countries, to the point where some of the symbols are banned from display altogether.[9]
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Flag of the Nazi Party (National Socialist German Workers' Party, NSDAP), bearing the swastika, the premier symbol of Nazism which remains strongly associated with it in the Western world.
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Parteiadler eagle, used as a symbol by the NSDAP
Spain
The fascist
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Flag of theSpanish Falange, bearing the yoke and arrows, the premier symbol of Falangism.
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State coat of arms of Francoist Spain 1939–1945.
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State coat of arms of Francoist Spain 1945–1977.
Poland
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Falanga symbol.
Several Polish far-right and nationalist organizations have used the falanga sword, most notably by the ONR and NOP as their main identifying symbols.
Other places
Many other fascist movements did not win power or were relatively minor regimes in comparison and their symbolism is not well-remembered today in many parts of the world, although the BUF's
In alphabetical order by nation:
- Austria's crutch crossas its symbol.
- Lightning bolts were a common symbol of Flash and Circle.
- The Brazilian Integralist Action used an upper case sigma (Σ), to represent the summation of all things under the State.
- The symbol of the Bulgarian national-socialist Ratnik movements was a sun cross named "Bogar".
- The symbol of the Croatian Ustaše movement was capital letter U with the flaming grenade and the Croatian coat of arms.
- A prominent symbol of the Greek 4th of August Regime was the Labrys/Pelekys, the double-headed axe which Ioannis Metaxas thought to be the oldest symbol of all Hellenic civilizations.
- Greece's far-right, ultra-nationalist Golden Dawn Party uses a flag depicting a meandros in a style and color scheme reminiscent of the Nazi swastika.
- The symbol of Hungary's fascistic Arrow Cross Party was the Arrow Cross.
- The Kataeb Party of Lebanon is known in English as the Phalange Party which a derivation of the Spanish spelling for Fascist.
- The National Socialist Movement in the Netherlands (NSB) used the Wolfsangel as its main symbol.
- The symbol of the Norwegian Nasjonal Samling was as golden/yellow sun cross on red background.
- The symbol of Salazar's Portuguese Estado Novo regime was a stylized version of the Christ Cross and shield found on the national flag to distinguish its rivals in the Movimento Nacional-Sindicalista used the Order of Christ Cross.
- The symbol of the Romanian Iron Guard was a triple cross (a variant of the triple parted and fretted) – three parallel verticals intersected with three parallel horizontals, usually in black; it was meant to represent prison bars, as a badge of martyrdom. It was sometimes deemed the Archangel Michael Cross, after the patron saint of the movement.
- The symbol of the Silver Legion of America was a silver flag with a scarlet letter L.
- The Russian Movement Against Illegal Immigration used the black-colored road sign "Stop Prohibited" (similar to the swastika) as their main symbol.
- The quasi-Fascist Yugoslav ZBOR used a green shield with a blade of wheat on it, with a sword crossing the shield.
Contemporary usage
Some
- Crosses:
- Arrow cross – Arrow Cross Partyin Hungary
- Celtic cross – used by neo-Nazi white nationalist groups worldwide, the Italian New Force, Stormfront, David Duke's website, VSBD/PdA, a banned German neo-Nazi party and the British People's Party, a banned British neo-Nazi party
- Cross crosslet – Lithuanian National Socialist Party
- Knights Party
- Swastika – continues to be used by neo-Nazi groups such as the American Nazi Party, the São Paulo Skinheads in Brazil, and was used by the National Socialist Front of Sweden
- Bladed swastika – Russian National Unity
- Wolfsangel symbol
- Used by the SS and Hitlerjugendas well as various neo-Nazi groups
- Used by the SS and
- Black Sun - Used by the Azov Battalion and Vanguard America as well as other groups such as Volksfront. The shooter behind the Christchurch mosque shootings engraved it on his guns and put it on the cover of his manifesto.
- Labrys (or Pelekys) – a Minoan double-headed axe, used by some fascist Greek nostalgics
- Runes:
- Algiz rune – Allgermanische Heidnische Front, National Alliance in the United States
- Odal rune- common among various neo-Nazi groups
- Sigel rune, especially on the Schutzstaffel badge, sometimes confused with or used interchangeably with Eihwaz
- Tyr rune was on the badge of the SA Reichsführerschulen in Nazi Germany, and is sometimes used by neo-Nazis such as Nordic Resistance Movement
- Nihal Atsiz, e.g.Türkçü Toplumcu Budun Derneği
- Republic of South Africa
- Neo-Nazis typically use Nordic Pagan symbols, including Mjölnir.[20]
- Others, continued to be used by the National Socialist Japanese Workers' Party in Japan and formerly used by the Canadian Nazi Party and the New Triumph Party in Argentina
Pejorative symbolism
Opponents of fascism use pejorative symbols to represent fascism, such as the jackboot.[citation needed]
See also
- Heraldry portal
- Anarchist symbolism
- Communist symbolism
- Rising Sun Flag#Controversy
- Schwarze Sonne
- Strafgesetzbuch section 86a
- Western use of the swastika in the early 20th century
- Modern display of the Confederate flag
- Z (military symbol)
References
- ^ "Hate on Display: Hate Symbols Database". Anti-Defamation League. Archived from the original on 2019-02-02. Retrieved 2019-07-20.
- ISBN 978-0-7148-4846-4.
- ISBN 0754810623.
- ISBN 0754810623.
- ^ "Standard of the Head of State 1940-1975 (Spain)". Flags of the World. Retrieved 2021-03-07.
- ^ www.generalisimofranco.com, Arms image
- ISBN 9780415290180.
- ^ Payne, Stanley G. (2005). A history of fascism, 1914-1945. Oxon, England, UK: Digital Printing. p. 90.
- ^ Keating, Joshua (2015-06-24). "Germany Banned Its Ugly Historic Symbols. Should We Do That Too?". Slate Magazine. Retrieved 2021-03-07.
- ISBN 978-1-85973-587-9.
- ^ [1] Preparing for War With Ukraine’s Fascist Defenders of Freedom
- ^ [2]"Azov Battalion fighters parading with the Wolfsangel banner favoured by neo-Nazis"
- ^ USA nie będą szkolić batalionu Azow
- ^ One year on: where are the far-right forces of Ukraine? The group proudly displays the Wolfsangel symbols - a motif used by several SS groups in Nazi Germany
- ^ Gespenstischer Neonazi- Aufmarsch in der Ukraine
- ^ Meisner, Matthias (11 September 2014). "Hakenkreuz und SS-Rune - Protest von Zuschauern". Der Tagesspiegel Online.
- ^ "Story-Krise in Hollywood".
- ^ "Rechtsradikaler wird Polizeichef in Kiew". Die Welt. 12 November 2014.
- ^ Ukraine crisis: the neo-Nazi brigade fighting pro-Russian separatists The Telegraph Tom Parfitt 11 August 2014
- ^ General Hate Symbols: Thor's Hammer, Anti-Defamation League