Jean Grave

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Jean Grave

Jean Grave (French:

La Révolte and Les Temps Nouveaux [fr], and wrote dozens of pamphlets and a number of important anarchist books.[1]

Grave supported anarchism in the late 1870s, when it first began to emerge as a distinct movement. He was initially a supporter of

Elisée Reclus to be the editor of Le Révolté, which was renamed La Révolte when it moved to Paris in 1886. He edited La Révolte from 1887 to 1894.[1]

In 1893 Grave wrote

Voltairine De Cleyre
appeared in 1899.

Grave was acquitted in the "

Trial of the thirty
".

From 1895 to 1922 Grave was the editor of Les Temps nouveaux,

, etc.) illustrated and helped to finance the review.

In 1914 Grave joined Kropotkin in England, and incurred the wrath of anti-war anarchists by signing the Manifesto of the Sixteen, which supported the allies during World War I.

Grave also wrote Le Mouvement libertaire sous la IIIe république.

Sources

  • Louis Patsouras: Anarchism of Jean Grave. Black Rose Books, 2001.

References

  1. ^
    ISSN 0020-8590
    .

External links