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  2. Max Nettlau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Nettlau

    Max Heinrich Hermann Reinhardt Nettlau ( German: [ˈnɛtlaʊ]; 30 April 1865 – 23 July 1944) was a German anarchist and historian. Although born in Neuwaldegg (today part of Vienna) and raised in Vienna, he lived there until the anschluss to Nazi Germany in 1938. Max Nettlau retained his Prussian (later German) nationality throughout his life.

  3. A Short History of Anarchism | The Anarchist Library

    theanarchistlibrary.org/library/max-nettlau-a...

    Max Nettlau 1865 – 1944 The person Max Nettlau was an anarchist for more than sixty years, and for some fifty years he took an important part in the anarchist movement, as a writer, chronicler, historian, often argumentative critic and active supporter.

  4. Max Nettlau | IISG

    iisg.amsterdam/en/about/history/max-nettlau

    In well-informed circles, Max Nettlau was known as the 'Herodotus of Anarchy', the first and greatest historian of the anarchist movement. The name of the International Institute of Social History (1935) very nearly was the Max Nettlau Institute.

  5. Max Nettlau | The Anarchist Library

    theanarchistlibrary.org/category/author/max-nettlau

    Sorting: Results per page: 1907 and the Present Outlook — Max Nettlau May 11, 2023 8 pp. After Six Years of Authoritarian Revolution — Max Nettlau Jul 26, 2012 15 pp. Anarchism and the Unemployed — Max Nettlau May 11, 2023 5 pp. Anarchism: Communist or Individualist? Both — Max Nettlau Jul 26, 2011 8 pp.

  6. Authoritarian Communism and Libertarian Communism - Max Nettlau

    libcom.org/article/authoritarian-communism-and...

    This brief survey of the historical and philosophical differences between authoritarian and libertarian communism, written by the anarchist historian Max Nettlau in 1928, exemplifies the “anarchism without adjectives” which, confronted by the Bolshevik experience, reacted by reasserting the particularly liberal and pluralistic roots of the anarc...

  7. An Anarchist Manifesto | The Anarchist Library

    theanarchistlibrary.org/library/max-nettlau-an...

    Title: An Anarchist Manifesto Author: Max Nettlau Topics: anarcho-communism , manifesto Date: 1 st May, 1895 Source: Anarchy is Order CD Max Nettlau An Anarchist Manifesto Fellow Workers, We come before you as Anarchist Communists to explain our principles.

  8. History of Anarchy I. (Excerpt) | The Anarchist Library

    theanarchistlibrary.org/library/max-nettlau...

    The first forerunners of anarchism in Europe can be found in ancient Greek philosophy. The anarchist historian Prof. Max Nettlau sees the mere existence of the word “An-Archia” as evidence that “there were people who consciously rejected the rule, the state.”

  9. 10 The Anarchist Imaginary: Max Nettlau and Latin America ...

    academic.oup.com/illinois-scholarship-online/...

    Max Nettlau’s publications became key documents for the study of Latin American anarchism and radical history. Nettlau considered Hispanic anarchists in the United States as an integral part of the Latin American anarchist imaginary. This chapter explores Nettlau’s correspondence with two anarchist activists, José Lóuzara de Andrés (1891 ...

  10. Max Nettlau - Wikiwand

    www.wikiwand.com/en/Max_Nettlau

    Max Heinrich Hermann Reinhardt Nettlau ( German: [ˈnɛtlaʊ]; 30 April 1865 – 23 July 1944) was a German anarchist and historian. Although born in Neuwaldegg (today part of Vienna) and raised in Vienna, he lived there until the anschluss to Nazi Germany in 1938.

  11. MAX NETTLAU - Cambridge University Press & Assessment

    www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge...

    MAX NETTLAU Nettlau left Vienna after the Nazi occupation and came to Amsterdam, where he worked at the International Institute of Social History until the Germans closed the Institute in July 1940. He died at Amsterdam on July 23, 1944. Max Nettlau was born on April 30, 1865, at Neuwaldegg, near Vienna. He studied philology at various German ...