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National Bolshevism
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[[File:National Bolshevik Party flag.svg.png|thumb|Flag of the [[National Bolshevik Party]]]] '''National Bolshevism''', often referred to as "'''NazBolism'''," was synthesized during the [[Interwar Period]] in [[Germany]] by political [[Philosophy|philosopher]] [[Karl Otto Paetel]] that rejected both the [[Communist Party of Germany]] (KDP) and the [[National Socialist German Workers' Party]] (Nazi Party) due to the former rejecting nationalism and the latter rejecting [[Communism]].<ref>[https://arplan.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Paetel-The-National-Bolshevist-Manifesto-1933.pdf The National Bolshevist Manifesto]</ref> National Bolshevism reemerged to prominence in [[Russia]] in 1993 when [[Eduard Limonov]] and [[Aleksandr Dugin]] came together to found the [[National Bolshevik Party]] (NBP), embracing a Russian interpretation of the National Bolshevist movement.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20080921193029/http://www.nazbol.ru/rubr28/index0/249.html Declaration on the establishment of the NBP]</ref> The NBP quickly became prominent during [[Black October]] when the Russian people rallied against [[Boris Yeltsin]] in an attempt to restore the Soviet Union (USSR). Since then, the tendency of National Bolshevism has seen a revival internationally inspired primarily by Dugin's work in the NBP and later the [[Eurasia Party]]. == References == <references />
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