334:. It was not until the next day that Lecoin broke his fast. In August 1963, with the bill still not voted into law, Lecoin threatened to recommence his hunger strike. The government yielded, the law was promulgated on 23 December 1963 and all objectors were freed.
270:. Despite being followed by the police, he managed to enter disguised as a soldier. Finding a seat in the middle of the meeting, when the president spoke, Lecoin got up and repeated three times "Long live Sacco and Vanzetti". He was then arrested.
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309:, despite being 74 years old. The strike met with initial indifference, but after a few days, Lecoin received important support from the press, particularly from
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participated actively although he did not live to see its conclusion. The government was refusing to keep its promise of 1 June 1961, so Lecoin began a
199:, faced with strong-arm threats from the leadership, he fired his revolver in the air so that the revolutionary syndicalists could express themselves.
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who had announced he was to visit France. They were arrested in France for carrying banned weapons. Lecoin established a committee on the
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after having tried out being a manual labourer, gardener, cement worker and a beggar. He had a life partnership with a worker for the
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HolĂ ! Les
Grandes Gueules ! Laisserez-vous mourir Louis Lecoin ?" (Hey big-mouths, are you going to let Lecoin die?)
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for his ideas. In
October 1910, a young recruit, he received the order with his regiment to break a railway workers'
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as well as 18 months of prison for disturbing public order, without being given the opportunity to defend himself.
130:, Marie Morand, which lasted until her death in 1958. Over the course of his life he edited several publications:
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He fought two battles which were to have repercussions throughout the entire world.
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sent him a promise that a legislative bill was about to be submitted to the
317:; Jeanson seized the attention of the intellectual class with a resounding "
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and, having made contact with anarchist circles, he became secretary of the
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on 23 August 1927. Shortly thereafter Lecoin snuck into a meeting of the
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and Spain. They were accused of having plotted an attack on
114:(he himself did not gain any qualification beyond the basic
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Though a committee developed to recommend Lecoin for 1964
321:. Lecoin was sent to hospital by force. On the 21st day,
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on the 18 December 1917. He was sentenced to 5 years of
341:, he retracted his name to support (eventual laureate)
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After the war, Lecoin founded the committee to support
282:". Because of this he was sent to prison until 1943.
366:. Vol. 2. Greenwood Publishing Group. p.
293:. In 1958 Lecoin launched his campaign to create a
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364:Biographical Dictionary of European Labor Leaders
102:Louis Lecoin was born into a very poor family in
157:. He refused, which got him 6 months in prison.
81:. He was at the center of the foundation of the
77:(30 September 1888 – 23 June 1971) was a French
8:
26:
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426:Louis Lecoin et le mouvement anarchiste
354:
405:(édité à compte d'auteur, Paris), 1965
398:(édité à compte d'auteur, Paris), 1946
250:The second struggle was in support of
247:. The three men were never extradited.
149:He spent twelve years of his life in
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435:(Anima, Saint-Amand-Montrond), 1991.
428:(Volonté anarchiste, Fresnes), 1982.
433:Louis Lecoin combattant de la Paix
278:, Lecoin penned a tract entitled "
215:ConfederaciĂłn Nacional del Trabajo
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496:Burials at Père Lachaise Cemetery
191:In 1921, at the congress of the
167:Fédération anarchiste communiste
418:(Union pacifiste, Paris), 1974
206:The first was to defend three
110:département. His parents were
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471:People from Cher (department)
244:Ligue des droits de l'homme
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491:French anti-war activists
274:After the declaration of
176:, he was called before a
83:Union pacifiste de France
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410:La Nation face à l'armée
362:Lane, A. Thomas (1995).
264:United States of America
241:and took control of the
446:List of peace activists
431:Jean-Claude Lemonnier,
299:conscientious objectors
416:Écrits de Louis Lecoin
343:Martin Luther King Jr.
291:worldwide citizenship
235:Alfonso XIII of Spain
229:, who were sought by
219:Buenaventura Durruti
161:in 1912, he went to
104:Saint-Amand-Montrond
49:Saint-Amand-Montrond
396:De prison en prison
256:Bartolomeo Vanzetti
116:certificat d'Ă©tudes
403:Le cours d'une vie
140:Défense de l’Homme
132:Ce qu’il faut dire
481:French anarchists
476:Anarcho-pacifists
377:978-0-313-26456-6
339:Nobel Peace Prize
289:in introducing a
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45:30 September 1888
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486:French pacifists
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326:Georges Pompidou
227:Francisco Ascaso
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315:Canard enchaîné
268:American Legion
239:right to asylum
186:military prison
182:insubordination
118:). He became a
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345:'s candidacy.
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223:Gregorio Jover
178:military court
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68:(aged 82)
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307:hunger strike
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303:Albert Camus
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276:World War II
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252:Nicola Sacco
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120:proof-reader
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75:Louis Lecoin
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66:(1971-06-23)
64:23 June 1971
20:Louis Lecoin
466:1971 deaths
461:1888 births
287:Garry Davis
174:World War I
159:Demobilized
86: [
455:Categories
349:References
112:illiterate
41:1888-09-30
331:Parlement
231:Argentina
210:from the
208:militants
98:Biography
440:See also
260:executed
89:Wikidata
55:, France
313:of the
262:in the
212:Spanish
172:During
144:Liberté
106:in the
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155:strike
151:prison
197:Lille
163:Paris
122:at a
92:]
372:ISBN
297:for
254:and
225:and
180:for
142:and
108:Cher
61:Died
53:Cher
35:Born
368:554
295:law
195:in
193:CGT
128:PTT
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