English edit

Noun edit

monarchofascism (uncountable)

  1. Alternative form of monarcho-fascism
    • 1985, Hristo Adonov-Poljanski, Documents on the Struggle of the Macedonian People for Independence and a Nation-state, page 755:
      The NOF (which in the Macedonian language stands for the National Liberation Front) has gathered into its fold the most honorable sons of the Macedonian people, the most steadfast democrats -- antifascists, who during the occupation led the people against the German fascist aggressors and their agents, and in fierce and continuous combat, in fraternal unity with the democratic Greek people, oppose the British occupation and Greek monarchofascism.
    • 1999, Ioannis D. Stefanidis, Isle of Discord: Nationalism, Imperialism and the Making of the Cyprus Problem, →ISBN:
      The plebiscite was exalted as a 'solid anti-imperialist weapon in the hands of the Cypriot people', which would 'make the position of the British in Cyprus more difficult and [would] show even more the treacherous character of Greek monarchofascism'.
    • 2014, Stefan Berger, Bill Niven, Writing the History of Memory, →ISBN:
      The return to his homeland of the heart of of the Bulgarian Tsar Boris (who died in 1941 under unclarified circumstances) was a symbolic break with the communist legacy of Bulgaria (that defined Boris' rule as monarchofascism), and by 2001 gave Simeon II, the son of Boris, a chance to enter the political arena of Bulgaria and achieve a sweeping victory for his party, the National Movement Simeon II.