Alberto Ezcurra Medrano

His family was related to Encarnación Ezcurra, wife of Argentine caudillo Juan Manuel de Rosas and an important political figure of her time.

He considered nationalism as an "exaltation of moral values as a reaction against atheism, internationalism and marxist materialism", that notwithstanding was to be tempered by Catholic doctrine in order to succeed and avoid falling into totalitarianism.

[2][5] A Catholic integralist, Ezcurra supported Gelasian Diarchy and idealised the Middle Ages as a peak of Western civilisation marked by social harmony and order.

[2][5] He saw Argentine national identity and history as inherently bound to Christianity, despite the process of slow decadence it had experienced since the fall of Juan Manuel de Rosas.

He was sympathetic to Mussolini's regime in Italy and admired Francoism and Salazarism, but criticized National Socialism as a "neopagan" and "Antichristian" consequence of the Protestant Reformation.

Vendéen Sacred Heart