Top 10 similar words or synonyms for indalecio

victoriano    0.854735

baldomero    0.849758

herminio    0.835725

saravia    0.834467

arnulfo    0.833685

carazo    0.832819

marcelino    0.832654

venancio    0.832241

melchor    0.830290

higinio    0.828165

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for indalecio

Article Example
Indalecio Prieto Indalecio Prieto Tuero (30 April 1883 – 11 February 1962) was a Spanish politician, a minister and one of the leading figures of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) in the years before and during the Second Spanish Republic.
Indalecio Prieto Spain's neutrality in World War I greatly benefited Spanish industry and commerce, but those benefits were not reflected in the workers' salaries. The war period was one of great social unrest, culminating on August 13, 1917 in a revolutionary general strike. Due to the government's fear of unrest like that of the February Revolution that year in Russia (the October Revolution was still to come), it used the military to put down the general strike. Members of the strike committee were arrested in Madrid. Having been involved in organizing the strike, Prieto fled to France before he could be arrested.
Indalecio Prieto When the Second Spanish Republic was proclaimed on April 14, 1931, Indalecio Prieto was named Finance Minister in the provisional government presided over by Niceto Alcalá-Zamora.
Indalecio Prieto As Minister of Public Works in the 1931–1933 government of Manuel Azaña, he continued and expanded the policy of hydroelectric projects begun during the Primo de Rivera dictatorship, as well as the ambitious plan of infrastructural improvements in Madrid, such as the new Chamartín railway station and the tunnel under Madrid linking it to Atocha Station; most of these works that would not be completed until after the 1936–1939 Spanish Civil War.
Indalecio Prieto Unlike Largo Caballero, he opposed the general strike and the failed armed rising of October 1934; nonetheless he again fled to France to escape possible prosecution. While, prior to the period of the Republic, Prieto had arguably maintained a "harder" line than Largo Caballero, from this time forward he would be identified as a relative moderate, opposed to Largo Caballero's more revolutionary tendency.