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Encyclopedia > Phalange

The Kataeb Party, better known in English-speaking countries as the Phalange, is a Lebanese political party that was first established as a Maronite nationalist youth movement in 1936 by Pierre Gemayel. It was inspired by José Antonio Primo de Rivera's Spanish Falange. The name of the Phalange party derives from the Greek word phalanx.


It was widely regarded as an ally, despite public denials, of Israel in the Lebanese Civil War.


The influence of the Phalangists was very limited in the early years of Lebanon's independence, but came to prominence as a champion of the Christian cause in the crisis of 1958. In the aftermath of the war, Pierre Gemayel was appointed to the cabinet, and two years later, was elected to the National Assembly. By the end of the decade, the Phalangists held 9 seats in the 99-member National Assembly, making it one of the largest groupings in Lebanon's notoriously fractured political system.


In the 1970s, the Phalangists built a military branch, which by 1976 was led by Bashir Gemayel, Pierre Gemayel's son. Bashir Gemayel was elected President the Republic by the National Assembly in 1982, following the Israeli invasion. He was assassinated less than a month later, and was succeeded by his brother, Amin Gemayel. Amin was widely regarded at the time as possessing neither the charisma and military skill of his brother Bashir, nor the consummate political experience of his father Pierre, and had difficulty rallying the nation and the Phalange Party around him.


In September 1982, the Phanlangists commited the Sabra and Shatila Massacre while Israeli forces were guarding the entrances.


When President Amin Gemayel's term ended in 1988, he went into exile. The Phalange Party, lacking direction, broke down into several rival factions. The party is still a significant player on the political scene, despite being divided into two separate factions that virtually amount to separate parties, one being led by Amin Gemayel and the other by Karim Pakradouni.


External links

  • Official Kataeb web site (http://www.kataeb.com/)
  • Pro Phalange web site in U.S.A. (http://www.falange.us/bashir.htm)

  Results from FactBites:
 
II. Osteology. 6b. 3. The Phalanges of the Hand. Gray, Henry. 1918. Anatomy of the Human Body. (735 words)
The ungual phalanges are convex on their dorsal and flat on their volar surfaces; they are recognized by their small size, and by a roughened, elevated surface of a horseshoe form on the volar surface of the distal extremity of each which serves to support the sensitive pulp of the finger.
—In the four fingers the phalanges of the first row articulate with those of the second row and with the metacarpals; the phalanges of the second row with those of the first and third rows, and the ungual phalanges with those of the second row.
In the ungual phalanges the centers for the bodies appear at the distal extremities of the phalanges, instead of at the middle of the bodies, as in the other phalanges.
Phalanx bones - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (179 words)
The name Phalanges is commonly given to the bones that form fingers and toes.
Proximal phalanges are closest to the hand (or foot) and articulate with the metacarpals of the hand, or metatarsals of the foot.
Middle or Intermediate phalanges are between the distal and proximal.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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