Difference between revisions of "The Future of the Right in East and Central Europe"
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According to Richard Gott, the following people were among those attending the conference: | According to Richard Gott, the following people were among those attending the conference: | ||
− | [[Roger Scruton]] | [[Norman Stone]] | [[Caroline Cox]] | [[John Marks]] | [[Jan Carnogursky]] | [[Angus Cargill]] | [[ | + | [[Roger Scruton]] | [[Norman Stone]] | [[Caroline Cox]] | [[John Marks]] | [[Jan Carnogursky]] | [[Angus Cargill]] | [[Karel Schwarzenberg|Karl Schwarzenberg]] | [[Tom Spencer]] | [[John Masek]] | [[Charles Tilbury]] | [[Vaclav Benda]] | [[Alexander Tomsky]] | [[Ivan Baba]] | [[Pawel Bratinka]] | [[Harold Elletson]] | [[Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 7th Marquess of Salisbury|Viscount Cranborne]]<ref>Richard Gott, The blue pimpernels: In the post-Communist dawn, Mrs Thatcher's ideologues slip into Prague to rescue East Europeans from the tyranny of old philosophies. But Richard Gott finds a guarded response to the glories of the free market, The Guardian, 15 January 1990.</ref> |
==Notes== | ==Notes== |
Latest revision as of 20:11, 15 August 2010
The Future of the Right in East and Central Europe was the title of a conference hold in Prague in January 1990.[1] According to Richard Gott this took place under the auspices of the Conservative Council of Eastern Europe.[2] However, Lord Hatch referred in Commons debate at the time to a meeting held by the Conservative Council for Eastern Europe.[3]
Participants
According to Richard Gott, the following people were among those attending the conference:
Roger Scruton | Norman Stone | Caroline Cox | John Marks | Jan Carnogursky | Angus Cargill | Karl Schwarzenberg | Tom Spencer | John Masek | Charles Tilbury | Vaclav Benda | Alexander Tomsky | Ivan Baba | Pawel Bratinka | Harold Elletson | Viscount Cranborne[4]
Notes
- ↑ Richard Gott, The blue pimpernels: In the post-Communist dawn, Mrs Thatcher's ideologues slip into Prague to rescue East Europeans from the tyranny of old philosophies. But Richard Gott finds a guarded response to the glories of the free market, The Guardian, 15 January 1990.
- ↑ Richard Gott, The blue pimpernels: In the post-Communist dawn, Mrs Thatcher's ideologues slip into Prague to rescue East Europeans from the tyranny of old philosophies. But Richard Gott finds a guarded response to the glories of the free market, The Guardian, 15 January 1990.
- ↑ Lord Hatch, Germany: Unification Prospect, Hansard, House of Lords, 17 January 1990.
- ↑ Richard Gott, The blue pimpernels: In the post-Communist dawn, Mrs Thatcher's ideologues slip into Prague to rescue East Europeans from the tyranny of old philosophies. But Richard Gott finds a guarded response to the glories of the free market, The Guardian, 15 January 1990.