

La Inteligencia Organizadora, Editorial San Luis, 1950.Les Templiers en Amérique, J'ai Lu, 1999.La Fabuleuse épopée des Troyens en Amérique du Sud, Pardès, 1998.L'Imposture de Christophe Colomb, Copernic, 1979.Drakkars sur l'Amazone, Copernicus, 1977.L'Agonie du Dieu-Soleil, Robert Laffont, 1974.Le Grand Voyage du Dieu-Soleil, Robert Laffont, 1971.Précis de biopolitique, Editions Celtiques, 1969.The project ended during the Revolución Libertadora regime, which toppled Juan Perón's government in 1955.

He wrote a book titled The Communal Economy (1964), which was inspired by a social and economic project developed in Mendoza. His books on the Knights Templar allege they settled in Mexico before Columbus.īeside anthropological interests, Mahieu also wrote about economy and state questions. He allegedly travelled to Brazil in 1974, where he visited the Sete Cidades park in Piauí and considered it a Viking establishment. He traveled to Paraguay for anthropological studies, and claimed the Guayaki tribes were descendants of the Vikings. Jacques de Mahieu headed the Argentine chapter of the Spanish neo-Nazi group, CEDADE, until his death in Buenos Aires, in 1990.įurther information: Pre-Columbian trans-oceanic contactsĭe Mahieu wrote on pre-Columbian America and esoteric Nazism. Uki Goñi claims that he was photographed with Carlos Menem during the latter's 1989 presidential campaign. Jacques de Mahieu remained in Argentina in his later years. He also was a member of the Academia Argentina de Sociología (1952–1955), and a lecturer with the Armed Forces of the Argentine Republic (1961–1971). He also taught economy, ethnography and French at the National University of Cuyo (1948–1955), and at the Universidad del Salvador (1964–1965). He became a professor of anthropological studies in Buenos Aires as the deputy rector of the Institute of Human Studies (from 1953 to 1955 and again from 1972 to 1976). Jacques de Mahieu studied at the Universities of Mendoza and Buenos Aires he graduated in philosophy, as doctor Honoris Causa of Medicine, doctor in economic sciences, and doctor in political science. A Naturalized Argentine, he became an ideologue of the Peronist movement, before becoming a mentor to a Roman Catholic nationalist youth group in the 1960s.

Īfter the liberation of France, he was one of the first to flee to Juan Perón's Argentina through the ratlines organized by Perón. ĭuring World War II, Jacques de Mahieu was a member of the Charlemagne Division. Born in Marseille, as a young man Jacques de Mahieu was influenced by authors such as Georges Sorel, Charles Maurras, and Alexis Carrel and joined the Action Française.
