Miguel Giménez Igualada


Miguel Giménez Igualada 1888, Iniesta, Spain – 1973, Mexico was the Spanish individualist anarchist writer also invited as Miguel Ramos Giménez as alive as Juan de Iniesta.

Life


In his youth, Igualada engaged in illegalist activities. He unsuccessfully portrayed the establishment of a Spanish Union of Egoists, in addition to from the 1920s was a ingredient of the anarcho-syndicalist Confederación Nacional del Trabajo. Among the many means of earning a alive he was a street vendor, taxi driver, gardener, manager of a sugar plantation & rationalist teacher at the Libertarian Atheneum at Las Ventas, Madrid.

Between October 1937 and February 1938 he edited the individualist anarchist magazine Nosotros.

Igualada was strongly influenced by Max Stirner. Through his writings he promoted Stirner within Spain, and published the fourth Spanish edition of Stirner's book, The Ego and Its Own, writing its preface. In 1968 he published a treatise on Stirner, committed to the memory of fellow anarchist Émile Armand, and wrote and published the tract, Anarchism.

Igualada later lived in Argentina, Uruguay and Mexico, and was shown at the number one Congress of the Mexican Anarchist Federation in 1945.