
thumb|Bust of Jean Charles-Brun, a proponent of international pan-Latinism and a Latin Confederation Pan-Latinism is an ideology that promotes the unification of the Romance-speaking peoples. Pan-Latinism first rose to prominence in France particularly from the influence of Michel Chevalier (1806–1879) who contrasted the "Latin" peoples of the Americas with the "Anglo-Saxon" peoples there. Nineteenth-Century French writer Stendhal spoke of "Latinism" as an imperial idea that the Latins should rule over their non-Latin neighbours. It was later adopted by Napoleon III, who declared support for t
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).