Proper noun
Evola (plural Evolas)
A surname from Italian.
Cernat, p.115, 137 Julius Evola also grew disappointed by the movement's total rejection of tradition and began his personal search for an alternative, pursuing a path which later led him to esotericism and fascism. Source: Internet
As a young man in Italy, I was for some years a close disciple of the traditionalist guru and writer Julius Evola. Source: Internet
Councilmember Sal Evola was unable to attend Tuesday’s meeting, but voted in favor of the amendment on its first reading on March 12. Source: Internet
I assumed that the fourth proletarian estate was below the third, the bourgeois estate (as asserted by Evola), and, therefore, treating the far-away and unknown capitalism as an evil (but of the second order). Source: Internet
When I spoke with Gyöngyösi, he voiced his admiration for Evola. Source: Internet