Spanish Civil War
This article may be too long to read and navigate comfortably. (November 2024) |
Spanish Civil War | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Part of the interwar period and prelude to World War II | |||||||
| |||||||
| |||||||
Belligerents | |||||||
Mexico |
Germany | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Strength | |||||||
1936 strength:[1]
1938 strength:[3]
|
1936 strength:[4]
1938 strength:[6]
| ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
Estimates differ widely[note 1] |
History of Spain |
---|
Timeline |
Events leading to World War II |
---|
Part of the Politics series |
Republicanism |
---|
Politics portal |
The Spanish Civil War (Spanish: guerra civil española)[note 2] was a military conflict fought from 1936 to 1939 between the Republicans and the Nationalists. Republicans were loyal to the left-leaning Popular Front government of the Second Spanish Republic, and consisted of various socialist, communist, separatist, anarchist, and republican parties, some of which had opposed the government in the pre-war period.[13] The opposing Nationalists were an alliance of Falangists, monarchists, conservatives, and traditionalists led by a military junta among whom General Francisco Franco quickly achieved a preponderant role. Due to the international political climate at the time, the war had many facets and was variously viewed as class struggle, a religious struggle, a struggle between dictatorship and republican democracy, between revolution and counterrevolution, and between fascism and communism.[14] According to Claude Bowers, U.S. ambassador to Spain during the war, it was the "dress rehearsal" for World War II.[15] The Nationalists won the war, which ended in early 1939, and ruled Spain until Franco's death in November 1975.
The war began after the partial failure of the coup d'état of July 1936 against the Republican government by a group of generals of the Spanish Republican Armed Forces, with General Emilio Mola as the primary planner and leader and General José Sanjurjo as a figurehead. The government at the time was a coalition of Republicans, supported in the Cortes by communist and socialist parties, under the leadership of centre-left president Manuel Azaña.[16][17] The Nationalist faction was supported by several conservative groups, including CEDA, monarchists, including both the opposing Alfonsists and the religious conservative Carlists, and the Falange Española de las JONS, a fascist political party.[18]
The coup was supported by military units in Morocco, Pamplona, Burgos, Zaragoza, Valladolid, Cádiz, Córdoba, Málaga, and Seville. However, rebelling units in almost all important cities—such as Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Bilbao, Murcia, and Almería—did not gain control. Those cities remained in the hands of the government, leaving Spain militarily and politically divided. The Nationalists and the Republican government fought for control of the country. The Nationalist forces received munitions, soldiers, and air support from Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany while the Republican side received support from the Soviet Union and Mexico. Other countries, such as the United Kingdom, France, and the United States, continued to recognise the Republican government but followed an official policy of non-intervention. Despite this policy, tens of thousands of citizens from non-interventionist countries directly participated in the conflict. They fought mostly in the pro-Republican International Brigades, which also included several thousand exiles from pro-Nationalist regimes. Smaller numbers of pro-Republican international volunteer fighters fought in the POUM, the CNT and the UGT.
After the deaths of José Sanjurjo on July 20, 1936, Manuel Goded Llopis on August 12, 1936, and Emilio Mola on June 3, 1937, Franco gradually emerged as the primary leader of the Nationalist side.
The Nationalists advanced from their strongholds in the south and west, capturing most of Spain's northern coastline in 1937. They also besieged Madrid and the area to its south and west for much of the war. After much of Catalonia was captured in 1938 and 1939, and Madrid cut off from Barcelona, the Republican military position became hopeless. Following the fall without resistance of Barcelona in January 1939, the Francoist regime was recognised by France and the United Kingdom in February 1939. On 5 March 1939, in response to an alleged increasing communist dominance of the Republican government and the deteriorating military situation, Colonel Segismundo Casado led a military coup against the Republican government, intending to seek peace with the Nationalists. These peace overtures, however, were rejected by Franco. Following internal conflict between Republican factions in Madrid in the same month, Franco entered the capital and declared victory on 1 April 1939. Hundreds of thousands of Spaniards fled to refugee camps in southern France.[19] Those associated with the losing Republicans who stayed were persecuted by the victorious Nationalists. Franco established a dictatorship in which all right-wing parties were fused into the structure of his regime.[18]
The war became notable for the passion and political division it inspired worldwide and for the many atrocities that occurred. Organised purges occurred in territory captured by Franco's forces so they could consolidate their future regime.[20] Mass executions on a lesser scale also took place in areas controlled by the Republicans,[21] with the participation of local authorities varying from location to location.[22][23]
Background
[edit]Absolutism and liberalism
[edit]The 19th century was a turbulent time for Spain. Those in favour of reforming the Spanish government vied for political power with conservatives who intended to prevent such reforms from being implemented. In a tradition that started with the Spanish Constitution of 1812, many liberals sought to curtail the authority of the Spanish monarchy as well as to establish a nation-state under the ideology and philosophy that they believed in. The reforms of 1812 were short-lived as they were almost immediately overturned by King Ferdinand VII when he dissolved the aforementioned constitution. This ended the Trienio Liberal government.[24]
Twelve successful coups were carried out between 1814 and 1874.[24] There were several attempts to realign the political system to match social reality. Until the 1850s, the economy of Spain was primarily based on agriculture. There was little development of a bourgeois industrial or commercial class. The land-based oligarchy remained powerful; a small number of people held large estates called latifundia as well as all of the important positions in government.[25] The mid-century Carlist Wars, fought by the Carlist movement to establish an alternative branch of the Bourbon dynasty, further destabilized the Spanish monarchy.[26]
Glorious Revolution and First Republic
[edit]In 1868, popular uprisings led to the overthrow of Queen Isabella II of the House of Bourbon. Two distinct factors led to the uprisings: a series of urban riots and a liberal movement within the middle classes and the military (led by General Joan Prim), which was concerned about the ultra-conservatism of the monarchy. In 1873, Isabella's replacement, King Amadeo I of the House of Savoy, abdicated due to increasing political pressure, and the short-lived First Spanish Republic was proclaimed.[27][28] The Republic was marred with political instability and conflicts and was quickly overthrown by a coup d'état by General Arsenio Martínez Campos in December 1874, after which the Bourbons were restored to the throne in the figure of Alfonso XII, Isabella's son.[29]
Restoration
[edit]After the restoration, Carlists and anarchists emerged in opposition to the monarchy.[30][31] Alejandro Lerroux, Spanish politician and leader of the Radical Republican Party, helped to bring republicanism to the fore in Catalonia—a region of Spain with its own cultural and societal identity in which poverty was particularly acute at the time.[32] Conscription was a controversial policy that was eventually implemented by the government of Spain. As evidenced by the Tragic Week in 1909, resentment and resistance were factors that continued well into the 20th century.[33]
Spain was neutral in World War I. Following the war, wide swathes of Spanish society, including the armed forces, united in hopes of removing the corrupt central government of the country in Madrid, but these circles were ultimately unsuccessful.[34] Popular perception of communism as a major threat significantly increased during this period.[35]
Dictatorship of Primo de Rivera
[edit]In 1923, a military coup brought Miguel Primo de Rivera to power. As a result, Spain transitioned to government by military dictatorship.[36] Support for the Rivera regime gradually faded, and he resigned in January 1930. He was replaced by General Dámaso Berenguer, who was in turn himself replaced by Admiral Juan Bautista Aznar-Cabañas; both men continued a policy of rule by decree.
There was little support for the monarchy in the major cities. Consequently, King Alfonso XIII of Spain relented to popular pressure and called municipal elections for 12 April 1931. Left-wing entities such as the Socialist and Liberal Republicans won almost all the provincial capitals and, following the resignation of Aznar's government, Alfonso XIII fled the country.[37] At this time, the Second Spanish Republic was formed. This republic remained in power until the beginning of the civil war five years later.[38]
Second Republic
[edit]The revolutionary committee headed by Niceto Alcalá-Zamora became the provisional government, with Alcalá-Zamora himself as president and head of state.[39] The republic had broad support from all segments of society.[40]
In May 1931, an incident in which a taxi driver was attacked outside a monarchist club sparked anti-clerical violence throughout Madrid and south-west portion of the country. The slow response on the part of the government disillusioned the right and reinforced their view that the Republic was determined to persecute the church. In June and July, the Confederación Nacional del Trabajo (CNT) called several strikes, which led to a violent incident between CNT members and the Civil Guard and a brutal crackdown by the Civil Guard and the army against the CNT in Seville. This led many workers to believe the Second Spanish Republic was just as oppressive as the monarchy, and the CNT announced its intention of overthrowing it via revolution.[41]
Constituent Cortes and left-wing government (1931–1933)
[edit]Elections in June 1931 returned a large majority of Republicans and Socialists.[29] With the onset of the Great Depression, the government tried to assist rural Spain by instituting an eight-hour day and redistributing land tenure to farm workers.[42][43] The rural workers lived in some of the worst poverty in Europe at the time and the government tried to increase their wages and improve working conditions. This estranged small and medium landholders who used hired labour. The Law of Municipal Boundaries forbade owners from hiring workers outside their locality. When some localities had labour shortages, the law shut out workers seeking extra income as pickers.
Newly established labour arbitration boards regulated salaries, contracts, and working hours, but were more favourable to workers than employers. A decree in July 1931 increased overtime pay and several laws in late 1931 restricted whom landowners could hire. Other efforts included decrees limiting: the use of machinery; efforts to create a monopoly on hiring; strikes; and efforts by unions to limit women's employment, all done to preserve a labour monopoly for their members. Class struggle intensified as landowners turned to counterrevolutionary organisations and local oligarchs. Strikes, workplace theft, arson, robbery and assaults on shops, strikebreakers, employers and machines became increasingly common. Ultimately, the reforms of the Republican-Socialist government alienated as many people as they pleased.[44]
Republican Manuel Azaña became prime minister of a minority government in October 1931.[47][48] Fascism remained a reactive threat and it was facilitated by controversial reforms to the military.[49] In December, a new reformist, liberal and democratic constitution was declared. It included strong provisions enforcing a broad secularisation of the Catholic country, which included the abolition of Catholic schools and charities, a move which was met with opposition.[50] At this point, once the constituent assembly had fulfilled its mandate of approving a new constitution, but fearing an increasing popular opposition, the Radical and Socialist majority postponed the regular elections, prolonging their time in power for two more years. Diaz's Republican government initiated numerous reforms to, in their view, modernize the country. In 1932, the Jesuits were banned and their property was confiscated, the army was reduced, landowners were expropriated. Home rule was granted to Catalonia, with a local parliament and a president of its own.[51] In June 1933, Pope Pius XI issued the encyclical Dilectissima Nobis, "On Oppression of the Church of Spain", raising his voice against the persecution of the Catholic Church in Spain.[52]
Right-wing government (1933–1936)
[edit]In November 1933, the right-wing parties won the general election.[53] The causal factors were increased resentment of the incumbent government caused by a controversial decree implementing land reform,[54] by the Casas Viejas incident,[55] and the formation of a right-wing alliance, Spanish Confederation of Autonomous Right-wing Groups (CEDA). Another factor was the recent enfranchisement of women, most of whom voted for centre-right parties.[56] According to Stanley G. Payne and Jesús Palacios Tapias, left Republicans attempted to have Niceto Alcalá Zamora cancel the electoral results but did not succeed. Despite CEDA's electoral victory, President Alcalá-Zamora declined to invite its leader, Gil Robles, to form a government, fearing CEDA's monarchist sympathies and proposed changes to the constitution. Instead, he invited the Radical Republican Party's Alejandro Lerroux to do so. Despite receiving the most votes, CEDA was denied cabinet positions for nearly a year.[57]
Events in the period after November 1933, called the "black biennium", seemed to make a civil war more likely.[58] Alejandro Lerroux of the Radical Republican Party (RRP) formed a government, reversing changes made by the previous administration[59] and granting amnesty to the collaborators of the unsuccessful uprising by General José Sanjurjo in August 1932.[60][61] Some monarchists joined with the then fascist-nationalist Falange Española y de las JONS ("Falange") to help achieve their aims.[62] Open violence occurred in the streets of Spanish cities, and militancy continued to increase,[63] reflecting a movement towards radical upheaval, rather than peaceful democratic means as solutions.[64] A small insurrection by anarchists occurred in December 1933 in response to CEDA's victory, in which around 100 people died.[65] After a year of intense pressure, CEDA, the party with the most seats in parliament, finally succeeded in forcing the acceptance of three ministries. The Socialists (PSOE) and Communists reacted with an insurrection for which they had been preparing for nine months.[66]
The rebellion developed into a bloody uprising known as the Revolution of 1934. Fairly well armed revolutionaries managed to take the whole province of Asturias, murdering numerous policemen, clergymen and civilians, destroying religious buildings including churches, convents and part of the university at Oviedo.[67] Rebels in the occupied areas proclaimed revolution for the workers and abolished the existing currency.[68] The rebellion was crushed in two weeks by the Spanish Navy and the Spanish Republican Army, the latter using mainly Moorish colonial troops from Spanish Morocco.[69] Azaña was in Barcelona that day, and the Lerroux-CEDA government tried to implicate him. He was arrested and charged with complicity. In fact, Azaña had no connection with the rebellion and was released from prison in January 1935.[70]
In sparking an uprising, the non-anarchist socialists, like the anarchists, manifested their conviction that the existing political order was illegitimate.[71] The Spanish historian Salvador de Madariaga, an Azaña supporter and an exiled vocal opponent of Francisco Franco, wrote a sharp criticism of the left's participation in the revolt: "The uprising of 1934 is unforgivable. The argument that Mr Gil Robles tried to destroy the Constitution to establish fascism was, at once, hypocritical and false. With the rebellion of 1934, the Spanish left lost even the shadow of moral authority to condemn the rebellion of 1936."[72]
Reversals of land reform resulted in expulsions, firings and arbitrary changes to working conditions in the central and southern countryside in 1935, with landowners' behaviour at times reaching "genuine cruelty", which included violence against farmworkers and socialists, causing several deaths. One historian argued that the behaviour of the right in the southern countryside was one of the main causes of hatred during the Civil War and possibly even the Civil War itself.[73] Landowners taunted workers by saying that if they went hungry, they should "Go eat the Republic!"[74][75] Bosses fired leftist workers and imprisoned trade union and socialist militants; wages were reduced to "salaries of hunger".[76]
In 1935, the government, led by the Radical Republican Party, had now endured a series of crises. After a number of corruption scandals, President Niceto Alcalá-Zamora, who was hostile to this government, called another election.
Popular Front's victory and escalation
[edit]The Popular Front narrowly won the 1936 general election. The revolutionary left-wing masses took to the streets and freed prisoners. In the thirty-six hours following the election, sixteen people were killed (mostly by police officers attempting to maintain order or to intervene in violent clashes) and thirty-nine were seriously injured. Also, fifty churches and seventy conservative political centres were attacked or set ablaze.[77] Manuel Azaña was called to form a government before the electoral process had ended. He shortly replaced Zamora as president, taking advantage of a constitutional loophole. Convinced that the left was no longer willing to follow the rule of law and that its vision of Spain was under threat, the right abandoned the parliamentary option and began planning to overthrow the republic, rather than to control it.[78]
PSOE's left wing socialists started to take action. Julio Álvarez del Vayo talked about "Spain being converted into a socialist Republic in association with the Soviet Union". Francisco Largo Caballero declared that "the organized proletariat will carry everything before it and destroy everything until we reach our goal".[79] The country had rapidly become anarchic. Even the staunch socialist Indalecio Prieto, at a party rally in Cuenca in May 1936, complained: "we have never seen so tragic a panorama or so great a collapse as in Spain at this moment. Abroad, Spain is classified as insolvent. This is not the road to socialism or communism but to desperate anarchism without even the advantage of liberty".[79] The disenchantment with Azaña's ruling was also voiced by Miguel de Unamuno, a republican and one of Spain's most respected intellectuals who, in June 1936, told a reporter who published his statement in El Adelanto that President Manuel Azaña should commit suicide "as a patriotic act".[80]
Laia Balcells observes that polarisation in Spain just before the coup was so intense that physical confrontations between leftists and rightists were a routine occurrence in most localities; six days before the coup occurred, there was a riot between the two in the province of Teruel. Balcells notes that Spanish society was so divided along Left-Right lines that the monk Hilari Raguer stated that in his parish, instead of playing "cops and robbers", children would sometimes play "leftists and rightists".[81] Within the first month of the Popular Front's government, nearly a quarter of the provincial governors had been removed due to their failure to prevent or control strikes, illegal land occupation, political violence and arson. The Popular Front government was more likely to prosecute rightists for violence than leftists who committed similar acts.[82]
Azaña was hesitant to use the army to shoot or stop rioters or protestors as many of them supported his coalition. On the other hand, he was reluctant to disarm the military as he believed he needed them to stop insurrections from the extreme left. Illegal land occupation became widespread—poor tenant farmers knew the government was disinclined to stop them. By April 1936, nearly 100,000 peasants had appropriated 400,000 hectares of land and perhaps as many as 1 million hectares by the start of the civil war; for comparison, the 1931–33 land reform had granted only 6,000 peasants 45,000 hectares.[83] As many strikes occurred between April and July as had occurred in the entirety of 1931. Workers increasingly demanded less work and more pay. "Social crimes"—refusing to pay for goods and rent—became increasingly common by workers, particularly in Madrid. In some cases, this was done in the company of armed militants. Conservatives, the middle classes, businessmen and landowners became convinced that revolution had already begun.[84]
Prime Minister Santiago Casares Quiroga ignored warnings of a military conspiracy involving several generals, who decided that the government had to be replaced to prevent the dissolution of Spain.[85] Both sides had become convinced that, if the other side gained power, it would discriminate against their members and attempt to suppress their political organisations.[86]
Military coup
[edit]Background
[edit]Shortly after the Popular Front's victory in the 1936 election, groups of officers, both active and retired, got together to discuss a coup. By the end of April General Emilio Mola emerged as the leader of a national conspiracy network.[87] The Republican government reacted by reshuffling suspect generals from influential posts, Azana however acutely aware that as he did so, the Army still served as a possible buffer to leftist power brokers threatening his government.[88] Franco was sacked as chief of staff and transferred to command of the Canary Islands.[89] Manuel Goded Llopis was removed as inspector general and made general of the Balearic Islands. Mola was moved from head of the Army of Africa to commander of Pamplona.[90] This latter reassignment, however, allowed Mola to direct the mainland uprising; General José Sanjurjo became the figurehead of the operation and helped reach an agreement with the Carlists,[90] Mola was chief planner and second in command.[78] José Antonio Primo de Rivera was put in prison in mid-March to restrict the Falange.[90] However, government actions were not as thorough as they might have been, and warnings by the Director of Security and other figures were not acted upon.[89]
The revolt was devoid of ideology. The goal was to put an end to anarchical disorder.[91] Mola's plan for the new regime was a "republican dictatorship", modelled after Salazar's Portugal and along the lines of being semi-pluralist authoritarian, rather than fascist totalitarian. The initial government would be an all-military "Directory", which would create a "strong and disciplined state". Sanjurjo would be the head of this new regime, due to being liked and respected within the military, though his position would be symbolic due to his lack of political talent. The 1931 Constitution would be suspended, replaced by a new "constituent parliament" which would be chosen by a new politically purged electorate, who would vote on the issue of republic versus monarchy. Liberal elements would remain, such as separation of church and state as well as freedom of religion. Agrarian issues would be solved by regional commissioners on the basis of smallholdings, but collective cultivation would be permitted in some circumstances. Legislation prior to February 1936 would be respected. Violence would be required to destroy opposition to the coup, though it seems Mola did not envision the mass atrocities and repression that would manifest during the civil war.[92][93] Of particular importance to Mola was ensuring the revolt was an Army affair, not subject to special interests, ensuring the position of the armed forces as the basis for the new state.[94] However, the separation of church and state was forgotten once the conflict assumed the dimension of a war of religion, and military authorities increasingly deferred to the Church and to the expression of Catholic sentiment.[95] Mola's program was vague and only a rough sketch, and there were disagreements among coupists about their vision.[96][97]
On 12 June, Prime Minister Casares Quiroga met General Juan Yagüe, who falsely convinced Casares of his loyalty to the republic.[98] Mola began planning in the spring. Franco was a key player because of his prestige as a former director of the military academy and as the man who suppressed the Asturian miners' strike of 1934.[78] He was respected in the Army of Africa, the Army's toughest troops.[99] He wrote a cryptic letter to Casares on 23 June, suggesting the military was disloyal, but could be restrained if he were put in charge. Casares did nothing, failing to arrest or buy off Franco.[99] With the help of the British intelligence agents, the rebels chartered a Dragon Rapide aircraft[100] to transport Franco from the Canary Islands to Spanish Morocco.[101] Franco arrived in Morocco on 19 July.[102] Franco was offered this position as Mola's planning for the coup had become increasingly complex and it did not look like it would be as swift as he hoped, instead likely turning into a miniature civil war that would last weeks. Mola had concluded troops in Spain were insufficient and it would be necessary to use elite units from North Africa, something Franco had always believed would be necessary.[103]
On 12 July 1936, Falangists in Madrid killed police officer Lieutenant José Castillo of the Guardia de Asalto (Assault Guard). Castillo was a Socialist party member who was giving military training to the UGT youth. Castillo had led the Assault Guards that violently suppressed the riots after the funeral of Guardia Civil lieutenant Anastasio de los Reyes.[102] Assault Guard Captain Fernando Condés was a friend of Castillo. The next day, after getting the approval of the minister of interior to illegally arrest members of parliament, he led his squad to arrest José María Gil-Robles y Quiñones, founder of CEDA, as a reprisal for Castillo's murder. But he was not at home, so they went to the house of José Calvo Sotelo, a Spanish monarchist and prominent parliamentary conservative.[104] Luis Cuenca, a member of the arresting group and a Socialist who was known as the bodyguard of PSOE leader Indalecio Prieto, summarily executed Sotelo.[104][105]
Reprisals followed.[104] The killing of Calvo Sotelo with police involvement aroused suspicions and reactions among the government's opponents on the right.[105] Although the nationalist generals were planning an uprising, the event was a catalyst and a public justification for a coup.[104] Stanley Payne claims that before these events, the idea of rebellion by army officers against the government had weakened; Mola had estimated only 12% of officers reliably supported the coup and Mola considered fleeing for fear he was compromised. He had to be convinced to remain by his co-conspirators.[106] However, the kidnapping and murder of Sotelo transformed the "limping conspiracy" into a revolt that could trigger a civil war.[107][108]
The arbitrary use of lethal force by the state and lack of action against the attackers led to public disapproval of the government. No effective punitive, judicial or even investigative action was taken; Payne points to a possible veto by socialists within the government who shielded the killers drawn from their ranks.[109] The murder of a parliamentary leader by state police was unprecedented, and the belief the state had ceased to be neutral and effective encouraged important sectors of the right to join the rebellion.[110] Franco changed his mind on rebellion and dispatched a message to Mola to display his firm commitment.[111]
The Socialists and Communists, led by Indalecio Prieto, demanded that arms be distributed to the people before the military took over. The prime minister was hesitant.[104]
Beginning of the coup
[edit]The uprising's timing was fixed at 17 July, at 17:01, agreed to by the leader of the Carlists, Manuel Fal Conde.[112] However, the timing was changed—the men in the Morocco protectorate were to rise up at 05:00 on 18 July and those in Spain proper a day later so that control of Spanish Morocco could be achieved and forces sent back to the Iberian Peninsula to coincide with the risings there.[113] The rising was intended to be a swift coup d'état, but the government retained control of most of the country.[114]
Control over Spanish Morocco was all but certain.[115] The plan was discovered in Morocco on 17 July, which prompted the conspirators to enact it immediately. Little resistance was encountered. The rebels shot 189 people.[116] Goded and Franco immediately took control of the islands to which they were assigned.[78] On 18 July, Casares Quiroga refused an offer of help from the CNT and Unión General de Trabajadores (UGT), leading the groups to proclaim a general strike—in effect, mobilising. They opened weapons caches, some buried since the 1934 risings, and formed militias.[117] The paramilitary security forces often waited for the outcome of militia action before either joining or suppressing the rebellion. Quick action by either the rebels or anarchist militias was often enough to decide the fate of a town.[118] General Gonzalo Queipo de Llano secured Seville for the rebels, arresting a number of other officers.[119]
Outcome
[edit]The rebels failed to take any major cities with the critical exception of the July 1936 military uprising in Seville, which provided a landing point for Franco's African troops, and the primarily conservative and Catholic areas of Old Castile and León, which fell quickly.[114] They took Cádiz with help from the first troops from Africa.[120]
The government retained control of Málaga, Jaén, and Almería. In Madrid, the rebels were hemmed into the Cuartel de la Montaña siege, which fell with considerable bloodshed. Republican leader Casares Quiroga was replaced by José Giral, who ordered the distribution of weapons among the civilian population.[121] This facilitated the defeat of the army insurrection in the main industrial centres, including Madrid, Barcelona, and Valencia, but it allowed anarchists to take control of Barcelona along with large swathes of Aragón and Catalonia.[122] General Goded surrendered in Barcelona and was later condemned to death.[123] The Republican government ended up controlling almost all the east coast and central area around Madrid, as well as most of Asturias, Cantabria and part of the Basque Country in the north.[124]
Hugh Thomas suggested that the civil war could have ended in the favour of either side almost immediately if certain decisions had been taken during the initial coup. Thomas argues that if the government had taken steps to arm the workers, they could probably have crushed the coup very quickly. Conversely, if the coup had risen everywhere in Spain on the 18th rather than be delayed, it could have triumphed by the 22nd.[125] While the militias that rose to meet the rebels were often untrained and poorly armed (possessing only a small number of pistols, shotguns and dynamite), this was offset by the fact that the rebellion was not universal. In addition, the Falangists and Carlists were themselves often not particularly powerful fighters either. However, enough officers and soldiers had joined the coup to prevent it from being crushed swiftly.[107]
The rebels termed themselves Nacionales, normally translated "Nationalists", although the former implies "true Spaniards" rather than a nationalistic cause.[126] The result of the coup was a nationalist area of control containing 11 million of Spain's population of 25 million.[127] The Nationalists had secured the support of around half of Spain's territorial army, some 60,000 men, joined by the Army of Africa, made up of 35,000 men,[128] and just under half of Spain's militaristic police forces, the Assault Guards, the Civil Guards, and the Carabineers.[129] Republicans controlled under half of the rifles and about a third of both machine guns and artillery pieces.[130]
The Spanish Republican Army had just 18 tanks of a sufficiently modern design, and the Nationalists took control of 10.[131] Naval capacity was uneven, with the Republicans retaining a numerical advantage, but with the Navy's top commanders and two of the most modern ships, heavy cruisers Canarias—captured at the Ferrol shipyard—and Baleares, in Nationalist control.[132] The Spanish Republican Navy suffered from the same problems as the army—many officers had defected or been killed after trying to do so.[131] Two-thirds of air capability was retained by the government—however, the whole of the Republican Air Force was very outdated.[133]
Combatants
[edit]The war was cast by Republican sympathisers as a struggle between tyranny and freedom, and by Nationalist supporters as communist and anarchist red hordes versus Christian civilisation.[108] Nationalists also claimed they were bringing security and direction to an ungoverned and lawless country.[108] Spanish politics, especially on the left, was quite fragmented: on the one hand socialists and communists supported the republic but on the other, during the republic, anarchists had mixed opinions, though both major groups opposed the Nationalists during the Civil War; the latter, in contrast, were united by their fervent opposition to the Republican government and presented a more unified front.[134]
The coup divided regular forces fairly evenly. Out of some 66,000 military actually under arms in July 1936 (including the Army of Africa and the navy, excluding soldiers in service but on leave during the coup) some 52% (34,000) were in the Republican zone and 48% (32,000) in the Nationalist one.[135] Out of some 66,000 men in other armed services (Guardia Civil, Guardia de Asalto, Carabineros)[136] some 59% (39,000) joined the loyalists and some 41% (27,000) joined the rebels.[137] In total, out of some 132,000 armed and uniformed men actually in service, some 55% (73,000) seemed available to the loyalists and some 45% (59,000) to the rebels. However, one popular work claims that the loyalists controlled 90,000 men and the rebels controlled some 130,000.[138]
During the first few months, both armies were joined in high numbers by volunteers, Nationalists by some 100,000 men and Republicans by some 120,000.[139] From August, both sides launched their own, similarly scaled conscription schemes, resulting in further massive growth of their armies. Finally, the final months of 1936 saw the arrival of foreign troops, International Brigades joining the Republicans and Italian Corpo Truppe Volontarie (CTV), German Legion Condor and Portuguese Viriatos joining the Nationalists. The result was that in April 1937 there were some 360,000 soldiers in the Republican ranks and some 290,000 in the Nationalist ones.[140]
The armies kept growing. The principal source of manpower was conscription; both sides continued and expanded their schemes, the Nationalists drafting more aggressively, and there was little room left for volunteering. Foreigners contributed little to further growth; on the Nationalist side the Italians scaled down their engagement, while on the Republican side the influx of new interbrigadistas did not cover losses on the front. At the turn of 1937–1938, each army numbered about 700,000.[141]
Throughout 1938, the principal if not exclusive source of new men was a draft; at this stage it was the Republicans who conscripted more aggressively, and only 47% of their combatants were in age corresponding to the Nationalist conscription age limits.[142] Just prior to the Battle of Ebro, Republicans achieved their all-time high, slightly above 800,000; yet Nationalists numbered 880,000.[143] The Battle of Ebro, fall of Catalonia and collapsing discipline caused a great shrinking of Republican troops. In late February 1939, their army was 400,000[144] compared to more than double that number of Nationalists. In the moment of their final victory, Nationalists commanded over 900,000 troops.[145]
The total number of Spaniards serving in the Republican forces was officially stated as 917,000; later scholarly work estimated the number as "well over 1 million men",[146] though other studies claim the Republican total of 1.75 million (including non-Spaniards)[147] and "27 age groups, ranging from 18 to 44 years old".[148] The total number of Spaniards serving in the Nationalist units is estimated between "nearly 1 million men",[146] and 1.26 million (including non-Spaniards),[149] which comprised "15 age groups, ranging from 18 to 32 years old".[150]
Republicans
[edit]Only two countries openly and fully supported the Republic: the Mexican government and the USSR. From them, especially the USSR, the Republic received diplomatic support, volunteers, weapons and vehicles. Other countries remained neutral; this neutrality faced serious opposition from sympathizers in the United States and United Kingdom, and to a lesser extent in other European countries and from Marxists worldwide. This led to formation of the International Brigades, thousands of foreigners of all nationalities who voluntarily went to Spain to aid the Republic in the fight; they meant a great deal to morale but militarily were not very significant.
The Republic's supporters within Spain ranged from centrists who supported a moderately capitalist liberal democracy to revolutionary anarchists who opposed the Republic but sided with it against the coup forces. Their base was primarily secular and urban but also included landless peasants and was particularly strong in industrial regions like Asturias, the Basque country, and Catalonia.[151]
This faction was called variously leales "Loyalists" by supporters, "Republicans", the "Popular Front", or "the government" by all parties; or los rojos "the Reds" by their opponents.[152] Republicans were supported by urban workers, agricultural labourers, and parts of the middle class.[153]
The conservative, strongly Catholic Basque country, along with Catholic Galicia and the more left-leaning Catalonia, sought autonomy or independence from the central government of Madrid. The Republican government allowed for the possibility of self-government for the two regions,[154] whose forces were gathered under the People's Republican Army (Ejército Popular Republicano, or EPR), which was reorganised into mixed brigades after October 1936.[155] Historian Stanley Payne argues that the Republicans' diverse combination of movements produced an unusual regime that lacked any exact counterpart elsewhere as it combined libertarian collectivism and regional autonomy with centralisation, state control and economic nationalisation. Payne argues that Republican Spain was not a democracy but also not a strict dictatorship, with the four different major left-wing factions remaining relatively autonomous from one another and operating within a semi-pluralist political framework and limited rule of law.[156]
A few well-known people fought on the Republican side, such as English writer George Orwell (who wrote Homage to Catalonia (1938), an account of his experiences in the war)[157] and Canadian thoracic surgeon Norman Bethune, who developed a mobile blood-transfusion service for front-line operations.[158] Simone Weil briefly fought with the anarchist columns of Buenaventura Durruti.[159]
At the beginning of the war, the Republicans outnumbered the Nationalists ten to one on the front in Aragon, but by January 1937, that advantage had dropped to four to one.[160]
Nationalists
[edit]The Nacionales or Nationalists, also called "insurgents", "rebels" or, by opponents, Franquistas or "fascists" —feared national fragmentation and opposed the separatist movements. They were chiefly defined by their anti-communism, which galvanised diverse or opposed movements like Falangists and monarchists. Their leaders had a generally wealthier, more conservative, monarchist, landowning background.[161]
The Nationalist side included the Carlists and Alfonsists, Spanish nationalists, the fascist Falange, and most conservatives and monarchist liberals. Virtually all Nationalist groups had strong Catholic convictions and supported the native Spanish clergy.[152] The Nationals included the majority of the Catholic clergy and practitioners (outside of the Basque region), important elements of the army, most large landowners, and many businessmen.[108] The Nationalist base largely consisted of the middle classes, conservative peasant smallholders in the North and Catholics in general. Catholic support became particularly pronounced as a consequence of the burning of churches and killing of priests in most leftists zones during the first six months of the war. By mid-1937, the Catholic Church gave its official blessing to the Franco regime; religious fervor was a major source of emotional support for the Nationalists during the civil war.[162] Michael Seidmann reports that devout Catholics, such as seminary students, often volunteered to fight and would die in disproportionate numbers in the war. Catholic confession cleared the soldiers of moral doubt and increased fighting ability; Republican newspapers described Nationalist priests as ferocious in battle and Indalecio Prieto remarked that the enemy he feared most was "the requeté who has just received communion".[163]
One of the rightists' principal motives was to confront the anti-clericalism of the Republican regime and to defend the Catholic Church,[161] which had been targeted by opponents, including Republicans, who blamed the institution for the country's ills. The Church opposed many of the Republicans' reforms, which were fortified by the Spanish Constitution of 1931.[164] Articles 24 and 26 of the 1931 constitution had banned the Society of Jesus. This proscription deeply offended many within the conservative fold. The revolution in the Republican zone at the outset of the war, in which 7,000 clergy and thousands of lay people were killed, deepened Catholic support for the Nationalists.[165][166]
Prior to the war, during the Asturian miners' strike of 1934, religious buildings were burnt and at least 100 clergy, religious civilians, and pro-Catholic police were killed by revolutionaries.[162][167] Franco had brought in Spain's colonial Army of Africa (Spanish: Ejército de África or Cuerpo de Ejército Marroquí) and reduced the miners to submission by heavy artillery attacks and bombing raids. The Spanish Legion committed atrocities and the army carried out summary executions of leftists. The repression in the aftermath was brutal and prisoners were tortured.[168]
The Moroccan Fuerzas Regulares Indígenas joined the rebellion and played a significant role in the civil war.[169]
While the Nationalists are often assumed to have drawn in the majority of military officers, this is a somewhat simplistic analysis. The Spanish army had its own internal divisions and long-standing rifts. Officers supporting the coup tended to be africanistas (men who fought in North Africa between 1909 and 1923) while those who stayed loyal tended to be peninsulares (men who stayed back in Spain during this period). This was because during Spain's North African campaigns, the traditional promotion by seniority was suspended in favour of promotion by merit through battlefield heroism. This tended to benefit younger officers starting their careers as they could, while older officers had familial commitments that made it harder for them to be deployed in North Africa. Officers in front line combat corps (primarily infantry and cavalry) benefited over those in technical corps (those in artillery, engineering etc.) because they had more chances to demonstrate the requisite battlefield heroism and had also traditionally enjoyed promotion by seniority. The peninsulares resented seeing the africanistas rapidly leapfrog through the ranks, while the africanistas themselves were seen as swaggering and arrogant, further fueling resentment. Thus, when the coup occurred, officers who joined the rebellion, particularly from Franco's rank downwards, were often africanistas, while senior officers and those in non-front line positions tended to oppose it (though a small number of senior africanistas opposed the coup as well).[107] It has also been argued that officers who stayed loyal to the Republic were more likely to have been promoted and to have been favoured by the Republican regime (such as those in the Aviation and Assault Guard units).[170] Thus, while often thought of as a "rebellion of the generals", this is not correct. Of the eighteen division generals, only four rebelled (of the four division generals without postings, two rebelled and two remained loyal). Fourteen of the fifty-six brigade generals rebelled. The rebels tended to draw from less senior officers. Of the approximately 15,301 officers, just over half rebelled.[171]
Other factions
[edit]Catalan and Basque nationalists were divided. Left-wing Catalan nationalists sided with the Republicans, while Conservative Catalan nationalists were far less vocal in supporting the government, due to anti-clericalism and confiscations occurring in areas within its control. Basque nationalists, heralded by the conservative Basque Nationalist Party, were mildly supportive of the Republican government, although some in Navarre sided with the uprising for the same reasons influencing conservative Catalans. Not withstanding religious matters, Basque nationalists, who were for the most part Catholic, generally sided with the Republicans, although the PNV, Basque nationalist party, was reported passing the plans of Bilbao defences to the Nationalists, in an attempt to reduce the duration and casualties of siege.[172]
Foreign involvement
[edit]The Spanish Civil War exposed political divisions across Europe. The right and the Catholics supported the Nationalists to stop the spread of Bolshevism. On the left, including labour unions, students and intellectuals, the war represented a necessary battle to stop the spread of fascism. Anti-war and pacifist sentiment was strong in many countries, leading to warnings that the Civil War could escalate into a second world war.[173] In this respect, the war was an indicator of the growing instability across Europe.[174]
The Spanish Civil War involved large numbers of non-Spanish citizens who participated in combat and advisory positions. Britain and France led a political alliance of 27 nations that pledged non-intervention, including an embargo on all arms exports to Spain. The United States unofficially adopted a position of non-intervention as well, despite abstaining from joining the alliance (due in part to its policy of political isolation). The group from the United States called themselves the "Abraham Lincoln Brigade". Germany, Italy and the Soviet Union signed on officially, but ignored the embargo. The attempted suppression of imported material was largely ineffective, and France was especially accused of allowing large shipments to Republican troops.[175] The clandestine actions of the various European powers were, at the time, considered to be risking another world war, alarming antiwar elements across the world.[176]
The League of Nations' reaction to the war was influenced by a fear of communism,[177] and was insufficient to contain the massive importation of arms and other war resources by the fighting factions. Although a Non-Intervention Committee was formed, its policies accomplished very little and its directives were ineffective.[178]
Support for the Nationalists
[edit]Italy
[edit]As the conquest of Ethiopia in the Second Italo-Ethiopian War made the Italian government confident in its military power, Benito Mussolini joined the war to secure Fascist control of the Mediterranean,[179] supporting the Nationalists to a greater extent than Nazi Germany did.[180] The Royal Italian Navy (Italian: Regia Marina) played a substantial role in the Mediterranean blockade, and ultimately Italy supplied machine guns, artillery, aircraft, tankettes, the Aviazione Legionaria, and the Corpo Truppe Volontarie (CTV) to the Nationalist cause.[181] The Italian CTV would, at its peak, supply the Nationalists with 50,000 men.[181] Italian warships took part in breaking the Republican navy's blockade of Nationalist-held Spanish Morocco and took part in naval bombardment of Republican-held Málaga, Valencia, and Barcelona.[182] In addition, the Italian air force made air raids of some note, targeting mainly cities and civilian targets.[183] These Italian commitments were heavily propagandised in Italy proper, and became a point of fascist pride.[183] In total, Italy provided the Nationalists with 660 planes, 150 tanks, 800 artillery pieces, 10,000 machine guns, and 240,747 rifles.[184]
Germany
[edit]German involvement began days after fighting broke out in July 1936. Adolf Hitler quickly sent in powerful air units that fought in combat. On the ground, whilst not deploying formed ground combat forces like those of Italy, Germany did supply several hundred armoured vehicles, as well as a number of combat instructors, these efforts ensuring that the Nationalists acquired armoured capabilities to counter those of the republican side. The manner of engagement ensured that the war provided combat experience with the latest technology for the German military. However, the intervention also posed the risk of escalating into a world war for which Hitler was not ready. Therefore, he limited his aid, and instead encouraged Benito Mussolini to send in large Italian ground units, which did engage in land battles.[185]
A crucial element of Nazi Germany's actions was the formation of the multitasking Condor Legion, a unit composed of volunteers from the Luftwaffe and the German Army (Heer) from July 1936 to March 1939. The Condor Legion proved to be especially useful in that first year of conflict in operations that included: the 1936 battle of the Toledo; movement of the Army of Africa to mainland Spain in the war's early stages; and later the detachment of the republican gnobernito's from support by the central government.[186] German operations slowly expanded to include strike targets, most notably—and controversially—the bombing of Guernica which, on 26 April 1937, killed 200 to 300 civilians.[187] Germany also used the war to test new weapons, such as Luftwaffe Junkers Ju 87 Stukas and Junkers Ju 52 transport Trimotors (the JU52's used both as transport platforms and as Bombers), efforts that showed themselves to be effective.[188]
German involvement was further manifested through undertakings such as Operation Ursula, a U-boat undertaking; and contributions from the Kriegsmarine. The Legion spearheaded many Nationalist victories, particularly in aerial combat,[186] while Spain further provided a proving ground for German tank tactics. The training which German units provided to the Nationalist forces would prove valuable. By the War's end, perhaps 56,000 Nationalist soldiers, encompassing infantry, artillery, aerial and naval forces, had been trained by German detachments.[186]
Hitler's policy for Spain was shrewd and pragmatic. The minutes of a conference at the Reich Chancellery in Berlin on 10 November 1937 summarised his views on foreign policy regarding the Spanish Civil War: "On the other hand, a one-hundred percent victory for Franco was not desirable either, from the German point of view; rather were we interested in a continuance of the war and in the keeping up of the tension in the Mediterranean."[189][190] Hitler wanted to help Franco just enough to gain his gratitude and to prevent the side supported by the Soviet Union from winning, but not large enough to give the Caudillo a quick victory.[191]
A total of approximately 16,000 German citizens fought in the war, with approximately 300 killed,[192] though no more than 10,000 participated at any one time. German aid to the Nationalists amounted to approximately £43,000,000 ($215,000,000) in 1939 prices,[192][note 3] 15.5% of which was used for salaries and expenses and 21.9% for direct delivery of supplies to Spain, while 62.6% was expended on the Condor Legion.[192] In total, Germany provided the Nationalists with 600 planes and 200 tanks.[193]
Portugal
[edit]The Estado Novo regime of Portuguese Prime Minister António de Oliveira Salazar played an important role in supplying Francisco Franco's forces with ammunition and logistical help.[194]
Manuel Azaña, president of the embattled Spanish Republic, had financed and armed those seeking to topple Salazar's conservative regime.[195] Radicals in Spain and Portugal had long advocated for peninsular unity. Salazar was concerned that the Spanish left's internationalist views and support for Iberian federalism posed a threat to Portugal's independence, fearing that a leftist Spain might seek to dominate Portugal. Many middle-class radicals in Portugal supported this idea, believing that their country needed to integrate with Spain to achieve agricultural modernization and industrialization. [195]
While the Nationalists lacked access to seaports early on, they secured control of the entire border with Portugal by the end of August 1936, thus giving Salazar and his regime a free hand to render whatever assistance to Franco they saw fit without fear of Republican interference or retaliation. Salazar's Portugal helped the Nationalist side receive armaments shipments from abroad, including ordnance when certain Nationalist forces virtually ran out of ammunition. Consequently, the Nationalists called Lisbon "the port of Castile".[196]
However, despite the border being secured, on 8 September 1936, a naval revolt took place in Lisbon. The crews of two naval Portuguese vessels, the NRP Afonso de Albuquerque and the NRP Dão, mutinied. The sailors, who were affiliated with the Portuguese Communist Party, confined their officers and attempted to sail the ships out of Lisbon to join the Spanish Republican forces fighting in Spain. Salazar ordered the ships to be destroyed by gunfire.[197][198] Both Afonso de Albuquerque and Dão received direct hits and were grounded.[199]
Salazar supported Franco primarily to ensure the survival of his own regime. He feared the Republican side would threaten the stability and independence of Portugal.[195][200] Salazar's strategy was the support Franco in its struggle against the Republic, the preservation of the two Iberian states as independent but in association with the Atlanticist foreign policy of England, and the survival of the Portuguese regime.[201]
Despite its discreet direct military involvement—restrained to a somewhat "semi-official" endorsement, by its authoritarian regime—a "Viriatos Legion" volunteer force was organised, but disbanded, due to political unrest.[202] Between 8,000[202] and 12,000[108] Salazar's desire to maintain a prudent distance from initiatives that could threaten the image of neutrality that the government sought to maintain at all costs in the eyes of the international community meant that the idea of an exclusively Portuguese volunteer corps was never put into practice. Salazar and the military leadership did not look favorably upon misplaced adventurism and, in general, any plans for direct intervention from which it would be difficult, if not impossible, to clearly distance themselves in front of the International Non-Intervention Committee.[203] The Viriatos were integrated into various units and battle fronts (The Spanish Legion, Falange militias or requetés, rebel aviation, or regular army brigades), without forming any specific unit.[204]
There were also Portuguese militiamen fighting in the defense of the Spanish Republic, although their participation was much smaller.[205] Some were anti-Salazarist exiles belonging to the Portuguese Popular Front in Spain, the Iberian Anarchist Federation, or the Portuguese Communist Party; they were workers, intellectuals, and politicians allied against the dictatorship in Portugal.[206]
While fully supporting Franco's side in many ways, the Portuguese regime spared no efforts at dissociating itself from their own citizens enlisted in the Spanish in order to maintain the non-intervention façade.[203]
In February 1937, under pressure from the London Committee, the Salazar government was forced to publish a decree prohibiting the enlistment of volunteers on either side of the conflict.[207]
In March 1937, the Portuguese Military Observation Mission in Spain (MMPOE) was created with three essential objectives: to gain knowledge of new weapons and military techniques, to ensure a privileged position for Portugal in the new European scenario, and to assist Portuguese combatants.[203][204]
In January 1938, Salazar appointed Pedro Teotónio Pereira as special liaison of the Portuguese government to Franco's government, where he achieved great prestige and influence.[208] In April 1938, Pereira officially became a full-rank Portuguese ambassador to Spain, remaining in this post throughout World War II.[209]
Propaganda about the military achievements of the 'viriatos' spread throughout the Portuguese press after peace was signed in April 1939 but the government did not take responsibility for the fate of the Portuguese soldiers in the Spanish Civil War because, officially, Portugal did not participate in the conflict. Although encouraged by the anti-communist and pro-Franco propaganda of the Estado Novo, the Portuguese combatants went to Spain of their own free will and, therefore, all responsibilities arising from their participation in the battle were theirs alone, according to the regime's political position. The government considered that ex-combatants in Spain should accept their precarious condition as volunteer soldiers and, therefore, had no right to any official assistance upon returning to Portugal.[206]
The Francoist authorities were ungrateful for the help provided by the 'viriatos.' Many of those who returned to Portugal after the war were forced to deposit all their savings at the Spanish customs, accused of currency evasion.[210]
Portugal was instrumental in providing the Nationalists with organizational skills and reassurance from the Iberian neighbour to Franco and his allies that no interference would hinder the supply traffic directed to the Nationalist cause.[211]
Just a few days before the end of the Spanish Civil War, on 17 March 1939, Portugal and Spain signed the Iberian Pact, a non-aggression treaty that marked the beginning of a new phase in Iberian relations. Meetings between Franco and Salazar played a fundamental role in this new political arrangement.[212] The pact proved to be a decisive instrument in keeping the Iberian Peninsula out of Hitler's continental system.[213]
In May 1939, in a speech delivered to the National Assembly, Salazar emphasized that Portugal had acted as 'a factor of peace' amidst the growing chaos in Europe. He asserted that the country had taken all necessary steps to prevent its neighbor from falling under 'communist enslavement'.[214]
Later, Franco spoke of Salazar in glowing terms in an interview in the Le Figaro newspaper: "The most complete statesman, the one most worthy of respect, that I have known is Salazar. I regard him as an extraordinary personality for his intelligence, his political sense and his humility. His only defect is probably his modesty."[215]
Others
[edit]Romanian volunteers were led by Ion Moța, deputy-leader of the Iron Guard ("Legion of the Archangel Michael"), whose group of Seven Legionaries visited Spain in December 1936 to ally their movement with the Nationalists.[216]
Despite the Irish government's prohibition against participating in the war, about 600 Irishmen, followers of the Irish political activist and co-founder of the recently created political party of Fine Gael (unofficially called "The Blue Shirts"), Eoin O'Duffy, known as the "Irish Brigade", went to Spain to fight alongside Franco.[217] The majority of the volunteers were Catholics, and according to O'Duffy had volunteered to help the Nationalists fight against communism.[218][219]
According to Spanish statistics, 1,052 Yugoslavs were recorded as volunteers of which 48% were Croats, 23% Slovenes, 18% Serbs, 2.3% Montenegrins and 1.5% Macedonians.[220]
Around 150 to 170 White Russians fought for Franco, of whom 19 perished and many more were wounded.[221] Their attempts at creating a separate unit were turned down by the Francoist government.
Support for the Republicans
[edit]International Brigades
[edit]On 26 July, just eight days after the revolt had started, an international communist conference was held at Prague to arrange plans to help the Republican Government. It decided to raise an international brigade of 5,000 men and a fund of 1 billion francs.[222] At the same time communist parties throughout the world quickly launched a full-scale propaganda campaign in support of the Popular Front. The Communist International immediately reinforced its activity sending to Spain its leader Georgi Dimitrov, and Palmiro Togliatti the chief of the Communist Party of Italy.[223][224] From August onward aid started to be sent from Russia, over one ship per day arrived at Spain's Mediterranean ports carrying munitions, rifles, machine guns, hand grenades, artillery and trucks. With the cargo came Soviet agents, technicians, instructors and propagandists.[223]
The Communist International immediately started to organize the International Brigades with great care to conceal or minimize the communist character of the enterprise and to make it appear as a campaign on behalf of progressive democracy.[223] Attractive names were deliberately chosen, such as Garibaldi Battalion in Italy, the Canadian "Mackenzie-Papineau Battalion" or Abraham Lincoln Battalion in the United States.[223]
Many non-Spaniards, often affiliated with radical communist or socialist entities, joined the International Brigades, believing that the Spanish Republic was a front line in the war against fascism. The units represented the largest foreign contingent of those fighting for the Republicans. Roughly 40,000 foreign nationals fought with the Brigades, though no more than 18,000 were in the conflict at any given time. They claimed to represent 53 nations.[225]
Significant numbers of volunteers came from France (10,000), Nazi Germany and Austria (5,000), and Italy (3,350). More than 1,000 each came from the Soviet Union, the United States, the United Kingdom, Poland, Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Canada.[225] The Thälmann Battalion, a group of Germans, and the Garibaldi Battalion, a group of Italians, distinguished their units during the siege of Madrid. Americans fought in units such as the XV International Brigade ("Abraham Lincoln Brigade"), while Canadians joined the Mackenzie–Papineau Battalion.[226]
More than 500 Romanians fought on the Republican side, including Romanian Communist Party members Petre Borilă and Valter Roman.[227] About 145 men[228] from Ireland formed the Connolly Column, which was immortalized by Irish folk musician Christy Moore in the song "Viva la Quinta Brigada". Some Chinese joined the Brigades;[229] the majority of them eventually returned to China, but some went to prison or to French refugee camps, and a handful remained in Spain.[230]
Soviet Union
[edit]Although General Secretary Joseph Stalin had signed the Non-Intervention Agreement, the Soviet Union contravened the League of Nations embargo by providing material assistance to the Republican forces, becoming their only source of major weapons. Unlike Hitler and Mussolini, Stalin tried to do this covertly.[231] Estimates of material provided by the USSR to the Republicans vary between 634 and 806 aircraft, 331 and 362 tanks and 1,034 to 1,895 artillery pieces.[232] Stalin also created Section X of the Soviet Union military to head the weapons shipment operation, called Operation X. Despite Stalin's interest in aiding the Republicans, the quality of arms was inconsistent.[233][234] Many rifles and field guns provided were old, obsolete or otherwise of limited use (some dated back to the 1860s) but the T-26 and BT-5 tanks were modern and effective in combat.[233] The Soviet Union supplied aircraft that were in current service with their own forces but the aircraft provided by Germany to the Nationalists proved superior by the end of the war.[235]
The movement of arms from Russia to Spain was extremely slow. Many shipments were lost or arrived only partially matching what had been authorised.[236] Stalin ordered shipbuilders to include false decks in the design of ships and, while at sea, Soviet captains used deceptive flags and paint schemes to evade detection by the Nationalists.[237]
The USSR sent 2,000–3,000 military advisers to Spain; while the Soviet commitment of troops was fewer than 500 men at a time, Soviet volunteers often operated Soviet-made tanks and aircraft, particularly at the beginning of the war.[238][239][240][225] The Spanish commander of every military unit on the Republican side was attended by a "Comissar Politico" of equal rank, who represented Moscow.[241]
The Republic paid for Soviet arms with official Bank of Spain gold reserves, 176 tonnes of which was transferred through France and 510 directly to Russia,[242] which was called Moscow gold.
Also, the Soviet Union directed Communist parties around the world to organise and recruit the International Brigades.[243]
Another significant Soviet involvement was the activity of the People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs (NKVD) inside the Republican rearguard. Communist figures including Vittorio Vidali ("Comandante Contreras"), Iosif Grigulevich, Mikhail Koltsov and, most prominently, Aleksandr Mikhailovich Orlov led operations that included the murders of Catalan anti-Stalinist Communist politician Andrés Nin, the socialist journalist Mark Rein, and the independent left-wing activist José Robles.[244]
Other NKVD-led operations were the murder of the Austrian member of the International Left Opposition and Trotskyist Kurt Landau,[245] and the shooting down (in December 1936) of the French aircraft in which the delegate of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), Georges Henny, carried extensive documentation on the Paracuellos massacres to France.[246]
In his book, Partners in Crime: Faustian Bargain, historian Ian Ona Johnson explains that in the 1920s and 30s (during the Spanish Civil War) Germany and Soviet Russia had entered into a partnership centering on economic and military cooperation. This led to the establishment of German military bases and facilities in Russia. This military exchange of war material continued until June 1941, when Germany invaded Stalin's Russia.[247]
Poland
[edit]Polish arms sales to Republican Spain took place between September 1936 and February 1939. Politically Poland did not support any of the Spanish Civil War sides, though over time the Warsaw government increasingly tended to favour the Nationalists; sales to the Republicans were motivated exclusively by economic interest. Since Poland was bound by non-intervention obligations, Polish governmental officials and the military disguised sales as commercial transactions mediated by international brokers and targeting customers in various countries, principally in Latin America; there are 54 shipments from Danzig and Gdynia identified. Most hardware were obsolete and worn-out second-rate weapons, though there were also some modern arms delivered; all were 20–30% overpriced. Polish sales amounted to $40m and constituted some 5–7% of overall Republican military spendings, though in terms of quantity certain categories of weaponry, like machine-guns, might have accounted for 50% of all arms delivered. After the USSR Poland was the second largest arms supplier for the Republic. After the USSR, Italy and Germany, Poland was the 4th largest arms supplier to war-engulfed Spain.[248]
Greece
[edit]Greece was officially neutral during the war. It maintained formal diplomatic relations with the Republic, though the Metaxas dictatorship sympathized with the Nationalists. The country joined the non-intervention policy in August 1936, yet from the onset the Athens government connived at arms sales to both sides. The official vendor was Pyrkal or Greek Powder and Cartridge Company (GPCC), and the key personality behind the deal was the GPCC head, Prodromos Bodosakis-Athanasiadis. The company partially took advantage of the earlier Schacht Plan, a German-Greek credit agreement which enabled Greek purchases from Rheinmetall-Borsig; some of German products were later re-exported to Republican Spain. However, GPCC was selling its own arms, as the company operated a number of factories, and partially thanks to Spanish sales it became the largest company in Greece.[249]
Most of Greek sales went to the Republic; on part of the Spaniards the deals were negotiated by Grigori Rosenberg, son of well-known Soviet diplomat, and Máximo José Kahn Mussabaun, the Spanish representative in the Thessaloniki consulate. Shipments set off usually from Piraeus, were camouflaged at a deserted island, and with changed flags they proceeded officially to ports in Mexico. It is known that sales continued from August 1936 at least until November 1938. Exact number of shipments is unknown, but it remained significant: by November 1937 34 Greek ships were declared non-compliant with the non-intervention agreement, and the Nationalist navy seized 21 vessels in 1938 alone. Details of sales to the Nationalists are unclear, but it is known they were by far smaller.[249]
Total worth of Greek sales is unknown. One author claims that in 1937 alone, GPCC shipments amounted to $10.9m for the Republicans and $2.7m for the Nationalists, and that in late 1937 Bodosakis signed another contract with the Republicans for £2.1m (around $10m), though it is not clear whether the ammunition contracted was delivered. The arms sold included artillery (e.g., 30 pieces of 155mm guns), machine guns (at least 400), cartridges (at least 11m), bombs (at least 1,500) and explosives (at least 38 tons of TNT).[249] AEKKEA-RAAB, a Greek aviation company, also sold at least 60 aircraft to the Republican Air Force, consisting of R-29 fighters and R-33 trainers.[250]
Mexico
[edit]Unlike the United States and major Latin American governments, such as the ABC nations and Peru, the Mexican government supported the Republicans.[251][252] Mexico abstained from following the French-British non-intervention proposals,[251] and provided $2,000,000 in aid and material assistance, which included 20,000 rifles and 20 million cartridges.[251]
Mexico's most important contributions to the Spanish Republic was its diplomatic help, as well as the sanctuary the nation arranged for Republican refugees, including Spanish intellectuals and orphaned children from Republican families. Some 50,000 took refuge, primarily in Mexico City and Morelia, accompanied by $300 million in various treasures still owned by the Left.[253]
France
[edit]Fearing it might spark a civil war inside France, the leftist "Popular Front" government in France did not send direct support to the Republicans. French Prime Minister Léon Blum was sympathetic to the republic,[254] fearing that the success of Nationalist forces in Spain would result in the creation of an ally state of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy, an alliance that would nearly encircle France.[254] Right-wing politicians opposed any aid and attacked the Blum government.[255] In July 1936, British officials convinced Blum not to send arms to the Republicans and, on 27 July, the French government declared that it would not send military aid, technology or forces to assist the Republican forces.[256] However, Blum made clear that France reserved the right to provide aid should it wish to the Republic: "We could have delivered arms to the Spanish Government [Republicans], a legitimate government... We have not done so, in order not to give an excuse to those who would be tempted to send arms to the rebels [Nationalists]."[257]
On 1 August 1936, a pro-Republican rally of 20,000 people confronted Blum, demanding that he send aircraft to the Republicans, at the same time as right-wing politicians attacked Blum for supporting the Republic and being responsible for provoking Italian intervention on the side of Franco.[257] Germany informed the French ambassador in Berlin that Germany would hold France responsible if it supported "the manoeuvres of Moscow" by supporting the Republicans.[258] On 21 August 1936, France signed the Non-Intervention Agreement.[258] However, the Blum government provided aircraft to the Republicans covertly with Potez 540 bomber aircraft (nicknamed the "Flying Coffin" by Spanish Republican pilots),[259] Dewoitine aircraft, and Loire 46 fighter aircraft being sent from 7 August 1936 to December of that year to Republican forces.[260] France, through the favour of pro-communist air minister Pierre Cot also sent a group of trained fighter pilots and engineers to help the Republicans.[222][261] Also, until 8 September 1936, aircraft could freely pass from France into Spain if they were bought in other countries.[262]
Even after covert support by France to the Republicans ended in December 1936, the possibility of French intervention against the Nationalists remained a serious possibility throughout the war. German intelligence reported to Franco and the Nationalists that the French military was engaging in open discussions about intervention in the war through French military intervention in Catalonia and the Balearic Islands.[263] In 1938, Franco feared an immediate French intervention against a potential Nationalist victory in Spain through French occupation of Catalonia, the Balearic Islands, and Spanish Morocco.[264]
Course of the war
[edit]1936
[edit]A large air and sealift of Nationalist troops in Spanish Morocco was organised to the southwest of Spain.[265] Coup leader Sanjurjo was killed in a plane crash on 20 July,[266][267] leaving an effective command split between Mola in the North and Franco in the South.[78] This period also saw the worst actions of the so-called "Red" and "White Terrors" in Spain.[268] On 21 July, the fifth day of the rebellion, the Nationalists captured the central Spanish naval base, located in Ferrol, Galicia.[269]
A rebel force under Colonel Alfonso Beorlegui Canet, sent by General Mola and Colonel Esteban García, undertook the Campaign of Gipuzkoa from July to September. The capture of Gipuzkoa isolated the Republican provinces in the north. On 5 September, the Nationalists closed the French border to the Republicans in the battle of Irún.[270] On 15 September San Sebastián, home to a divided Republican force of anarchists and Basque nationalists, was taken by Nationalist soldiers.[211]
The Republic proved ineffective militarily, relying on disorganised revolutionary militias. The Republican government under Giral resigned on 4 September, unable to cope with the situation, and was replaced by a mostly Socialist organisation under Francisco Largo Caballero.[271] The new leadership began to unify central command in the republican zone.[272] The civilian militias were often simply just civilians armed with whatever was available. Thus, they fared poorly in combat, particularly against the professional Army of Africa armed with modern weapons, ultimately contributing to Franco's rapid advance.[273]
On the Nationalist side, Franco was chosen as chief military commander at a meeting of ranking generals at Salamanca on 21 September, now called by the title Generalísimo.[78][276] Franco won another victory on 27 September when his troops relieved the siege of the Alcázar in Toledo,[276] which had been held by a Nationalist garrison under Colonel José Moscardó Ituarte since the beginning of the rebellion, resisting thousands of Republican troops, who completely surrounded the isolated building. Moroccans and elements of the Spanish Legion came to the rescue.[277] Two days after relieving the siege, Franco proclaimed himself Caudillo ("chieftain", the Spanish equivalent of the Italian Duce and the German Führer—meaning: 'director') while forcibly unifying the various and diverse Falangist, Royalist and other elements within the Nationalist cause.[271] The diversion to Toledo gave Madrid time to prepare a defense but was hailed as a major propaganda victory and personal success for Franco.[278] On 1 October 1936, General Franco was confirmed head of state and armies in Burgos. A similar dramatic success for the Nationalists occurred on 17 October, when troops coming from Galicia relieved the besieged town of Oviedo, in Northern Spain.[279][280]
In October, the Francoist troops launched a major offensive toward Madrid,[281] reaching it in early November and launching a major assault on the city on 8 November.[282] The Republican government was forced to shift from Madrid to Valencia, outside the combat zone, on 6 November.[283] However, the Nationalists' attack on the capital was repulsed in fierce fighting between 8 and 23 November. A contributory factor in the successful Republican defense was the effectiveness of the Fifth Regiment[284] and later the arrival of the International Brigades, though only an approximate 3,000 foreign volunteers participated in the battle.[285] Having failed to take the capital, Franco bombarded it from the air and, in the following two years, mounted several offensives to try to encircle Madrid, beginning the three-year siege of Madrid. The Second Battle of the Corunna Road, a Nationalist offensive to the northwest, pushed Republican forces back, but failed to isolate Madrid. The battle lasted into January.[286]
1937
[edit]With his ranks swelled by Italian troops and Spanish colonial soldiers from Morocco, Franco made another attempt to capture Madrid in January and February 1937, but was again unsuccessful. The Battle of Málaga started in mid-January, and this Nationalist offensive in Spain's southeast would turn into a disaster for the Republicans, who were poorly organised and armed. The city was taken by Franco on 8 February.[287] The consolidation of various militias into the Republican Army had started in December 1936.[288] The main Nationalist advance to cross the Jarama and cut the supply to Madrid by the Valencia road, termed the Battle of Jarama, led to heavy casualties (6,000–20,000) on both sides. The operation's main objective was not met, though Nationalists gained a modest amount of territory.[289]
A similar Nationalist offensive, the Battle of Guadalajara, was a more significant defeat for Franco and his armies. This was the only publicised Republican victory of the war. Franco used Italian troops and blitzkrieg tactics; while many strategists blamed Franco for the rightists' defeat, the Germans believed it was the former at fault for the Nationalists' 5,000 casualties and loss of valuable equipment.[290] The German strategists successfully argued that the Nationalists needed to concentrate on vulnerable areas first.[291]
The "War in the North" began in mid-March, with the Biscay Campaign. The Basques suffered most from the lack of a suitable air force.[292] On 26 April, the Condor Legion bombed the town of Guernica, killing 200–300 and causing significant damage. The bombing of Guernica had a significant effect on international opinion. The Basques retreated from the area.[293]
April and May saw the May Days, infighting among Republican groups in Catalonia. The dispute was between an ultimately victorious government—Communist forces and the anarchist CNT. The disturbance pleased Nationalist command, but little was done to exploit Republican divisions.[294] After the fall of Guernica, the Republican government began to fight back with increasing effectiveness. In July, it made a move to recapture Segovia, forcing Franco to delay his advance on the Bilbao front, but for only two weeks. The Huesca Offensive failed similarly.[295]
Mola, Franco's second-in-command, was killed on 3 June, in an airplane accident.[296] In early July, despite the earlier loss at the Battle of Bilbao, the government launched a strong counter-offensive to the west of Madrid, focusing on Brunete. The Battle of Brunete, however, was a significant defeat for the Republic, which lost many of its most accomplished troops. The offensive led to an advance of 50 square kilometres (19 sq mi), and left 25,000 Republican casualties.[297]
A Republican offensive against Zaragoza was also a failure. Despite having land and aerial advantages, the Battle of Belchite, a place lacking any military interest, resulted in an advance of only 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) and the loss of much equipment.[298] Franco invaded Aragón and took the city of Santander in Cantabria in August.[299] With the surrender of the Republican army in the Basque territory came the Santoña Agreement.[300] Gijón finally fell in late October in the Asturias Offensive.[301] Franco had effectively won in the north. At November's end, with Franco's troops closing in on Valencia, the government had to move again, this time to Barcelona.[162]
1938
[edit]The Battle of Teruel was an important confrontation in 1938, its outcome heralding future progress of the war. The city, which had formerly belonged to the Nationalists, was conquered by Republicans in January. Francoist troops launched a counter-offensive and recovered the city by 22 February, the Nationalists relying heavily on German and Italian air support.[302]
Teruel secured, on 7 March the Nationalists launched the Aragon Offensive; by 14 April they had pushed east through to the Mediterranean, cutting the Republican-held portion of Spain in two. The Republican government attempted to sue for peace in May,[303] but Franco demanded unconditional surrender, and the war raged on.
In July, the Nationalist army pressed southward from Teruel, pushing south along the coast toward the capital of the Republic at Valencia, but was halted in heavy fighting along the XYZ Line, a system of fortifications defending Valencia.[304] The Republican government then launched an all-out campaign to reconnect their territory in the Battle of the Ebro, from 24 July until 26 November; the scale of the Republican offensive forced Franco to personally take command.[305]
The Republican Ebro campaign was unsuccessful, undermined by the agreement signed in Munich, Germany, between Hitler and Chamberlain. The Munich Agreement effectively caused a collapse in Republican morale by ending hope of an anti-fascist alliance with Western powers.[306] The subsequent Republican retreat from the Ebro all but determined the outcome of the war.[305] Eight days before the new year, Franco threw massive forces into an invasion of Catalonia.[307]
1939
[edit]Franco's troops conquered Catalonia in a whirlwind campaign during the first two months of 1939. Tarragona fell on 15 January,[308] followed by Barcelona on 26 January[309] and Girona on 2 February.[310] On 27 February, the United Kingdom and France recognized the Franco regime.[311]
Only Madrid and a few other strongholds remained for the Republican forces. On 5 March 1939 the Republican army, led by the Colonel Segismundo Casado and the politician Julián Besteiro, rose against the prime minister Juan Negrín and formed the National Defence Council (Consejo Nacional de Defensa or CND) to negotiate a peace deal.[312] Negrín fled to France on 6 March,[313] but the Communist troops around Madrid rose against the junta, starting a brief civil war within the civil war.[314] Casado defeated them, and began peace negotiations with the Nationalists, but Franco refused to accept anything less than unconditional surrender.[315]
On 26 March, the Nationalists started a general offensive, on 28 March the Nationalists occupied Madrid and, by 31 March, they controlled all Spanish territory.[316] Franco proclaimed victory in a radio speech aired on 1 April, when the last of the Republican forces surrendered.[317]
After the end of the war, there were harsh reprisals against Franco's former enemies.[318] Thousands of Republicans were imprisoned and at least 30,000 executed.[319] Other estimates of these deaths range from 50,000[320] to 200,000, depending on which deaths are included. Many others were put to forced labour, building railways, draining swamps, and digging canals.[320]
At the end of the war, in what was called La Retirada (withdrawal) Hundreds of thousands of Republicans fled abroad, with some 500,000 fleeing to France.[321] Refugees were confined in internment camps of the French Third Republic, such as Camp Gurs or Camp Vernet, where 12,000 Republicans were housed in squalid conditions. In his capacity as consul in Paris, Chilean poet and politician Pablo Neruda organised the immigration to Chile of 2,200 Republican exiles in France using the ship SS Winnipeg.[322]
Of the 17,000 refugees housed in Gurs, farmers and others who could not find relations in France were encouraged by the Third Republic, in agreement with the Francoist government, to return to Spain. The great majority did so and were turned over to the Francoist authorities in Irún.[323] From there, they were transferred to the Miranda de Ebro camp for "purification" according to the Law of Political Responsibilities. After the proclamation by Marshal Philippe Pétain of the Vichy regime, the refugees became political prisoners, and the French police attempted to round up those who had been liberated from the camp. Along with other "undesirable" people, the Spaniards were sent to the Drancy internment camp before being deported to Nazi Germany. About 5,000 Spaniards died in the Mauthausen concentration camp.[323]
After the official end of the war, guerrilla warfare was waged on an irregular basis by the Spanish Maquis well into the 1950s, gradually reduced by military defeats and scant support from the exhausted population. In 1944, a group of republican veterans, who also fought in the French resistance against the Nazis, invaded the Val d'Aran in northwest Catalonia, but were defeated after 10 days.[324] According to some scholars, the Spanish Civil War lasted until 1952; until 1939 it was "conventional civil war", but afterwards it turned into an "irregular civil war".[325]
Evacuation of children
[edit]The Republicans oversaw the evacuation of 30,000–35,000 children from their zone,[326] starting with Basque areas, from which 20,000 were evacuated. Their destinations included the United Kingdom[327] and the USSR, and many other countries in Europe, along with Mexico. The policy of evacuating children to foreign countries was initially opposed to by elements in the government as well as private charities, who saw the policy as unnecessary and harmful to the well-being of the evacuated children.[326] On 21 May 1937, around 4,000 Basque children were evacuated to the UK on the aging steamship SS Habana from the Spanish port of Santurtzi. Upon their arrival two days later in Southampton, the children were sent to families all over England, with over 200 children accommodated in Wales.[328] The upper age limit was initially set at 12 but raised to 15.[329] By mid-September, all of los niños vascos, as they became known,[330] had found homes with families.[331] Most were repatriated to Spain after the war, but some 250 were still in Britain by the end of the Second World War in 1945 and some chose to settle there.[332]
Financing
[edit]During the Civil War the Nationalist and Republican military expenditures combined totalled some $3.89bn, on average $1.44bn annually.[note 5] The overall Nationalist expenditures are calculated at $2.04bn, while the Republican ones reached ca. $1,85bn.[333] In comparison, in 1936–1938 the French military expenditure totalled $0.87bn, the Italian ones reached $2.64bn, and the British ones stood at $4.13bn.[334] As in the mid-1930s the Spanish GDP was much smaller than the Italian, French or British ones,[335] and as in the Second Republic the annual defence and security budget was usually around $0,13bn (total annual governmental spendings were close to $0.65bn),[note 6] wartime military expenditures put huge strain on the Spanish economy. Financing the war posed enormous challenge for both the Nationalists and the Republicans.
The two combatant parties followed similar financial strategies; in both cases money creation, rather than new taxes or issue of debt, was key to financing the war.[333]
Both sides relied mostly on domestic resources; in the case of the Nationalists, they amounted to 63% of the overall spendings ($1.28bn) and in the case of the Republicans they stood at 59% ($1.09bn). In the Nationalist zone money creation was responsible for some 69% of domestic resources, while in the Republican one the corresponding figure stood at 60%; it was accomplished mostly by means of advances, credits, loans and debit balances from respective central banks.[333] However, while in the Nationalist zone the rising stock of money was only marginally above the production growth rate, in the Republican zone it by far exceeded dwindling production figures. The result was that while by the end of the war the Nationalist inflation was 41% compared to 1936, the Republican one was in triple digits. The second component of domestic resource was fiscal revenue. In the Nationalist zone it grew steadily and in the 2nd half of 1938 it was 214% of the figure from the 2nd half of 1936.[336] In the Republican zone fiscal revenues in 1937 dropped to some 25% of revenues recorded in the proportional area in 1935 but recovered slightly in 1938. Neither side re-engineered the pre-war tax system; differences resulted from dramatic problems with tax collection in the Republican zone and from the course of the war, as more and more of the population were governed by the Nationalists. A smaller percentage of domestic resources came from expropriations, donations or internal borrowing.[333]
Foreign resources amounted to 37% in case of the Nationalists ($0,76bn) and 41% in case of the Republicans ($0,77bn).[note 7] For the Nationalists it was mostly the Italian and German credit;[note 8] in case of the Republicans, it was sales of gold reserves, mostly to the USSR and in much smaller amount to France. None of the sides resolved to public borrowing and none floated debt on foreign exchange markets.[333]
Authors of recent studies suggest that given Nationalist and Republican spendings were comparable, earlier theory pointing to Republican mismanagement of resources is no longer tenable.[note 9] Instead, they claim that the Republicans failed to translate their resources into military victory largely because of constraints of the international non-intervention agreement; they were forced to spend in excess of market prices and accept goods of lower quality. Initial turmoil in the Republican zone contributed to problems, while at later stages the course of the war meant that population, territory and resources kept shrinking.[333]
Friction between Republican leadership and Catalonia
[edit]Given the lack of operativeness of the republican army after the fascist coup d'état, the columns of militiamen temporarily played their role. There was also an expedition supported by the Generalitat de Catalunya to recover Mallorca. The lack of support from the Spanish government for the underlying cause of the Generalitat being involved into the operation and the Catalanist propaganda that promoted the enlistment of volunteers forced the withdrawal. President Azaña would describe the initiative as "That crazy operation was born from the tyrannical vanity, petulance and deviant ambition of some Barcelona politicians".[338] Not recapturing Mallorca would be of great importance in the future course of the war.
The Republic, prevented from buying weapons abroad by the international agreement of neutrality, which both Germany and Italy ignored, urgently required war material. In this context, the Generalitat built a network of war industries converting civilian industries. When the republican government moved to Barcelona in 1937, it took control of the war industries from the Generalitat. But under his control, production dropped dramatically, with the consequent impact on supplies to the war fronts.[339]
While this was happening, Prime Minister Negrín treated President Companys with notable disloyalty, to the final point of abandoning him at the French border, after appropriating the Generalitat's reserve funds for exile.[339]
All of above can be illustrated with Negrín's statement collected by Julián Zugazagoitia:[340]
I am not waging war against Franco so that a stupid and sleazy separatism will return to us in Barcelona. I am waging war for Spain and for Spain! For greatness and for greatness! Those who assume otherwise are mistaken. There is only one nation: Spain! Before consenting to nationalist campaigns that lead us to dismemberment that I in no way admit, I would give way to Franco without any other condition than to get aside the Germans and Italians.
Death toll
[edit]Civil War death toll | |||||||||||
range | estimate | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
+2m | 2,000,000[note 10] | ||||||||||
+1m | 1,500,000,[note 11] 1,124,257,[note 12] 1,200,000,[note 13] 1,000,000,[note 14] | ||||||||||
+ 900,000 | 909,000,[note 15] 900,000[341] | ||||||||||
+ 800,000 | 800,000[note 16] | ||||||||||
+ 700,000 | 750,000,[note 17] 745,000,[note 18] 700,000[note 19] | ||||||||||
+ 600,000 | 665,300,[342] 650,000,[343] 640,000,[note 20] 625,000,[note 21] 623,000,[344] 613,000,[note 22] 611,000,[345] 610,000,[note 23] 600,000[346] | ||||||||||
+ 500,000 | 580,000,[note 24] 560,000,[347] 540,000,[note 25] 530,000,[note 26] 500,000[note 27] | ||||||||||
+ 400,000 | 496,000,[note 28] 465,000,[note 29] 450,000,[note 30] 443,000,[348] 436,000,[349] 420,000,[note 31] 410,000,[note 32] 407,000,[note 33] 405,000,[note 34] 400,000[note 35] | ||||||||||
+ 300,000 | 380,000,[note 36] 365,000,[350] 350,000,[note 37] 346,000,[note 38] 344,000,[note 39] 340,000,[note 40] 335,000,[note 41] 330,000,[note 42] 328,929,[note 43] 310,000,[351] 300,000[note 44] | ||||||||||
+ 200,000 | 290,000,[note 45] 270,000,[note 46] 265,000,[note 47] 256,825,[note 48] 255,000,[note 49] 250,000,[note 50] 231,000[note 51] | ||||||||||
+ 100,000 | 170,489,[note 52] 149,213[note 53] |
The death toll of the Spanish Civil War is far from clear and remains—especially in part related to war and postwar repression—a very controversial issue. Many general historiographic works—notably in Spain—refrain from advancing any figures; massive historical series,[352] encyclopedias[353] or dictionaries[354] provide no numbers or at best propose vague general descriptions;[note 54] more detailed general history accounts produced by expert Spanish scholars often remain silent on the issue.[note 55] Foreign scholars, especially English-speaking historians, are more willing to offer some general estimates, though some have revised their projections, usually downward,[note 56] and the figures vary from 1 million to 250,000. Apart from bias/ill will, incompetence or changing access to sources, the differences result chiefly from categorisation and methodology issues.
The totals advanced usually include or exclude various categories. Scholars who focus on killings or "violent deaths" most typically list (1) combat and combat-related deaths; figures in this rubric range from 100,000[355][356] to 700,000;[357] (2) rearguard terror, both judicial and extrajudicial, recorded until the end of the Civil War: 103,000[358] to 235,000;[359] (3) civilian deaths from military action, typically air raids: 10,000[359] to 15,000.[360] These categories combined point to totals from 235,000[361] to 715,000.[362] Many authors opt for a broader view and calculate "death toll" by adding also (4) above-the-norm deaths caused by malnutrition,[363] hygiene shortcomings, cold, illness, etc. recorded until the end of the Civil War: 30,000[364] to 630,000.[365] It is not unusual to encounter war statistics which include (5) postwar terror related to Civil War, at times up to the year of 1961: 23,000[366] to 200,000.[359] Some authors also add (6) foreign combat and combat-related deaths: 3,000[367] to 25,000,[366] (7) Spaniards killed in World War II: 6,000,[366] (8) deaths related to postwar guerilla, typically the Invasion of Val d'Aran: 4,000,[366] (9) above-the-norm deaths caused by malnutrition, etc., recorded after the Civil War but related to it: 160,000[366] to 300,000.[368]
Demographers take an entirely different approach; instead of adding up deaths from different categories, they try to gauge the difference between the total number of deaths recorded during the war and the total that would result from applying annual death averages from the 1926–1935 period; this difference is considered excess death resulting from the war. The figure they arrive at for the 1936–1939 period is 346,000; the figure for 1936–1942, including the years of postwar deaths resulting from terror and war sufferings, is 540,000.[note 57] Some scholars go even further and calculate the war's "population loss" or "demographic impact"; in this case they might include also (10) migration abroad: 160,000[note 58] to 730,000[note 59] and (11) decrease in birth rate: 500,000[note 60] to 570,000.[note 61]
Atrocities
[edit]Death totals remain debated. British historian Antony Beevor wrote in his history of the Civil War that Franco's ensuing "white terror" resulted in the deaths of 200,000 people and that the "red terror" killed 38,000.[369] Julius Ruiz contends that, "Although the figures remain disputed, a minimum of 37,843 executions were carried out in the Republican zone, with a maximum of 150,000 executions (including 50,000 after the war) in Nationalist Spain".[370] Historian Michael Seidman stated that the Nationalists killed approximately 130,000 people and the Republicans approximately 50,000 people.[371]
In 2008 a Spanish judge, Baltasar Garzón, opened an investigation into the executions and disappearances of 114,266 people between 17 July 1936 and December 1951. Among the executions investigated was that of the poet and dramatist Federico García Lorca, whose body has never been found.[372] Mention of García Lorca's death was forbidden during Franco's regime.[373]
Research since 2016 has started to locate mass graves, using a combination of witness testimony, remote sensing and forensic geophysics techniques.[374]
Historians such as Helen Graham,[375] Paul Preston,[376] Antony Beevor,[21] Gabriel Jackson[377] and Hugh Thomas[378] argue that the mass executions behind the Nationalist lines were organised and approved by the Nationalist rebel authorities, while the executions behind the Republican lines were the result of the breakdown of the Republican state and chaos:
Though there was much wanton killing in rebel Spain, the idea of the limpieza, the "cleaning up", of the country from the evils which had overtaken it, was a disciplined policy of the new authorities and a part of their programme of regeneration. In republican Spain, most of the killing was the consequence of anarchy, the outcome of a national breakdown, and not the work of the state, although some political parties in some cities abetted the enormities, and some of those responsible ultimately rose to positions of authority.
— Hugh Thomas[379]
Conversely, historians such as Stanley Payne, Julius Ruiz[380] and José Sánchez[381] argue that the political violence in the Republican zone was in fact organized by the left:
In general, this was not an irrepressible outpouring of hatred, by the man in the street for his "oppressors", as it has sometimes been painted, but a semi-organized activity carried out by sections of nearly all the leftist groups. In the entire leftist zone the only organized political party that eschewed involvement in such activity were the Basque Nationalists.[382]
Nationalists
[edit]Nationalist atrocities, which authorities frequently ordered so as to eradicate any trace of "leftism" in Spain, were common. The notion of a limpieza (cleansing) formed an essential part of the rebel strategy, and the process began immediately after an area had been captured.[383] Estimates of the death toll vary; historian Paul Preston estimates the minimum number of those executed by the rebels as 130,000,[384] while Antony Beevor places the figure much higher at an estimated 200,000 dead.[385] The violence was carried out in the rebel zone by the military, the Civil Guard and the Falange in the name of the regime.[386] Julius Ruiz reports that the Nationalists killed 100,000 people during the war and executed at least 28,000 immediately after. The first three months of the war were the bloodiest, with 50 to 70 percent of all executions carried out by Franco's regime, from 1936 to 1975, occurring during this period.[387] The first few months of killings lacked much in the way of centralisation, being largely in the hands of local commanders. According to Stanely Payne and Jesús Palacios, General Mola was taken aback by them, despite his own planning emphasising the need for violence; early in the conflict he had ordered a group of leftist militiamen to be immediately executed, only to change his mind and rescind the order.[388]
Many such acts were committed by reactionary groups during the first weeks of the war.[386] This included the execution of schoolteachers,[389] because the efforts of the Second Spanish Republic to promote laicism and displace the Church from schools by closing religious educational institutions were considered by the Nationalists as an attack on the Roman Catholic Church. Extensive killings of civilians were carried out in the cities captured by the Nationalists,[390] along with the execution of unwanted individuals. These included non-combatants such as trade-unionists, Popular Front politicians, suspected Freemasons, Basque, Catalan, Andalusian, and Galician Nationalists, Republican intellectuals, relatives of known Republicans, and those suspected of voting for the Popular Front.[386][391][392][393][394] The Nationalists also frequently killed military officers who refused to support them in the early days of the coup.[395] Many killings in the first few months were often done by vigilantes and civilian death squads, with the Nationalist leadership often condoning their actions or even assisting them.[396] Post-war executions were conducted by military tribunal, though the accused had limited ways to defend themselves. A large number of the executed were done so for their political activities or positions they held under the Republic during the war, though those who committed their own killings under the Republic were also amongst executed as well.[397] A 2010 analysis of Catalonia argued that Nationalist executions were more likely to occur when they occupied an area that experienced greater prior violence, likely due to pro-Nationalist civilians seeking revenge for earlier actions by denouncing others to the Nationalist forces.[398] Michael Seidman argues that the Nationalists' greater death toll may be partially attributable to their military success resulting in territorial gains and thus more opportunities to enact violence against their enemies.[399] However, during the war, executions declined as the Francoist state began to establish itself.[400]
Nationalist forces massacred civilians in Seville, where some 8,000 people were shot; 10,000 were killed in Cordoba; 6,000–12,000 were killed in Badajoz[401] after more than 1,000 landowners and conservatives were killed by the revolutionaries. In Granada, where working-class neighbourhoods were hit with artillery and right-wing squads were given free rein to kill government sympathizers,[402] at least 2,000 people were murdered.[389] In February 1937, over 7,000 were killed after the capture of Málaga.[403] When Bilbao was conquered, thousands of people were sent to prison. There were fewer executions than usual, however, because of the effect Guernica left on Nationalists' reputations internationally.[404] The numbers killed as the columns of the Army of Africa devastated and pillaged their way between Seville and Madrid are particularly difficult to calculate.[405] Landowners who owned the large estates of Southern Spain rode alongside the Army of Africa to reclaim via force of arms the land given to the landless peasants by the Republican government. Rural workers were executed, and it was mockingly joked that they had received their "land reform" in the form of a burial plot.[406]
Nationalists also murdered Catholic clerics. In one particular incident, following the capture of Bilbao, they took hundreds of people, including 16 priests who had served as chaplains for the Republican forces, to the countryside or graveyards and murdered them.[407][408]
Franco's forces also persecuted Protestants, including murdering 20 Protestant ministers.[409] Franco's forces were determined to remove the "Protestant heresy" from Spain.[410] The Nationalists also persecuted Basques, as they strove to eradicate Basque culture.[299] According to Basque sources, some 22,000 Basques were murdered by Nationalists immediately after the Civil War.[411]
The Nationalist side conducted aerial bombing of cities in Republican territory, carried out mainly by the Luftwaffe volunteers of the Condor Legion and the Italian air force volunteers of the Corpo Truppe Volontarie: Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Guernica, Durango, and other cities were attacked. The Bombing of Guernica was the most controversial.[412] The Italian air force conducted a particularly heavy bombing raid on Barcelona in early 1938. While some Nationalist leaders did oppose the bombing of the city—for example, Generals Yagüe and Moscardó, who were noted for being nonconformists, protested against the indiscriminate destruction—other Nationalist leaders, often those of a fascist persuasion, approved of the bombings which they saw as necessary to "cleanse" Barcelona.[413]
Michael Seidman observes that the Nationalist terror was a key part of the Nationalist victory as it allowed them to secure their rear; the Russian Whites, in their civil war, had struggled to suppress peasant rebellions, bandits and warlordism behind their lines; British observers argued that if the Russian Whites had been able to secure law and order behind their lines, they would have won over the Russian peasantry, while the inability of the Chinese Nationalists to stop banditry during the Chinese Civil War did severe damage to the regime's legitimacy. The Spanish Nationalists, in contrast, imposed a puritanically terrorist order on the populace in their territory. They never suffered from serious partisan activity behind their lines and the fact that banditry did not develop into a serious problem in Spain, despite how easy it would have been in such mountainous terrain, demands explanation. Seidman argues that severe terror, combined with control of the food supply, explains the general lack of guerilla warfare in the Nationalist rear.[414] A 2009 analysis of Nationalist violence argues that evidence supports the view that killings were used strategically by the Nationalists to pre-emptively counter potential opposition by targeting individuals and groups deemed most likely to cultivate future rebellions, thus helping the Nationalists win the war.[415]
Republicans
[edit]Scholars have estimated that between 38,000[416] and 70,000[417] civilians were killed in Republican-held territories, with the most common estimate being around 50,000.[418][419][420][421]
Whatever the exact number, the death toll was far exaggerated by both sides, for propaganda reasons, giving birth to the legend of the millón de muertos.[note 62] Franco's government would later give names of 61,000 victims of the red terrors, but which are not considered objectively verifiable.[162] The deaths would form the prevailing outside opinion of the republic up until the bombing of Guernica.[416]
The leftist Revolution of 1936 that preceded the war was accompanied since the first months by an escalation of leftist anticlerical terror that, between 18 and 31 July alone, killed 839 religious, continuing during the month of August with 2055 other victims, including 10 bishops killed, that was 42% of the total number of registered victims in that year.[422] Particularly noteworthy repression was conducted in Madrid during the war.
The Republican government was anticlerical, and, when the war began, supporters attacked and murdered Roman Catholic clergy in reaction to the news of military revolt.[408] In his 1961 book, Spanish archbishop Antonio Montero Moreno, who at the time was director of the journal Ecclesia, wrote that 6,832 were killed during the war, including 4,184 priests, 2,365 monks and friars, and 283 nuns (many were first raped before they died),[423][424] in addition to 13 bishops, a figure accepted by historians, including Beevor.[425][426][427] Some of the killings were carried out with extreme cruelty, some were burned to death, there are reports of castration and disembowelment.[425] Some sources claim that by the conflict's end, 20 percent of the nation's clergy had been killed.[428][note 63] The "Execution" of the Sacred Heart of Jesus by Communist militiamen at Cerro de los Ángeles near Madrid, on 7 August 1936, was the most infamous of widespread desecration of religious property.[429] In dioceses where the Republicans had general control, a large proportion—often a majority—of secular priests were killed.[430] Michael Seidman argues that the hatred of the Republicans for the clergy was in excess of anything else; while local revolutionaries might spare the lives of the rich and right-wingers, they seldom offered the same to priests.[76]
Like clergy, civilians were executed in Republican territories. Some civilians were executed as suspected Falangists.[431] Others died in acts of revenge after Republicans heard of massacres carried out in the Nationalist zone.[432] Even families who simply attended Catholic Mass were hunted down; including children.[433][434] Air raids committed against Republican cities were another driving factor.[435] Shopkeepers and industrialists were shot if they did not sympathise with the Republicans and were usually spared if they did.[436] Fake justice was sought through commissions, named checas after the Soviet secret police organization.[431]
Many killings were done by paseos, impromptu death squads that emerged as a spontaneous practice amongst revolutionary activists in Republican areas. According to Seidman, the Republican government only made efforts to stop the actions of the paseos late in the war; during the first few months, the government either tolerated it or made no efforts to stop it.[438] The killings often contained a symbolic element, as those killed were seen as embodying an oppressive source of power and authority. This was also why the Republicans would kill priests or employers who were not considered to personally have done anything wrong but were nonetheless seen as representing the old oppressive order that needed to be destroyed.[439]
There was infighting between the Republican factions, and the Communists following Stalinism declared the Workers' Party of Marxist Unification (POUM), an anti-Stalinist communist party, to be an illegal organization, along with the Anarchists. The Stalinists betrayed and committed mass atrocities on the other Republican factions, such as torture and mass executions. George Orwell would record this in his Homage to Catalonia as well as write Nineteen Eighty-Four and Animal Farm to criticize Stalinism.[440][441] As pressure mounted with the increasing success of the Nationalists, many civilians were executed by councils and tribunals controlled by competing Communist and anarchist groups.[431] Some members of the latter were executed by Soviet-advised communist functionaries in Catalonia,[437] as recounted by George Orwell's description of the purges in Barcelona in 1937 in which followed a period of increasing tension between competing elements of the Catalan political scene. Some individuals fled to friendly embassies, which would house up to 8,500 people during the war.[432]
In the Andalusian town of Ronda, 512 suspected Nationalists were executed in the first month of the war.[437] Communist Santiago Carrillo Solares was accused of the killing of Nationalists in the Paracuellos massacre near Paracuellos de Jarama.[443] Pro-Soviet Communists committed numerous atrocities against fellow Republicans, including other Marxists: André Marty, known as the Butcher of Albacete, was responsible for the deaths of some 500 members of the International Brigades.[444] Andrés Nin, leader of the POUM (Workers' Party of Marxist Unification), and many other prominent POUM members, were murdered by the Communists, with the help of the USSR's NKVD.[445]
The Republicans also conducted their own bombing attacks on cities, such as the bombing of Cabra. According to Stanley Payne and Jesús Palacios, the Republicans conducted more indiscriminate air raids on cities and civilian targets than the Nationalists,[446] although their attacks were often weak and ineffective.[447] Michael Seidman argues that the better trained Nationalist air force was more effective at inflicting casualties, killing an estimated 11,000 civilians compared to approximately 4,000 for the Republican air force.[448]
38,000 people were killed in the Republican zone during the war, 17,000 of whom were killed in Madrid or Catalonia within a month of the coup. Whilst the Communists were forthright in their support of extrajudicial killings, much of the Republican side was appalled by the murders.[449] Azaña came close to resigning.[432] He, alongside other members of Parliament and a great number of other local officials, attempted to prevent Nationalist supporters from being lynched. Some of those in positions of power intervened personally to stop the killings.[449]
Social revolution
[edit]In the anarchist-controlled areas, Aragon and Catalonia, in addition to the temporary military success, there was a vast social revolution in which the workers and peasants collectivised land and industry and set up councils parallel to the paralyzed Republican government.[450] This revolution was opposed by the Soviet-supported communists who campaigned against the loss of civil property rights.[450]
As the war progressed, the government and the communists were able to exploit their access to Soviet arms to restore government control over the war effort, through diplomacy and force.[445] Anarchists and the Workers' Party of Marxist Unification (Partido Obrero de Unificación Marxista, POUM) were integrated into the regular army, albeit with resistance. The POUM Trotskyists were outlawed and denounced by the Soviet-aligned Communists as an instrument of the fascists.[445] In the May Days of 1937, many thousands of anarchist and communist Republican soldiers fought for control of strategic points in Barcelona.[294]
The pre-war Falange was a small party of some 30,000–40,000 members.[451] It also called for a social revolution that would have seen Spanish society transformed by National Syndicalism.[452] Following the execution of its leader, José Antonio Primo de Rivera, by the Republicans, the party swelled in size to several hundred thousand members.[453] The leadership of the Falange suffered 60 percent casualties in the early days of the civil war, and the party was transformed by new members and rising new leaders, called camisas nuevas ("new shirts"), who were less interested in the revolutionary aspects of National Syndicalism.[454] Subsequently, Franco united all fighting groups into the Traditionalist Spanish Falange and the National Syndicalist Offensive Juntas (Spanish: Falange Española Tradicionalista de las Juntas de Ofensiva Nacional-Sindicalista, FET y de las JONS).[455]
The 1930s also saw Spain become a focus for pacifist organisations, including the Fellowship of Reconciliation, the War Resisters League, and the War Resisters' International. Many people including, as they are now called, the insumisos ("defiant ones", conscientious objectors) argued and worked for non-violent strategies. Prominent Spanish pacifists, such as Amparo Poch y Gascón and José Brocca, supported the Republicans. Brocca argued that Spanish pacifists had no alternative but to make a stand against fascism. He put this stand into practice by various means, including organizing agricultural workers to maintain food supplies, and through humanitarian work with war refugees.[note 64]
Art and propaganda
[edit]Throughout the course of the Spanish Civil War, people all over the world were exposed to the goings-on and effects of it on its people not only through standard art, but also through propaganda. Motion pictures, posters, books, radio programs, and leaflets are a few examples of this media art that was so influential during the war. Produced by both nationalists and republicans, propaganda allowed Spaniards a way to spread awareness about their war all over the world. A film co-produced by famous early-twentieth century authors such as Ernest Hemingway and Lillian Hellman was used as a way to advertise Spain's need for military and monetary aid. This film, The Spanish Earth, premiered in America in July 1937. In 1938, George Orwell's Homage to Catalonia, a personal account of his experiences and observations in the war, was published in the United Kingdom. In 1939, Jean-Paul Sartre published in France a short story, "The Wall" in which he describes the last night of prisoners of war sentenced to death by shooting.
Leading works of sculpture include Alberto Sánchez Pérez's El pueblo español tiene un camino que conduce a una estrella ("The Spanish People Have a Path that Leads to a Star"), a 12.5 m monolith constructed out of plaster representing the struggle for a socialist utopia;[456] Julio González's La Montserrat, an anti-war work which shares its title with a mountain near Barcelona, is created from a sheet of iron which has been hammered and welded to create a peasant mother carrying a small child in one arm and a sickle in the other. and Alexander Calder's Fuente de mercurio (Mercury Fountain) a protest work by the American against the Nationalist forced control of Almadén and the mercury mines there.[457]
Salvador Dalí responded to the conflict in his homeland with two powerful oil paintings in 1936: Soft Construction with Boiled Beans: A Premonition of Civil War (Philadelphia Museum of Art) and Autumnal Cannibalism (Tate Modern, London). Of the former, the art historian Robert Hughes stated, "Salvador Dalí appropriated the horizontal thigh of Goya's crouching Saturn for the hybrid monster in the painting Soft Construction with Boiled Beans, Premonition of Civil War, which rather than Picasso's Guernica – is the finest single work of visual art inspired by the Spanish Civil War."[458]: 383 p. On the later, Dalí commented "These Iberian beings mutually devouring each other correspond to the pathos of civil war considered as a pure phenomenon of natural history as opposed to Picasso who considered it a political phenomenon."[459]: 223 p.
Pablo Picasso painted Guernica in 1937, inspired by the bombing of Guernica and influenced by Leonardo da Vinci's Battle of Anghiari. Guernica, like many important Republican masterpieces, was featured at the 1937 International Exhibition in Paris. The work's size (11 ft by 25.6 ft) grabbed much attention and cast the horrors of the mounting Spanish civil unrest into a global spotlight.[460] The painting has since been heralded as an antiwar work and a symbol of peace in the 20th century.[461]
Joan Miró created El Segador (The Reaper) in 1937, formally titled El campesino catalán en rebeldía (Catalan peasant in revolt), which spans some 18 by 12 feet (5.5 by 3.7 m)[462] and depicted a peasant brandishing a sickle in the air, to which Miró commented that "The sickle is not a communist symbol. It is the reaper's symbol, the tool of his work, and, when his freedom is threatened, his weapon."[463] This work, also featured at the 1937 International Exhibition in Paris, was shipped back to the Spanish Republic's capital in Valencia following the Exhibition, but has since gone missing or has been destroyed.[462]
The Army of Africa would feature a place in propaganda on both sides, due to the complex history of the Army and Spanish colonialism in North Africa. Both sides would invent different characters of the Moorish troops, drawing on a wide range of historical symbols, cultural prejudices and racial stereotypes. The Army of Africa would be used as part of a propaganda campaign by both sides to portray the other side as foreign invaders attacking from outside the national community, while portraying their own as representing "true Spain".[464]
Consequences
[edit]Economic effects
[edit]Costs for the war on both sides were very high. Monetary resources on the Republican side were completely drained from weapons acquisition. On the Nationalist side, the biggest losses came after the conflict, when they had to let Germany exploit the country's mining resources, so until the beginning of World War II they barely had the chance to make any profit.[465]
Victims
[edit]The number of civilian victims is still being discussed, with some estimating approximately 500,000 victims, while others go as high as 1,000,000.[466] These deaths were not only due to combat, but also executions, which were especially well-organised and systematic on the Nationalist side, being more disorganised on the Republican side (mainly caused by loss of control of the armed masses by the government).[467] However, the 500,000 death toll does not include deaths by malnutrition, hunger or diseases brought about by the war.
Francoist repression after the war and Republican exile
[edit]After the War, the Francoist regime initiated a repressive process against the losing side, a "cleansing" of sorts against anything or anyone associated with the Republic. This process led many to exile or death. Exile happened in three waves. The first one was during the Northern Campaign (March–November 1937), followed by a second wave, called La Retirada, after the fall of Catalonia (January–February 1939), in which about 500,000 people fled to France. The French authorities had to improvise concentration camps, with such hard conditions that almost half of the exiled Spaniards returned. The third wave occurred after the War, at the end of March 1939, when thousands of Republicans tried to board ships to exile, although few succeeded.[468]
International relations
[edit]The political and emotional repercussions of the War transcended the national scale, becoming a precursor to the Second World War.[469] The war has frequently been described by historians as the "prelude to" or the "opening round of" the Second World War, as part of an international battle against fascism. Historian Stanley Payne suggests that this view is an incorrect summary of the geopolitic position of the interwar period, arguing that the international alliance that was created in December 1941, once the United States entered the Second World War, was politically much broader than the Spanish Popular Front. The Spanish Civil War, Payne argues, was thus a far more clear-cut revolutionary and counter-revolutionary struggle between the left and right wings, while the Second World War initially had fascists and communist powers on the same side with the combined Nazi-Soviet invasion of Poland. Payne suggests that instead the civil war was the last of the revolutionary crises that emerged from the First World War, observing it had parallels such as the complete revolutionary breakdown of domestic institutions, the development of full-scale revolutionary and counter-revolutionary struggles, the development of a typical post-WW1 communist force in the form of the People's Army, an extreme exacerbation of nationalism, the frequent use of WW1-style military weapons and tactics and the fact that it was not the product of the plan of any of the major powers, making it more similar to the post-WW1 crises which arose after the Treaty of Versailles.[470][471]
After the War, Spanish policy leaned heavily towards Germany, Portugal and Italy, since they had been the greatest Nationalist supporters and aligned with Spain ideologically. However, the end of the Civil War and later the Second World War saw the isolation of the country from most other nations until the 1950s, in which the American anti-Communist international policy favoured having a far-right and extremely anti-communist ally in Europe.[472]
Interpretations; civil war in perspective
[edit]There have been numerous attempts to define the Spanish Civil War in terms of its key mechanism, prevailing logic and dominant conflict line; many of these interpretations strove also to identify the conflict in terms of major threads of continental or even global history. These attempts might not differ much from propaganda, advanced by both warring parties or their sympathizers; they might form part of broad public discourse, either in Spain or abroad; they might also belong to professional academic historiographic debate. Major theories are listed in the below table.
Spanish Civil War as: | related concepts or variants | proponents (examples) | related quotation |
---|---|---|---|
clash of European nationalisms | Basque-Spanish war, Catalan struggle for independence, climax of imperialist nationalisms | Basque propaganda,[473] Julen Madariaga, Xosé M. Núñez Seixas | "[gudaris] de la guerra 36–37, víctimas de la última y más incivilizada agresión extranjera perpetrada contra Euskal Herria",[474] "la guerra ha sido y es un factor intrínsicamente unido, y a menudo deseñado, en el desarollo histórico de las identidades nacionales y los nacionalismos europeos"[475] |
clash of totalitarian systems | violent conflict of radicalised and polarised masses, Communism vs Fascism/Nazism, totalitarian regimes fighting by proxies | Antony Beevor, George Orwell | "I remember saying once to Arthur Koestler, 'History stopped in 1936', at which he nodded in immediate understanding. We were both thinking of totalitarianism in general, but more particularly of the Spanish Civil War"[476] |
democracy vs dictatorship | liberty vs Fascist oppression, freedom vs Communist tyranny, peoples against tyrants | Komintern propaganda, Francoist propaganda | [Republican] "defeat by the forces of International Fascism would be a major disaster for Europe",[477] "the fight in Spain is between the forces of freedom, democracy, justice, and the forces of reaction, tyranny, obscurantism, admits no doubt",[478] "el pueblo con su propio esfuerzo en la lucha contra la tiranía comunista"[479] |
episode of European civil war | melting pot of universal battles, Spaniards vs Spaniards, Irish vs Irish, Italians vs Italians, Russians vs Russians, "European cockpit" | Julian Casanova | "prologue to the European civil war of a few years later",[480] "it evolved into an episode of a European civil war that ended in 1945",[481] "melting pot of universal battles between bosses and workers, Church and State, obscurantism and modernism"[482] |
episode of long internal Spanish conflict | Fourth Carlist War, modernity vs traditionalism, typically Spanish fanatic sectarian violence | Mark Lawrence, Carlist propaganda, Spanish Black Legend propagandists | "civil war dominates modern Spain more than any other Western European country",[483] "the rebellion that began in 1936 was the climax to a long and tortuous period of political experiment"[484] |
epilogue to WW1 | breakdown of old-style society, rapid mobilisation of the masses, convulsive post-monarchic period | Stanley G. Payne | resembled more "a post-World War I crisis than a crisis of the era of World War II", "the Spanish crisis of the spring and summer of 1936 was in key respects the Spanish version of the revolutionary and counterrevolutionary crises that affected various central and eastern European countries between 1917 and 1923"[485] |
left vs right | local and exceptionally violent outbreak of long-standing universal political conflict, whites vs reds | Harold Nicolson, Sandra Halperin | "a military struggle between left- and right-wing elements in Spain",[486] "traditional explanation of the Civil War in terms of the left vs right political confrontation",[487] "polarization between left and right in Western Europe escalated into armed conflict with the outbreak of the civil war in Spain"[488][489] |
paradigm of a civil war | benchmark for civil war categorizations, laboratory of civil war, the most typical case of civil war, point of reference | Laia Balcells | "the Spanish, along with the American Civil War, is a paradigmatic case of conventional civil war"[490] |
prologue to Cold War | confronting and containing Communism, free world vs Soviet imperialism, civilized West vs barbaric East | Luis de Galinsoga, Francoist propaganda | Franco as "Centinela de Occidente"[491] |
prologue to WW2 | fight against Fascism, democratic Europe against the Axis, pre-configuration of WW2 alliances | Patricia van der Esch, many others | "prelude to war",[492] "I think in many ways it was the first battle of World War II",[493] "in this context, the Spanish civil war can be regarded as the prologue and preface to the Second World War",[494] "microcosmic prologue to the battle between fascism and democracy that was the Second World War"[495] |
revolution vs counter-revolution | class struggle, proletariat vs bourgeoisie, Spanish peoples in national-revolutionary struggle | Eric Hobsbawm, Stanley G. Payne, later (not wartime) Soviet propaganda | "only occasionally has the war been analyzed in terms of its most accurate definition, as a revolutionary/counterrevolutionary struggle",[496] "национально-революционная война испанского народа"[497] |
religious war | Cruzada, Catholicism vs barbaric atheism, war of cultures, civic society vs Catholic fanaticism | Francoist propaganda (e.g. Juan Tusquets), José Sánchez, Mary Vincent | "To many, religion became the most divisive issue of the war, the single problem that distinguished one fraction from another",[498] "consideraté soldado de una cruzada que pone Dios como fin y en El confía el triunfo"[499] |
Spanish war of independence | Spaniards vs foreign Judeo-Bolshevik aggression, Spaniards vs foreign Fascist invasion, guerra de liberación, Spain vs anti-Spain | Communist propaganda, Francoist propaganda | "nuestra guerra de independencia nacional contra el invasor y el fascismo tiene muchos puntos semejantes con la lucha heroica y victoriosa del pueblo soviético",[500] "Está en litigio la existencia misma de España como entidad y como unidad",[501] "guerra de liberación que se vivía en España"[502] |
See also
[edit]- List of Spanish Nationalist military equipment of the Spanish Civil War
- List of weapons of the Corpo Truppe Volontarie
- Aviazione Legionaria
- Condor Legion
- List of Spanish Republican military equipment of the Spanish Civil War
- Art and culture in Francoist Spain
- Catholicism in the Second Spanish Republic
- The Falling Soldier
- Foreign involvement in the Spanish Civil War
- Francoist Spain
- Jewish volunteers in the Spanish Civil War
- List of foreign correspondents in the Spanish Civil War
- List of foreign ships wrecked or lost in the Spanish Civil War
- List of war films and TV specials set between 1914 and 1945#Spanish_Civil_War_(1936–1939)
- Martyrs of the Spanish Civil War
- Pacifism in Spain
- Political parties and organizations in the Spanish Civil War
- Revisionism (Spain)
- Spain in World War II
- Invasion of Val d'Aran
- Spanish Republican Armed Forces
- SS Cantabria (1919)
- Timeline of the Spanish Civil War
- Category:Exiles of the Spanish Civil War
- Spanish Republican exiles
- Robert Capa
- Hugo Jaeger
Notes
[edit]- ^ The POUM fought in the Spanish Civil War from 17 July 1936 until 16 June 1937, when the POUM was illegalized and suppressed by the Popular Front Republican government led by Prime Minister Juan Negrín, with the government suppression of the POUM supported by Joseph Stalin, the Comintern and the PCE.
- ^ The Euzko Gudarostea fought in the Spanish Civil War from 17 July 1936 until it surrendered to the Italian Corpo Truppe Volontarie in the Santoña Agreement on 24 August 1937.
- ^ The only party under Francisco Franco from 1937 onward, a merger of the other factions on the Nationalist side.
- ^ a b c d 1936–1937, then merged into FET y de las JONS
- ^ See Death toll section.
- ^ Also known as The Crusade (Spanish: La Cruzada) or The Revolution (Spanish: La Revolución) among Nationalists, the Fourth Carlist War (Spanish: Cuarta Guerra Carlista) among Carlists, and The Rebellion (Spanish: La Rebelión) or The Uprising (Spanish: La Sublevación) among Republicans.
- ^ Westwell (2004) gives a figure of 500 million Reichsmarks.
- ^ "The Roman salute characteristic of Italian fascism was first adopted by the PNE and the JONS, later spreading to the Falange and other extreme right groups, before it became the official salute in Franco's Spain. The JAP salute, which consisted of stretching the right arm horizontally to touch the left shoulder enjoyed only relatively little acceptance. The gesture of the raised fist, so widespread among left-wing workers' groups, gave rise to more regimented variations, such as the salute with the fist on one's temple, characteristic of the German Rotfront, which was adopted by the republican Popular Army". The Splintering of Spain, pp. 36–37
- ^ the war lasted 986 days; dollars are quoted at their nominal value of the late 1930s
- ^ in 1934 the Spanish military spendings as reported by the statistical office were 958m ptas; in 1935 they were 1.065m ptas, Huerta Barajas Justo Alberto (2016), Gobierno u administración militar en la II República Española, ISBN 978-8434023031, p. 805. The peseta to dolar exchange rate for 1935 varied from 7.32 in August to 7.38 in January, Martínez Méndez P. (1990), Nuevos datos sobre la evolución de la peseta entre 1900 y 1936, ISBN 8477930724, p. 14
- ^ when assessing financial cost of waging the war, some scholars limit their analysis to foreign resources only and set expenditures of both sides at some $0,7bn each, compare e.g. Romero Salvado, Francisco J. (2013), Historical Dictionary of the Spanish Civil War, ISBN 978-0810857841, p. 20. Similarly, another author claims that "the republican authorities obtained 714 million dollars, and this was the financial cost of the civil war for the Republicans", while "the financial cost of the war on the Francoist side was very similar, between 694 and 716 million dollars".[337] The same author claims in the same work that "losing the war cost the Republic almost as much as Franco spent on winning it, some six hundred million dollars on each side" (p. 185)
- ^ exact figures differ; one source claims $0,45bn for Italy and $0,23bn for Germany, Romero Salvado 2013, p. 20; the rest was mostly private credit from British (e.g. Rio Tinto) or US (e.g. Texaco) companies
- ^ earlier studies suggested that the Republican military expenditures were 4 times larger than the Nationalist ones (40bn ptas v. 12bn ptas); the conclusion drawn was that the Republicans have grossly mismanaged their resources. Recent studies claim that the above figures are calculated in nominal terms, and that entirely different picture emerges when inflation and exchange rates are taken into account,[333]
- ^ highest considered estimate; "la guerra civil fue una espantosa calamidad en la que todas las clases y todos los partidos perdieron. Además del millión o dos milliones de muertos, la salud del pueblo se ha visto minada por su secuela de hambre y enfermedades", Brennan, Gerald (1978), El laberinto español. Antecedentes sociales y políticos de la guerra civil, ISBN 978-8485361038, p. 20
- ^ some press estimates from the era, see e.g. "one and a half million Spaniards have already been killed in the war", Spain's War Goes On, [in:] Daily Record [Britain] 28 March 1939
- ^ initial estimate of Ramón Salas Larrazábal, El mito del millón de muertos, includes victims of malnutrition, cold etc, includes birth deficit assumed to be caused by the war
- ^ "esta cruenta lucha le costó a España 1 200 000 muertos entre combatientes y civiles", Pazos Beceiro, Carlos (2004), La globalización económica neoliberal y la guerra, ISBN 978-9597071266, p. 116
- ^ Lee, Stephen J. (2000), European Dictatorships, 1918–1945, ISBN 978-0415230452, p. 248; "a reasonable estimate, and a rather conservative one", Howard Griffin, John, Simon, Yves René (1974), Jacques Maritain: Homage in Words and Pictures, ISBN 978-0873430463, p. 11; military casualties only, Ash, Russell (2003), The Top 10 of Everything 2004, ISBN 978-0789496591, p. 68; lowest considered estimate, Brennan (1978), p. 20. The phrase of "one million dead" became a cliche since the 1960s, and many older Spaniards might repeat that "yo siempre había escuchado lo del millon de muertos", compare burbuja service, available here. This is so due to extreme popularity of a 1961 novel Un millón de muertos by José María Gironella, even though the author many times declared that he had in mind those "muerto espiritualmente", referred after Diez Nicolas, Juan (1985), La mortalidad en la Guerra Civil Española, [in:] Boletín de la Asociación de Demografía Histórica III/1, p. 42. Scholars claim also that the figure of "one million deaths" was continuously repeated by Francoist authorities "to drive home the point of having saved the country form ruin", Encarnación, Omar G. (2008), Spanish Politics: Democracy After Dictatorship, ISBN 978-0745639925, p. 24, and became one of the "mitos principales del franquismo", referred as "myth no. 9" in Reig Tapia, Alberto (2017), La crítica de la crítica: Inconsecuentes, insustanciales, impotentes, prepotentes y equidistantes, ISBN 978-8432318658
- ^ 145,000 KIA, 134,000 executed, 630,000 due to sickness, cold etc., Guerre civile d'Espagne, [in:] Encyclopedie Larousse online, available here
- ^ maximum considered estimate, Griffin, Julia Ortiz, Griffin, William D. (2007), Spain and Portugal: A Reference Guide from the Renaissance to the Present, ISBN 978-0816074761, p. 49, "[war] generated around 800,000 deaths", Laia Balcells (2011), Death is in the Air: Bombings in Catalonia, 1936–1939, [in:] Reis 136, p. 199
- ^ "the war cost about 750,000 Spanish lives", A Dictionary of World History (2006), ISBN 978-0192807007, p. 602; also "la poblacion de Espana en 1939 contaba 750,000 personas menos que las esperables si no hubiera habido guerra", ¿Cuántas víctimas se cobró la Guerra Civil? ¿Dónde hubo más?, [in:] El Pais 27.02.2019 [accessed 7 December 2019]
- ^ Coatsworth, John, Cole, Juan, Hanagan, Michael P., Perdue, Peter C., Tilly, Charles, Tilly, Louise (2015), Global Connections, ISBN 978-0521761062, p. 379; divided into 700,000 died "in battle", 30,000 executed and 15,000 of air raids, Dupuy, R. Ernest, Dupuy, Trevor N. (1977), The Encyclopedia of Military History, ISBN 0060111399, p. 1032, the same breakdown in The Encyclopedia of World History (2001), ISBN 978-0395652374, p. 692, and in Teed, Peter (1992),A Dictionary of Twentieth-Century History, ISBN 0192852078, p. 439
- ^ 600,000 killed during the war + 100,000 executed afterwards, Tucker, Spencer C. (2016), World War II: The Definitive Encyclopedia and Document Collection, ISBN 978-1851099696, p. 1563; Georges Soria, Guerra y Revolucion en Espana (1936–1939), vol. 5, Barcelona 1978, p. 87
- ^ when referring reported calculations of Hugh Thomas and divided into 320,000 KIA, 100,000 executed and 220,000 of malnutrition etc., Crow, John Armstrong (1985), Spain: The Root and the Flower : an Interpretation of Spain and the Spanish People, ISBN 978-0520051331, p. 342
- ^ highest considered estimate, Tusell, Javier (1998), Historia de España en el siglo XX. Tomo III. La Dictadura de Franco, ISBN 8430603328, p. 625
- ^ including 285,000 KIA, 125,000 civilians "due to war directed causes", 200,000 malnutrition., Sandler, Stanley (2002), Ground Warfare: An International Encyclopedia, vol. 1, ISBN 978-1576073445, p. 160
- ^ 285,000 in combat, 125,000 executed, 200,000 of malnutrition, Thomas, Hugh (1961), The Spanish Civil War (and other initial editions), referred after Clodfelter, Micheal (2017), Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures, 1492–2015, ISBN 978-0786474707, p. 339
- ^ 100,000 in combat, 220,000 rearguard terror, 10,000 in air raids, 200,000 after-war terror, 50,000 malnutrition etc.; Jackson, Gabriel (1965), The Spanish Republic and the Civil War, 1931–1939, ISBN 978-0691007571, referred after Clodfelter (2017), p. 338
- ^ delta between the total number of deaths recorded in 1936–1942 and the total which would have resulted from extrapolating average annual death total from the 1926–1935 period, Ortega, José Antonio, Silvestre, Javier (2006), Las consecuencias demográficas, [in:] Aceńa, Pablo Martín (ed.), La economía de la guerra civil, ISBN 978-8496467330, p. 76
- ^ excluding "50,000 more fatalities in Franco's prison camps during the immediate postwar period", Smele, Jonathan D. (2015), Historical Dictionary of the Russian Civil Wars, 1916–1926, ISBN 978-1442252813, p. 253
- ^ approximate, excluding post-war terror; Hepworth, Andrea (2017), Site of memory and dismemory: the Valley of the Fallen in Spain, [in:] Gigliotti, Simone, The Memorialization of Genocide, ISBN 978-1317394167, p. 77; highest considered estimate, Seidman, Michael (2011), The Victorious Counterrevolution: The Nationalist Effort in the Spanish Civil War, ISBN 978-0299249632, p. 172; Britannica Concise Encyclopedia (2008), ISBN 978-1593394929, p. 1795; 200,000 in combat, 125,000 executed, 175,000 of malnutrition, Thomas, Hugh (1977), The Spanish Civil War (and later editions), referred after Clodfelter (2017), p. 339; Nowa encyklopedia powszechna PWN (1995), vol. 2, ISBN 830111097X, p. 778; "probably over.." and including 300,000 KIA, Palmer, Alan (1990), Penguin Dictionary of Twentieth-Century History, ISBN 0140511881, p. 371; KIA + victims of terror only, Lowe, Norman (2013), Mastering modern history, London 2013, ISBN 978-1137276940, p. 345; at least, "lost their lives", Palmowski, Jan (2008), The Dictionary of Contemporary World History, ISBN 978-0199295678, p. 643
- ^ 215,000 in combat, 200,000 killed in rearguard, 70,000 due to wartime hardships, 11,000 civilian victims of military operations; the author later rounds up the total to 0,5m, Alonso Millán, Jesús (2015), La guerra total en España (1936–1939), ISBN 978-1512174137, pp. 403–404
- ^ at most 300,000 "violent deaths" + 165,000 above average deaths, Payne, Stanley G. (1987), The Franco Regime, ISBN 978-0299110741, pp. 219–220
- ^ highest considered estimate, Du Souich, Felipe (2011), Apuntes de Historia de Espana Para Los Amigos, ISBN 978-1447527336, p. 62; "at least", "killed", Quigley, Caroll (2004), Tragedy and Hope. A History of the World in our Time, ISBN 094500110X, p. 604.
- ^ 200,000 KIA, 200,000 executed, 20,000 executed after the war, excluding "unknown numbers" of civilians killed in military action and "many more" died of malnutrition etc., Preston, Paul (2012), The Spanish holocaust, ISBN 978-0393239669, p. xi
- ^ Batchelor, Dawho hn (2011), The Mystery on Highway 599, ISBN 978-1456734756, p. 57
- ^ broken down into 120,000 KIA, 15,000 civilians, 107,000 in repression and 165,000 above-the-norm deaths as extracted from calculations of Salas Larrazábal, whose total includes also post-war victims, quoted after Payne 1987, p. 219
- ^ highest considered estimate, Jackson, Gabriel (2005), La Republica Espanola y la Guerra Civil, ISBN 8447336336, p. 14
- ^ Chislett, William (2013), Spain: What Everyone Needs to Know?, ISBN 978-0199936458, p. 42; "probably", Spielvogel, Jackon J. (2013), Western Civilization: A Brief History, ISBN 978-1133606765, p. 603; Mourre, Michel (1978), Dictionaire Encyclopedique d'Histoire, vol. 3, ISBN 204006513X, p. 1636; broken down into 200,000 KIA and 200,000 executed, Bradford, James. C (2006), International Encyclopedia of Military History, vol. 2, ISBN 0415936616, p. 1209; lowest considered estimate, Tusell, Javier (1998), Historia de España en el siglo XX. Tomo III. La Dictadura de Franco, ISBN 8430603328, p. 625
- ^ highest considered estimate, Bowen, Wayne H. (2006), Spain During World War II, ISBN 978-0826265159, p. 113
- ^ Julia, Santos, (1999), Victimas de la guerra, ISBN 978-8478809837, referred after Richards, Michael (2006), El régimen de Franco y la política de memoria de la guerra civil española, [in:] Aróstegui, Julio, Godicheau, François (eds.), Guerra Civil: mito y memoria, ISBN 978-8496467125, p. 173; Richards, Michael (2013), After the Civil War: Making Memory and Re-Making Spain Since 1936, ISBN 978-0521899345, p. 6; Renshaw, Layla (2016), Exhuming Loss: Memory, Materiality and Mass Graves of the Spanish Civil War, ISBN 978-1315428680, p. 22
- ^ delta between the total number of deaths recorded in 1936–1939 and the total which would have resulted from extrapolating average annual death total from the 1926–1935 period, Ortega, Silvestre (2006), p. 76
- ^ does not include post-war losses, Payne, Stanley G. (2012), The Spanish Civil War, ISBN 978-0521174701, p. 245
- ^ "not counting the many thousand who died in the post-war repression or were lost to the ravages of disease and malnutrition, some 340,000 people had been killed: 200,000 on the battlefield, 75,000 in the Nationalist limpieza, 55,000 in the Terror and subsequent acts of judicial murder in the Republican zone, and 10,000 in air raids and the like”, Esdaile, Charles J. (2018), The Spanish Civil War: A Military History, ISBN 9780429859298, p. 310
- ^ lowest considered estimate, includes 150,000 KIA and 185,000 victims of rearguard repression, Bernecker, Walter L. (ed., 2008), Spanien heute: Politik, Wirtschaft, Kultur, ISBN 978-3865274182, p. 109
- ^ lowest considered estimate, Du Souich (2011), p. 62; lowest considered estimate, Jackson (2005), p. 14; 1943 estimate of the Spanish Direccion General de Estadistica, referred after Puche, Javier (2017), Economia, mercado y bienestar humano durante la Guerra Civil Espanola, [in:] Contenciosa V/7, p. 13
- ^ 137,000 KIA, the rest victims of repression, Lauge Hansen, Hans (2013), Auto-Reflection on the Processes of Cultural Re-Memoriation in the Contemporary Spanish Memory Novel, [in:] Nathan R. White (ed.), War, ISBN 978-1626181991, p. 90
- ^ "at least", Hart, Stephen M. (1998), "!No Pasarán!": Art, Literature and the Spanish Civil War, ISBN 978-0729302869, p. 16, Preston, Paul (2003), The Politics of Revenge: Fascism and the Military in 20th-century Spain, ISBN 978-1134811137, p. 40; lowest considered estimate, Seidman, Michael (2011), The Victorious Counterrevolution: The Nationalist Effort in the Spanish Civil War, ISBN 978-0299249632, p. 172; Camps, Pedro Montoliú (2005), Madrid en la Posguerra, ISBN 978-8477371595, p. 375, "at most", excluding deaths from malnutrition etc., The New Encyclopædia Britannica (2017), vol. 11, ISBN 978-1593392925, p. 69; of which 140,000 in combat, Большая Российская энциклопедия, (2008), vol. 12, ISBN 978-5852703439, p. 76
- ^ highest considered estimate, 150,000 in combat and 140,000 executed, Moa, Pio (2015), Los mitos del franquismo, ISBN 978-8490603741, p. 44
- ^ "at least", Hitchcock, William L. (2008), The Struggle for Europe: The Turbulent History of a Divided Continent 1945 to the Present, ISBN 978-0307491404, p. 271
- ^ 100,000 in combat, 135,000 executed, 30,000 other causes. Muñoz, Miguel A. (2009). Reflexiones en torno a nuestro pasado (in Spanish). Cultivalibros. p. 375. ISBN 978-8499231464.
- ^ "muertos a causa de la Guerra", includes victims of post-war terror. The figure is based on totals reported as "violent deaths" in the official statistics for 1936–1942 and calculated by Ramón Tamames, Breve historia de la Guerra Civil espanola, Barcelona 2011, ISBN 978-8466650359, chapter "Impactos demograficos" (page unavailable). Tamames suggests that the actual number of victims is probably much higher than this given by official statistics
- ^ lowest considered estimate, 145,000 in combat and 110,000 executed, Moa (2015), p. 44
- ^ lowest considered estimate, Bowen (2006), p. 113
- ^ 103,000 executed during the war, 28,000 executed afterwards, around 100,000 KIA, Martínez de Baños Carrillo, Fernando, Szafran, Agnieszka (2011), El general Walter, ISBN 978-8492888061, p. 324
- ^ the total reported as "muerte violenta o casual" for 1936–1939 in official statistics released by Instituto Nacional de Estadistica in 1943, might include accidental deaths (car accidents etc.) and covers all months of 1936 and 1939, excludes "homicidio" category (39,028 for 1936–1939), referred after Diez Nicolas (1985), p. 54
- ^ the number which emerges from the official statistics as provided during the early Francoist era and calculated later by Ramón Tamames, who analyses the figures released in 1951 by Instituto Nacional de Estadistica. Tamames added figures reported in the "violent deaths" rubric for 1936, 1937 and 1938 and 25% of the same category for 1939; then he deducted annual averages for "violent deaths" reported by INE in the mid-1930s to arrive at 149,213. Tamames suggests that the actual figure is probably "mucho mayor", Tamames (2011)
- ^ "provocó un número de caidós en combate sin precedentes, casi tantos como los muertos y desaparecidos en la retaguardia", Diccionario de historia y política del siglo XX (2001), ISBN 843093703X, p. 316, "habia comportado centenares de miles de muertos", Marín, José María, Ysàs, Carme Molinero (2001), Historia política de España, 1939–2000, vol. 2, ISBN 978-8470903199, p. 17
- ^ Tusell, Javier, Martín, José Luis, Shaw, Carlos (2001), Historia de España: La edad contemporánea, vol. 2, ISBN 978-8430604357, Pérez, Joseph (1999), Historia de España, ISBN 978-8474238655, Tusell, Javier (2007), Historia de España en el siglo XX, vol. 2, ISBN 978-8430606306
- ^ e.g. Stanley G. Payne reduced his earlier estimate of 465,000 (at most 300,000 "violent deaths" with 165,000 deaths from malnutrition which "must be added", Payne (1987), p. 220) to 344,000 (also "violent deaths" and malnutrition victims, Payne (2012), p. 245); Hugh Thomas in The Spanish Civil War editions from the 1960s opted for 600,000 (285,000 KIA, 125,000 executed, 200,000 malnutrition), in editions from the 1970s he reduced the figure to 500,000 (200,000 KIA, 125,000 executed, 175,000 malnutrition), referred after Clodfeler (2017), p. 383 and with slight revisions kept reproducing the figure also in last editions published before his death, compare Thomas, Hugh (2003), La Guerra Civil Española, vol. 2, ISBN 8497598229, p. 993; Gabriel Jackson went down from 580,000 (including 420,000 victims of war and post-war terror), see Jackson (1965) to a range of 405,000–330,000 (including 220,000 to 170,000 victims of war and post-war terror), Jackson (2005), p. 14
- ^ Ortega, Silvestre (2006), p. 76; slightly different figures, 344,000 and 558,000, in earlier study completed using the same method, see Diez Nicolas (1985), p. 48.
- ^ only those who did not return to Spain, Payne (1987), p. 220.
- ^ Ortega, Silvestre (2006), p. 80; the number of migrants usually quoted is 450,000, which refers only to these who crossed to France in the first months of 1939, López, Fernando Martínez (2010), París, ciudad de acogida: el exilio español durante los siglos XIX y XX, ISBN 978-8492820122, p. 252.
- ^ "a deficit of approximately a half million births resulted", Payne (1987), p. 218.
- ^ delta between actual birth totals for 1936–1942 and birth totals which would have resulted from extrapolating average annual birth totals from the 1926–1935 period, Ortega, Silvestre (2006), p. 67.
- ^ Lee, Stephen J. (2000), European Dictatorships, 1918–1945, ISBN 978-0415230452, p. 248; "a reasonable estimate, and a rather conservative one", Howard Griffin, John, Simon, Yves René (1974), Jacques Maritain: Homage in Words and Pictures, ISBN 978-0873430463, p. 11; military casualties only, Ash, Russell (2003), The Top 10 of Everything 2004, ISBN 978-0789496591, p. 68; lowest considered estimate, Brennan (1978), p. 20. The phrase of "one million dead" became a cliche since the 1960s, and many older Spaniards might repeat that "yo siempre había escuchado lo del millon de muertos", compare burbuja service, available here. This is so due to extreme popularity of a 1961 novel Un millón de muertos by José María Gironella, even though the author many times declared that he had in mind those "muerto espiritualmente", referred after Diez Nicolas, Juan (1985), La mortalidad en la Guerra Civil Española, [in:] Boletín de la Asociación de Demografía Histórica III/1, p. 42. Scholars claim also that the figure of "one million deaths" was continuously repeated by Francoist authorities "to drive home the point of having saved the country form ruin", Encarnación, Omar G. (2008), Spanish Politics: Democracy After Dictatorship, ISBN 978-0745639925, p. 24, and became one of the "mitos principales del franquismo", referred as "myth no. 9" in Reig Tapia, Alberto (2017), La crítica de la crítica: Inconsecuentes, insustanciales, impotentes, prepotentes y equidistantes, ISBN 978-8432318658
- ^ Since [425] suggests 7,000 members of some 115,000 clergy were killed, the proportion could well be lower.
- ^ See variously: Bennett, Scott, Radical Pacifism: The War Resisters League and Gandhian Nonviolence in America, 1915–1963, Syracuse NY, Syracuse University Press, 2003; Prasad, Devi, War Is a Crime Against Humanity: The Story of War Resisters' International, London, WRI, 2005. Also see Hunter, Allan, White Corpsucles in Europe, Chicago, Willett, Clark & Co., 1939; and Brown, H. Runham, Spain: A Challenge to Pacifism, London, The Finsbury Press, 1937.
References
[edit]Citations
[edit]- ^ "Republican Army in Spain". Spartacus Educational. Archived from the original on 25 May 2020. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
- ^ Larrazáhal, R. Salas. "Aspectos militares de la Guerra Civil española". Archived from the original on 19 March 2022. Retrieved 11 September 2018.
- ^ Thomas (1961), p. 491.
- ^ "The Nationalist Army". Spartacus Educational. Archived from the original on 3 April 2019. Retrieved 29 September 2022.
- ^ "Warships of the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939)". kbismarck.com. Archived from the original on 24 June 2020. Retrieved 22 January 2008.
- ^ Thomas (1961), p. 488.
- ^ a b Thomas, Hugh. The Spanish Civil War. Penguin Books. London. 1977 (and later editions).
- ^ a b Clodfelter 2017, p. 339.
- ^ a b Simkin, J. (2012). "Spanish Civil War" Archived 6 April 2022 at the Wayback Machine. The Spanish Civil War Encyclopedia (Ser. Spanish Civil War). University of Sussex, Spartacus Educational E-Books.
- ^ Casanova 2010, p. 181.
- ^ Maestre, Francisco; Casanova, Julián; Mir, Conxita; Gómez, Francisco (2004). Morir, matar, sobrevivir: La violencia en la dictadura de Franco. Grupo Planeta. ISBN 978-8484325062.
- ^ Jackson, Gabriel (1967). The Spanish Republic and the Civil War, 1931–1939. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691007578.
- ^ Graham, Helen; Preston, Paul (1987). "The Spanish Popular Front and the Civil War". The Popular Front in Europe. London: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 106–130. ISBN 978-1349106189.
- ^ Juliá, Santos (1999). Un siglo de España. Política y sociedad. Madrid: Marcial Pons. ISBN 8495379031.
Fue desde luego lucha de clases por las armas, en la que alguien podía morir por cubrirse la cabeza con un sombrero o calzarse con alpargatas los pies, pero no fue en menor medida guerra de religión, de nacionalismos enfrentados, guerra entre dictadura militar y democracia republicana, entre revolución y contrarrevolución, entre fascismo y comunismo.
- ^ Bowers 1954, p. 272.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 43.
- ^ Preston 2006, p. 84.
- ^ a b Payne 1973, pp. 200–203.
- ^ "Refugees and the Spanish Civil War". History Today. Archived from the original on 24 August 2019. Retrieved 24 August 2019.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 88.
- ^ a b Beevor 2006, pp. 86–87.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 260–271.
- ^ Julius Ruiz. El Terror Rojo (2011). pp. 200–211.
- ^ a b Beevor 2006, p. 7.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 19.
- ^ Van der Kiste, John (2011). Divided Kingdom: The Spanish Monarchy from Isabel to Juan Carlos. The History Press. pp. 6–9. ISBN 9780752470832. Archived from the original on 23 January 2024. Retrieved 14 November 2015.
- ^ Thomas 1961, p. 13.
- ^ Preston 2006, p. 21.
- ^ a b Preston 2006, p. 22.
- ^ Preston 2006, p. 24.
- ^ Fraser, Ronald (1979). Blood of Spain. London: Allen Lane. p. 22. ISBN 978-0712660143.
- ^ Preston 2006, pp. 24–26.
- ^ Thomas 1961, p. 15.
- ^ Preston 2006, pp. 32–33.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 15.
- ^ Thomas 1961, p. 16.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 20–22.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 20.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 23.
- ^ Preston 2006, pp. 38–39.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 26.
- ^ Preston 2006, p. 42.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 22.
- ^ Seidman 2011, pp. 16–17.
- ^ Boza Puerta, Mariano; Sánchez Herrador, Miguel Ángel (2007). "El martirio de los libros: una aproximación a la destrucción bibliográfica durante la Guerra Civil". Boletín de la Asociación Andaluza de Bibliotecarios (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 18 May 2024. Retrieved 18 May 2024.
- ^ Juan García Durán, Sobre la Guerra Civil, su gran producción bibliografía y sus pequeñas lagunas de investigación, archived from the original on 21 September 2006
- ^ Thomas 1961, p. 47.
- ^ Preston 2006, p. 61.
- ^ Preston 2006, pp. 45–48.
- ^ Preston 2006, p. 53.
- ^ Hayes 1951, p. 91.
- ^ Hayes 1951, p. 93.
- ^ Casanova 2010, p. 90.
- ^ Preston 2006, pp. 54–55.
- ^ Hansen, Edward C. (2 January 1984). "The Anarchists of Casas Viejas (Book Review)". Ethnohistory. 31 (3): 235–236. doi:10.2307/482644. ISSN 0014-1801. JSTOR 482644.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 27.
- ^ Payne 2006, pp. 41–47.
- ^ Preston 2006, pp. 66–67.
- ^ Preston 2006, pp. 67–68.
- ^ Preston 2006, pp. 63–65.
- ^ Thomas 1961, p. 62.
- ^ Preston 2006, pp. 69–70.
- ^ Preston 2006, p. 70.
- ^ Preston 2006, p. 83.
- ^ Casanova, Julián (2005). "Terror and Violence: The Dark Face of Spanish Anarchism". International Labor and Working-Class History. 67 (67): 79–99. doi:10.1017/S0147547905000098. JSTOR 27672986.
- ^ Payne & Palacios 2018, p. 88.
- ^ Orella Martínez, José Luis; Mizerska-Wrotkowska, Malgorzata (2015). Poland and Spain in the interwar and postwar period. Madrid: Schedas, S.l. ISBN 978-8494418068.
- ^ Payne 2006, p. 90.
- ^ The Splintering of Spain, p. 54 CUP, 2005
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 27–30.
- ^ Casanova 2010, p. 138.
- ^ Madariaga – Spain (1964) p. 416 as cited in Orella Martínez, José Luis; Mizerska-Wrotkowska, Malgorzata (2015). Poland and Spain in the interwar and postwar period. Madrid: Schedas, S.l. ISBN 978-8494418068.
- ^ Payne, Stanley G. The collapse of the Spanish republic, 1933–1936: Origins of the civil war. Yale University Press, 2008, pp. 110–111
- ^ Salvadó, Francisco J. Romero. Twentieth-century Spain: politics and society, 1898–1998. Macmillan International Higher Education, 1999, p. 84
- ^ Mann, Michael. Fascists. Cambridge University Press, 2004, p. 316
- ^ a b Seidman 2011, pp. 18–19.
- ^ Álvarez Tardío, Manuel (29 September 2017). "El «desordenado empuje del Frente Popular». Movilización y violencia política tras las elecciones de 1936". Revista de Estudios Políticos (177): 147–179. doi:10.18042/cepc/rep.177.05.
- ^ a b c d e f Preston 1983, pp. 4–10.
- ^ a b Hayes 1951, p. 100.
- ^ Rabaté, Jean-Claude; Rabaté, Colette (2009). Miguel de Unamuno: Biografía (in Spanish). Taurus.
- ^ Balcells, Laia. Rivalry and revenge. Cambridge University Press, 2017. pp. 58–59
- ^ Seidman 2017, p. 15.
- ^ Seidman 2017, pp. 15–16.
- ^ Seidman 2017, p. 16.
- ^ Preston 2006, p. 93.
- ^ Simpson, James, and Juan Carmona. Why Democracy Failed: The Agrarian Origins of the Spanish Civil War. Cambridge University Press, 2020, pp. 201–202
- ^ Ruiz, Julius. The'red Terror'and the Spanish Civil War. Cambridge University Press, 2014, pp. 36–37
- ^ Puzzo, Dante A. (1969). The Spanish Civil War. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold. p. 16. ISBN 9780442001025.
- ^ a b Preston 2006, pp. 94–95.
- ^ a b c Preston 2006, p. 94.
- ^ Hayes 1951, p. 103.
- ^ Payne 2012, pp. 67–68.
- ^ Payne & Palacios 2018, p. 113.
- ^ Payne 2011b, pp. 89–90.
- ^ Payne 2012, pp. 115–125.
- ^ Payne 2011b, p. 90.
- ^ Jensen, Geoffrey (2005). Franco : soldier, commander, dictator (1st ed.). Potomac Books. p. 68. ISBN 978-1574886443.
- ^ Preston 2006, p. 95.
- ^ a b Preston 2006, p. 96.
- ^ Casanova, Julián. The Spanish republic and civil war. Cambridge University Press, 2010, p. 141
- ^ Alpert, Michael BBC History Magazine April 2002
- ^ a b Preston 2006, p. 98.
- ^ Payne & Palacios 2018, pp. 115–116.
- ^ a b c d e Preston 2006, p. 99.
- ^ a b Thomas 2001, pp. 196–198.
- ^ Payne & Palacios 2018, p. 115.
- ^ a b c Esdaile, Charles J. The Spanish Civil War: A Military History. Routledge, 2018.
- ^ a b c d e Beevor 2006.
- ^ Payne 2012, pp. 69–70.
- ^ Seidman 2011, p. 17.
- ^ Payne 2012.
- ^ Thomas (1961), p. 126.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 55–56.
- ^ a b Preston 2006, p. 102.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 56.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 56–57.
- ^ Preston 2006, p. 56.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 58–59.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 59.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 60–61.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 62.
- ^ Chomsky, Noam (1969). American Power and the New Mandarins. Pantheon Books.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 69.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 55–61.
- ^ Thomas 2001.
- ^ Preston 2006, pp. 102–103.
- ^ Westwell 2004, p. 9.
- ^ Howson 1998, p. 28.
- ^ Westwell 2004, p. 10.
- ^ Howson 1998, p. 20.
- ^ a b Howson 1998, p. 21.
- ^ Alpert, Michael (2008). La guerra civil española en el mar. Barcelona: Crítica. ISBN 978-8484329756.
- ^ Howson 1998, pp. 21–22.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 42–42.
- ^ Alpert, Michael (2013), The Republican Army in the Spanish Civil War, 1936–1939, Cambridge, ISBN 9781107028739, p. 19
- ^ 32.000 Guardia Civil, 17.000 Guardia de Asalto, 16.000 Carabineros, Molina Franco Lucas, Sagarra Renedo Pedro, González López Óscar (2021), El factor humano. Organización y liderazgo para ganar una guerra. La Jefatura de Movilización, Instrucción y Recuperación en la Guerra Civil española, Madrid, ISBN 9788490916100, p. 50
- ^ detailed percentage split by formation (loyalist share: 51% of Guardia Civil, 65% of Carabineros and 70% of Guardia de Asalto) is provided in Tusell, Javier (1998), Historia de España en el siglo XX. Tomo III, ISBN 8430603328, p. 300
- ^ Beevor 2006. p. 126. The author maintains that "They [Nationalists] had also secured 50,000 men from the badly trained and poorly equipped metropolitan army", an unsourced claim which is chiefly responsible for difference versus scientific studies
- ^ James Matthews, Our Red Soldiers': The Nationalist Army's Management of its Left-Wing Conscripts in the Spanish Civil War 1936–9, [in:] Journal of Contemporary History 45/2 (2010), p. 342
- ^ Payne (1970), pp. 329–330
- ^ Payne (2012), p. 188
- ^ following the Battle of Ebro the Nationalists have established that only 47% of Republican POWs taken were in age corresponding to the Nationalist conscription age; 43% were older and 10% were younger, Payne, Stanley G., The Spanish civil War, the Soviet Union, and communism, Yale University Press, 2008, p. 269
- ^ Payne (2012), p. 299
- ^ Payne (1970), p. 360
- ^ Payne (1987), p. 244
- ^ a b Payne (1970), p. 343
- ^ Salas Larrazábal, Ramón (1980), Datos exactos de la Guerra civil, ISBN 978-8430026944, pp. 288–289, also Matthews 2010, p. 346.
- ^ Michael Seidman, Quiet Fronts in the Spanish Civil War, [in:] The Historian 61/4 (1999), p. 823
- ^ Larrazábal (1980), pp. 288–289; also Matthews 2010, p. 346.
- ^ Seidman 1999, p. 823
- ^ Preston 2006, pp. 30–33.
- ^ a b Howson 1998.
- ^ Cohen 2012, pp. 164–165.
- ^ Thomas 1961, pp. 86–90.
- ^ Orden, circular, creando un Comisariado general de Guerra con la misión que se indica [Order, circular, creating a general comisariat of war with the indicated mission] (PDF) (in Spanish). Vol. IV. Gaceta de Madrid: diario oficial de la República. 16 October 1936. p. 355. Archived (PDF) from the original on 19 November 2018. Retrieved 30 July 2012.
- ^ Payne, S. G. (2008). the Spanish civil War, the Soviet Union, and communism. Yale University Press, page 305
- ^ Dawson 2013, p. 85.
- ^ Alpert 2013, p. 167.
- ^ Pétrement, Simone (1988). Simone Weil: A Life. Schocken Books. pp. 271–278. ISBN 978-0805208627.
- ^ Michael Seidman. "Quiet fronts in the Spanish civil war". libcom.org.
- ^ a b Howson 1998, pp. 1–2.
- ^ a b c d Payne 1973.
- ^ Seidman 2011, p. 168.
- ^ Werstein 1969, p. 44.
- ^ Payne 2008, p. 13.
- ^ Rooney, Nicola. "The role of the Catholic hierarchy in the rise to power of General Franco" (PDF). Queen's University, Belfast. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 April 2014. Retrieved 15 April 2010.
- ^ Coverdale 2002, p. 148.
- ^ Preston 2006, p. 79.
- ^ "Morocco tackles painful role in Spain's past Archived 17 August 2021 at the Wayback Machine," Reuters 14 January 2009.
- ^ La Parra-Pérez, Alvaro. "Fighting Against Democracy: Military Factions in the Second Spanish Republic and Civil War (1931–1939)." Job Market Paper, University of Maryland (2014).
- ^ Casanova 2010, p. 9157.
- ^ Peers & Hogan 1936, pp. 529–544.
- ^ Zara Steiner, The Triumph of the Dark: European International History 1933–1939 (Oxford History of Modern Europe) (2013), pp. 181–251.
- ^ Adler, Emanuel; Pouliot, Vincent (2011). International Practices. Cambridge University Press. pp. 184–185. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511862373. ISBN 978-1139501583. S2CID 243338228.
- ^ Stone (1997), p. 133.
- ^ "Spain:Business & Blood". Time. 19 April 1937. Archived from the original on 16 January 2009. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ Jackson 1974, p. 194.
- ^ Stoff 2004, p. 194.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 135–136.
- ^ Neulen 2000, p. 25.
- ^ a b Beevor 2006, p. 199.
- ^ Balfour, Sebastian; Preston, Paul (2009). Spain and the great powers in the twentieth century. London; New York: Routledge. p. 172. ISBN 978-0415180788.
- ^ a b Rodrigo, Javier (2019). "A fascist warfare? Italian fascism and war experience in the Spanish Civil War (1936–39)". War in History. 26 (1): 86–104. doi:10.1177/0968344517696526. JSTOR 26986937. S2CID 159711547.
- ^ Thomas (2001), pp. 938–939.
- ^ Zara Steiner, The Triumph of the Dark: European International History 1933–1939 (2013) pp. 181–251.
- ^ a b c Westwell 2004, p. 87.
- ^ "The legacy of Guernica". BBC website. 26 April 2007. Archived from the original on 29 November 2019. Retrieved 6 June 2011.
- ^ Musciano, Walter. "Spanish Civil War: German Condor Legion's Tactical Air Power" Archived 4 December 2019 at the Wayback Machine, History Net, 2004. Retrieved on 2 July 2015.
- ^ Documents on German Foreign Policy: 1918–1945 | From the Archives of the German Foreign Ministry. Vol. 12. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1949.
- ^ Tucker, Spencer C. (2016). World War II: The Definitive Encyclopedia and Document Collection [5 volumes]: The Definitive Encyclopedia and Document Collection. ABC-CLIO. p. 1982. ISBN 978-1851099696.
- ^ Hayes 1951, p. 127.
- ^ a b c Thomas 1961, p. 634.
- ^ Thomas 2001, p. 937.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 116, 133, 143, 148, 174, 427.
- ^ a b c Gallagher 2020, p. 74.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 97.
- ^ Gallagher 2020, p. 75.
- ^ Wiarda, Howard J. (1977). Corporatism and Development: The Portuguese Experience (First ed.). Univ of Massachusetts Press. p. 160. ISBN 978-0870232213. Archived from the original on 3 June 2020. Retrieved 26 May 2020.
- ^ The Sydney Morning Herald, Friday 2 October 1936, p. 17
- ^ Pena-Rodríguez 2015, p. 9.
- ^ Gallagher 2020, p. 77.
- ^ a b Othen, Christopher. Franco's International Brigades (Reportage Press 2008)
- ^ a b c Vieira, Rui Aballe (June 2011). Tomar o Pulso ao Tigre: Missões Militares Portuguesas em Espanha, entre a vigilância e a cooperação (1934–1939) (Thesis). Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas, Universidade Nova de Lisboa. Archived from the original on 7 July 2024. Retrieved 7 July 2024.
- ^ a b Pena-Rodríguez 2015, p. 13.
- ^ PAULO Heloisa, « Une vision commune du républicanisme : la coopération entre les exilés portugais et les républicains espagnols (1931–1939). L'historiographie portugaise et les études sur les relations Portugal-Espagne au XXe siècle », Exils et migrations ibériques aux XXe et XXIe siècles, 2016/1 (N° 8), p. 26-43. URL : https://www.cairn.info/revue-exils-et-migrations-iberiques-2016-1-page-26.htm Archived 7 July 2024 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b Pena-Rodríguez 2015, p. 15.
- ^ Pena-Rodríguez 2015, p. 16.
- ^ Hoare 1946, p. 117.
- ^ Kay, Hugh (1970). Salazar and Modern Portugal. New York: Hawthorn Books. p. 117.
- ^ Pena-Rodríguez 2015, p. 23.
- ^ a b Beevor 2006, p. 116.
- ^ Maria Inácia Rezola, "The Franco–Salazar Meetings: Foreign policy and Iberian relations during the Dictatorships (1942–1963)" E-Journal of Portuguese History (2008) 6#2 pp. 1–11. online Archived 24 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Hoare 1946, pp. 124–125.
- ^ Gallagher 2020, p. 81.
- ^ Lochery, Neill (2011). Lisbon: War in the Shadows of the City of Light, 1939–1945. PublicAffairs; 1 edition. p. 19. ISBN 978-1586488796.
- ^ Othen 2008, p. 102.
- ^ Thomas 1961, p. 635.
- ^ Casanova 2010, p. 225.
- ^ Mittermaier 2010, p. 195.
- ^ Lešnik, Avgust (2014). "Uloga KPJ U Regrutovanju Jugoslovenski Interbrigadista Za Republikansku Španiju". In Petrović, Milo (ed.). Preispitivanje prošlosti i istorijski revizionizam (PDF) (in Serbian (Latin script)). p. 243. Archived (PDF) from the original on 25 November 2022. Retrieved 8 September 2022 – via Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung.
- ^ Xosé M. Núñez Seixas and Oleg Beyda (27 March 2023). "'Defeat, Victory, Repeat': Russian Émigrés between the Spanish Civil War and Operation Barbarossa, 1936–1944". Contemporary European History: 1–16. doi:10.1017/S0960777323000085. hdl:10347/30957. S2CID 257783342. Archived from the original on 28 May 2023. Retrieved 28 May 2023.
- ^ a b Hayes 1951, p. 115.
- ^ a b c d Hayes 1951, p. 117.
- ^ Richardson 1982, p. 12.
- ^ a b c Thomas 1961, p. 637.
- ^ Thomas 1961, pp. 638–639.
- ^ Deletant (1999). p. 20.
- ^ "Review of O'Riordan's memoir". Archived from the original on 4 June 2020. Retrieved 25 October 2014.
- ^ Tsou, Nancy; Tsou, Len (2001). 橄欖桂冠的召喚. 人間出版社. ISBN 978-9578660663. Archived from the original on 22 April 2022. Retrieved 1 January 2021 – via 豆瓣.
- ^ Benton & Pieke 1998, p. 215.
- ^ Howson 1998, p. 125.
- ^ Payne 2004, p. 156.
- ^ a b Payne 2004, pp. 156–157.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 152–153.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 152.
- ^ Howson 1998, pp. 126–129.
- ^ Howson 1998, p. 134.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 163.
- ^ Graham 2005, p. 92.
- ^ Thomas 1961, p. 944.
- ^ Hayes 1951, p. 121.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 153–154.
- ^ Richardson 1982, pp. 31–40.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 246, 273.
- ^ "Katia Landau: Stalinism in Spain (Part 2) – RH". www.marxists.org. Archived from the original on 19 March 2022. Retrieved 20 June 2020.
- ^ Vidal, César. La guerra que ganó Franco. Madrid, 2008. p. 256.
- ^ Johnson 2021, pp. 15–50, 80–160, 170ff.
- ^ Jan Stanisław Ciechanowski, Podwójna gra. Rzeczpospolita wobec hiszpańskiej wojny domowej 1936–1939, Warszawa 2014, ISBN 978-8311137615, p. 456; Francisco J. Romero Salvadó, Historical Dictionary of the Spanish Civil War, London 2013, ISBN 978-0810857841, p. 91; Miguel Ángel Ordoñez, Dos siglos de bribones y algún malandrín: Crónica de la corrupción en España desde el SXIX a la actualidad, Madrid 2014, ISBN 978-8441434387, p. 312, Gerald Howson, Arms for Spain, London 1997, ISBN 978-0312241773, p. 111
- ^ a b c Sarah Elizabeth Inglis, Danza de la Muerte: Greek Arms Dealing in the Spanish Civil War, 1936–1939 [MA thesis Simon Fraser University], Burnaby 2014
- ^ Raab, Antonius (1984). Raab fliegt: Erinnerungen eines Flugpioniers (in German). Konkret Literatur. ISBN 3922144322.
- ^ a b c Beevor 2006, pp. 139–140.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 291.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 412–413.
- ^ a b Alpert 1994, p. 14.
- ^ Alpert 1994, pp. 14–15.
- ^ Alpert 1994, pp. 20–23.
- ^ a b Alpert 1994, p. 41.
- ^ a b Alpert 1994, p. 43.
- ^ "Potez 540/542". Archived from the original on 11 August 2011.
- ^ Alpert 1994, pp. 46–47.
- ^ Werstein 1969, p. 139.
- ^ Alpert 1994, p. 47.
- ^ Payne 2008, p. 28.
- ^ Lukeš, Goldstein (1999). p. 176.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 71.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 96.
- ^ Thomas 1961, p. 162.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 81–94.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 73–74.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 116–117.
- ^ a b Beevor 2006, p. 144.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 146–147.
- ^ Graham, Helen. The Spanish Civil War: a very short introduction. Vol. 123. Oxford University Press, 2005, p. 35
- ^ Abel Paz (1996). Durruti en la revolución española. Madrid: Fundación de Estudios Libertarios Anselmo Lorenzo. ISBN 8486864216.
- ^ Abel Paz (2004). Durruti en la revolución española. Madrid: La Esfera de los Libros.
- ^ a b Beevor 2006, p. 143.
- ^ Timmermans, Rodolphe. 1937. Heroes of the Alcazar. Charles Scribner's Sons, New York
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 121.
- ^ Casanova 2010, p. 109.
- ^ Cleugh 1962, p. 90.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 150.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 177.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 171.
- ^ Comín Colomer, Eduardo (1973); El 5º Regimiento de Milicias Populares. Madrid.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 177–183.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 191–192.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 200–201.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 202.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 208–215.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 216–221.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 222.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 223–229.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 231–233.
- ^ a b Beevor 2006, pp. 263–273.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 277.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 235.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 277–284.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 296–299.
- ^ a b Beevor 2006, p. 237.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 237–238.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 302.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 315–322.
- ^ Thomas 1961, pp. 820–821.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 346–347.
- ^ a b Beevor 2006, pp. 349–359.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 362.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 374.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 376.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 378.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 380.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 86.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 391–392.
- ^ Thomas 1961, pp. 879–882.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 256.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 394–395.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 396–397.
- ^ Derby 2009, p. 28.
- ^ Professor Hilton (27 October 2005). "Spain: Repression under Franco after the Civil War". cgi.stanford.edu. Archived from the original on 7 December 2008. Retrieved 24 June 2009.
- ^ Tremlett, Giles (1 December 2003). "Spain torn on tribute to victims of Franco". The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on 27 August 2013. Retrieved 24 June 2009.
- ^ a b Beevor 2006, p. 405.
- ^ Caistor, Nick (28 February 2003). "Spanish Civil War fighters look back". BBC News. Archived from the original on 11 October 2017. Retrieved 24 June 2009.
- ^ "Winnipeg". www.nuestro.cl. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ a b Film documentary Archived 28 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine on the website of the Cité nationale de l'histoire de l'immigration (in French)
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 421–422.
- ^ Marco, Jorge (2020). "Rethinking the Postwar Period in Spain: Violence and Irregular Civil War, 1939–52" (PDF). Journal of Contemporary History. 55 (3): 492. doi:10.1177/0022009419839764. S2CID 195505767. Archived (PDF) from the original on 5 December 2022. Retrieved 25 November 2022.
- ^ a b Daniel Kowalsky. "The Evacuation of Spanish Children to the Soviet Union". Gutenburg E. Columbia University Press. Archived from the original on 19 March 2022. Retrieved 16 August 2011.
- ^ "History of the arrival of the Basque Children to England in 1937". BasqueChildren.org. Basque Children of '37 Association. Archived from the original on 10 June 2022. Retrieved 16 August 2011.
- ^ "Wales and the refugee children of the Basque country". BBC Wales. 3 December 2012. Archived from the original on 19 March 2022. Retrieved 27 May 2016.
- ^ Buchanan (1997), pp. 109–110.
- ^ Sabín-Fernández 2010, p. 194.
- ^ Sabín-Fernández 2010, p. 121.
- ^ Sabín-Fernández 2010, pp. 125–126.
- ^ a b c d e f g Martín-Aceña, Martínez Ruiz & Pons 2012, pp. 144–165.
- ^ Maier Charles S. (1987), In Search of Stability: Explorations in Historical Political Economy, ISBN 978-0521346986, p. 105
- ^ in the mid-1930s the Spanish GDP was 23% of the British one, 37% of the French one and 48% of the Italian one, see e.g. Maddison Angus, Historical Statistics of the World Economy, available here Archived 13 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ in nominal terms, in terms of purchasing power the growth was smaller; nominal figures were 396m ptas in the 2nd half of 1936 and 847m ptas in the 2nd half of 1938, Martín-Aceña, Martínez Ruiz & Pons 2012, pp. 144–165
- ^ Casanova 2010, p. 91.
- ^ Massot i Muntaner, Josep (1987). El desembarcament de Bayo a Mallorca: agost-setembre de 1936 (in Catalan). Publicacions de l'Abadia de Montserrat. ISBN 9788472028357.
- ^ a b Llaudó Avila, Eduard (2021). Racisme i supremacisme polítics a l'Espanya contemporània (7a ed.). Manresa: Parcir. ISBN 9788418849107.
- ^ Zugazagoitia, Julián (2001). Guerra y vicisitudes de los españoles (in Spanish). Tusquets Editores. ISBN 9788483107607.
- ^ Nadeau, Jean-Benoit, Barlow, Julie (2013), The Story of Spanish, ISBN 978-1250023162, p. 283
- ^ Jeanes, Ike (1996), Forecast and Solution: Grappling with the Nuclear, a Trilogy for Everyone, ISBN 978-0936015620, p. 131
- ^ Del Amo, Maria (2006), Cuando La Higuera Este Brotando..., ISBN 978-1597541657, p. 28
- ^ including war-related executions until 1961, death above average due to illness etc., Salas Larrazabal, Ramón (1977), Pérdidas de la guerra, ISBN 8432002852, pp. 428–429
- ^ Nash, Jay Robert (1976), Darkest Hours, ISBN 978-1590775264, p. 775
- ^ "at least" and "between 1936 and 1945", includes 300,000 "combatants", Salvadó, Francisco Romero (2013), Historical Dictionary of the Spanish Civil War, ISBN 978-0810880092, p. 21
- ^ Gallo, Max (1974), Spain under Franco: a history, ISBN 978-0525207504, p. 70; divided into 345,000 during the war and 215,000 in 1939–1942, Diez Nicolas (1985), pp. 52–53
- ^ De Miguel, Amando (1987), Significación demográfica de la guerra civil, [in:] Santos Juliá Díaz (ed.), Socialismo y guerra civil, ISBN 8485691350, p. 193.
- ^ Kirsch, Hans-Christian (1967), Der spanische Bürgerkrieg in Augenzeugenberichten, p. 446
- ^ White, Matthew (2011), Atrocitology: Humanity's 100 Deadliest Achievements, ISBN 978-0857861252, p. LXIX; broken down into 200,000 KIA, 130,000 executed, 25,000 of malnutrition and 10,000 of air raids, Johnson, Paul (1984), A History of the Modern World, ISBN 0297784757, p. 339
- ^ Pedro Montoliú Camps (1998), Madrid en la guerra civil: La historia, ISBN 978-8477370727, p. 324
- ^ see e.g. the monumental Historia de España Menéndez Pidal, (2005), vol. XL, ISBN 8467013060
- ^ Encyclopedia de Historia de España (1991), vol. 5, ISBN 8420652415
- ^ Diccionario Espasa Historia de España y América (2002), ISBN 8467003162
- ^ Jackson 1974, p. 412.
- ^ Muñoz 2009, p. 412.
- ^ Dupuy, Dupuy (1977), p. 1032, Teed (1992), 439
- ^ Martínez de Baños, Szafran (2011), p. 324
- ^ a b c Jackson (1965), p. 412
- ^ Dupuy, Dupuy (1977), p. 1032
- ^ Moa (2015), p. 44
- ^ Tucker (2016), p. 1563.
- ^ hunger and hunger-triggered health problems are supposed to be responsible for 246,000 deaths (Villar Salinas), 343,500 (Salas Larrazábal), 345,000 (Díez Nicolás) or 346,000 (Ortega y Silvestre), referred after Miguel Ángel del Arco Blanco, Famine in Spain During Franco's Dictatorship (1939–52), [in: ] Journal of Contemporary History 56/1 (2021), p. 6
- ^ Muñoz 2009, p. 375.
- ^ Guerre civile d'Espagne, [in:] Encyclopedie Larousse online, available here Archived 17 May 2022 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b c d e Larrazabal (1977), pp. 428–429
- ^ Sandler (2002), p. 160
- ^ highest considered estimate, Payne (2012), p. 245
- ^ "Men of La Mancha". The Economist. 22 June 2006. Archived from the original on 12 November 2007. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ Ruiz, Julius (2007). "Defending the Republic: The García Atadell Brigade in Madrid, 1936". Journal of Contemporary History. 42 (1): 97. doi:10.1177/0022009407071625. S2CID 159559553.
- ^ Seidman 2017, p. 18.
- ^ "Spanish judge opens case into Franco's atrocities". The New York Times. 16 October 2008. Archived from the original on 10 February 2009. Retrieved 28 July 2009.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 92.
- ^ Fernández-Álvarez, José-Paulino; Rubio-Melendi, David; Martínez-Velasco, Antxoka; Pringle, Jamie K.; Aguilera, Hector-David (2016). "Discovery of a mass grave from the Spanish Civil War using Ground Penetrating Radar and forensic archaeology". Forensic Science International. 267: e10–e17. doi:10.1016/j.forsciint.2016.05.040. PMID 27318840. Archived from the original on 19 March 2022. Retrieved 30 November 2019.
- ^ Graham 2005, p. 30.
- ^ Preston 2006, p. 307.
- ^ Jackson 1965, p. 305.
- ^ Thomas 2001, p. 268.
- ^ Thomas 1961, p. 268.
- ^ Ruiz, Julius. The 'red Terror' and the Spanish Civil War. Cambridge University Press, 2014.
- ^ Sánchez, José María. The Spanish civil war as a religious tragedy. University Press of Virginia, 1987.
- ^ Payne 1973, p. 650.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 98.
- ^ Preston, Paul (19 January 2008). "Paul Preston lecture: The Crimes of Franco" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 February 2011. Retrieved 16 August 2011.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 94.
- ^ a b c Beevor 2006, pp. 88–89.
- ^ Juliuz Ruiz, Franco's Peace, in Quigley, Paul, and James Hawdon, eds. Reconciliation After Civil Wars: Global Perspectives. Routledge, 2018.
- ^ Payne & Palacios 2018, p. 202.
- ^ a b Beevor 2006, p. 89.
- ^ Preston 2006, p. 121.
- ^ Jackson 1965, p. 377.
- ^ Thomas 2001, pp. 253–255.
- ^ Santos et al. (1999). p. 229.
- ^ Preston 2006, pp. 120–123.
- ^ Graham 2005, pp. 23–24.
- ^ Graham 2005, pp. 30–31.
- ^ Payne 2012, p. 110.
- ^ Balcells 2010, pp. 291–313.
- ^ Seidman 2011, p. 172.
- ^ Ruiz 2005, pp. 171–191.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 91.
- ^ Balfour, Sebastian. "Spain from 1931 to the Present". Spain: a History. Ed. Raymond Carr. New York: Oxford University Press, 2000. p. 257. Print.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 93.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 236–237.
- ^ Preston 2006, p. 302.
- ^ Graham 2005, p. 32.
- ^ Bieter, Bieter (2003), p. 91.
- ^ a b Beevor 2006, pp. 82–83.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 8.
- ^ Seidman 2011, p. 205.
- ^ Wieland, Terry (2002). Spanish Best: The Fine Shotguns of Spain. Down East Enterprise. p. 47. ISBN 089272546X.
- ^ Westwell 2004, p. 31.
- ^ Seidman 2002, p. 156.
- ^ Seidman 2011, pp. 30–31.
- ^ Herreros, Francisco, and Henar Criado. "Pre-emptive or arbitrary: Two forms of lethal violence in a civil war." Journal of Conflict Resolution 53, no. 3 (2009): 419–445.
- ^ a b Beevor 2006, p. 81.
- ^ Cueva, Julio de la, "Religious Persecution", Journal of Contemporary History, 3, 198, pp. 355–369. JSTOR 261121
- ^ Thomas 2001, p. 900.
- ^ Preston 2006, p. 233.
- ^ Payne 2012, pp. 244–245.
- ^ Violencia roja y azul, pp. 77–78. Díaz (ed.), Víctimas de la guerra civil, pp. 411–412.
- ^ Alfonso Alvarez Bolado (1996). Para ganar la guerra, para ganar la paz. Iglesia y Guerra Civil (1936–1939) (Estudios). Univ Pontifica Comillas. ISBN 978-8487840791. OCLC 636785112.
- ^ Antonio Montero Moreno (1998). Historia de la persecución religiosa de España 1936–1939. Biblioteca de autores cristianos. Archived from the original on 24 August 2024. Retrieved 11 November 2019.
- ^ Santos Juliá; Josep M. Solé; Joan Vilarroya; Julián Casanova (1999). Víctimas de la guerra civil. Ediciones Martínez Roca. p. 58. Archived from the original on 11 November 2019. Retrieved 11 November 2019.
- ^ a b c Beevor 2006, p. 82.
- ^ Antonio Montero Moreno, Historia de la persecucion religiosa en Espana 1936–1939 (Madrid: Biblioteca de Autores Cristianos, 1961)
- ^ Payne 1973, p. 649.
- ^ Bowen 2006, p. 22.
- ^ Ealham, Richards (2005). pp. 80, 168.
- ^ Hubert Jedin; John Dolan (1981). History of the Church. Continuum. p. 607. ISBN 978-0860120926.
- ^ a b c Beevor 2006, p. 84.
- ^ a b c Beevor 2006, p. 85.
- ^ Ruiz, Julius. "2 Fighting the Fifth Column: The Terror in Republican Madrid during the Spanish Civil War.", pp. 56–57
- ^ Beevor, Antony (2006), The Battle For Spain; The Spanish Civil War 1936–1939, p. 81 Weidenfeld & Nicolson
- ^ Preston 2006.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 83.
- ^ a b c Thomas 1961, p. 176.
- ^ Seidman 2017.
- ^ Graham 2005, p. 27.
- ^ "1984: George Orwell's road to dystopia". BBC News. 8 February 2013. Archived from the original on 24 August 2024. Retrieved 27 July 2021.
- ^ Orwell in Spain. Penguin Books. 2001. p. 6.
- ^ "Shots of War: Photojournalism During the Spanish Civil War". Orpheus.ucsd.edu. Archived from the original on 9 March 2009. Retrieved 24 June 2009.
- ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 172–173.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 161.
- ^ a b c Beevor 2006, pp. 272–273.
- ^ Payne & Palacios 2018, p. 194.
- ^ Payne 2011b, pp. 219–220.
- ^ Seidman 2011, p. 173.
- ^ a b Beevor 2006, p. 87.
- ^ a b Beevor 2006, pp. 102–122.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 40.
- ^ Payne 1999, p. 151.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 253.
- ^ Arnaud Imatz, "La vraie mort de Garcia Lorca" 2009 40 NRH, 31–34, pp. 32–33.
- ^ Beevor 2006, p. 255.
- ^ Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, El pueblo español tiene un camino que conduce a una estrella (maqueta) (There Is a Way for the Spanish People That Leads to a Star [Maquette]).
- ^ Museum of Modern Art.
- ^ Hughes, Robert (2003) Goya. Alfred A. Knopf. New York. p. 429 ISBN 0394580281
- ^ Descharnes, Robert (1984) Salvador Dali: The Work, The Man. Harry N. Abrams, Inc., Publishers, New York. p. 455 ISBN 0810908255
- ^ Pablo Picasso Archived 4 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine.
- ^ SUNY Oneota Archived 24 August 2024 at the Wayback Machine, Picasso's Guernica.
- ^ a b Stanley Meisler Archived 26 August 2014 at the Wayback Machine, For Joan Miró, Painting and Poetry Were the Same.
- ^ TATE Archived 16 June 2018 at the Wayback Machine, 'The Reaper': Miró's Civil War protest.
- ^ Bolorinos Allard, Elisabeth (2016). "The Crescent and the Dagger: Representations of the Moorish Other during the Spanish Civil War". Bulletin of Spanish Studies. 93 (6): 965–988. doi:10.1080/14753820.2015.1082811. S2CID 218588108.
- ^ Whealey, Robert H. (1989). Hitler and Spain: The Nazi Role in the Spanish Civil War, 1936–1939 (1st ed.). University Press of Kentucky. pp. 72–94. ISBN 978-0813148632.
- ^ Thomas 2001, pp. xviii, 899–901.
- ^ Thomas, Hugh, Op.Cit.
- ^ Bahamonde, Ángel; Cervera Gil, Javier (1999). Así terminó la Guerra civil. Madrid: Marcial Pons. ISBN 8495379007.
- ^ Payne 2008, p. 336.
- ^ Payne 2011a, p. 194.
- ^ Payne 2004, pp. 313–314.
- ^ Cooley, Alexander (2008). Base Politics : Democratic Change and the U.S. Military Overseas. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. pp. 57–64. ISBN 978-0801446054.
- ^ see e.g. theories of Mario Onaindía and Juan Mari Bandrés, discussed in Gaizka Fernández, Héroes, heterodoxos y traidores, Madrid 2013, ISBN 978-8430958092
- ^ Gaizka Fernández Soldevilla, Mitos que matan. La narrativa del «conflicto vasco», [in:] Ayer 98 (2015), pp. 228–229
- ^ Núñez Seixas 2006, p. 11
- ^ George Orwell's notes Archived 1 September 2022 at the Wayback Machine, [in:] Orwell Foundation
- ^ W. H. Auden in Authors take sides, London 1937
- ^ Hamilton Fyfe in Authors take sides, London 1937
- ^ Daniel Arasa, Historias curiosas del franquismo, Barcelona 2008, ISBN 978-8479279790, p. 174
- ^ Luisa Passerini, The Last Identification: Why Some of Us Would Like to Call Ourselves Europeans and What We Mean by This, [in:] Bo Strath (ed.), Europe and the Other and Europe as the Other, Brussels 2010, ISBN 978-9052016504, p. 45
- ^ Casanova 2010, p. 213.
- ^ Julian Casanova, A Short History of the Spanish Civil War, Cambridge 2021, ISBN 978-1350152588, p. 95
- ^ Mark Lawrence, The Spanish Civil Wars: A Comparative History of the First Carlist War and the Conflict of the 1930s, London 2017, ISBN 978-1474229425, p. 8
- ^ Alastair Hennessy, Traditionalism in Spain: the Second Carlist War 1872–76, [in:] History Today 5/1 (1955)
- ^ Stanley G. Payne, The Franco Regime, Madison 2011, ISBN 978-0299110741, p. 87
- ^ "Spanish Civil War". Oxford Reference. Archived from the original on 30 October 2021. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
- ^ Salvadó 1999, pp. 1161–1167.
- ^ Halperin 2004, p. 211.
- ^ Nicolson 1966, p. 211.
- ^ Balcells 2017, p. 12.
- ^ Luis de Galinsoga, Centinela de Occidente. Semblanza biográfica de Francisco Franco, Barcelona 1958
- ^ Patricia A.M. Van Der Esch, Prelude to War; The International Repercussions of the Spanish Civil War, 1936–1939, London 1951
- ^ Hochschild, Adam (28 March 2016). "In Many Ways, Author Says, Spanish Civil War Was 'The First Battle Of WWII'". NPR. Archived from the original on 29 October 2021. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
- ^ Frank McDonough (ed.), The Origins of the Second World War: An International Perspective, London 2011, ISBN 978-1441159182, p. 214
- ^ Melveena McKendrick, Spain: A History, s.l. 2016, ISBN 978-1612309439, p. 197
- ^ Stanley G. Payne, The Spanish Civil War, Cambridge 2012, ISBN 978-0521174701, p. 231
- ^ Voennyi entsiklopedicheskiy slavar, Maskva 1984, p. 482
- ^ José Mariano Sánchez, The Spanish Civil War as a Religious Tragedy, New York 2008, ISBN 978-0268017262, p. xiii
- ^ Devocionario del Requete Archived 24 October 2021 at the Wayback Machine, s.l. 1936
- ^ Jose Diaz, quoted after Xosé Manoel Núñez Seixas, Fuera el invasor!: nacionalismos y movilización bélica durante la guerra civil española (1936–1939), Madrid 2006, ISBN 978-8496467378, p. 143
- ^ Jose Antonio Primo de Rivera, quoted after Henar Herrero Suárez, Un yugo para los flechas, Madrid 2010, ISBN 978-8497433679, p. 44
- ^ José Martín Brocos referred after Carlos Prieto, La Guerra Civil fue una "cruzada" y una "guerra de liberación" Archived 29 October 2021 at the Wayback Machine, [in:] Publico 02.06.2011
Sources
[edit]- Alpert, Michael (1994). A New International History of the Spanish Civil War. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 1403911711. OCLC 155897766.
- Alpert, Michael (2013). The Republican Army in the Spanish Civil War, 1936–1939. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1107028739.
- Balcells, Laia (7 June 2010). "Rivalry and Revenge: Violence against Civilians in Conventional Civil Wars1: Rivalry and Revenge". International Studies Quarterly. 54 (2): 291–313. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2478.2010.00588.x.
- Balcells, Laia (2017). Rivalry and revenge: the politics of violence during civil war. Cambridge studies in comparative politics. Cambridge : New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1107118690. OCLC 990183614.
- Beevor, Antony (2006) [1982]. The Battle for Spain: The Spanish Civil War 1936–1939. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0297848321.
- Benton, Gregor; Pieke, Frank N. (1998). The Chinese in Europe. Macmillan. ISBN 0333669134.
- Bieter, John; Bieter, Mark (2003). An Enduring Legacy: The Story of Basques in Idaho. University of Nevada Press. ISBN 978-0874175684. Archived from the original on 31 January 2023. Retrieved 31 January 2023.
- Bolloten, Burnett (1979). The Spanish Revolution. The Left and the Struggle for Power during the Civil War. University of North Carolina. ISBN 1842122037.
- Borkenau, Franz (1937). The Spanish Cockpit: An Eye-Witness Account of the Political and Social Conflicts of the Spanish Civil War. London: Faber and Faber.
- Bowen, Wayne H. (2006). Spain During World War II. University of Missouri Press. ISBN 978-0826216588.
- Bowers, Claude G. (1954). My Mission to Spain: Watching the Rehearsal for World War II. New York: Simon and Schuster. OCLC 582203758. Archived from the original on 3 April 2024. Retrieved 3 April 2024.
- Brenan, Gerald (1993) [1943]. The Spanish Labyrinth: an account of the social and political background of the Civil War. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521398275. OCLC 38930004.
- Buchanan, Tom (1997). Britain and the Spanish Civil War. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521455693.
- Casanova, Julián (2010). The Spanish Republic and Civil War. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780511787027. OCLC 659843319.
- Cleugh, James (1962). Spanish Fury: The Story of a Civil War. London: Harrap. OCLC 2613142.
- Clodfelter, M. (2017). Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures, 1492–2015 (4th ed.). Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland. ISBN 978-0786474707.
- Cohen, Yehuda (2012). The Spanish: Shadows of Embarrassment. Brighton: Sussex Academic Press. ISBN 978-1845193928.
- Coverdale, John F. (2002). Uncommon faith: the early years of Opus Dei, 1928–1943. New York: Scepter. ISBN 978-1889334745.
- Cox, Geoffrey (1937). The Defence of Madrid. London: Victor Gollancz. OCLC 4059942.
- Dawson, Ashley (2013). The Routledge Concise History of Twentieth-century British Literature. New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0415572453.
- Derby, Mark (2009). Kiwi Companeros: New Zealand and the Spanish Civil War. Christchurch, New Zealand: Canterbury University Press. ISBN 978-1877257711.
- Ealham, Chris; Richards, Michael (2005). The Splintering of Spain. Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511497025. ISBN 978-0521821780. Archived from the original on 24 August 2024. Retrieved 7 November 2020.
- Graham, Helen (2005). The Spanish Civil War: A very short introduction. New York: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/actrade/9780192803771.001.0001. ISBN 978-0192803771.
- Gallagher, Tom (2020). Salazar: The Dictator Who Refused To Die. C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd. ISBN 978-1-78738-388-3.
- Hemingway, Ernest (1938). The Fifth Column. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. ISBN 978-0684102382.
- Halperin, Sandra (2004). War and Social Change in Modern Europe: The Great Transformation Revisisted. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521540155. OCLC 69337496.
- Hayes, Carlton J.H. (1951). The United States and Spain. An Interpretation (1st ed.). Sheed & Ward.
- Hemingway, Ernest (1940). For Whom The Bell Tolls. New York: Scribner. ISBN 978-0684803357.
- Hoare, Samuel (1946). Ambassador on Special Mission. Collins; 1st ed. p. 45. Archived from the original on 24 August 2024. Retrieved 26 May 2020.
- Howson, Gerald (1998). Arms for Spain. New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0312241771. OCLC 231874197.
- Jackson, Gabriel (1965). The Spanish Republic and the Civil War, 1931–1939. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691007578. OCLC 185862219.
- Jackson, Gabriel (1974). The Cruel Years: The Story of the Spanish Civil War. New York: John Day.
- Kisch, Egon Erwin (1939). The three cows (translated from the German). Translated by Farrar, Stewart. London: Fore Publications.
- Koestler, Arthur (1983). Dialogue with death. London: Macmillan. ISBN 0333347765. OCLC 16604744.
- Kowalsky, Daniel (2008). Stalin and the Spanish Civil War. New York: Columbia University Press.
- Lukeš, Igor; Goldstein, Erik, eds. (1999). The Munich Crisis, 1938: Prelude to World War II. London; Portland, Oregon: Frank Cass. ISBN 978-0714680569.
- Johnson, Ian Ona (2021). Faustian bargain: Soviet-German military cooperation in the interwar period. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 15–50. 80–160, 170ff. ISBN 9780190675172.
- Majfud, Jorge (2016). "Rescuing Memory: the Humanist Interview with Noam Chomsky". The Humanist. Archived from the original on 24 August 2024. Retrieved 18 July 2016.
- Martín-Aceña, Pablo; Martínez Ruiz, Elena; Pons, María A. (2012). "War and Economics: Spanish Civil War Finances Revisited". European Review of Economic History. 16 (2): 144–165. doi:10.1093/ereh/her011. JSTOR 41708654.
- Mitchell, Mairin (1937). Storm over Spain. London: Secker & Warburg.
- Mittermaier, Ute Anne (2010). "Charles Donnelly, 'Dark Star' of Irish Poetry and Reluctant Hero of the Irish Left". In Clark, David; Álavez, Rubén Jarazo (eds.). 'To Banish Ghost and Goblin': New Essays on Irish Culture. Oleiros (La Coruña): Netbiblo. pp. 191–200. ISBN 978-0521737807.
- Neulen, Hans Werner (2000). In the skies of Europe – Air Forces allied to the Luftwaffe 1939–1945. Ramsbury, Marlborough, England: The Crowood Press. ISBN 1861267991.
- Nicolson, Harold (1966). Nicolson, Nigel (ed.). Nicolson diaries and letters 1907-1964 Harold. London: Collins.
- O'Riordan, Michael (2005). The Connolly Column. Pontypool, Wales: Warren & Pell.
- Orwell, George (2000) [1938]. Homage to Catalonia. London: Penguin, Martin Secker & Warburg. ISBN 0141183055. OCLC 42954349.
- Othen, Christopher (2008). Franco's International Brigades: Foreign Volunteers and Fascist Dictators in the Spanish Civil War. London: Reportage Press.
- Payne, Stanley G. (1973). "The Spanish Civil War of 1936–1939". A History of Spain and Portugal. Vol. 2. University of Wisconsin Press. Archived from the original on 8 November 2017. Retrieved 15 May 2007 – via Library of Iberian resources online.
- Payne, Stanley G. (1999). Fascism in Spain, 1923–1977. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 0299165647.
- Payne, Stanley G. (2004). The Spanish Civil War, the Soviet Union, and Communism. New Haven, CT; London: Yale University Press. ISBN 030010068X. OCLC 186010979.
- Payne, Stanley G (2006). The collapse of the Spanish Republic, 1933–1936 : origins of the Civil War. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300110654.
- Payne, Stanley G. (2008). Franco and Hitler: Spain, Germany, and World War II. Connecticut, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300122824.
- Payne, Stanley G. (2011a). Spain: A Unique History. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0299250249.
- Payne, Stanley G. (2011b). The Franco regime, 1936–1975. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0299110741.
- Payne, Stanley G. (2012). The Spanish Civil War. Cambridge essential histories. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521174701. OCLC 804664837.
- Payne, Stanley G.; Palacios, Jesús (2018). Franco: A Personal and Political Biography (4th ed.). University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0299302146.
- Peers, E. Allison; Hogan, James (December 1936). "The Basques and the Spanish Civil War". Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review. 25 (100). Irish Province of the Society of Jesus: 540–542. ISSN 0039-3495. JSTOR 30097608.
- Pena-Rodríguez, Alberto (2015). "Salazar y los viriatos. Los combatientes portugueses en la Guerra Civil española: prensa y propaganda". Spagna Contemporanea (47): 7–24. hdl:10316/46323. Archived from the original on 24 August 2024. Retrieved 7 July 2024.
- Preston, Paul (1978). The Coming of the Spanish Civil War. London: Macmillan. ISBN 0333237242. OCLC 185713276.
- Preston, Paul (November 1983). "From Rebel to Caudillo: Franco's path to power". History Today. 33 (11). Archived from the original on 24 August 2024. Retrieved 23 August 2021.
- Preston, Paul (1996) [1986]. A Concise history of the Spanish Civil War. London: Fontana. ISBN 978-0006863731. OCLC 231702516.
- Preston, Paul (2006). The Spanish Civil War: Reaction, Revolution, and Revenge. New York: WW Norton & Co. ISBN 0393329879.
- Radosh, Ronald; Habeck, Mary; Sevostianov, Grigory (2001). Spain betrayed: the Soviet Union in the Spanish Civil War. New Haven, CT; London: Yale University Press. ISBN 0300089813. OCLC 186413320.
- Richardson, R. Dan (1982) [first published as an academic thesis in 1969]. Comintern Army: The International Brigades and the Spanish Civil War. Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0813154466.
- Ruiz, Julius (May 2005). "A Spanish Genocide? Reflections on the Francoist Repression after the Spanish Civil War" (PDF). Contemporary European History. 14 (2): 171–191. doi:10.1017/S0960777305002304. hdl:20.500.11820/4b775690-4b3d-46de-a7fd-673fbd33a844. JSTOR 20081255. Archived (PDF) from the original on 3 August 2024. Retrieved 15 May 2024.
- Rust, William (2003) [1939]. Britons in Spain: A History of the British Battalion of the XV International Brigade (reprint). Pontypool, Wales: Warren & Pell.
- Sabín-Fernández, Susana (2010). The Basque refugee children of the Spanish Civil War in the UK: memory and memorialisation (Ph.D.). University of Southampton. Archived from the original on 2 June 2024. Retrieved 2 June 2024.
- Salvadó, Francisco J. Romero (December 1999). "The Road to the Civil War: Social Conflict and Mass Politics in Spain, 1898–1936". The Historical Journal. 42 (4): 1161–1167. doi:10.1017/S0018246X99008821. S2CID 15952641.
- Santos, Juliá; Casanova, Julián; Solé I Sabaté, Josep Maria; Villarroya, Joan; Moreno, Francisco (1999). Victimas de la guerra civil (in Spanish). Madrid: Temas de Hoy.
- Seidman, Michael (2002). Republic of egos : a social history of the Spanish Civil War. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0299178635.
- Seidman, Michael (2011). The Victorious Counter-revolution: The Nationalist Effort in the Spanish Civil War. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 978-0299249649.
- Seidman, Michael (2017). Transatlantic antifascisms : from the Spanish Civil War to the end of World War II. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1108417785.
- Simkin, John (2012) [1997]. Spanish Civil War: Casualties. Brighton, England: University of Sussex & Spartacus Educational. Archived from the original on 6 April 2022. Retrieved 6 April 2022.
- Stoff, Laurie (2004). Spain. San Diego, CA: Greenhaven Press.
- Taylor, F. Jay (1971) [1956]. The United States and the Spanish Civil War, 1936–1939. New York: Bookman Associates. ISBN 978-0374978495. OCLC 248799351.
- Thomas, Hugh (1961) [1961, 1987, 2001]. The Spanish Civil War. London: Penguin. ISBN 0-14-101161-0. OCLC 248799351.
- Thomas, Hugh (2001) [1961, 1987 (Penguin)]. The Spanish Civil War. London: Modern Library. ISBN 0141011610.
- Werstein, Irving (1969). The Cruel Years: The Story of the Spanish Civil War. New York: Julian Messner.[ISBN missing]
- Westwell, Ian (2004). Condor Legion: The Wehrmacht's Training Ground. Ian Allan.[ISBN missing]
Further reading
[edit]- Beevor, Antony (2001) [1982]. The Spanish Civil War. New York: Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-100148-7.
- Broué, Pierre; Témine, Emile (2008). The revolution and the Civil War in Spain. Chicago, Ill: Haymarket. ISBN 978-1-931859-51-6. OCLC 1063936788.
- Carr, Raymond (2000) [1977]. The Spanish tragedy: the civil war in perspective. A Phoenix Press paperback. London: Phoenix. ISBN 978-1-84212-203-7.
- de Meneses, Filipe Ribeiro (2001). Franco and the Spanish Civil War. Introductions to history. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-23925-7.
- Doyle, Bob; Owens, Harry (2006). Brigadista: an Irishman's fight against fascism. Blackrock, Co. ; Dublin: Currach Press. ISBN 978-1-85607-939-6. OCLC 71752897.
- Francis, Hywel (2012). Miners Against Fascism: Wales and the Spanish Civil War. Pontypool, Wales: Lawrence & Wishart. ISBN 978-1-907103-51-3.
- Graham, Helen (2002). The Spanish Republic at war 1936-1939. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-45314-1. OCLC 231983673.
- Graham, Helen (April 1988). "The Spanish Socialist Party in Power and the Government of Juan Negrín, 1937-9". European History Quarterly. 18 (2): 175–206. doi:10.1177/026569148801800203. ISSN 0265-6914. S2CID 145387965.
- Hill, Alexander (2017). The Red Army and the Second World War. Armies of the Second World War. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-02079-5.
- Hurst, Steve (2009). Famous faces of the Spanish Civil War: writers and artists in the conflict, 1936-1939. Barnsley: Pen & Sword Military. ISBN 978-1-84415-952-9.
- Ibarruri, Dolores (1966). They Shall Not Pass: the Autobiography of La Pasionaria (translated from El Unico Camino). New York: International Publishers. ISBN 978-0-717-80468-9.
- Jellinek, Frank (1938). The Civil War in Spain. London: Victor Gollancz Ltd. OCLC 1186990149.
- Kowalsky, Daniel (2004). La Unión Soviética y la Guerra Civil española: una revisión crítica. Crítica contrastes (in Spanish). Barcelona: Crítica. ISBN 978-84-8432-490-4. OCLC 255243139.
- Low, Mary; Breá, Juan (1979) [1937]. Red Spanish Notebook. San Francisco: City Lights. ISBN 978-0-872-86132-9. OCLC 4832126.
- Míguez Macho, Antonio, ed. (2021). Sites of violence and memory in modern Spain: from the Spanish Civil War to the present day. Dublin: Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 978-1-350-19921-7.
- Monteath, Peter (1994). The Spanish Civil war in literature, film, and art: an international bibliography of secondary literature. Bibliographies and indexes in world literature. Westport (Conn.) ; London: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-29262-0.
- de Urbel, Justo Pérez (1993). Catholic martyrs of the Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939. Translated by Ingrams, Michael F. Kansas City, MO: Angelus Press. ISBN 978-0-935-95296-4. OCLC 31020583.
- Preston, Paul (2012). The Spanish Holocaust: inquisition and extermination in twentieth-century Spain. London: HarperPress. ISBN 978-0-00-255634-7.
- Preston, Paul (2016). The last days of the Spanish Republic. London: HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-00-816342-6.
- Puzzo, Dante Anthony (1972). Spain and the great powers, 1936-1941 (Repr ed.). Freeport, N.Y: Books for Libraries Press. ISBN 978-0-8369-6868-2. OCLC 308726.
- Shneiderman, S. L. (2024). Journey Through the Spanish Civil War: The Hinterlands. Translated by Green, Deborah A. Amherst: White Goat Press. ISBN 979-8-9894524-4-6.
- Southworth, Herbert Rutledge (1963). El mito de la cruzada de Franco [The Myth of Franco's crusade] (in Spanish). Paris: Ruedo Ibérico. OCLC 869419482.
- Wheeler, George; Leach, David (2003). Leach, David (ed.). To make the people smile again: a memoir of the Spanish Civil War. Newcastle upon Tyne: Zymurgy Publishing. ISBN 978-1-903506-07-3. OCLC 231998540. (trade unionist)
- Wilson, Ann (1986). Carr, Raymond (ed.). Images of the Spanish civil war. London: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-0-04-940089-4. OCLC 15085188.
Suggested listening
[edit]- Songs of the Lincoln and International Brigades (Stinson Records) (1962)
- Songs of the Spanish Civil War Vol. 1 (Folkways) (1961)
- Songs of the Spanish Civil War Vol. 2: Songs of the Lincoln Brigade (Folkways) (1962)
- Spain in My Heart: Songs of the Spanish Civil War (Appleseed) (2003)
External links
[edit]Films, images and sounds
[edit]Films
[edit]- The Spanish Civil War. A six-part documentary miniseries using film and eyewitness accounts from both sides of the conflict.
- Tierra Española (The Spanish Earth) by Joris Ivens, 1937
Images
[edit]- Guernica by Pablo Picasso
- The Spanish Civil War by Robert Capa, Magnum Photos
- Aircraft of the Spanish Civil War
- Imperial War Museum Collection of Spanish Civil War Posters hosted online by Libcom.org
- Posters of the Spanish Civil War from UCSD's Southworth collection
- About the Spanish Civil War – Illinois English Department at the University of Illinois
- Collection: "Exiles from the Spanish Civil War" from the University of Michigan Museum of Art
Sounds
[edit]- Valley of Jarama – song by Woody Guthrie (see: Jarama)
- Anthems and songs Archived 3 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine
- 11 Songs of the Spanish Civil War Archived 26 September 2018 at the Wayback Machine
- Spanish Bombs – song by The Clash
- Viva la Quinta Brigada – song by Christy Moore
- For Whom the Bell Tolls – song by Metallica
Miscellaneous documents
[edit]Diverse references and citations
[edit]- Spanish Civil War History Project at the University of South Florida
- ¡No Pasarán! Speech Dolores Ibárruri's famous rousing address for the defense of the Second Republic
- "Trabajadores: The Spanish Civil War through the eyes of organised labour", a digitised collection of more than 13,000 pages of documents from the archives of the British Trades Union Congress held in the Modern Records Centre, University of Warwick
- Hilton, Ronald. Spain, 1931–36, From Monarchy to Civil War, An Eyewitness Account. Historical text A36rchive. Archived from the original on 6 April 2016..
- Low, Mary; Breá, Juan. "Red Spanish Book". Benjamin Peret. A testimony by two surrealists and trotskytes
- Lunn, Arnold (1937). Spanish Rehearsal.
- Peers, Allison (1936). The Spanish Tragedy.
- Weisbord, Albert; Weisbord, Vera. "A collection of essays". with about a dozen essays written during and about the Spanish Civil War.
- "Magazines and journals published during the war" (online exhibit). The University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign.
- "Revistas y guerra" [Magazines & war] (in Spanish). Urbana-Champaign: The University of Illinois.
- Roy, Pinaki (January 2013). "Escritores Apasionados del Combate: English and American Novelists of the Spanish Civil War". Labyrinth. 4 (1): 44–53. ISSN 0976-0814.
- "La Cucaracha, The Spanish Civil War Diary". Archived from the original on 8 February 2005., a detailed chronicle of the events of the war
- "Spanish Civil War and Revolution" (text archive). The libcom library. Archived from the original on 8 March 2021. Retrieved 14 April 2007.
- "Southworth Spanish Civil War Collection". Mandeville Special Collection Library (books and other literature). University of California, San Diego. Archived from the original on 16 December 2017. Retrieved 5 August 2016.
- "The Spanish Civil War", BBC Radio 4 discussion with Paul Preston, Helen Graham and Mary Vincent (In Our Time, 3 April 2003)
Academics and governments
[edit]- A History of the Spanish Civil War, excerpted from a U.S. government country study.
- "The Spanish Civil War – causes and legacy" on BBC Radio 4's In Our Time featuring Paul Preston, Helen Graham and Dr Mary Vincent (audio)
- Spanish Civil War information at Spartacus Educational
- Interview with Agustín Guillamón, historian of the Spanish Revolution
- The Anarcho-Statists of Spain (the anarchists in the Spanish Civil War), George Mason University
- Fanny, Queen of the Machine Gun (Dutch volunteers) at The Volunteer
- Jews In The Spanish Civil War – by Martin Sugarman, assistant archivist at the Jewish Military Museum
- Franco and the Spanish Civil War Archived 7 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine, paper by Filipe Ribeiro de Meneses, Routledge, London, 2001
- Full text in translation of the Collective Letter of the Spanish Bishops, 1937, a pastoral letter of the Spanish bishops which justified Franco's uprising
- New Zealand and the Spanish Civil War
- Warships of the Spanish Civil War
Archives
[edit]- Robert E. Burke Collection. Archived 26 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine 1892–1994. 60.43 cubic feet (68 boxes plus two oversize folders and one oversize vertical file). At the Labor Archives of Washington, University of Washington Libraries Special Collections. Contains materials collected by Burke on the Spanish Civil War.
- Anarchy Archives
- The role of anarchism in the Spanish Revolution
- Private Collection about German Exile and Spanish Civil War
- The Archives of Ontario Remembers Children's Art from the Spanish Civil War, online exhibit on Archives of Ontario website
- Stuyvesant's Spanish Civil War Archives