War in the North: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|1937 Spanish Civil War campaign in northern Spain}} |
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{{About||the video game|The Lord of the Rings: War in the North}} |
{{About||the video game|The Lord of the Rings: War in the North}} |
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{{Infobox military conflict |
{{Infobox military conflict |
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| conflict = War in the North |
| conflict = War in the North |
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| partof = the [[Spanish Civil War]] |
| partof = the [[Spanish Civil War]] |
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| image = Frente del Norte - Spanish Civil War (March-Sept 1937).svg |
| image = Frente del Norte - Spanish Civil War (March-Sept 1937).svg |
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| image_size = 300px |
| image_size = 300px |
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| caption = Map of the campaign |
| caption = Map of the campaign |
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| date |
| date = 31 March – 21 October 1937 |
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| place = Northern [[Spain]] |
| place = Northern [[Spain]] |
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| result |
| result = Nationalist victory |
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* Republican defeat in northern Spain |
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| combatant1 = {{flagicon|Spain|1931}} [[Second Spanish Republic|Spanish Republic]]<br>{{flagicon|Basque Country}} [[Basque Army]] |
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| combatant1 = {{flagicon|Spain|1931}} [[Republican faction (Spanish Civil War)|Spanish Republic]]<br>{{flagicon|Basque Country}} [[Basque Army]] |
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| combatant2 = {{flagicon|Nationalist Spain|1936}} [[Nationalist faction (Spanish Civil War)|Nationalist Spain]]<br>{{flagicon|Fascist Italy (1922–1943)}} [[Corpo Truppe Volontarie|CTV]]<br>{{flagicon|Nazi Germany}} [[Condor Legion]] |
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| |
| commander1 = {{flagicon|Spain|1931}} [[Adolfo Prada|Adolfo Prada Vaquero]] <br>{{flagicon|Spain|1931}} [[Francisco Llano de la Encomienda]]<br>{{flagicon|Spain|1931}} [[Francisco Ciutat de Miguel|Francisco Ciutat]]<br>{{flagicon|Spain|1931}} [[Francisco Galán]]<br/>{{flagicon|Spain|1931}} [[Belarmino Tomás]] |
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| commander2 = {{flagicon|Nationalist Spain|1936}} [[Emilio Mola]]<br>{{flagicon|Nationalist Spain|1936}} [[José Solchaga]]<br>{{flagicon|Nationalist Spain|1936}} [[Fidel Davila]]<br>{{flagicon|Fascist Italy (1922–1943)}} [[Ettore Bastico]] |
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⚫ | |||
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| strength1 = 120,000 soldiers <br>thousands of anarchists ''milicianos''<ref>Jackson, Gabriel. ''La república española y la guerra civil.'' RBA editores. 2005. Barcelona. Pagina 330</ref> <br> 250 artillery pieces <br> 40 tanks <br>70 aircraft<br>2 destroyers<br>7 armed trawlers |
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⚫ | |||
| casualties1 = 33,000 dead<br>100,000 prisoners<br>one destroyer |
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| |
| casualties1 = 33,000 dead<br>100,000 prisoners<br>one destroyer |
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| casualties2 = 10,000 dead<br>one battleship |
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}} |
}} |
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{{Campaignbox Spanish Civil War}} |
{{Campaignbox Spanish Civil War}} |
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The '''War in the North''' ({{langx|es|Ofensiva del Norte}}) was a [[Theater (warfare)|theatre]] of the [[Spanish Civil War]] that occurred in [[northern Spain]] from 31 March to 21 October 1937. |
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The '''War in the North''', in the [[Spanish Civil War]] was the campaign in which the Nationalist forces defeated and occupied the parts of northern [[Spain]] that remained loyal to the [[Second Spanish Republic|Republican]] government. The campaign included several separate battles. The [[Biscay Campaign]] resulted in the loss of the part of the [[Basque Country (autonomous community)|Basque Country]] still held by the Republic and [[Battle of Bilbao|Bilbao]], the greatest Spanish industrial center. This part of the campaign saw the [[Bombing of Guernica]] and [[Durango, Spain|Durango]]. |
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The [[Nationalist faction (Spanish Civil War)|Nationalists]] launched a number of offensives into parts of the [[Basque Country (autonomous community)|Basque Country]], [[Cantabria|Santander]] (Cantabria), and [[Asturias]] that formed an [[enclave]] loyal to the [[Second Spanish Republic|Republican]] government. The [[Biscay Campaign]] from March to July saw the [[bombing of Guernica]] and [[Bombing of Durango|Durango]] and resulted in the Republicans losing the Basque Country after the [[Battle of Bilbao]]. The Nationalists captured Santander in September after the [[Battle of Santander]] and launched the [[Asturias Offensive]] against the last northern Republican stronghold in eastern Asturias. The [[Battle of El Mazucu]] saw fierce Republican resistance against Nationalist attacks and possibly the first use of [[carpet bombing]] against a military target. The War in the North ended when the Nationalists broke through the Republican lines and captured the city of [[Gijón]] at the end of October. |
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The [[Battle of Santander]] caused the loss of the province of Santander in [[Cantabria]]n [[Old Castile|Castile]] for the Republic. The [[Battle of El Mazuco]] led to the capture of the Republican-controlled part of [[Asturias]] and the fall of [[Gijón]], the Republic's last stronghold in the North, to the Nationalists. The campaign ended on October 21, 1937 with a decisive and total Nationalist victory. |
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== |
==Background== |
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{{Main|Spanish coup of 1936}} |
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On the Nationalist takeover of Navarre (July 1936), General Mola had announced a war of extermination and no mercy against any dissent.<ref>Preston, Paul, ''The Spanish Holocaust: Inquisition and Extermination in Twentieth-Century Spain'', (2013), p. 179.</ref> Harsh repression started to be implemented on blacklisted, inconvenient [[Navarre]]se individuals and their families, and by late August, the Requeté ([[Carlism|Carlist]] militia) from Navarre advanced towards Irun with a mission to cut off [[Gipuzkoa]]n Republican forces from the French border.<ref>Preston, Paul, ''The Spanish Holocaust: Inquisition and Extermination in Twentieth-Century Spain'', (2013), p. 430.</ref> |
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In July 1936, upon the [[Nationalist faction (Spanish Civil War)|Nationalist]] takeover of [[Navarre]], their leader General [[Emilio Mola]] had announced a [[war of annihilation]] against the [[Second Spanish Republic]] and no mercy to any [[dissent]].{{sfn|Preston|2013|p=179}} Harsh repression started to be implemented against those blacklisted, who were Navarrese individuals and their families. By late August, the ''[[Requeté]]'', a pro-Nationalist [[Carlist]] militia from Navarre, advanced towards [[Irun]] in the [[Basque Country (autonomous community)|Basque Country]] with a mission to cut off Republican forces in [[Gipuzkoa]] from the [[France–Spain border]].{{sfn|Preston|2013|p=430}} In September, after the [[Battle of Irún|fall of Irun]] and then of [[San Sebastián]], the Nationalists led by [[Francisco Franco]] launched a [[Campaign of Gipuzkoa|campaign in Gipuzkoa]] and cut off the Republican-controlled areas in northern Spain from the border with France. That area had been already isolated from the rest of Spain by Nationalist control at the beginning of the war. |
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With [[Battle of Irún|the fall of Irun]] and then [[San Sebastián]], on September 23, 1936, the Nationalists under Franco [[Campaign of Gipuzkoa|pushed their way through Gipuzkoa]], cutting off the Republican controlled areas in northern Spain from the border with France. This area had been already isolated from the rest of Spain by Nationalist control at the beginning of the war. |
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Northern Spain was very attractive to the Nationalists because of the industrial production of [[Biscay]] and the mineral resources of [[Asturias]]. Control of the area would be profitable because of its valuable resources and it could force a [[two-front war]]. The resources of [[iron]], [[coal]], [[steel]] and chemicals were a tempting target. Furthermore, its major supplies came by sea, which was controlled by the Nationalist navy. The north being such a heavily industrialised region made it a stronghold for [[far-left]] politics and therefore the Republic. However, the northern Republicans were also politically divided and weakened by struggles between leftists and [[Basque nationalists]], who mostly supported the Republic across the political sprectrum due to better chances for Basque [[autonomy]]. Franco realised that the capital [[Madrid]] was not going to be conquered quickly after a number of Nationalist offensives on the city and the surrounding area had failed. Franco ordered his commanders on the Madrid front to go on the defensive and to send all available resources to the north.<ref>Hugh Thomas, ''The Spanish Civil War'', (2001) p. 594.</ref> Republican forces attempted to establish a front at [[Buruntza]]. Eventually, the front stabilised temporarily on the western fringes of Gipuzkoa (Intxorta) in October 1936, when the [[History of the Basques#Wartime|Basque Statute of Autonomy]] was passed in Madrid, and the [[Basque Government|Basque government]] was rapidly organised. As the Nationalists advanced, tens of thousands of panicking civilians from the occupied areas fled towards [[Bilbao]].{{sfn|Preston|2013|p=430}} |
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==Biscay Campaign== |
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Republican forces attempted to establish a front at [[Buruntza]]. Eventually the front stabilized temporarily on the western fringes of Gipuzkoa (Intxorta) during October 1936, when the [[History of the Basques#Wartime|Basque Statute of Autonomy]] was passed in Madrid, and the Basque Government was rapidly organized. As military rebels advanced, panicking civilians from the occupied areas fled towards Bilbao by the tens of thousands.<ref>Preston, Paul, ''The Spanish Holocaust: Inquisition and Extermination in Twentieth-Century Spain'', (2013), p. 430</ref> |
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==Beginning of the campaign== |
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{{Main|Biscay Campaign}} |
{{Main|Biscay Campaign}} |
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On 31 March 1937, the Nationalists began a campaign to capture the province of [[Biscay]] in the Basque Country with 50,000 men of the 61st Solchaga against the [[Spanish Republican Army]]'s Army of the North commanded by General [[Francisco Llano de la Encomienda]].<ref>Hugh Thomas, (2001), p. 595</ref><ref>Hugh Thomas, (2001), p. 597.</ref> The same day of the Nationalist offensive, the ''[[Legión Condor]]'' [[bombing of Durango|bombed the town of Durango]] with 250 civilian deaths. The Navarrese troops attacked the town of [[Otxandio|Ochandiano]], and on 4 April, occupied it only after heavy combat. Mola then decided to stop the advance because of bad weather.<ref>Beevor, Antony. (2006). ''The Battle for Spain. The Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939.'' Penguin Books. London. pp.228-229</ref> On 6 April, the Nationalist government in [[Burgos]] announced the [[blockade]] of the Basque ports, but some British ships entered Bilbao. On April 20, the Nationalists continued their offensive and occupied [[Elgeta]] after a heavy [[artillery]] bombardment. The same day, the ''Legion Condor'' [[bombing of Guernica|bombed the town of Guernica]]. The Basques retreated to [[Bilbao's Iron Ring]], and on 30 April, the Italian [[Corps of Volunteer Troops]] occupied [[Bermeo]], but the Nationalist battleship ''[[Spanish battleship Alfonso XIII|España]]'' was sunk by a mine.<ref>Thomas, Hugh. (2001). ''The Spanish Civil War''. Penguin Books. London. pp.595-611</ref> |
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⚫ | The Republican government decided to send 50 aircraft of the [[Spanish Republican Air Force]] to Bilbao and launched the [[Huesca Offensive]] and the [[Segovia Offensive]] to stop the Nationalist advance, but both failed. On 3 June, Mola was killed in an [[airplane crash]] and replaced by [[Fidel Dávila Arrondo|Fidel Davila]]. On 12 June, the [[Battle of Bilbao]] began when the Nationalists started their assault of the Iron Ring and, after heavy aerial and artillery bombings, they entered the city on 19 June, completing their conquest of the Biscay and the Basque Country.<ref>Beevor, Antony (2006). ''The Battle for Spain. The Spanish Civil War, 1936–1939''. London: Penguin Books. p. 236.</ref> |
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[[Emilio Mola]] was in command of the start of this campaign, beginning on March 31, 1937; however, Mola, died in an airplane crash on June 3, 1937. The Nationalists began the attack with 50,000 men of the [[61st Solchaga]].<ref>Hugh Thomas, (2001), p. 595</ref> The Republican Army of the North was commanded by General [[Francisco Llano de la Encomienda]].<ref>Hugh Thomas, (2001), p. 597.</ref> This was the beginning of the [[Biscay Campaign]]. |
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The Nationalist offensive started on March 31, and the same day the ''[[Legion Condor]]'' bombed the town of [[Bombing of Durango|Durango]], there were 250 civilian deaths. The Navarrese troops attacked the town of Ochandiano and on April 4 occupied it, after heavy combat. Mola then decided to stop the advance due to bad weather.<ref>Beevor, Antony. (2006). ''The Battle for Spain. The Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939.'' Penguin Books. London. pp.228-229</ref> |
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On April 6, the Nationalist government in Burgos announced the blockade of the Basque ports, but some British ships entered Bilbao. On April 20, the Nationalists continued their offensive and occupied Elgeta after a heavy artillery bombardment. The same day the ''Legion Condor'' bombed [[Bombing of Guernica|Guernica]]. The Basques retreated to the Iron Belt line and on April 30, the Italians occupied Bermeo, but the Nationalist [[Spanish battleship Alfonso XIII|battleship España]] was sunk by a mine.<ref>Thomas, Hugh. (2001). ''The Spanish Civil War.'' Penguin Books. London. pp.595-611</ref> |
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⚫ | The Republican government decided to send 50 aircraft to Bilbao and launched |
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==Battle of Santander== |
==Battle of Santander== |
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{{Main|Battle of Santander}} |
{{Main|Battle of Santander}} |
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After the fall of Bilbao, the Republican government decided to launch an offensive against [[Battle of Brunete|Brunete]] |
After the fall of Bilbao, the Republican government decided to launch an offensive against [[Battle of Brunete|Brunete]] on 6 July to stop the Nationalist offensive in the north, but the offensive had ended by 25 July. The Republican troops in [[Cantabria|Santander Province]] (Cantabria) had low morale, though the Basque soldiers did not want to stop fighting. On 14 August, the Nationalists launched their offensive against Cantabria, with the 90,000 men (25,000 of whom were Italian) and 200 aircraft of the Army of the North. On 17 August, the Italians occupied the [[Puerto del Escudo|El Escudo]] Pass and encircled 22 Republican [[battalion]]s at [[Campoo]]. On 24 August, the Basque troops surrendered to the Italians at [[Santoña]], which led to the [[Santoña Agreement]], and the Republican troops fled from Santander. On 26 August, the Italians occupied the city of [[Santander, Spain|Santander]], and by 1 September, the Nationalists had occupied almost all of Cantabria. The Nationalists captured 60,000 prisoners, the greatest number during the war.<ref>Thomas, Hugh. (2001). ''The Spanish Civil War''. Penguin Books. 2001. London. p.699</ref> |
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==Asturias Campaign== |
==Asturias Campaign== |
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{{Main|Asturias Campaign}} |
{{Main|Asturias Campaign}} |
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The Nationalists decided to continue their offensive into [[Asturias]] after the failed Republican [[Battle of Belchite (1937)|offensive against Zaragoza]]. Eastern Asturias was a Republican stronghold and the last piece of Republican-held territory in the north. The Nationalists had overwhelming numerical and material superiority, with 90,000 men against 45,000 and more than 200 aircraft against 35, but the Republican Army in Asturias was better organised than in Santander and the difficult mountainous terrain would provide excellent defensive positions. The [[Battle of El Mazuco]] saw 30,000 Navarrese troops led by Solchaga and supported by the ''Legion Condor'' try to break through into eastern Asturias. This involved the widespread use of [[carpet bombing]] against Republican positions, in possibly one of its first uses against military targets in warfare. The [[El Mazuco]] valley and the critical nearby mountains (Peña Blanca and Pico Turbina), which were held by 5,000 Republican soldiers, fell to the Nationalists only after 33 days of bloody combat.<ref>Beevor, Antony. (2006). ''The Battle for Spain. The Spanish Civil War, 1936–1939''. Penguin Books. p. 302</ref><ref> El Mazuco (La defensa imposible) by Juan Antonio de Blas.</ref> |
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On |
On 14 October, the Nationalists broke the Republican front and, on October 17, the Republican government ordered the evacuation of Asturias to begin. However, Nationalist ships were blockading the Asturian ports, and only the few military commanders [[Adolfo Prada]], [[Francisco Galán]], and [[Belarmino Tomas]] managed to escape. By 21 October, the Nationalists had occupied [[Gijón]] and completed the conquest of the northern zone.<ref>Thomas, Hugh. (2001). ''The Spanish Civil War.'' Penguin Books. London. pp.708–710</ref> |
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==Aftermath== |
==Aftermath== |
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With the conquest of |
With the conquest of northern Spain, the Nationalists controlled 36% of Spanish industrial production, 60% of the coal production and all of the steel production. Furthermore, more than 100,000 Republican [[prisoners of war]] were forced to join the Nationalist army or were sent to [[labour battalion|labour battalions]].<ref>Beevor, Antony. (2006). ''The Battle for Spain. The Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939.'' Penguin Books. London. p.303</ref> The Republic had lost the Army of the North (more than 200,000 soldiers), and by then, a complete military victory of the Republic in the war became impossible. Franco then decided to start a new offensive against Madrid, but [[Vicente Rojo Lluch]], the leader of the Republican Army, launched a diversionary offensive in [[Aragon]], resulting in the [[Battle of Teruel]].<ref>Graham, Helen. (2005). ''The Spanish Civil War. A Very Short Introduction''. Oxford University Press. p.93</ref> |
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== See also == |
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* [[List of Spanish Nationalist military equipment of the Spanish Civil War]] |
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* [[Condor Legion]] |
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* [[List of weapons of the Corpo Truppe Volontarie]] |
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* [[List of Spanish Republican military equipment of the Spanish Civil War]] |
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* [[Kasilda Hernáez]] |
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==References== |
==References== |
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==Bibliography== |
==Bibliography== |
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* {{cite book| last = Beevor| first = Antony| title = The Battle for Spain The Spanish Civil War |
* {{cite book| last = Beevor| first = Antony| title = The Battle for Spain: The Spanish Civil War 1936-1939| year = 2006| publisher = Penguin| isbn = 978-0-14-303765-1| url-access = registration| url = https://archive.org/details/battleforspainsp00anto}} |
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*Graham, Helen. (2005). ''The Spanish Civil War. A Very Short introduction.'' Oxford University Press. {{ISBN|978-0-19-280377-1}}. |
*Graham, Helen. (2005). ''The Spanish Civil War. A Very Short introduction.'' Oxford University Press. {{ISBN|978-0-19-280377-1}}. |
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*Jackson, Gabriel. (1967) ''The Spanish Republic and the Civil War, 1931–1939.'' Princeton University Press. Princeton. {{ISBN|978-0-691-00757-1}}. |
*Jackson, Gabriel. (1967) ''The Spanish Republic and the Civil War, 1931–1939.'' Princeton University Press. Princeton. {{ISBN|978-0-691-00757-1}}. |
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[[Category:Conflicts in 1937]] |
[[Category:Conflicts in 1937]] |
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[[Category:1937 in Spain]] |
[[Category:1937 in Spain]] |
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[[Category:Basque |
[[Category:1937 in the Basque Country (autonomous community)]] |
Latest revision as of 15:05, 25 October 2024
War in the North | |||||||
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Part of the Spanish Civil War | |||||||
Map of the campaign | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Spanish Republic Basque Army |
Nationalist Spain CTV Condor Legion | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Adolfo Prada Vaquero Francisco Llano de la Encomienda Francisco Ciutat Francisco Galán Belarmino Tomás |
Emilio Mola José Solchaga Fidel Davila Ettore Bastico | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
120,000 soldiers thousands of anarchists milicianos[1] 250 artillery pieces 40 tanks 70 aircraft 2 destroyers 7 armed trawlers |
100,000 Nationalist soldiers 60,000 Italian soldiers[2] 400 artillery pieces 230 aircraft 1 battleship 2 cruisers 1 destroyer | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
33,000 dead 100,000 prisoners one destroyer |
10,000 dead one battleship |
The War in the North (Spanish: Ofensiva del Norte) was a theatre of the Spanish Civil War that occurred in northern Spain from 31 March to 21 October 1937.
The Nationalists launched a number of offensives into parts of the Basque Country, Santander (Cantabria), and Asturias that formed an enclave loyal to the Republican government. The Biscay Campaign from March to July saw the bombing of Guernica and Durango and resulted in the Republicans losing the Basque Country after the Battle of Bilbao. The Nationalists captured Santander in September after the Battle of Santander and launched the Asturias Offensive against the last northern Republican stronghold in eastern Asturias. The Battle of El Mazucu saw fierce Republican resistance against Nationalist attacks and possibly the first use of carpet bombing against a military target. The War in the North ended when the Nationalists broke through the Republican lines and captured the city of Gijón at the end of October.
Background
[edit]In July 1936, upon the Nationalist takeover of Navarre, their leader General Emilio Mola had announced a war of annihilation against the Second Spanish Republic and no mercy to any dissent.[3] Harsh repression started to be implemented against those blacklisted, who were Navarrese individuals and their families. By late August, the Requeté, a pro-Nationalist Carlist militia from Navarre, advanced towards Irun in the Basque Country with a mission to cut off Republican forces in Gipuzkoa from the France–Spain border.[4] In September, after the fall of Irun and then of San Sebastián, the Nationalists led by Francisco Franco launched a campaign in Gipuzkoa and cut off the Republican-controlled areas in northern Spain from the border with France. That area had been already isolated from the rest of Spain by Nationalist control at the beginning of the war.
Northern Spain was very attractive to the Nationalists because of the industrial production of Biscay and the mineral resources of Asturias. Control of the area would be profitable because of its valuable resources and it could force a two-front war. The resources of iron, coal, steel and chemicals were a tempting target. Furthermore, its major supplies came by sea, which was controlled by the Nationalist navy. The north being such a heavily industrialised region made it a stronghold for far-left politics and therefore the Republic. However, the northern Republicans were also politically divided and weakened by struggles between leftists and Basque nationalists, who mostly supported the Republic across the political sprectrum due to better chances for Basque autonomy. Franco realised that the capital Madrid was not going to be conquered quickly after a number of Nationalist offensives on the city and the surrounding area had failed. Franco ordered his commanders on the Madrid front to go on the defensive and to send all available resources to the north.[5] Republican forces attempted to establish a front at Buruntza. Eventually, the front stabilised temporarily on the western fringes of Gipuzkoa (Intxorta) in October 1936, when the Basque Statute of Autonomy was passed in Madrid, and the Basque government was rapidly organised. As the Nationalists advanced, tens of thousands of panicking civilians from the occupied areas fled towards Bilbao.[4]
Biscay Campaign
[edit]On 31 March 1937, the Nationalists began a campaign to capture the province of Biscay in the Basque Country with 50,000 men of the 61st Solchaga against the Spanish Republican Army's Army of the North commanded by General Francisco Llano de la Encomienda.[6][7] The same day of the Nationalist offensive, the Legión Condor bombed the town of Durango with 250 civilian deaths. The Navarrese troops attacked the town of Ochandiano, and on 4 April, occupied it only after heavy combat. Mola then decided to stop the advance because of bad weather.[8] On 6 April, the Nationalist government in Burgos announced the blockade of the Basque ports, but some British ships entered Bilbao. On April 20, the Nationalists continued their offensive and occupied Elgeta after a heavy artillery bombardment. The same day, the Legion Condor bombed the town of Guernica. The Basques retreated to Bilbao's Iron Ring, and on 30 April, the Italian Corps of Volunteer Troops occupied Bermeo, but the Nationalist battleship España was sunk by a mine.[9]
The Republican government decided to send 50 aircraft of the Spanish Republican Air Force to Bilbao and launched the Huesca Offensive and the Segovia Offensive to stop the Nationalist advance, but both failed. On 3 June, Mola was killed in an airplane crash and replaced by Fidel Davila. On 12 June, the Battle of Bilbao began when the Nationalists started their assault of the Iron Ring and, after heavy aerial and artillery bombings, they entered the city on 19 June, completing their conquest of the Biscay and the Basque Country.[10]
Battle of Santander
[edit]After the fall of Bilbao, the Republican government decided to launch an offensive against Brunete on 6 July to stop the Nationalist offensive in the north, but the offensive had ended by 25 July. The Republican troops in Santander Province (Cantabria) had low morale, though the Basque soldiers did not want to stop fighting. On 14 August, the Nationalists launched their offensive against Cantabria, with the 90,000 men (25,000 of whom were Italian) and 200 aircraft of the Army of the North. On 17 August, the Italians occupied the El Escudo Pass and encircled 22 Republican battalions at Campoo. On 24 August, the Basque troops surrendered to the Italians at Santoña, which led to the Santoña Agreement, and the Republican troops fled from Santander. On 26 August, the Italians occupied the city of Santander, and by 1 September, the Nationalists had occupied almost all of Cantabria. The Nationalists captured 60,000 prisoners, the greatest number during the war.[11]
Asturias Campaign
[edit]The Nationalists decided to continue their offensive into Asturias after the failed Republican offensive against Zaragoza. Eastern Asturias was a Republican stronghold and the last piece of Republican-held territory in the north. The Nationalists had overwhelming numerical and material superiority, with 90,000 men against 45,000 and more than 200 aircraft against 35, but the Republican Army in Asturias was better organised than in Santander and the difficult mountainous terrain would provide excellent defensive positions. The Battle of El Mazuco saw 30,000 Navarrese troops led by Solchaga and supported by the Legion Condor try to break through into eastern Asturias. This involved the widespread use of carpet bombing against Republican positions, in possibly one of its first uses against military targets in warfare. The El Mazuco valley and the critical nearby mountains (Peña Blanca and Pico Turbina), which were held by 5,000 Republican soldiers, fell to the Nationalists only after 33 days of bloody combat.[12][13]
On 14 October, the Nationalists broke the Republican front and, on October 17, the Republican government ordered the evacuation of Asturias to begin. However, Nationalist ships were blockading the Asturian ports, and only the few military commanders Adolfo Prada, Francisco Galán, and Belarmino Tomas managed to escape. By 21 October, the Nationalists had occupied Gijón and completed the conquest of the northern zone.[14]
Aftermath
[edit]With the conquest of northern Spain, the Nationalists controlled 36% of Spanish industrial production, 60% of the coal production and all of the steel production. Furthermore, more than 100,000 Republican prisoners of war were forced to join the Nationalist army or were sent to labour battalions.[15] The Republic had lost the Army of the North (more than 200,000 soldiers), and by then, a complete military victory of the Republic in the war became impossible. Franco then decided to start a new offensive against Madrid, but Vicente Rojo Lluch, the leader of the Republican Army, launched a diversionary offensive in Aragon, resulting in the Battle of Teruel.[16]
See also
[edit]- List of Spanish Nationalist military equipment of the Spanish Civil War
- Condor Legion
- List of weapons of the Corpo Truppe Volontarie
- List of Spanish Republican military equipment of the Spanish Civil War
- Kasilda Hernáez
References
[edit]- ^ Jackson, Gabriel. La república española y la guerra civil. RBA editores. 2005. Barcelona. Pagina 330
- ^ Jackson, Gabriel. La república española y la guerra civil. RBA editores. 2005. Barcelona.
- ^ Preston 2013, p. 179.
- ^ a b Preston 2013, p. 430.
- ^ Hugh Thomas, The Spanish Civil War, (2001) p. 594.
- ^ Hugh Thomas, (2001), p. 595
- ^ Hugh Thomas, (2001), p. 597.
- ^ Beevor, Antony. (2006). The Battle for Spain. The Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939. Penguin Books. London. pp.228-229
- ^ Thomas, Hugh. (2001). The Spanish Civil War. Penguin Books. London. pp.595-611
- ^ Beevor, Antony (2006). The Battle for Spain. The Spanish Civil War, 1936–1939. London: Penguin Books. p. 236.
- ^ Thomas, Hugh. (2001). The Spanish Civil War. Penguin Books. 2001. London. p.699
- ^ Beevor, Antony. (2006). The Battle for Spain. The Spanish Civil War, 1936–1939. Penguin Books. p. 302
- ^ El Mazuco (La defensa imposible) by Juan Antonio de Blas.
- ^ Thomas, Hugh. (2001). The Spanish Civil War. Penguin Books. London. pp.708–710
- ^ Beevor, Antony. (2006). The Battle for Spain. The Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939. Penguin Books. London. p.303
- ^ Graham, Helen. (2005). The Spanish Civil War. A Very Short Introduction. Oxford University Press. p.93
Bibliography
[edit]- Beevor, Antony (2006). The Battle for Spain: The Spanish Civil War 1936-1939. Penguin. ISBN 978-0-14-303765-1.
- Graham, Helen. (2005). The Spanish Civil War. A Very Short introduction. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-280377-1.
- Jackson, Gabriel. (1967) The Spanish Republic and the Civil War, 1931–1939. Princeton University Press. Princeton. ISBN 978-0-691-00757-1.
- Preston, Paul (2013). The Spanish Holocaust: Inquisition and Extermination in Twentieth-Century Spain. London, UK: HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-00-638695-7.
- Thomas, Hugh (2001). The Spanish Civil War. Penguin Books, Limited (UK). ISBN 978-0-14-101161-5.
External links
[edit]- Juan Antonio de Blas, El Mazuco (La defensa imposible), in La guerra civil en Asturias, Ediciones Júcar, Gijón 1986 (pp369–383).
- La Guerra Civil en Cantabria
- Almirante Cervera log