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Extremadura campaign

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Extremadura campaign
Part ofSpanish Civil War
Date2–14 August 1936
Location
ResultNationalist victory
Belligerents
SpainSpanish RepublicFrancoist SpainNationalist Spain[1]
Regulares
Spanish Legion
Kingdom of ItalyAviazione Legionaria
Nazi Germany
Commanders and leaders
SpainIldefonso PuigdendolasFrancoist SpainJuan Yagüe
Francoist SpainCarlos Asensio
Francoist SpainAntonio Castejón
Francoist SpainFernando Barron
Strength
13,000 militiamen
some Breguet XIX bombers
8,000 regulars
17 medium bombers
Casualties and losses
Unknown military dead
6,600–12,000 militiamen and civilians shot
Unknown military dead
243 civilians shot[2]
July 1936 uprising /Revolution
1936
1937
1938
1939

TheExtremadura campaign was a campaign inExtremadura,Spain during theSpanish Civil War. It culminated in theBattle of Badajoz in August 1936, from which the troops of the Army of Africa under the command ofFrancisco Franco moved quickly to begin the march toMadrid.

Background

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After the victory of thePopular Front in February 1936, the new government promised to start theland reform, but the agricultural unemployment was very high and the peasants started to illegally occupy large states. On 25 March 1936, 60,000 landless peasants inBadajoz led by the socialist's land union, theFederación Nacional de Trabajadores de la Tierra orFNTT, took over 3,000 farms and started to plough. The government decided to legalise the land occupations. By June 1936, 190,000 landless peasants had been settled in the southern Spain. Many landowners left for the cities.[3]

In August 1936 the Nationalists, with the aid ofNazi Germany, andFascist Italy,managed to transport to thePeninsula thousands of soldiers of theSpanish Army of Africa.[4] ThenFrancisco Franco decided to advance to the north, and occupy Extremadura, in order to connect the two nationalist held zones and start the advance towards Madrid. TheJuly'scoup had succeeded in theCaceres province but in the Badajoz province the armed forces had remained loyal to the government.[5]

Opposing forces

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Nationalists

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The Nationalists had a force of 8,000 men of theSpanish Army of Africa, mainly members of theSpanish Legion and theRegulares (Moroccan mercenaries),[6] backed by AndalusianRequetes, under the command of the ColonelJuan Yagüe. This force was organized in five motorized columns of some 1,500 men each (abandera of theLegion and aTabor ofRegulares with one or twobatteries of75mm), led by the colonels José Asensio, Francisco Delgado Serrano, Fernando Barron and Heli Rolando Tella and the Major Antonio Castejón. This force had the air cover of eight ItalianSa-81 bombers flown by Italian pilots and nineJunkers Ju 52 flown by German pilots[7] andCR.32 andHe-51 fighters.[8]

Republicans

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Opposing the Nationalists, theSpanish Republican Army had a force of 13,000 militiamen and soldiers.[9] Most of them were militiamen, for example in the city of Badajoz there were 500 soldiers and 2,000 militiamen.[10] The members of the Republican militias had no military training and were poorly armed, there only was one rifle per three men, and one machine-gun per 150–200 men.[11] The militiamen refused to dig trenches, had no idea of how to prepare a defensive position and the aircraft bombings caused maximum terror to peasants[12] (a group of militiamen abandoned their positions after being bombed with melons).[7] Furthermore, they had no artillery, barbed wire or professional staff officers. TheFARE lacked gasoline, spare parts and trained pilots, and most of the Republican planes were 15-year-oldBreguets, which had no nose guns and were slower than the Italian fighters,[13] and obsoleteNi-52 fighters.[14]

The drive

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On 2 August the Nationalist force leftSeville and headed to the north towardsMérida andBadajoz.[15] When the Nationalist troops reached a town, they bombed it with artillery and aircraft for half an hour, and after that the legionaries and regulares entered the town. If there was resistance they assaulted it. The militiamen fought bravely while the ammunition lasted, but when threatened by aflanking movement the militiamen would flee. In most cases the leaders of the left-wing parties and anyone with a shoulder bruised from the recoil of a fired rifle would be shot. Thered’s corpses would be piled up, sprinkled with gasoline, and burned.[16] In every town dozens or hundreds were executed by the Nationalists.[10] Furthermore, the colonial troops looted the houses of the Republican supporters and raped thousands of working-class women.[17] Thousands of refugees fled from the Nationalists northwards.[18] According to Helen Graham: "...the Army strategically butchered and terrorized the pro-Republican population, especially the rural landless...It was a war of agrarian counter-reform...The large landowners who owned the vast estates which covered most of the southern half of Spain rode along with the Army of Africa to reclaim by force of arms the land on which the Republic had settled the landless poor. Rural labourers were killed where they stood, the 'joke' being they had got their 'land reform' at last -in the form of a burial plot."[6] More than a half of the victims of the Nationalist repression in Badajoz were landless peasants and journeymen.[19]

On 5 August the Nationalists defeated a column of militiamen andGuardias de Asalto atLos Santos de Maimona.[20] On 7 August the Nationalist troops occupiedZafra[21] and reached the town ofAlmendralejo, about 100 militiamen barricaded themselves in the town’s church and resisted a week of shelling. On 14 August, 40 survivors surrendered and were killed by the Nationalists.[22] On 10 August the Nationalists won theBattle of Mérida. After that, Yagüe turned west and advanced to the city of Badajoz and on 14 August, after a heavy bombardment, Yagüe’s troops won theBattle of Badajoz. TheMassacre of Badajoz saw Yagüe's troops kill between 500[23] and 4,000[24] republican soldiers and civilians[25] and looted the city, even the shops and houses of the Nationalist supporters.[26] One Nationalist officer said that this was a "war tax they pay for they salvation".[10] Many Republican refugees tried to escape across the Portuguese frontier, but they were handed over to the Nationalists by thePortuguese government and executed.[27]

Aftermath

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After the occupation of Mérida and Badajoz, the Nationalists connected the Nationalist-held northern zone and the southern zone.[28] Furthermore, the Nationalists occupied the western half of the province of Badajoz and the Republican government lost control of the Portuguese frontier. The Nationalists carried out harsh repression in the conquered territory. Between 6,600 and 12,000 Republican supporters were executed by the Nationalists (the Republicans had executed 243 Nationalist supporters).[2]

After the fall of Badajoz, Yagüe turned east and pushed towards Madrid. He defeated the Republican troops in theBattle of the Sierra Guadalupe[29] and on September 3, he occupiedTalavera de La Reina after defeating the Republican militiamen. Yagüe had advanced 500 km in four weeks and the road to Madrid was open.[30]

See also

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References

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  1. ^"CVC. Corresponsales en la Guerra de España. Crónicas. Ampliación". Cvc.cervantes.es. 1936-08-30. Retrieved2012-08-15.
  2. ^abBeevor 2006, p. 91.
  3. ^Thomas, Hugh. (2001).The Spanish Civil War. Penguin Books. London. pp.159–160
  4. ^Graham, Helen. (2005).The Spanish Civil War. A very short introduction,. Oxford University Press.p.24
  5. ^Thomas, Hugh. (2001).The Spanish Civil War. Penguin Books. London. p.230
  6. ^abGraham, Helen. (2005).The Spanish Civil War. A very short introduction,. Oxford University Press.p.32
  7. ^abThomas, Hugh. (2001).The Spanish Civil War. Penguin Books. London. p.358
  8. ^Preston 2006, p. 119.
  9. ^Espinosa, Francisco. (2003).La columna de la muerte. El avance del ejercito franquista de Sevilla a Badajoz. Editoríal Crítica. p. 433
  10. ^abcBeevor 2006, p. 120.
  11. ^Beevor 2006, p. 123.
  12. ^Beevor 2006, p. 119.
  13. ^Jackson, Gabriel. (1967).The Spanish Republic and the Civil War, 1931–1939.Princeton University Press. Princeton. pp.270–271
  14. ^Green, William and Swanborough, Gordon.The Complete Book of Fighters. New York: Smithmark, 1994. pp.92–93
  15. ^Espinosa, Francisco. (2003).La columna de la muerte. El avance del ejercito franquista de Sevilla a Badajoz. Editoríal Crítica. p. 8
  16. ^Thomas, Hugh. (2001).The Spanish Civil War. Penguin Books. London. pp.358–360
  17. ^Preston 2006, p. 120.
  18. ^Beevor 2006.
  19. ^Espinosa, Francisco. (2003).La columna de la muerte. El avance del ejercito franquista de Sevilla a Badajoz. Editoríal Crítica. p. 245
  20. ^Espinosa, Francisco. (2003).La columna de la muerte. El avance del ejercito franquista de Sevilla a Badajoz. Editoríal Crítica. p. 21
  21. ^Espinosa, Francisco. (2003).La columna de la muerte. El avance del ejercito franquista de Sevilla a Badajoz. Editoríal Crítica. p. 29
  22. ^Jackson, Gabriel. (1967).The Spanish Republic and the Civil War, 1931–1939. Princeton University Press. Princeton. p.268
  23. ^F. Pilo, M. Domínguez y F. de la Iglesia. La matanza de Badajoz. Madrid. Libros Libres. 2010. p. 254
  24. ^Preston 2006, p. 270.
  25. ^Thomas, Hugh. (2001).The Spanish Civil War. Penguin Books. London. pp.360–362
  26. ^Preston 2006, p. 119-120.
  27. ^Jackson, Gabriel. (1967).The Spanish Republic and the Civil War, 1931–1939. Princeton University Press. Princeton. p.269
  28. ^Jackson, Gabriel. (1967).The Spanish Republic and the Civil War, 1931–1939. Princeton University Press. Princeton. p.268
  29. ^Thomas, Hugh. (2001).The Spanish Civil War. Penguin Books. London. p.362
  30. ^Beevor 2006, p. 120-121.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Beevor, Antony (2006).The Battle for Spain; The Spanish Civil War 1936-1939. London: Penguin books.ISBN 0-14-303765-X.
  • Espinosa, Francisco. (2003).La columna de la muerte. El avance del ejército franquista de Sevilla a Badajoz.. Editorial Crítica. Barcelona.ISBN 84-8432-431-1
  • 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 (2006).The Spanish Civil War: Reaction, Revolution and Revenge. London: Harper Perennial.ISBN 978-0-00-723207-9.
  • Thomas, Hugh. (2001).The Spanish Civil War. Penguin Books. London.ISBN 978-0-14-101161-5

External links

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