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International Brigades

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Paramilitary supporting the Republicans in the Spanish Civil War
For the militia force run by The Other Russia of E. V. Limonov, seeInterbrigades.

International Brigades
Emblem of the International Brigades
Active18 September 1936 – 23 September 1938 (1936-09-18 –1938-09-23)
CountryMultipleand others...
Allegiance
TypeInfantry
RoleParamilitary
Size32,000
Garrison/HQAlbacete
Mottos
Engagements
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Insignia
Flag
Military unit
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TheInternational Brigades (Spanish:Brigadas Internacionales) were volunteer soldiers organized by theCommunist International to assist thePopular Front government of theSecond Spanish Republic during theSpanish Civil War. The International Brigades existed for two years, from 1936 until 1938. It is estimated that during the entire war, there were some 32,000 Brigaders, yet at no single moment were there more than 18,000 actually deployed.[1] Beyond the Spanish Civil War, "International Brigades" is also sometimes used interchangeably with the termforeign legion in reference to military units comprising foreigners who volunteer to fight in the military of another state, often in times of war.[2]

The headquarters of the brigade was located at the Gran Hotel,[3]Albacete,Castilla-La Mancha. They participated in the battles ofMadrid,Jarama,Guadalajara,Brunete,Belchite,Teruel,Aragon, andthe Ebro. Most of these ended in defeat. For the last year of its existence, the International Brigades were integrated into theSpanish Republican Army as part of theSpanish Foreign Legion. The organisation was dissolved on 23 September 1938 by Spanish Prime MinisterJuan Negrín in a vain attempt to get more support from the liberal democracies on theNon-Intervention Committee.

The International Brigades were strongly supported by theComintern and represented theSoviet Union's commitment to assisting the Spanish Republic (with arms, logistics, military advisers and theNKVD), just asPortugal,Fascist Italy, andNazi Germany were assisting the opposingNationalist insurgency.[4] The largest number of volunteers came from France (where theFrench Communist Party had many members) and communist exiles from Italy and Germany. ManyJews were part of the brigades, being particularly numerous within the volunteers coming from the United States,Poland, France, Great Britain, and Argentina.[5]

Republican volunteers who were opposed toStalinism did not join the Brigades. Instead, they enlisted in the separatePopular Front, thePOUM (formed fromTrotskyist,Bukharinist, and otheranti-Stalinist groups, which did not separate Spaniards and foreign volunteers),[6] oranarcho-syndicalist groups such as theDurruti Column, theIWA, and theCNT.

Formation and recruitment

[edit]
A unit of the Bulgarian International Brigade, 1937
Flag of the HungarianRakosi Group (part of the anarchistIron Column).

Using foreigncommunist parties to recruit volunteers for Spain was first proposed in August 1936 by British writer and military theoristTom Wintringham who had already travelled to Spain, but the idea was not formally raised with the Comintern in the Soviet Union until September 1936—apparently at the suggestion ofMaurice Thorez[7]—byWilli Münzenberg, chief ofComintern propaganda for Western Europe. One week after the London meeting of theNon-Intervention Committee confirmed that none of the Western democracies would provide military aid to the Spanish Republican side, the Comintern agreed to start recruiting international volunteers.[8] As a security measure, non-communist volunteers would first be interviewed by anNKVD agent.

By the end of September, the British, Italian and French Communist Parties had decided to set up a column.Luigi Longo, ex-leader of the Italian Communist Youth, was charged to make the necessary arrangements with the Spanish government. TheSoviet Ministry of Defense also helped, since they had experience dealing with the corps of international volunteers during theRussian Civil War. The idea was initially opposed byFrancisco Largo Caballero, but after the first setbacks of the war, he changed his mind and finally agreed to the operation on 22 October. However, the Soviet Union did not withdraw from the Non-Intervention Committee, probably to avoid diplomatic conflict with France and the United Kingdom.

The main recruitment center was in Paris, under the supervision of Soviet colonelKarol "Walter" Świerczewski. On 17 October 1936, an open letter byJoseph Stalin toJosé Díaz was published inMundo Obrero, arguing that victory for the Spanish second republic was a matter not only for Spaniards but also for the whole of "progressive humanity"; in short order, communist activists joined with moderate socialist and liberal groups to form anti-fascist "popular front" militias in several countries, most of them under the control of or influenced by theComintern.[9]

Entry to Spain was arranged for volunteers, for instance, a Yugoslav, Josip Broz, who would become famous asMarshalTito, was in Paris to provide assistance, money, and passports for volunteers fromEastern Europe (including numerousYugoslav volunteers in the Spanish Civil War). Volunteers were sent by train or ship from France to Spain, and sent to the base atAlbacete. Many of them also went by themselves to Spain. The volunteers were under no contract, nor defined engagement period, which would later prove a problem.

Also, many Italians, Germans, and people from other countries joined the movement, with the idea that combat in Spain was the first step to restoredemocracy or advance a revolutionary cause in their own country. There were also many unemployed workers (especially from France), and adventurers. Finally, some 500 communists who had been exiled to Russia were sent to Spain (among them, experienced military leaders from the First World War like"Kléber" Stern,"Gomez" Zaisser,"Lukacs" Zalka and"Gal" Galicz, who would prove invaluable in combat).

The operation was met with enthusiasm by communists, but byanarchists with skepticism, at best. At first, the anarchists, who controlled the borders with France, were told to refuse communist volunteers, but reluctantly allowed their passage after protests. Keith Scott Watson, a journalist who fought alongside Esmond Romilly at Cerro de los Ángeles and who later "resigned" from theThälmann Battalion, describes in his memoirs how he was detained and interrogated by Anarchist border guards before eventually being allowed into the country.[10] A group of 500 volunteers (mainly French, with a few exiled Poles and Germans) arrived in Albacete on 14 October 1936. They were met by international volunteers who had already been fighting in Spain: Germans from theThälmann Battalion, Italians from theCenturia Gastone Sozzi and French grouped together with Belgians under the Commune de Paris Battalion. Among them was the poetJohn Cornford, who had travelled down through France and Spain with a group of fellow intellectuals and artists including Wintringham,John Sommerfield,Bernard Knox,Ralph Bates and Jan Kurzke, all of whom left detailed memoirs of their battle experiences.[11][12][13][14]

On 30 May 1937, the Spanish linerCiudad de Barcelona, carrying 200–250 volunteers fromMarseille to Spain, was torpedoed by a Nationalist submarine off the coast ofMalgrat de Mar. The ship sank and up to 65 volunteers are estimated to have drowned.[15]

Albacete soon became the International Brigades headquarters and its main depot. It was run by atroika ofComintern heavyweights:André Marty was commander;Luigi Longo (Gallo) was Inspector-General; andGiuseppe Di Vittorio (Nicoletti) was chief political commissar.[16]

There were many Jewish volunteers amongst the brigadiers – about 22% of the total.[17] A Jewish company was formed within the Polish battalion that was named afterNaftali Botwin, a young Jewish communist killed in Poland in 1925.[18]

TheFrench Communist Party provided uniforms for the Brigades. They were organized intomixed brigades, the basic military unit of theRepublican People's Army.[19] Discipline was severe. For several weeks, the Brigades were locked in their base while their strict military training was underway.

Service

[edit]

First engagements: Siege of Madrid

[edit]
The flag of the International Brigades was theSpanish Republican flag with the three-pointed star of thePopular Front in the center

TheBattle of Madrid was a major success for the Republic, and staved off the prospect of a rapid defeat at the hands ofFrancisco Franco's forces. The role of the International Brigades in this victory was generally recognized but was exaggerated by Comintern propaganda so that the outside world heard only of their victories and not those of Spanish units. So successful was such propaganda that the British Ambassador, Sir Henry Chilton, declared that there were no Spaniards in the army which had defended Madrid. The International Brigade forces that fought in Madrid arrived after another successful Republican fighting. Of the 40,000 Republican troops in the city, the foreign troops numbered less than 3,000.[20]

Even though the International Brigades did not win the battle by themselves, nor significantly change the situation, they certainly did provide an example by their determined fighting and improved the morale of the population by demonstrating the concern of other nations in the fight. Many of the older members of the International Brigades provided valuable combat experience, having fought during theFirst World War (Spain remained neutral in 1914–1918) and theIrish War of Independence (some had fought in theBritish Army while others had fought in theIrish Republican Army (IRA)).

One of the strategic positions in Madrid was theCasa de Campo. There the Nationalist troops wereMoroccans, commanded by GeneralJosé Enrique Varela. They were stopped by III and IV Brigades of theSpanish Republican Army.

On 9 November 1936, theXI International Brigade – comprising 1,900 men from the Edgar André Battalion, the Commune de Paris Battalion and theDabrowski Battalion, together with a British machine-gun company — took up position at the Casa de Campo. In the evening, its commander,General Kléber, launched an assault on the Nationalist positions. This lasted for the whole night and part of the next morning. At the end of the fight, the Nationalist troops had been forced to retreat, abandoning all hopes of a direct assault on Madrid by Casa de Campo, while the XIth Brigade had lost a third of its personnel.[21]

On 13 November, the 1,550-man strongXII International Brigade, made up of the Thälmann Battalion, theGaribaldi Battalion and the André Marty Battalion, deployed. Commanded byGeneral "Lukacs", they assaulted Nationalist positions on the high ground of Cerro de Los Angeles. As a result of language and communication problems, command issues, lack of rest, poor coordination with armored units, and insufficient artillery support, the attack failed.

On 19 November, theanarchistmilitias were forced to retreat, and Nationalist troops — Moroccans and Spanish Foreign Legionnaires, covered by the NaziCondor Legion — captured a foothold in theUniversity City. The 11th Brigade was sent to drive the Nationalists out of the University City. The battle was extremely bloody, a mix of artillery and aerial bombardment, with bayonet and grenade fights, room by room. Anarchist leaderBuenaventura Durruti was shot there on 19 November 1936 and died the next day. The battle in the university went on until three-quarters of the University City was under Nationalist control. Both sides then started setting up trenches and fortifications. It was then clear that any assault from either side would be far too costly; the Nationalist leaders had to renounce the idea of a direct assault on Madrid, and prepare for a siege of the capital.

On 13 December 1936, 18,000 nationalist troops attempted an attack to close the encirclement of Madrid atGuadarrama — an engagement known as theBattle of the Corunna Road. The Republicans sent in a Soviet armored unit, under GeneralDmitry Pavlov, and both XI and XII International Brigades. Violent combat followed, and they stopped the Nationalist advance.

An attack was then launched by the Republic on theCórdoba front. The battle ended in a form of stalemate; a communique was issued, saying: "During the day the advance continued without the loss of any territory." PoetsRalph Winston Fox andJohn Cornford were killed at theBattle of Lopera, as was DublinerTommy Wood, aged 17.[22] Eventually, the Nationalists advanced, taking the hydroelectric station at El Campo.André Marty accused the commander of theMarseillaise Battalion,Gaston Delasalle, of espionage and treason and had him executed. (It is doubtful that Delasalle would have been a spy for Francisco Franco; he was denounced by his second-in-command, André Heussler, who was subsequently executed for treason during World War II by theFrench Resistance.)

Further Nationalist attempts after Christmas to encircle Madrid met with failure, but not without extremely violent combat. On 6 January 1937, the Thälmann Battalion arrived atLas Rozas and held its positions until it was destroyed as a fighting force. On 9 January, only 10 km had been lost to the Nationalists, when theXIII International Brigade andXIV International Brigade and the 1st British Company, arrived in Madrid. Violent Republican assaults were launched in an attempt to retake the land, with little success. On 15 January, trenches and fortifications were built by both sides, resulting in a stalemate.

The Nationalists did not take Madrid until the very end of the war, in March 1939, when they marched in unopposed. There were some pockets of resistance during the subsequent months.

Battle of Jarama

[edit]

On 6 February 1937, following the fall ofMálaga, the nationalists launched an attack on theMadridAndalusia road, south of Madrid. The Nationalists quickly advanced on the little town ofCiempozuelos, held by theXV International Brigade. was composed of theBritish Battalion (British Commonwealth and Irish), theDimitrov Battalion (miscellaneous Balkan nationalities), theSixth February Battalion (Belgians and French), the CanadianMackenzie-Papineau Battalion and theAbraham Lincoln Brigade. An independent 80-men-strong (mainly) Irish unit, known afterward as theConnolly Column, also fought. Battalions were rarely composed entirely of one nationality, rather they were, for the most part, a mix of many.

On 11 February 1937, a Nationalist brigadelaunched a surprise attack on the André Marty Battalion (XIV International Brigade), killing its sentries silently and crossing theJarama. The Garibaldi Battalion stopped the advance with heavy fire. At another point, the same tactic allowed the Nationalists to move their troops across the river. On 12 February, the British Battalion,XV International Brigade took the brunt of the attack, remaining under heavy fire for seven hours. The position became known as "Suicide Hill". At the end of the day, only 225 of the 600 members of the British battalion remained. One company was captured by ruse, when Nationalists advanced among their ranks singingThe Internationale.

On 17 February, the Republican Army counterattacked. On 23 and 27 February, the International Brigades were engaged, but with little success. The Lincoln Battalion was put under great pressure, with no artillery support. It suffered 120 killed and 175 wounded. Amongst the dead was the Irish poetCharles Donnelly and Leo Greene.[23]

There were heavy casualties on both sides, and although "both claimed victory ... both suffered defeats".[24] The battle resulted in a stalemate, with both sides digging in and creating elaborate trench systems. On 22 February 1937, theLeague of NationsNon-Intervention Committee ban on foreign volunteers went into effect.

Battle of Guadalajara

[edit]
Main article:Battle of Guadalajara
Flag of Garibaldi battalion of the XII International Brigade, formed by italian volunteers

After the failed assault on the Jarama, the Nationalists attempted another assault on Madrid, this time from the northeast. The objective was the town ofGuadalajara, 50 km from Madrid. The whole Italian expeditionary corps — 35,000 men, with 80 battle tanks and 200 field artillery — was deployed, asBenito Mussolini wanted the victory to be credited to Italy. On 9 March 1937, the Italians made a breach in the Republican lines but did not properly exploit the advance. However, the rest of the Nationalist army was advancing, and the situation appeared critical for the Republicans. A formation drawn from the best available units of the Republican army, including theXI andXII International Brigades, was quickly assembled.

At dawn on 10 March, the Nationalists closed in, and by noon, the Garibaldi Battalion counterattacked. Some confusion arose from the fact that the sides were not aware of each other's movements, and that both sides spoke Italian; this resulted in scouts from both sides exchanging information without realizing they were enemies.[25] The Republican lines advanced and made contact with XI International Brigade. Nationalist tanks were shot at and infantry patrols came into action.

On 11 March, the Nationalist army broke the front of the Republican army. TheThälmann Battalion suffered heavy losses but succeeded in holding theTrijuequeTorija road. The Garibaldi also held its positions. On 12 March, Republican planes and tanks attacked. The Thälmann Battalion attacked Trijuete in a bayonet charge and re-took the town, capturing numerous prisoners.

Other battles

[edit]

The International Brigades also saw combat in theBattle of Teruel in January 1938. The35th International Division suffered heavily in this battle from aerial bombardment as well as shortages of food, winter clothing, and ammunition. TheXIV International Brigade fought in theBattle of Ebro in July 1938, the last Republican offensive of the war.

Casualties

[edit]

Existing primary sources provide conflicting information as to the number of brigadiers killed; a report of the IB Albacete staff from late March 1938 claimed 4,575 KIA,[26] an internal Soviet communication to Moscow by anNKVD majorSemyon Gendin from late July 1938 claimed 3,615 KIA,[27] while the prime ministerJuan Negrín in his farewell address in Barcelona of October 28, 1938, mentioned 5,000 fallen.[28]

Also, in historiography there is no agreement as to fatal casualties. The highest estimate identified is 15,000 KIA.[29] Many scholars prefer 10,000, also in recently published works.[30] One exact figure offered is 9,934; it was calculated in the mid-1970s[31] and is at times repeated until today.[32] The popular Osprey series claims there were at least 7,800 killed.[33] However, other authors provide estimates that point rather to the range from 6,100[34] to 6,500;[35] one author claims 6,000.[36] In some non-scholarly publications the number is given as 4,900[37][38] and in some older monographic accounts as 4,000.[39] The above figures include brigadiers killed in action, these who died of wounds later or those who were executed asPOWs; they include also few hundred volunteers who perished before reaching Spain.[40] They include also brigadiers who were executed by their own side, the figure that some claim might have been 500;[41] they also do include victims of accidents (self-shooting, traffic, drownings etc.) or these who perished due to health problems (illness, frostbite, poisoning etc.).

POW brigadiers inCardeña give the fascist salute, October 1938

The total number of casualties is given as 48,909,[42] 55,162[43] or 59,380.[44] It includes killed, missing and wounded, though probably contains numerous duplicated/multiplicated cases, as one individual might have suffered wounds a few times; it also includes Spaniards, who at later stages formed over 50% of the IB personnel. The missing contain the category ofPOW; their total figure is unknown, yet estimates as to the number ofinterbrigadistas held prisoner in the key prison camp for foreign combatants, located inSan Pedro de Cardeña, exceed 700.[45] A work from the mid-1970s claimed that there were 7,686 MIA (incl. POW and deserters), 29,802 lightly wounded, and 7,739 heavily wounded.[46]

The ratio of KIA to all IB combatants as calculated by historians might differ even more as it depends not only on estimates as to the number of killed, but also on estimates as to the total number of volunteers. Some sources suggest the figure of 8.3%,[37] some authors claim 15%,[47] others opt for 16.8%,[48] estimate 20%[49] or 21%,[50] prefer 24.7%[51] or endorse the ratio of 28.6%;[52] a single author arrived at 33%[53] and one claims "a half".[54] In comparison, in shock units used by the Nationalists, though they were not entirely comparable, the ratio was 11.3% for the Carlistrequetés[55] and 14.6% for the Moroccanregulares.[56] The overall percentage of killed in action in armies of both sides is estimated at some 7%.[57]

Estimates of KIA ratio for major national contingents differ enormously and often bear no reasonable relation to the overall KIA ratio, calculated for the Brigades. For volunteers from Latin America (mostly Cubans, Argentinians, and Mexicans) the figures range between 11% and 13%,[58] for the French (including French-speaking Belgians and Swiss)[59] between 12%[60] and 18%;[48] for the Romanians 16-18%,[61] for the Czechs/Slovaks 17%,[62] for the Italians[63] between 18%[48] and 20%;[64] for the British[65] between 16%[48] and 22%;[66] for the Americans[67] between 13%[48] and 32%;[68] for the Yugoslavs between 35%[48] and 50%,[69] for the Canadians[70] between 43% and 57%,[71] for the Germans (including Austrians and German-speaking Swiss)[70] between 22%[48] and 60%;[72] for the Poles (including Ukrainians, Jews, Belarusians)[73] between 30%[74][75] and 62%.[76] Among smaller contingents, the KIA ratio calculated appears to be 10% for the Cubans,[77] 18% for the Austrians,[78] 21% for the Balts (Estonians, Latvians, Lithuanians),[79] 21-25% for the Swiss,[80] 31% for the Finns,[81] 13%-33% for the Greeks,[82] 23-35% for the Swedes,[83] 40% for the Danes,[84] and 44% for the Norwegians.[85] In case of some minuscule national contingents, e.g. the Australians, the ratio of KIA appears to be some 21-22%.[86]

Disbandment

[edit]
Bronze plaque honoring the British soldiers of the International Brigades who died defending theSpanish Republic at the monument on Hill 705,Serra de Pàndols.

In October 1938, at the height of theBattle of the Ebro, theNon-Intervention Committee demanded the withdrawal of the International Brigades.[87] The Republican government ofJuan Negrín announced the decision in theLeague of Nations on 21 September 1938. The disbandment was part of an ill-advised effort to get the Nationalists' foreign backers to withdraw their troops and to persuade the Western democracies such as France and Britain to end their arms embargo on the Republic.

By this time there were about an estimated 10,000 foreign volunteers still serving in Spain for the Republican side, and about 50,000 foreign conscripts for the Nationalists (excluding another 30,000 Moroccans).[88] Perhaps half of the International Brigadistas were exiles or refugees from Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy or other countries, such as Hungary, which had authoritarian right-wing governments at the time. These men could not safely return home, and some were instead given honorary Spanish citizenship and integrated into Spanish units of the Popular Army. The remainder were repatriated to their own countries. The Belgian and Dutch volunteers lost their citizenship because they had served in a foreign army.[6]

Composition

[edit]
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Overview

[edit]
For military structure and organization, seeInternational Brigades order of battle.

The first brigades were composed mostly of French, Belgian, Italian, and German volunteers, backed by a sizeable contingent of Polish miners from Northern France and Belgium. TheXIth,XIIth andXIIIth were the first brigades formed. Later, theXIVth andXVth Brigades were raised, mixing experienced soldiers with new volunteers. Smaller Brigades — the86th,129th and150th – were formed in late 1937 and 1938, mostly for temporary tactical reasons.

About 32,000[4] foreigners volunteered to defend the Spanish Republic, the vast majority of them with the International Brigades. Many were veterans of World War I. Their early engagements in 1936 during theSiege of Madrid amply demonstrated their military and propaganda value.

The international volunteers were mainly socialists, communists, or others willing to accept communist authority, and a high proportion wereJewish. Some were involved in theBarcelonaMay Days fighting against leftist opponents of the Communists: the Workers' Party of Marxist Unification (POUM) (Partido Obrero de Unificación Marxista, an anti-Stalinist Marxist party) and the anarchistCNT (CNT, Confederación Nacional del Trabajo) andFAI (FAI, Iberian Anarchist Federation), who had strong support in Catalonia. These libertarian groups attracted fewer foreign volunteers.

To simplify communication, the battalions usually concentrated on people of the same nationality or language group. The battalions were often (formally, at least) named after inspirational people or events. From spring 1937 onwards, many battalions contained one Spanish volunteer company of about 150 men.

Later in the war, military discipline tightened and learning Spanish became mandatory. By decree of 23 September 1937, the International Brigades formally became units of theSpanish Foreign Legion.[89] This made them subject to the Spanish Code of Military Justice. However, the Spanish Foreign Legion itself sided with the Nationalists throughout the coup and the civil war.[89] The same decree also specified that non-Spanish officers in the Brigades should not exceed Spanish ones by more than 50 percent.[90] Also, the decree ruled that there must be a Spanish battalion in every international brigade, a Spanish company in every battalion, and a Spanish section in every company.[91]

Non-Spanish battalions

[edit]
Spanish Civil War Medal awarded to the International Brigades
  • Abraham Lincoln Battalion – from the United States and Canada, with some British, Cypriots, and Chileans from the Chilean Worker Club of New York.
  • Mickiewicz Battalion – predominantlyPolish.
  • André Marty Battalion – predominantly French and Belgian.
  • British Battalion – mainly British but with many from Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Cyprus, and otherCommonwealth countries.
  • Checo-Balcánico Battalion – Czechoslovak and Balkan.
  • Commune de Paris Battalion – predominantly French.
  • Deda Blagoev Battalion – predominantly Bulgarian, later merged into the Đaković Battalion. Named afterDimitar Blagoev.
  • Dimitrov Battalion – Greek, Yugoslav, Bulgarian, Czechoslovak, Hungarian, and Romanian (named afterGeorgi Dimitrov).
  • Đuro Đaković Battalion – Yugoslav, Bulgarian, anarchist, named for former Yugoslav Communist Party secretary Djuro Đaković.
  • Dabrowski Battalion – mostly Polish and Hungarian, also Czechoslovak, Ukrainian, Bulgarian, andPalestinian Jews.
  • Edgar André Battalion – mostly German, also Austrian, Yugoslav, Bulgarian, Albanian, Romanian, Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, and Dutch.
  • Español Battalion – Mexican, Cuban, Puerto Rican, Chilean, Argentine, and Bolivian.
  • Figlio Battalion – mostly Italian; later merged with theGaribaldi Battalion.
  • Garibaldi Battalion – raised as the Italoespañol Battalion and renamed. Mostly Italian and Spanish but contained some Albanians. In April 1937, it became a brigade.
  • George Washington Battalion – the second U.S. battalion. Later merged with the Lincoln Battalion, to form the Lincoln-Washington Battalion.
  • Hans Beimler Battalion – mostly German; later merged with theThälmann Battalion.
  • Henri Barbusse Battalion – predominantly French.
  • Henri Vuilleman Battalion – predominantly French.
  • Italian Column (Matteotti Battalion) – predominantly Italian and the first international group to reach Spain.[92][93]
  • Louise Michel Battalions – French-speaking, later merged with the Henri Vuillemin Battalion.
  • Mackenzie–Papineau Battalion – the "Mac-Paps", predominantly Canadian.
  • Marseillaise Battalion – predominantly French, commanded byGeorge Nathan.
    • Incorporated one separate British company.
  • Palafox Battalion – Yugoslav, Polish, Czechoslovak, Hungarian, Jewish, and French.
  • Pierre Brachet Battalion – mostly French.
  • Rakosi Battalion – mainly Hungarian, also Czechoslovak, Ukrainian, Polish, Chinese, Mongolian, and Palestinian Jewish.
  • Nine Nations Battalion (also known as theSans nons andNeuf Nationalités) – French, Belgian, Italian, German, Austrian, Dutch, Danish, Swiss, and Polish.
  • Sixth of February Battalion – French, Belgian, Moroccan, Algerian, Libyan, Syrian, Iranian, Iraqi, Egyptian, Chinese, Japanese, Indian, Filipino, and Palestinian Jewish.
  • Thälmann Battalion – predominantly German, named after German communist leaderErnst Thälmann.
    • Tom Mann Centuria – a small, mostly British, group who operated as a section of the Thälmann Battalion.
  • Thomas Masaryk Battalion: mostly Czechoslovak.
  • Chapaev Battalion – composed of 21 nationalities (Ukrainian, Polish, Czechoslovak, Bulgarian, Yugoslavian, Turkish, Italian, German, Austrian, Finnish, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Belgian, French, Greek, Albanian, Dutch, Swiss, Lithuanian, and Estonian).[94]
  • Vaillant-Couturier Battalion – French, Belgian, Czechoslovak, Bulgarian, Swedish, Norwegian, and Danish.
  • Veinte Battalion – American, British, Italian, Yugoslav, and Bulgarian.
  • Zwölfte Februar Battalion – mostly Austrian.
  • Company De Zeven Provinciën – Dutch.

Brigadistas by country of origin

[edit]

The below table reflects citizenship rather than the country of recruitment. Probably more than 50% of all volunteers were recruited in France; apart from Frenchmen, they were either economic migrants, political refugees or both. Most volunteers holding citizenship of Germany, Italy, and Eastern European countries (Poland, Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, Hungary) were recruited in Western Europe.

CountryEstimateNotes
France8,962[95]–9,000[4][96]
Italy3,000[95][96]–3,350[97]
Germany3,000[4]–5,000[96] Beevor quotes 2,217 Germans and 872 Austrians.[95]
AustriaAustrian Resistancedocuments name 1,400 Austrians.Annexed in 1938 by Germany.
Poland500[98]–5,000[99]International historiography tends to hover around the figure of 3,000 "Poles".[4][96][95] It includes migrants from Poland but recruited in France and Belgium, who made up some 75% of the Polish contingent;[100] it also includes volunteers of Belarusian, Ukrainian and especially Jewish origin; the latter might have accounted for 45% of all volunteers classified as "Poles".[101]
United Kingdom2,500[102]
United States2,341[95]–2,800[96][97]
Czechoslovakia2,200[103]some 20% of volunteers from Czechoslovakia were Germans, and some 11% were Hungarians[104]
Yugoslavia1,900[4]–2,095[95]
Belgium1,600[96]–1,722[95]
Canada1,546–2,000[96]Thomas estimates 1,000.[97]
Cuba1,101[105][106]
Argentina740[107]
Netherlands628[95]–691[108]
Denmark550220 died.
Hungary528[95]–1,500[4]some 200 Hungarian volunteers came from Czechoslovakia,[109] almost 100 from Romania,[110] and almost 100 from Canada[111]
Sweden500[112]Est. 799[95]–1,000[97] from Scandinavia (of whom 500 were Swedes[112]).
Romania400[113]contemporary scholar failed to identify national identity of 36% of volunteers associated with Romania; 24% were Jews, 24% were Hungarians, and only 13% are confirmed as Romanians[114]
Bulgaria462
 Switzerland408[95]–800[115]
Lithuania300–600[116][95]
Ireland250Split between theBritish Battalion and theLincoln Battalion which included the famedConnolly Column.
Norway225100 died.[117][118][119]
Finland225Including 78Finnish Americans and 73Finnish Canadians, ca. 70 died.[120]
Estonia200[121][95]
Greece290–400[122]
Portugal134[95]Due to the geographic and linguistic proximity most Portuguese volunteers joined the Republican forces directly and not the International Brigades (such is the case ofEmídio Guerreiro and that was the plan of the failed1936 Naval Revolt). At the time it was estimated that about 2,000 Portuguese fought on the Republican side, spread throughout different units (estimate ofJaime Cortesão).[123]
Luxembourg103[124]Livre historiographic d'Henri Wehenkel – D'Spueniekämfer (1997)
China100[125]Organised by theChinese Communist Party, members were mostly overseas Chinese led by Xie Weijin.[126]
Mexico90
Cyprus60[122]
Australia60[127]Of whom 16 killed.[127]
Philippines50[128][129]
Albania43Organised in the "Garibaldi Battalion" together with Italians. They were led by the Kosovar revolutionaryAsim Vokshi.
Costa Rica24[4]
New Zealand20[130]Mixed into British units.
Others1,122[95]according to some sources, there were between 8,000 and 10,000 Jews among all volunteers, mostly from Poland, the USA and France. This would make them the second largest or even the largest national group[131]

Status after the war

[edit]

After the Civil War was eventually won by the Nationalists, the brigaders were initially on the "wrong side" of history, especially as most of their home countries had right-wing governments (in France, for instance, thePopular Front was not in power anymore). However, since most of these countries soon found themselves at war with the very powers which had been supporting the Nationalists, the brigadistas gained some prestige as the first guard of the democracies, as having foreseen the danger of fascism and gone to fight it. Some glory therefore accrued to the volunteers (a great many of the survivors also fought during World War II), but this soon faded in the fear that it would promotecommunism by association.

The highest-ranking post-war IB combatant wasKoča Popović, who briefly served as the vice-president of Yugoslavia (1966–1967). Two became prime ministers:Mehmet Shehu (Albania, 1954–1981) andFerenc Münnich (Hungary, 1958–1961), whileHeinrich Rau was the chairman ofDWK, sort of government of what would become East Germany (1948–1949). There were three deputy prime ministers:Petre Borilă (Romania, 1954–1965),Eugeniusz Szyr (Poland, 1959–1972), andPietro Nenni (Italy, 1963–1968);Rodoljub Čolaković served as prime minister of Bosnia and Hercegovina, the federative component of Yugoslavia (1945-1948). In communist countries tens of ex-combatants served as ministers (e.g.Karlo Lukanov in Bulgaria,Josef Pavel in Czechoslovakia,Gheorghe Vasilichi in Romania,Ernő Gerő in Hungary,Maks Baće in Yugoslavia), or held other key state jobs, especially in the army and security (e.g.Erich Mielke in East Germany). In the West the only person holding a ministerial job identified was Nenni, thoughLou Lichtveld was minister in the Dutch-dependent Surinam. In the West few became senators, likeArmando Fedeli (Italy, 1948–1958) andRaymond Guyeot (France, 1959–1977), and a handful served as members of lower houses in their national parliaments, especially in France (e.g.Auguste Lecœur in 1945-1955) and Italy (e.g.Aristodemo Maniera in 1948-1958); however, the highest-ranking combatant in national legislative wasFerdinand Kozovski, the longtime chairman of the National Assembly of Bulgaria (1949–1965). Beyond the official state structures single individuals grew to high political positions: in the mid-1970sJack Jones as General Secretary of General Workers Union was considered the most powerful person in Britain.

Canada

[edit]

Survivors of theMackenzie-Papineau Battalion were often investigated by theRoyal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) and denied employment when they returned to Canada. Many "Mac-Pap" veterans volunteered to fight inWorld War II, but some were rejected as "politically unreliable" due to their communist backgrounds.[132]

In 1995, a monument to Canadian soldiers in the Spanish Civil War was built nearOntario's provincial parliament.[133] On 12 February 2000, a bronze statue, "The Spirit of the Republic" by sculptorJack Harman, based on a poster from the Spanish Republic, was placed on the grounds of theBritish Columbia Legislature.[134] In 2001, the few surviving Canadian veterans of the Spanish Civil War dedicated a monument in Ottawa'sGreen Island Park to their country's International Brigaders.

East Germany

[edit]
Erich Mielke, most powerfulDDR combatant

Probably in no country of the world did the International Brigades combatants enjoy the prestige comparable to that bestowed on them inEast Germany.[135] Though after 1945, they were celebrated in all communist states as freedom fighters against fascism, their position was secondary and the official narrative centred upon other threads, e.g. theUSSR-raised army inPoland, theSlovak National Uprising inCzechoslovakia, or thepartisan quasi-state inYugoslavia. No such narrative was available in the case of East Germany, whose “communist government found itself without historical roots beyond the Soviet occupation of Eastern Europe and turned the heroism of the Spanish Civil War fighters into the myth that became a central focus of the German Democratic Republic”.[136] Factional purges of the early 1950s affected German veterans (e.g. the cases ofFranz Dahlem orWilhelm Zaisser) far less than e.g. in Czechoslovakia, though some “Brigaders faced an uncertain existence as they navigated the tortuous political hairpin curves of life under Stalinism and the continual and often critical need for political realignment”.[137] No deviation from official line was allowed; the portrait of IB as inFor Whom the Bell Tolls was considered unacceptable and the novel remained black-listed until the late 1960.[138]

Like in other communist countries, the IB veterans – usually referred to asSpanienkämpfer – were overrepresented in power structures. They took three of the most important military posts:Heinz Hoffmann as commander ofNationale Volksarmee,Erich Mielke as head of Ministry for Security, andFriedrich Dickel as Minister of Interior. Many held other key posts in army and security, e.g.Herbert Grünstein was Deputy Minister of the Interior whileEwald Munschke became chief of administration in NVA. There were 10 former interbrigadistas who entered the Political Bureau ofSozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands, some briefly (e.g.Anton Ackermann, Dahlem or Zaisser) and some for decades (e.g.Paul Verner,Kurt Hager andAlfred Neumann).[139] Numerous ex-combatants assumed high positions in media.[140] The list of veterans who “rose to the highest ranks in the East German government runs into hundreds”.[141]

Spanienkämpfer monument, Berlin

German participation in the International Brigades remained the ideological historiographic backbone of DDR until its collapse. East Germany itself officially acknowledged that “the German-speaking units of the International Brigades represented the nucleus of the armed forces of the future GDR”.[142] Books byLudwig Renn became standard works and at times obligatory reading.[143] Numerous streets, schools, bridges, factories and troop units were named after theSpanienkämpfer;[144] in 1968 they were dedicated a monument, unveiled in East Berlin.[145] Attempts to challenge the propagandistic use of German IB history, like the 1979 novelCollin byStefan Heym, remained isolated episodes with no major impact. The 1986 fiftieth anniversary of the outbreak of the war saw another outpouring of adulation,[146] even though over time the volunteers “became cardboard figures which mirrored the ossification of the State itself”.[147] However, only a few days before thefall of the Berlin Wall, on November 5, 1989,Walter Janka appeared at a public reading of his memoirs to an overflow crowd at theDeutsches Theater. The event was broadcast live on radio and shown later on television.[148]

Czechoslovakia

[edit]
Josef Pavel, highest-ranking IB combatant

Most Czechoslovak volunteers[149] remained in France, either in internment camps or where they had been recruited earlier; in 1939-40 many got enlisted in troops, raised by the exile Czechoslovak government. Later their fate differed: some served in Czechoslovak units raised in Britain,[150] some were members ofFrench resistance, some returned home, and some ended up in concentration camps.[151]

In re-bornCzechoslovakia, the Interbrigadistas, known asšpaněláci, were granted ex-combatant rights. They were overrepresented inKSČ-controlled power structures (army, public order, security, intelligence). Some of them – likePavel – were instrumental when carrying out thecoup of February 1948. TheSecurity Five, key men controlling security institutions – was composed of former IB volunteers: Pavel,Hofman,Hromádko, Valeš andZávodský.[152] Some rose to deputy ministers (London andDufek in foreign affairs,Hušek in information andKriegel in health).[153]

Vlasta Veselá, possibly tortured to death

At the turn of the decades a drastic wave of political purges heavily affected the former Interbrigadistas. Almost all lost their posts and many underwent brutal interrogation;Veselá died in prison. In the early 1950s there was a show-trial planned, intended to denounce “International Brigades as a Trotskyist-Titoist gang”,[154] though eventually most prison sentences were delivered during small-scale trials. In 1952Otto Šling was executed as an enemy spy.[155]

Following another political change in 1956 those still behind bars were set free and gradually re-admitted to public administration. The 1960s was the golden era for Czechoslovak IB combatants, hailed as the first ones who confronted Fascism. Some (Holdoš, Kriegel, Falbra) took advantage of their linguistic skills and were despatched as advisors toCastro's Cuba. Politically the Czechoslovak Interbrigadistas tended to support the reformist wing of KSČ. Few rose to top positions, e.g. in 1968 Kriegel became chairman of the National Front, and Pavel assumed the ministry of interior.

Theinvasion of 1968 marked another downturn; most of these at high positions were dismissed, though there was no wave of heavy repression. Some resigned (Pavel, Holdoš), few left for exile (Hromádko) and some were involved in dissident movement (Kriegel). After 1989 there was some confusion in both Czechia and Slovakia as to how the IB veterans should be approached, though the controversy was not comparable to the similar one in Poland;[156] eventually the image which seems to prevail is this of anti-fascist combatants. In 2016 the Czech minister of defenseKühnl awarded commemorative medals to last living Interbrigadistas.[157] A 2021 monograph presents thešpaněláci in balanced, but somewhat sympathetic terms.[158]

Poland

[edit]
Eugeniusz Szyr, highest-ranking IB combatant

In line with the 1920 legislation, Polish citizens who volunteered to the IB were automatically stripped of citizenship as individuals who without formal approval served in foreign armed forces.[159] Following republican defeat the combatants recruited in France and Belgium returned there.[160] Among the others some served in pro-Communist partisan units in the German-occupied Poland,[161] while some made it to the USSR and served in the pro-Communist Polish army raised there.[162]

In the Communist Poland the IB combatants – referred to asDąbrowszczacy[163] - were granted veteran rights and formed an own ex-combatant organisation, later to be amalgamanted into a general one.[164] There were some 750-800 of them registered.[165] In the early post-war period they enjoyed some official exaltation; the group was supported by Karol Świerczewski, in Spain a career Soviet commander who during few strings commanded IB units.[166] Some assumed high positions in administration,[167] but they were heavily overrepresented in power structures (army, security);[168] some departments became their fiefdoms, like counter-intelligence branch of the army.[169] During purges of the early 1950s there were also cases of deposition, arrest and prison on trumped-up charges of political conspiracy;[170] these were released in the mid-1950s.[171]

Warsaw, stone after vandalised and removed plaque, honoring IB men

Though from the onset Polish engagement in IB was hailed as "working class taking to arms against Fascism", the most intense idolization took place between the mid-1950s and the mid-1960s, with a spate of publications, schools[172] and streets named afterDąbrowszczacy.[173] However, an antisemitic turn in the late 1960s again produced de-emphasizing of IB volunteers, many of whom left Poland.[174] Until the end of Communist rule the IB episode was duly acknowledged, but propaganda related was a far cry from veneration reserved for wartime Communist partisans or the USSR-raised Polish army.[175] Despite some efforts on part of IB combatants, no monument has been erected.[176] Unlike in East Germany, exceptSzyr no-one made it to the very top strata of the Communist elite (member ofPolitical Bureau of PZPR, minister). Unlike in Czechoslovakia or Yugoslavia, no IB combatant became a recognizable figure of political opposition, though some deviated somewhat from the official party line and numerous potential dissidents left the country during anti-semitic purges in 1968-1969.[177]

After 1989 it was unclear whetherDąbrowszczacy were furtherly entitled to veteran privileges; the issue generated political debates until they became pointless, as almost all IB combatants had died.[178] Another question was about homage references, existent in public space. A state-run institutionIPN declared Polish IB combatants in service of the Stalinist regime and related homage references subject to de-communisation legislation.[179] However, efficiency of purges of public space differs depending upon local political configuration and occasionally there is heated public debate ensuing; in some cases there was conflict between regional and municipal authorities, one trying to overrule another.[180] Until today the role of Polish IB combatants remains a highly divisive topic; for some they are traitors and for some they are heroes.[181] In post-Communist Poland they gained few scientific articles, yet no larger scientific monograph onDąbrowszczacy has been published.[182]

Romania

[edit]
Petre Borilă, highest-ranking IB combatant
Petre Borilă, highest-ranking IB combatant

Some 300 Romanian volunteers, mostly stripped of citizenship,[183] survived the Spanish war, and around 110 made it to the post-1944 Romania.[184] Many were key to stabilisation of the regime. Some (Burcă,Borilă,Stoica) manned key positions inTudor Vladimirescu Division, key to Communist takeover; others (Coloman,Patriciu, Câmpeanu) headed 3 regional branches ofDGSP,[185] whileRoman served as the Chief of Staff. The wave of purges starting the late 1940s was relatively mild;[186] by default interbrigadistas appeared before party investigative commissions; some were posted to second-rate positions,[187] yet cases of arrest were few. The most dramatic was this of Stelian Mircea;[188] until 1954 he spent years in labor camps.[189] Most returned to positions of power, though not at the previous level.[190] At the turn of the 50/60s factionalist struggle inPMR produced new purges (Botnar,Doncea,Tismăneanu). In the mid-1960s most highly-positioned interbrigadistas adopted well to emergence ofCeaușescu, even though some (Borilă) – were increasingly at odds with his new, "national" line, and few remained monitored by Securitate.[191] In the 1970s most IB men retired, and few retained ceremonial positions in the 1980s.[192]

The two interbrigadistas who made it to Politbureau wereVasilichi and Borilă, though around 10 more entered the party Central Committee. In the government, Borilă served as deputy PM and ministerial posts were held by Vasilichi (education, mines and oil), Roman (telecoms),Florescu (chemical industry, oil industry), and Doncea (harvest). Roman was Chief of Staff while Burcă headed key departments in Interior. Stoica served as secretary to praesidium ofGreat National Assembly and held other apparently technical jobs, yet in the late 40s he was feared as „viceregele României”.[193] Two more individuals were notorious otherwise: Tismăneanu emerged as key ideologue, dubbed "apostle of Stalin",[194] whileGheza Vida was famous as a sculptor, author of monumental constructions.

spanioli at party congress, 1965

IB combatants have not been much celebrated in propaganda, though the episode of Romanian volunteers was duly acknowledged, usually in anniversary press articles or when receiving honors and nominations. The veteran’s organisation AFVRdARS[195] published a short-lived bulletin.[196] The collective name "spanioli" was barely in circulation[197] and until the end of theGheorghiu-Dej era no related works have been published.[198] In 1966 a monographic issue of a historiographic periodical went out,[199] 1971 saw appearance of a book with articles and documents[200] and in 1972 Roman was permitted to print his memoirs.[201] Some fallen individuals (Călin, Roşu, Făclie) got streets named after them.[202] Almost all interbrigadistas received generous pensions,[203] though few remained beyond the privildged circle.[204]

After 1989 the issue of "spanioli" barely generated public interest. If lambasted in the media, it is because of their role after 1944 rather than because of their Spanish engagements, which even in virulenty hostile press articles are referred to as "fighting Fascism".[205] Streets have not been re-named. In 2008 the memoirs of Iancu went to print, and the 2011 scientific work on Romania and the Spanish Civil War by Paşcalău contained a chapter on the interbrigadistas.[206] In 2013 Mihai Burcea, at the time a PhD researcher, started publishing first articles.[207] His monographic 2017 dissertation was commercially released as a 700-page book in 2024;[208] it is formatted as an academic study and mostly refrains from advancing a partisan perpective. Few other scientific articles have been published.[209]

Yugoslavia

[edit]
Koča Popović, highest-ranking IB combatant

Though the law passed in 1937 stripped volunteers of citizenship,[210] some 350 ex-combatants made it toYugoslavia; most engaged in Communist-led resistance.[211] Unlike in anti-Nazi movements of other East European countries, Yugoslav interbrigadiers played a major role, e.g. in Croatian general staff of theNational Liberation Army 3 key positions were held by ex-combatants: commander (Ivan Rukavina), political commissar (Marko Orešković) and operations officer (Franjo Ogulinac).[212]Tito specifically issued orders for so-calledŠpanci to assume command or otherwise important roles.[213] Three individuals (Peko Dapčević,Kosta Nađ andPetar Drapšin) were commanding army-size groupings. Around 30 were later promoted to the rank of a general, 59 becamePeople's Heroes, and 130 were killed.[214]

In the post-war Yugoslavia IB combatants were overrepresented in power structures;Ivan Krajačić andMaks Baće were instrumental in setting upOZNA,[215] whileKoča Popović and Dapčević were chiefs of general staff. Like elsewhere in the communist bloc, some fell victim to the Tito-Stalin split, but here it was the Stalinists who were repressed; some 35 got imprisoned, though no-one was executed.[216] Later a few (less than in East Germany, but more than in Poland) entered executive of the state party, and 20 entered the Central Committee.[217] Popović briefly served as vice-president of Yugoslavia (1966-67) and a handful were ministers (Popović at foreign affairs,Ivan Gošnjak at defence,Rodoljub Čolaković in education). The dictator himself was related to the IB, as in 1936-37 Tito was heavily involved in organising recruitment to the Brigades.

Tito withŠpanci, 1972

There were at least 400 members in the Yugoslav IB ex-combatant organization.[218] It remained a highly prestigious group[219] and in 1972 the parliament granted them extra rights.[220] Some scholars claim that the organisation enjoyed limited political power.[221]Španci remained celebrated, though usually combined with their role in resistance. First numerous biographies have been published[222] and then broader massive works followed.[223] No Spain-dedicated film has been made, but aŠpanac, battle-hardened combatant in partisan units, was frequent in movies about the resistance.[224] Apart from monuments to partisan commanders with earlier IB record,[225] a monument dedicated specifically to IB combatants was unveiled in 1976 inRijeka.[226] Numerous schools, streets and institutions were named afternaši Španci. Despite some controversy in 1984,[227] in 1986 massive commemorative events were organized across the country.[228] Few brigadiers became political dissidents, though most remained faithful to the party line.[229]

In all successor states the same pattern is at work as to heritage of IB volunteers. The memory debate has largely bypassed them due to the predominance of the Second World War on the mnemonic battlefield. However, for the Left they remain anti-fascist freedom fighters, while the Right relates brigadiers to post-war crimes such as theBleiburg massacre.[230] The Rijeka monument has been dismantled; monuments to other IB combatants (and resistance figures) suffered different fate, some removed,[231] some re-located to less prestigious spots,[232] and some renovated,[233] yet the purges are interpreted as "part of the general nationalization of public space in the successor states" rather than a specific anti-IB or de-communisation project.[234] Author of recent mononograph refers to "forgotten history of Yugoslav volunteers"; his perspective is that memory of the combatants is equal to cultivating "antifascist values necessary to foster an open and tolerant society in the twenty-first century".[235]

Switzerland

[edit]
Monument to Swiss IB volunteers,Geneva.

In Switzerland, public sympathy was high for the Republican cause, but the federal government banned all fundraising and recruiting activities a month after the start of the war as part of the country's long-standing policy ofneutrality.[115] Around 800 Swiss volunteers joined the International Brigades, among them a small number of women.[115] Sixty percent of Swiss volunteers identified as communists, while the others included socialists, anarchists and antifascists.[115]

Some 170 Swiss volunteers were killed in the war.[115] The survivors were tried bymilitary courts upon their return to Switzerland for violating the criminal prohibition on foreign military service.[115][236] The courts pronounced 420 sentences which ranged from around 2 weeks to 4 years in prison, and often also stripped the convicts of theirpolitical rights for the period of up to 5 years. In the Swiss society, traditionally highly appreciative of civic virtues, this translated to longtime stigmatization also after the penalty period expired.[237] In the judgment of Swiss historianMauro Cerutti, volunteers were punished more harshly in Switzerland than in any other democratic country.[115]

Zürich Volkshaus; plaque is visible left to main entrance

Motions topardon the Swiss brigaders on the account that they fought for ajust cause have been repeatedly introduced in theSwiss federal parliament. A first such proposal was defeated in 1939 on neutrality grounds.[115] In 2002, Parliament again rejected a pardon of the Swiss war volunteers, with a majority arguing that they broke a law that remains in effect to this day.[238] In March 2009, Parliament adopted the third bill of pardon, retroactively rehabilitating Swiss brigades, only a handful of whom were still alive.[239]

In 2000, there was a monument honoring Swiss IB combatants unveiled inGeneva; there are also numerous plaques mounted elsewhere, e.g., at the Volkshaus inZürich.[240] Since 2003 there is "Place des Brigades-internationales" inLa Chaux-de-Fonds. No Swiss IB ex-combatants became widely known personalities, though in the late 20th century some acquired certain public recognition; these were the cases of Ernst Stauffer (local civil servant and author of memoirs) andHans Hutter (author and activist for rehabilitation). IG Spanienfreiwillige, an organisation set up to cultivate the memory of Swiss volunteers, built up a database of around 800 individuals, more than a half of them listed with some biographical details.[241]

United Kingdom

[edit]

On disbandment, 305 British volunteers left Spain to return home.[242] They arrived atVictoria Station in central London on 7 December and were met warmly as returning heroes by a crowd of supporters includingClement Attlee,Stafford Cripps,Willie Gallacher,Ellen Wilkinson andWill Lawther.[243]

The last surviving British member of the International Brigades, Geoffrey Servante, died in April 2019 aged 99.[244]

IBMT

[edit]
See also:International Brigade Memorial Trust

TheInternational Brigade Memorial Trust is a registered charity that handles activities around the memory of volunteers from Britain and Ireland. The group maintains a map of memorials to volunteers in the Spanish Civil War and organises yearly events to commemorate the war.[245]

United States

[edit]
Main article:Abraham Lincoln Brigade

In the United States, the returned volunteers were labeled "premature anti-fascists" by theFBI, denied promotion during service in theU.S. military during World War II, and pursued byCongressional committees during theRed Scare of 1947–1957.[246][247] However, threats of loss of citizenship were not carried out.

Recognition

[edit]

Josep Almudéver, believed to be the last surviving veteran of the International Brigades, died on 23 May 2021 at the age of 101. Although born into a Spanish family and living in Spain at the outbreak of the conflict, he also held French citizenship and enlisted in the International Brigades to avoid age restrictions in the Spanish Republican army. He served in theCXXIX International Brigade and later fought in theSpanish Maquis, and after the war lived in exile in France.[248]

Spain

[edit]
Memorial to the International Brigades in the university campus where theBattle of Ciudad Universitaria took place.

On 26 January 1996, theSpanish government gave Spanish citizenship to the 600 or so remaining Brigadistas, fulfilling a promise made by Prime MinisterJuan Negrín in 1938.

France

[edit]

In 1996,Jacques Chirac, thenFrench President, granted the former French members of the International Brigades the legal status of former service personnel ("ancient combatants") following the request of two French communistMembers of Parliament, Lefort and Asensi, both children of volunteers. Before 1996, the same request was turned down several times including byFrançois Mitterrand, the former Socialist President.

Symbolism and heraldry

[edit]

The International Brigades were inheritors of a socialist aesthetic. The flags featured thecolors of the Spanish Republic: red, yellow and purple, often along with socialist symbols (red flags,hammer and sickle,fist). The emblem of the brigades themselves was the three-pointed red star, which is often featured.[249]

See also

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]

References

[edit]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^Fernando Puell de la Villa,Papel y operatividad de las Brigadas Internacionales, [in:] Francisco Alía Miranda, Eduardo Higueras Castañeda, Antonio Selva Iniesta (eds.),Hasta pronto, amigos de España. Las Brigadas Internacionales en el 80 aniversario de su despedida de la Guerra Civil (1938-2018), Albacete 2019, ISBN 9788494992827, p. 17
  2. ^Grasmeder, Elizabeth M. F. (2021)."Leaning on Legionnaires: Why Modern States Recruit Foreign Soldiers".International Security.46 (1):147–195.doi:10.1162/isec_a_00411.S2CID 236094319.Archived from the original on 13 August 2021. Retrieved30 July 2021.
  3. ^"Reportaje | La última brigadista".EL PAÍS (in Spanish). 11 December 2011.Archived from the original on 11 April 2021. Retrieved27 April 2017.
  4. ^abcdefghThomas 2003, pp. 941–945
  5. ^Rein, Raanan (2020)."De Moisés Ville a Madrid: Los argentinos judíos y la solidaridad con el bando republicano durante la Guerra Civil Española".Cuadernos de Historia de España (87). Buenos Aires:UBA:13–36.doi:10.34096/che.n87.9046.Archived from the original on 24 June 2021. Retrieved10 December 2020.
  6. ^abOrwell 1984
  7. ^Beevor 1999, p. 124
  8. ^Kaufman, Dan (24 February 2022)."Soldiers of Solidarity".New York Review of Books.
  9. ^Third International | association of political parties at theEncyclopædia Britannica
  10. ^Watson, Keith Scott (2022) [1937].Single to Spain. The Clapton Press.ISBN 978-1-913693-11-4.Archived from the original on 15 December 2022. Retrieved15 December 2022.
  11. ^Sommerfield, John (1937).Volunteer in Spain. London: Lawrence & Wishart Ltd.
  12. ^Wintringham, Tom (1939).English Captain. London: Faber & Faber.
  13. ^Bates, Ralph (1939).The Miraculous Horde. London: Johnathan Cape.
  14. ^Kurzke, Jan (2021).The Good Comrade: Memoirs of an International Brigader. The Clapton Press.ISBN 978-1-913693-06-0.Archived from the original on 15 December 2022. Retrieved15 December 2022.
  15. ^"The Sinking of the "Ciudad de Barcelona", 30th May 1937".Ciudad de Barcelona.Archived from the original on 3 July 2017. Retrieved20 March 2017.
  16. ^Thomas 2003, p. 443
  17. ^"Gut Feelers and Blind Believers: A Comparative Analysis of Jewish Involvement in the Communist Party in New York City and London, 1935-1945"(PDF).Archived(PDF) from the original on 3 February 2023.
  18. ^Graham, Helen (2005).The Spanish Civil War: a very short introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 44.ISBN 0-19-280377-8.OCLC 57243230.
  19. ^Orden, circular, creando un Comisariado general de Guerra con la misión que se indica(PDF). Vol. Año CCLXXV Tomo IV, Núm. 290. Gaceta de Madrid: diario oficial de la República. 16 October 1936. p. 355.Archived(PDF) from the original on 19 November 2018. Retrieved30 July 2012.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: publisher location (link)
  20. ^Beevor 1999;Anderson 2003, p. 59.
  21. ^Romilly, Esmond (2018).Boadilla. London:The Clapton Press.ISBN 978-1999654306.
  22. ^Stradling, R. A. (1999).The Irish and the Spanish Civil War, 1936–39: Crusades in Conflict. Manchester University Press. p. 151.ISBN 978-1-901341-13-3.
  23. ^McInerney, Michael (December 1979)."The Enigma of Frank Ryan part 1"(PDF).Old Limerick Journal.1. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 29 September 2020. Retrieved25 June 2018.
  24. ^Thomas 2003, p. 579
  25. ^Beevor 1999, p. 158
  26. ^Tremlett, Giles (13 May 2021).The International Brigades: Fascism, Freedom and the Spanish Civil War. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 7.ISBN 978-1-5266-4454-1. The national contingents with the highest number of KIAs were reported as French (942), Italians (526), Poles (466), Germans (308) and Americans (276), though the list contained also a large number (864) of others, unidentified etc
  27. ^"report of Semyon Gendin РГВА, ф. 33987, оп. 3, д. 1149, л. 260—269". Archived fromthe original on 11 July 2022. Retrieved11 July 2022.
  28. ^Pastor García, Daniel; Celada, Antonio R. (2 October 2017). "The Victors Write History, the Vanquished Literature: Myth, Distortion and Truth in the XV Brigade". In Belenguer, Susana; Cosgrove, Ciaran; Whiston, James (eds.).Living the Death of Democracy in Spain. Routledge. p. 312.ISBN 978-1-317-52543-1.
  29. ^"some raise the figure to 15,000, which seems to be entirely unfounded",Pastor García & Celada 2017, p. 312. However, one author claims there were 17,620 "dead or missing",Hooton, E. R. (19 March 2019).Spain in Arms. Philadelphia ; Oxford: Casemate.ISBN 978-1-61200-637-6.OCLC 1104030290., referred afterClifford, Alexander (2020).Fighting for Spain. Pen & Sword Military. p. 226.ISBN 9781526774385. The figure of 15,000 is sustained also byAustralian National University
  30. ^see e.g.Casanova, Julián (19 September 2019).A Short History of the Spanish Civil War. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 96.ISBN 978-1-350-12758-6., quotingLefebvre & Skoutelsky 2003
  31. ^Castells, Andreu (1974).Les Brigades Internacionales de la Guerra España. p. 383.
  32. ^Mugnai, Bruno (2019).Foreign Volunteers and International Brigades in the Spanish Civil War 1936-1939. Luca Cristini Editore (Soldiershop). p. 66.ISBN 978-88-9327-421-0.,Engel, Carlos (1999).Azul y rojo: imágenes de la Guerra Civil Española (in Spanish). Madrid: Almena. p. 78.ISBN 978-84-930713-0-1.
  33. ^Bradley, K.; Chappell, M. (1994).International Brigades in Spain 1936–39. Elite. Bloomsbury USA. p. 7.ISBN 978-1-85532-367-4.
  34. ^Payne, Stanley G. (13 August 2012).The Spanish Civil War. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 153, 157.ISBN 978-0-521-17470-1.of the total of 41,000 volunteers" there were "approximately 15 percent of the volunteers killed
  35. ^Kozłowski, Eugeniusz (1989). "Brygady Międzynarodowe w obronie republiki hiszpańskiej".Dąbrowszczacy w wojnie hiszpańskiej 1936–1939: 81.
  36. ^Martínez de Baños Carillo, Fernando (2011).El general Walter. Madrid: Editorial Delsal. p. 280.ISBN 9788492888061.parece que en número de unas seis mil bajas que se barajaron es el mas cercano a la verdad
  37. ^abSimkin, John."International Brigades".Spartacus Educational.Archived from the original on 11 July 2022. Retrieved11 July 2022.
  38. ^Gefallene ausländische Kämpfer im Spanischen Bürgerkrieg vom 17. Juli 1936 bis zum 01. April 1939, [in:]Statista service
  39. ^"at least 4,000 were known dead", Verle B. Johnson,Legions of Babel. The International Brigades in the Spanish Civil War, Harrisburg 1968, p. 181
  40. ^an unclear number of volunteers - with estimates ranging from 65 to 500 - lost their lives aboardCiudad de Barcelona, a ship which transported them from Marseilles to Valencia and which was sunk by an Italian submarine on May 30, 1937
  41. ^Andre Marty claimed he personally shot 500 men for cowardice, indiscipline and desertion, but the figure is doubted,Beevor, Antony (23 August 2012).Battle for Spain: the Spanish Civil War. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. p. 161.ISBN 978-1-78022-453-4.
  42. ^Engel 1999, p. 78
  43. ^Clifford 2020, p. 226
  44. ^Castells, referred after Puell de la Villa 2019, p. 16
  45. ^opinion of the author of the monograph in question. She quotes also other estimates ranging between 480 and 900,Vilar Oviedo, Celia (2021).Los brigadistas internacionales de San Pedro de Cardeña (MA thesis) (in Spanish). University of Burgos. p. 37.
  46. ^and 9,934 KIA, Castells, referred after Puell de la Villa 2019, p. 16. These sub-categories add up to 55,161, which is 4,219 less than the total given elsewhere by Castells, 59,380. It is not clear how these 4,219 should be categorized
  47. ^Payne 2012, p. 157. Also the IB report from March 1938 claimed 15%, namely 4.575 KIA out of 31.369 volunteers
  48. ^abcdefgCastells 1974, p. 383, also Paul Preston,International Brigades entry, [in:] Robert Cowley, Geoffrey Parkers (eds.),The Reader's Companion to Military History, Boston/New York 1996, ISBN 0618127429, p. 228, endorsed also in Gabriele Ranzato,The Spanish Civil War, New York 1999, ISBN 156656297X, p. 20
  49. ^"my final, conservative estimate is that one in five volunteers died", Tremlett 2021, p. 7
  50. ^"parece que un total de 59.380 hombres se habían alistado para combatir en favor de la República, sólo 12.673 de ellos quedaban en España", Gabriel Cardona,Las Brigadas Internacionales y el Ejército Popular, [in:] Santos Juliá et al.,La Guerra Civil Española y las Brigadas Internacionales, Cuenca 1998, ISBN 9788489958197, p. 81
  51. ^a "composite index",Jackson 1994, p. 106
  52. ^Casanova 2019, p. 96
  53. ^Durgan, Andy (Autumn 1999)."Freedom fighters or Comintern army? The International Brigades in Spain".International Socialism.2 (84). Archived fromthe original on 11 July 2022. Retrieved11 July 2022.An estimated third of all international volunteers were killed
  54. ^Jackson, M. W. (1986). "The Army of Strangers: The International Brigades in the Spanish Civil War*".Australian Journal of Politics & History.32 (1):105–118.doi:10.1111/j.1467-8497.1986.tb00344.x.ISSN 0004-9522.Perhaps half of the foreign volunteers in the International Brigades died in Spain
  55. ^Payne 2012, p. 184
  56. ^Wright, Stephanie (2020). "Glorious Brothers, Unsuitable Lovers: Moroccan Veterans, Spanish Women, and the Mechanisms of Francoist Paternalism".Journal of Contemporary History.55 (1):52–74.doi:10.1177/0022009418778777.ISSN 0022-0094.11,500 out of 78,500
  57. ^Payne, Stanley G. (11 March 2011).The Spanish Civil War, the Soviet Union, and Communism. Yale University Press. p. 153.ISBN 978-0-300-17832-6.the rate of loss was about average for the two contending armies (which averaged approximately 7 percent fatalities) and was exceeded only by that of special units, such as the International Brigades, about 15 percent of whose effectives were killed
  58. ^11% in case of KIA, 12,9% if missing or POWs are counted in,Baumann, Gerold Gino F. (2009).Los voluntarios latinoamericanos en la Guerra Civil Española (in Spanish). Cuenca: Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha. p. 34.ISBN 978-84-8427-643-2.; however, for national contingents estimates are usually higher, e.g. in case of Venezuelans 11%, Peruvians 13% and Mexicans 16%
  59. ^IB report of April 1938 claimed their KIA ratio of 11%,Payne, Stanley G. (1970).The Spanish Revolution. Revolutions in the modern world. Norton. p. 328.ISBN 978-0-393-09885-3.
  60. ^L'epopée de L'espagne, Paris 1957, p. 80, referred afterJackson, Michael W. (1994).Fallen Sparrows: The International Brigades in the Spanish Civil War. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society. p. 106.ISBN 978-0-87169-212-2.
  61. ^the number of "Romanian volunteers" (might include members of national minorities, e.g. Hungarians of Germans) was between 388 and 400. The number of those who "fell in the battle" is estimated at 63-70, Iosif Iulian Onescu,Fighting under Spain's blue sky: Romanian volunteers in the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939), [in:] Francisco Alía Miranda, Eduardo Higueras Castañeda, Antonio Selva Iniesta (eds.),Hasta pronto, amigos de España. Las Brigadas Internacionales en el 80 aniversario de su despedida de la Guerra Civil (1938-2018), Albacete 2019, ISBN 9788494992827, p. 45
  62. ^Nedvěd, Jiří (2008).Českoslovenští dobrovolníci, mezinárodní brigády a občanská válka ve Španělsku v letech 1936–1939 (MA thesis) (in Czech). Praha: Charles University in Prague., claims that out of 2170 volunteers from Czechoslovakia (p. 90) there were 370 KIA, POW and MIA (p. 144); IB report of April 1938 claimed 18%,Payne 1970, p. 328
  63. ^IB report of April 1938 claimed 18%,Payne 1970, p. 328
  64. ^Togliatti, Palmiro (1961).Le Parti Communiste Italien. p. 102., referred afterJackson 1994, p. 106
  65. ^IB report of April 1938 claimed 7%,Payne 1970, p. 328
  66. ^"British volunteers in the Spanish Civil War".International Brigade Memorial Trust. Archived from the original on 26 August 2013.; the figure of 20% inWood, Neal (1959).Communism and British Intellectuals. p. 56., referred afterJackson 1994, p. 106
  67. ^IB report of April 1938 claimed 12%,Payne 1970, p. 328
  68. ^Rolfe, Edwin (1939).The Lincoln Battalion. p. 7., referred afterJackson 1994, p. 106
  69. ^"Tito speaks".Life. 28 April 1952., referred afterJackson 1994, p. 106
  70. ^abIB report of April 1938 claimed 14%,Payne 1970, p. 328
  71. ^"Monument to Spanish Civil War's Mac-Paps veterans unveiled".archive.news.gov.bc.ca. 12 April 1998. Archived fromthe original on 30 November 2022. Retrieved11 July 2022.
  72. ^"Of some 5,000 German international volunteers, apparently around 3,000 died in the conflict", Gaynor Johnson (ed.),The International Context of the Spanish Civil War, Cambridge 2009, ISBN 9781443804851, p. 139
  73. ^IB report of April 1938 claimed 15%,Payne 1970, p. 328
  74. ^Różycki, Bartłomiej (2015).Polska Ludowa wobec Hiszpanii frankistowskiej i hiszpańskiej transformacji ustrojowej, 1945-1977 (in Polish). Warszawa: Instytut Pamięci Narodowej, Komisja Ścigania Zbrodni przeciwko Narodowi Polskiemu. p. 146.ISBN 978-83-7629-765-1.
  75. ^Pietrzak, Jacek (30 December 2016). "Polscy uczestnicy hiszpańskiej wojny domowej".Acta Universitatis Lodziensis. Folia Historica (97). Uniwersytet Lodzki (University of Lodz):65–86.doi:10.18778/0208-6050.97.04.hdl:11089/22617.ISSN 2450-6990.
  76. ^allegedly 3,500 out of 5,200,Wyszczelski, Lech (1989). "Wysiłek organizacyjny i bojowy dąbrowszczaków w wojnie hiszpańskiej w latach 1936–1939".Dąbrowszczacy w wojnie hiszpańskiej 1936–1939: 98.
  77. ^"111 muertos para 1 101 combatientes","Los voluntarios cubanos en la GCE". Archived fromthe original on 4 May 2015. Retrieved25 April 2015.
  78. ^Gálvez, Fran (13 October 2016). "Austria recuerda a sus brigadistas que lucharon en la Guerra Civil de España".La Vanguardia (in Spanish).De los 1.400 voluntarios austríacos, unos 250 murieron en diferentes frentes de la guerra; IB report of April 1938 claimed 16%,Payne 1970, p. 328
  79. ^190 out of 892 volunteers, referred afterde la Torre, Ignacio (2015).The role of the Baltics in the International Brigades during the Spanish Civil War (MA thesis). Riga: University of Latvia. p. 35.; IB report of April 1938 (which includes Finns among "the Balts") claimed 21%,Payne 1970, p. 328
  80. ^out of some 800 Swiss volunteers there were 170 KIA,Mariani 2008. According to another work out of 815 Swiss volunteers there were 185-200 dead (23-25%),Ramón Carrión, Manuel Alberto (14 January 2020)."Los voluntarios suizos en las Brigadas Internacionales (1936-1938)" [Swiss Volunteers in International Brigades (1936-1938)].HISPANIA NOVA. Primera Revista de Historia Contemporánea on-line en castellano. Segunda Época. Universidad Carlos III de Madrid: 233.doi:10.20318/hn.2020.5105.ISSN 1138-7319.; IB report of April 1938 claimed 19%,Payne 1970, p. 328
  81. ^70 KIA out of 225 volunteers,Juusela, Jyrki (2003).Suomalaiset Espanjan sisällissodassa 1936-1939 (in Finnish). Atena Kustannus Oy.ISBN 978-951-796-324-4., referred afterde la Torre 2015, p. 35
  82. ^including Cypriots; there are 53 KIA known by name, though the number is believed to be around 100 KIA, all out of 300 or 400 volunteers,efor."The Greek antifascist volunteers in the Spanish Civil War".EAGAINST.com. Archived fromthe original on 10 October 2017. Retrieved25 April 2015.
  83. ^estimates as to irrecoverable losses for some 500-men-strong Swedish contingent,Padilla, Fernando Camacho; Criado, Ana de la Asunción (1 June 2018)."El papel de Suecia en la guerra civil española (1936-1939)".Les Cahiers de Framespa. E-STORIA (27). UMR 5136 – FRAMESPA.doi:10.4000/framespa.4879.ISSN 1760-4761.; IB report of April 1938 claimed 14% KIA ratio among Danes, Norwegians and Swedes combined,Payne 1970, p. 328
  84. ^220 dead out of 550,Lefebvre & Skoutelsky 2003, referred afterde la Torre 2015, p. 35; IB report of April 1938 claimed 14% KIA ratio among Danes, Norwegians and Swedes combined,Payne 1970, p. 328
  85. ^100 KIA out of 225 volunteers,Moen, Jo Stein; Sæther, Rolf (2009).Tusen dager: Norge og den spanske borgerkrigen 1936–1939 (in Norwegian). Oslo: Gyldendal.ISBN 978-82-05-39351-6., referred afterde la Torre 2015, p. 35; IB report of April 1938 claimed 14% KIA ratio among Danes, Norwegians and Swedes combined,Payne 1970, p. 328
  86. ^there are 14 Australians killed in Spain listed by name inPalmer, Nettie; Fox, Len (1948).Australians in Spain. pp. 11–24.. The overall number of Australians serving in IB is estimated as 66, though some authors claim 44,Gould, Bronte (2012). "Australian Participation in the Spanish Civil War".The Flinders Journal of History and Politics.28: 102.
  87. ^Lorenzo Peña."Mensaje de de Despedida a Los voluntarios de las Brigadas Internacionales y otros discursos de La Pasionaria".Archived from the original on 26 July 2011. Retrieved25 April 2015.
  88. ^"WAR IN SPAIN: Exit".Time. 3 October 1938. Archived fromthe original on 26 August 2010.
  89. ^abBeevor 2006, p. 309
  90. ^Castells 1974, pp. 258–259
  91. ^Richard Baxell,The British Battalion of the International Brigades in the Spanish Civil War 1936-1939 [PhD dissertation LSEPS], London 2001, p. 26. If applied rigorously, this order would set the minimum for foreigners in an international brigade to some 20%
  92. ^Sachar, Howard M. (2013).Farewell Espana: The World of the Sephardim Remembered. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. p. 239.ISBN 978-0-8041-5053-8.
  93. ^Pugliese, Stanislao G. (1999).Carlo Rosselli: Socialist Heretic and Antifascist Exile. Harvard University Press. p. 209.ISBN 978-0-674-00053-7.
  94. ^Kantorowicz 1948
  95. ^abcdefghijklmnoLefebvre & Skoutelsky 2003, p. 16. Quoted byBeevor 2006, p. 468.
  96. ^abcdefgQuoted inAlvarez 1996.
  97. ^abcdThomas 2003, pp. 634–639
  98. ^the number of volunteers arriving directly from Poland is estimated at 500, 600, 800 or at best 1,200,Cieplewicz, Mieczysław (1990).Zarys dziejów wojskowości polskiej w latach 1864–1939 (in Polish). p. 734.,Pietrzak 2016, p. 65
  99. ^the figure of 5,000 volunteers "from Poland" at times appears in general Polish public discourse or in semi-scientific publications, compare "all in all, in Spain there were some 5,000 volunteers from Poland",Szymowski, Leszek (29 July 2018)."Wojna domowa w Hiszpanii: Pomocnicy spod czerwonej gwiazdy".Rzeczpospolita (in Polish).Archived from the original on 20 December 2019., "there were some 5,000 volunteers from Poland during the Civil War in Spain",Siek, Magdalena (2010)."Wojna domowa w Hiszpanii. Wstęp"(PDF). p. 2. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 18 July 2019.. Older Polish prints, often intended for propaganda purposes, when quoting the 5,000 figure referred more vaguely to "Polish volunteers", "Polish citizens" or "Poles", see e.g. "over 5,000 Polish volunteers","Dąbrowszczacy. Tow. Eugeniusz Szyr o udziale Polaków w antyfaszystowskiej walce ludu hiszpańskiego".Trybuna Ludu. 21 October 1966. p. 3., quoted afterRóżycki, Bartłomiej (2013). "Dąbrowszczacy i pamięć o hiszpańskiej wojnie domowej".Pamięć i Sprawiedliwość.12 (1): 186.. In present-day Polish historiography the figure of 5,000 "Polish volunteers" is relatively rare, but it does appear, see e.g. "it is accepted that they were ca. 4,5-5,000",Pietrzak 2016, p. 6
  100. ^Pietrzak 2016, p. 65
  101. ^Siek 2010, p. 2; similar claim (2,250 Jews out of 5,000 volunteers from Poland) in Albert Prago,Jews in the International Brigades, [in:]Jewish Currents 13 (1979), p. 17
  102. ^Baxell, Richard (2012).British Volunteers in the Spanish Civil War.
  103. ^David Majtenyi,Jiří Rajlich,Říkali jim Španěláci, Prague 2021,ISBN 978-80-7573-099-2
  104. ^Maroš Timko,Czechoslovak-Spanish relations (1918-1977) [MA thesis Charles University in Prague], Prague 2022, p. 28
  105. ^"Los voluntarios cubanos en la GCE". Archived fromthe original on 4 May 2015. Retrieved25 April 2015.
  106. ^"New book on Cubans in SCW". Archived fromthe original on 11 May 2015. Retrieved25 April 2015.
  107. ^"Voluntarios Argentinos en la Brigada XV Abraham Lincoln". June 2010.Archived from the original on 2 May 2015. Retrieved25 April 2015.
  108. ^Petram, Lodewijk; Kruizinga, Samuël (2020).De oorlog tegemoet. p. 262.
  109. ^Timko 2022, p. 28
  110. ^interview with Mihai Burcea, [in:]Lenesexradio service
  111. ^Myron Momryk,Hungarian Volunteers from Canada in the Spanish Civil War, 1936-39, [in:]Hungarian Studies Review XXIV/1-2 (1997), pp. 3-14
  112. ^abThomas 2003, p. 943
  113. ^between 388 and 400 according to Onescu 2019, p. 45. Another scholar opts for 377,interview with Mihai Burcea, [in:] Lenesexradio service
  114. ^interview with Mihai Burcea, [in:] Lenesexradio service
  115. ^abcdefghMariani, Daniele (27 February 2008)."No pardon for Spanish civil war helpers".Swissinfo. Archived fromthe original on 13 January 2013.
  116. ^"Lietuviai Ispanijos pilietiniame kare – Praeities paslaptys".www.praeitiespaslaptys.lt (in Lithuanian).Archived from the original on 2 August 2018. Retrieved1 August 2018.
  117. ^*Moen, Jo Stein; Sæther, Rolf (2009).Tusen dager (in Norwegian). Oslo: Gyldendal.ISBN 978-82-05-39351-6.
  118. ^"Nyheter fra arbeidslivet og fagbevegelsen".frifagbevegelse.no (in Norwegian). Archived fromthe original on 29 October 2013. Retrieved25 April 2015.
  119. ^"Tusen dager" (in Norwegian).Archived from the original on 3 December 2016. Retrieved25 April 2015.
  120. ^Juusela, Jyrki (2003).Suomalaiset Espanjan sisällissodassa 1936-1939 (in Finnish). Atena Kustannus Oy.ISBN 951-796-324-6.
  121. ^Kuuli, Riis & Utt 1965
  122. ^abefor."The Greek antifascist volunteers in the Spanish Civil War".EAGAINST.com. Archived fromthe original on 10 October 2017. Retrieved25 April 2015.
  123. ^"Jaime Cortesão e os antifascistas portugueses na Espanha republicana e na guerra civil".Esquerda (in Portuguese). 30 January 2021.Archived from the original on 6 March 2021.
  124. ^Wehenkel, Henri (1997).D'Spueniekämpfer – volontaires de la Guerre d'Espagne partis du Luxembourg. p. 14.
  125. ^"朱德等赠给国际纵队中国支队的锦旗" (in Chinese).National Museum of China. 31 May 2012. Archived fromthe original on 16 January 2013. Retrieved31 May 2012.
  126. ^"战斗在西班牙反法西斯前线的中国支队" (in Chinese). Luobinghui. 30 March 2005. Archived fromthe original on 6 July 2008.
  127. ^ab"Serving in Spain".Australia & the Spanish Civil War: Activism & Reaction. Australian National University.Archived from the original on 3 May 2019. Retrieved29 April 2019.
  128. ^"Spanish Civil War – Filipino Involement [sic]".pinoyhistory.proboards.com. Archived fromthe original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved25 April 2015.
  129. ^"SPANISH FALANGE IN THE PHILIPPINES, 1936–1945".florentinorodao.com. Archived fromthe original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved25 April 2015.
  130. ^"The Spanish Civil War".New Zealand History. New Zealand Government.Archived from the original on 3 May 2019. Retrieved29 April 2019.
  131. ^for 7,758 see Arno Lustiger,Schalom Libertad!, Frankfurt a/M 1989, ISBN 3610085290, p. 61, for "around 10.000" see Magdalena Siek,Wstęp, [in:]Wojna domowa w Hiszpanii. 1941-1987. Sygn. 332, Warszawa 2010, p. 2
  132. ^Howard, Victor; Reynolds, Mac (1986).MacKenzie-Papineau Battalion: The Canadian Contingent in the Spanish Civil War. McGill-Queen's University Press. pp. 239–240.ISBN 978-0-88629-049-8.JSTOR j.cttq92bw.
  133. ^Kastner, Susan (4 June 1995)."Unsung Canadian soldiers honored ... at last".Toronto Star. Archived fromthe original on 7 November 2012.
  134. ^""Mac-Pap" Monument Unveiling". workingTV. Archived fromthe original on 27 December 2016. Retrieved25 April 2015.
  135. ^"only Poland came close in its adulation of former Spanish veterans", Arnold Krammer,The Cult of the Spanish Civil War in East Germany, [in:]Journal of Contemporary History 39/4 (2004), p. 535. More detailed monographs are Josie McLellan,Anti-Fascism and Memory in East Germany. Remembering the International Brigades 1945-1989, Oxford 2004, ISBN 0199276269, and Michael Uhl,Mythos Spanien. Das Erbe der Internationalen Brigaden in der DDR, Bonn 2004, ISBN 3801250318
  136. ^ Arnold Krammer,Internationale Brigaden in der DDR, [in:]H/Soz/Kult 42/2 (2005)
  137. ^“by 1950, the Party had purified the anti-fascist movement of resistance workers, concentration camp survivors, and anti-Nazi spies, leaving only active fighters and committed Party members. What remained was to bring the story of the anti-fascist fighters, a common euphemism for the International Brigades, into ideological alignment”, Kramer 2005
  138. ^Vjeran Pavlaković,Yugoslav volunteers in the spanish Civil War, Beograd 2016, p. 99. Hemingway's novel received different treatment in other Communist countries, e.g. in Poland it was an obligatory school lecture, Jakub Wysmułek,Dąbrowszczacy: między symbolem faszyzmu a polityką antykomunizmu, [in:]Kultura i Społeceństwo 2 (2019), p. 144. In Yugoslavia in Zagreb alone there were 11 editions between 1952 and 1989, Pavlaković 2016, p. 99
  139. ^ Krammer 2004, p. 539
  140. ^ Max Kahane founded Allgemeiner Deutscher Nachrichtendienst and was the chief commentator ofNeues Deutschland. Georg Stibi was the chief editor ofBerliner Zeitung, thenLeipziger Volkszeitung, and finallyNeues Deutschland. Frieda Kantorowicz had a high administrative position with ADN. Erich Henschke was the editor-in-chief ofBerliner Zeitung and Kurt Julius Goldstein held the same position in the Deutschlandsender broadcast station
  141. ^ Krammer 2004, p. 537
  142. ^ Peter Joachim Lapp,Traditionspflege in der DDR, Berlin [West] 1988, ISBN 9783921226322, pp. 74-75
  143. ^ Krammer 2004, p. 535
  144. ^ Krammer 2005
  145. ^Denkmal für die deutschen Interbrigadisten, [in:]Bildhauerei in Berlin sevice
  146. ^ Krammer 2004, p. 558
  147. ^ Krammer 2005
  148. ^ Krammer 2004, p. 559
  149. ^ it is estimated that out of Czechoslovak volunteers, only 66% were Czechs or Slovaks; 20% were Germans and 11% were Hungarians, Maroš Timko,Czechoslovak-Spanish relations (1918-1977) [MA thesis Univerzita Karlova v Praze], Praha 2022, p. 28
  150. ^ Zdenko Maršálek,Internacionalisté pod drobnohledem. Interbrigadisté v československých jednotkách za druhé světové války pohledem sociologických kategorií, [in:]Paginae historiae 25/1 (2017), p. 47
  151. ^ Jiří Nedvěd,Českoslovenští dobrovolníci, mezinárodní brigády a občanská válka ve Španělsku v letech 1936 – 1939 [MA thesis Univerzita Karloyva v Praze], Praha 2008, pp. 147-149
  152. ^ Timko 2022, pp. 73-74
  153. ^ Nedvěd 2008, pp. 149-152
  154. ^ Timko 2022, p. 74
  155. ^ Nedvěd 2008, pp. 152-154
  156. ^when noting that “téma dokonce dodnes neztratilo na své kontroverznosti”, the Czech author quotes the Polish example, not any from Czechia, Maršálek 2017, p. 44
  157. ^ Nedvěd 2008, pp. 154-156
  158. ^compare David Majtenyi, Jiří Rajlich,Říkali jim Španěláci, Praha 2021, ISBN 978-80-7573-099-2
  159. ^Różycki 2015, p. 149
  160. ^Różycki 2015, p. 148
  161. ^individual paths from internment camps to occupied Poland differed, e.g. in 1940 some ex-combatants volunteered to German labor units, recruited in occupied France and deployed in the East; some fought in the Polish army in France or in the French army and were taken prisoner by the Germans, later released from Stalag camps
  162. ^usually they remained in French internment camps in Algeria until liberated by the Americans; in 1942–1943 from Africa via Middle East they made it to the USSR. In few cases some Polish IB volunteers were recalled from Spain to the USSR in 1937-1939, mostly to be executed; this was the case e.g. ofKazimierz Cichowski andGustaw Reicher
  163. ^unlike e.g. in East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Romania or Yugoslavia, where IB volunteers gained collective names related to Spain (“Spanienkämpfer”, “španěláci”, “spanioli”, “Španci”), in Poland it was not the case. The term “Hiszpanie” (Spaniards) briefly functioned in internal communist parlance, often to denote one of the party factions, but it was not used officially. The term “Dąbrowszczacy” [Dombrovskites] is derived from the surname ofJarosław Dąbrowski, a 19th-century left-wing commander who had been adopted as patron of the XIII International Brigade, the unit where most volunteers from Poland used to serve
  164. ^Różycki 2015, pp. 150–151
  165. ^in 1949, growth from 590 in 1947, Różycki 2015, pp. 158, 160. Some additional 400 veterans registered lived abroad, Różycki 2015, p. 160
  166. ^Różycki 2015, p. 152
  167. ^the highest-ranking IB combatant was Eugeniusz Szyr, who served as deputy prime minister in 1959–1972,Pietrzak 2016, p. 78
  168. ^out of some 750 former interbrigadistas living in Poland, 341 have been identified as engaged at one point or another in repressive structures, Daniel Czerwiński,Dąbrowszczacy w aparacie bezpieczeństwa Polski Ludowej. Próba wstępnej analizy zjawiska i postulaty badawcze, [in:]Dąbrowszczacy i wojna domowa w Hiszpanii, Warszawa/Gdańsk 2025, ISBN 9788383762982, ss. 331-332. Key figures were Mieczysław Mietkowski, Grzegorz Korczyński, Leon Rubinstein, Józef Mrozek, Franciszek Księżarczyk, Mieczysław Broniatowski, Henryk Toruńczyk, Juliusz Hibner, Jan Rutkowski, Paweł Szkliniarz, and Wacław Komar, who held various jobs in the Ministry of Defence, Ministry of Interior, army (especially counter-intelligence), and police, Pietrzak 2016, p. 78. List of 56 highest-positioned individuals in Czerwiński 2025, pp. 347-350
  169. ^Różycki 2015, p. 180
  170. ^Grzegorz Korczyński, Wacław Komar, Stanisław Flato, Michał Bron, Wiktor Taubenfliegel, Pietrzak 2016, p. 78
  171. ^Różycki 2015, p. 186
  172. ^following the fall of Communism in Poland all schools named after the Dąbrowszczacy were re-named or dropped the name altogether. The former case is e.g. this of Szkoła Podstawowa nr 161 im. Dąbrowszczaków in Warsaw, which following some institutional changes now operates as Szkoła Podstawowa nr 388, withJohn Paul II as its patron, seeHistoria szkoły, [in] Szkoła Podstawowa 388 service. The latter case is e.g. this of Szkoła Podstawowa nr 3 im. Dąbrowszczaków inZgierz, seeSzkoła Podstawowa nr 3 im. Dąbrowszczaków, [in:] Zgierz archivial service, which had not adopted a new patron and today operates simply as Szkoła Podstawowa nr 3, seeSzkoła Podstawowa nr 3, [in:] Zgierz municipal service
  173. ^Różycki 2015, pp. 186–187
  174. ^Różycki 2015, pp. 187–188. The best-known are Emanuel Mink, Michał Bron, Wiktor Taubenfligel, Józef Kutin, Eugenia Łozińska, Aleksander Szurek, Artur Kowalski and Ludwik Zagórski
  175. ^Różycki 2015, pp. 188–190
  176. ^except a commemorative stone in the Powązki military cemetery
  177. ^e.g.Seweryn Ajzner, expelled from PZPR in 1968 (died 1989), has not joined the dissident movement, though he remained somewhat sympathetic and his son did join.Michał Bron, also marginalised, merely maintained contacts with dissident movement. Increasingly disillusioned, he left Poland in 1984
  178. ^the legislation adopted in 1991 declared that veterans are individuals who "actively participated in the struggles for Poland's independence and sovereignty"; the veteran status allowed a number of privileges, seeDubisz, Radosław (9 October 2023)."Veteran Privileges".Urząd do Spraw Kombatantów i Osób Represjonowanych.Archived from the original on 3 December 2022.
  179. ^"ul. Dąbrowszczaków".Instytut Pamięci Narodowej (in Polish). 31 August 2021.Archived from the original on 20 June 2022.Byli realizatorami polityki stalinowskiej na Półwyspie Iberyjskim
  180. ^in some cases street names have been changed but restored later, for Warsaw seeOsowski, Jarosław (10 April 2019)."Koniec dekomunizacji w Warszawie".Gazeta Wyborcza. Archived fromthe original on 9 October 2023. Retrieved20 June 2022.. For a sample of re-naming a street see e.g.Official Gazette of theZachodniopomorskie Voivodship of 30.08.2017, with a street inBiałogard renamed to honor the primate of Poland,Wyszyński
  181. ^Opioła, Wojciech (2016).Hiszpańska wojna domowa w polskich dyskursach politycznych. Analiza publicystyki 1936–2015. pp. 238–245.,Pietrzak 2016, p. 80
  182. ^the closest thing is a set of articles, see Daniel Czerwiński (ed.),Dąbrowszczacy i wojna domowa w Hiszpanii. Kontekst międzynarodowy – późniejsze losy – spory o pamięć, Gdańsk/Warszawa 2025, ISBN 9788383762982. An exercise in micro-history is Dariusz Zalega,Śląsk zbuntowany, Katowice 2019, ISBN 9788380499362, commercial version of a PhD dissertation on volunteers from Upper Silesia (both German and Polish)
  183. ^ the constitution, adopted in 1938, specified in art. 9 that service in foreign military units with no approval on part of Romanian authorities automatically stripped a person in question of citizenship, seeMonitorul Oficial, partea I-a, nr. 48, 27.02.1938
  184. ^ few key Communist personalities – like Aurel Stancu and Leonte Tismăneanu – with assistance on part of thePCF managed to reach the USSR already in 1939 or 1940. The vast majority, however, remained in French internment camps, though over time they were being released and some joined theResistance (few perished, e.g. Nicolae Cristea or Ion Călin). In 1943 around 15-20 ex-combatants were liberated by the Americans in Algeria and via the Near East managed to reach the USSR. Very few of these who made it to the Soviet Union – like Constantin Doncea - were parachuted in Romania behind the frontline, operating in partisan groups in the Carpathians. Some assumed key roles in USSR-raised Romanian units which along the Red Army entered Romania in the summer of 1944 and were instrumental in Communist seizure of power. Details in Mihai Burcea,Luptănd pentru o iluzie. Voluntari români în Brigăzile Internaționale din Spania, Târgoviște 2024, ISBN 9786065376861, pp. 219-311
  185. ^ Mihai Burcea,Recuperarea memoriei interbrigadiștilor și maquisarzilor români: Studiu de caz; Ion Călin, [in:]Annals of the University of Bucharest. Political sciences 15/1 (2013), p. 87. Some assumed key positions in central offices:Wilhelm Einhorn, a Hungarian volunteer from Transylvania, in 1948 was appointed director of the Securitate secretariat, and in 1956 played a key role during Romanian intervention in Hungary, Dennis Deletant,Communist Terror in Romania. Gheorgiu-Dej and the Police State, 1948-1965, London 1999, ISBN 1850653860, p. 267
  186. ^ some scholars claim that Romanian party leadership resisted Soviet pressure to launch massivere pression, and others maintain that they actually campaigned to sideline Spanish veterans. For the former see opinion of Mihai Burcea [interview],Romanian International Brigadeers in the Spanish Civil War, [in:]LenexRadio service, for the latter see George H. Hodos,Show Trials: StalinistPurges in Eastern Europe, 1948-1954, Westport 1987, ISBN 0275927830, p. 99
  187. ^the best known case is this of Valter Roman, who in 1952 was deposed as minister of telecommunications and got marked for a show trial (which has never materialized). He was officially rehabilitated in 1956. Another is this ofElisabeta Luca (nee Betty Birman); though she did not hold any position of power, she was known as a very active propagandist
  188. ^ born in 1919, Mircea was the youngest Romanian volunteer
  189. ^ following service in Romanian foreign intelligence in France he was recalled, detained and marked for a show trial; the idea was eventually abandoned, and he spent years digging canals
  190. ^ e.g. Roman did not resume his ministerial job, but assumed directorial positions in a top state publishing house. In 1956 he was instrumental during Romanian intervention in Hungary and (as ethnic Hungarian) interrogatedImre Nagy. An exception is e.g. Elisabeta Luca, who following her release from detention in 1954 did not resume work in any of numerous organisations she had co-led before her downfall, and commenced working in a factory (according to somesources in a laboratory)
  191. ^ e.g. Andrei „Bandi” Roman, Hantz Arbore and Petre Suciu, Burcea 2024, pp. 658-659
  192. ^ e.g. Florescu retained ministerial position until 1980, and Roman remained member of the Central Committee until 1983. Many from the interbrigadista offspring left Romania in the 1970s and 1980s, giving rise to the collective name of "generația dezamăgiţilor", a disappointed generation, Burcea 2024, pp. 538-573
  193. ^ Burcea 2024, p. 24
  194. ^Laurenţiu Ungureanu, Radu Eremia,Eroi în Spania, activişti în URSS, politruci în România. Biografiile lui Petre Borilă, Gheorghe Stoica, Mihai Burcă şi Leonte Tismăneanu, [in:]Adevarul 27.02.2015
  195. ^full name Asociaţia Foştilor Voluntari Români din Armata Republicană Spaniolă. It was established in 1945. The honorary president was the prime minister (who did not serve in Spain) Petru Groza, the president was Stan Minea, after a few months replaced by Valter Roman. Elisabeta Luca (or Betty Birman, a nurse at the IB Brigades Hospital) was elected secretary. The Steering Committee consisted of Burcă, Borilă, Stoica, Florescu, Doncea, Minea and Luca, a fairly representative selection of most influential interbrigadistas
  196. ^ titledVoluntarii Libertăţii
  197. ^ Burcea 2024, p. 431
  198. ^ in the Dej period there were memoirs and similar accounts from Spanish war published, but not by Romanian authors (Longo, Ibarruri, de la Mora, Koltsov), Burcea 2024, p. 34
  199. ^Analele ISISP; Institutul de Studii Istoriceși Social-Politice on 30-th anniversary of the war published a monographic issue with articles and biographies og Constantin Burcă, Nicolae Cristea, Ștefan Megheri, Nicolae Roșu, Nicolae Pop, and Mihai Ardeleanu), Burcea 2024, p. 35
  200. ^titledVoluntari români în Spania: Amintiri și documente. 1936-1939; again, it was the publication by ISIS, compareGoogleBooks
  201. ^ Valter Roman,Sub cerul Spaniei, Bucureşti, Editura Militară 1972
  202. ^ Burcea 2024, p. 21
  203. ^ Burcea 2024, pp. 531-537
  204. ^ Burcea 2024, pp. 522-526
  205. ^e.g. in a virulent article lambasting former IB men for their role in post-1944 Romania, the IB episode is referred as „fighting against the Fascist Franco dictatorship”, Laurenţiu Ungureanu, Radu Eremia,Eroi în Spania, activişti în URSS, politruci în România. Biografiile lui Petre Borilă, Gheorghe Stoica, Mihai Burcă şi Leonte Tismăneanu, [in:]Adevarul 27.02.2015
  206. ^ Gheorghe Paşcalău,România şi războiul civil spaniol, Bucuresti 2011. ISBN 9786065393141
  207. ^ Mihai Burcea,Recuperarea memoriei interbrigadiștilor și maquisarzilor români: Studiu de caz; Ion Călin, [in:]Annals of the University of Bucharest. Political sciences 15/1 (2013), pp. 85-118
  208. ^ Mihai Burcea,Luptănd pentru o iluzie. Voluntari români în Brigăzile Internaționale din Spania, Târgoviște 2024, ISBN 9786065376861
  209. ^ Iosif Iulian Onescu,Fighting under Spain's blue sky: Romanian volunteers in the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939), [in:] Francisco Alía Miranda, Eduardo Higueras Castañeda, Antonio Selva Iniesta (eds.),Hasta pronto, amigos de España. Las Brigadas Internacionales en el 80 aniversario de sudespedida de la GuerraCivil (1938-2018), Albacete 2019, ISBN 9788494992827
  210. ^ Vjeran Pavlaković,Yugoslav volunteers in the spanish Civil War, Beograd 2016, p. 70
  211. ^ Pavlaković 2016, p. 89
  212. ^ Pavlaković 2016, p. 84
  213. ^ Pavlaković 2016, p. 85
  214. ^ Pavlaković 2016, pp. 89-90
  215. ^ Pavlaković 2016, p. 90
  216. ^ Pavlaković 2016, p. 90. Also, a group of Slovenes interned in France, later moved to Dachau and liberated in 1945, upon return were put on trial as spies, Pavlaković 2016, p. 89
  217. ^ Pavlaković 2016, p. 90
  218. ^ the association was named Udruženje jugoslovenskih republikanskih dobrovoljaca Španske republikanske vojske 1936-1939
  219. ^ in 1971 the association was collectively awarded Order of the People's Hero
  220. ^ Law on the Basic Rights of Veterans of the Spanish National Liberation War and Revolution (1936-1939)
  221. ^ allegedly continuing absence of diplomatic relations between Yugoslavia and Spain, despite some attempts by Franco, resulted from pressure on part of the combatants, Pavlaković 2016, pp. 92-93
  222. ^first books published about the Španci were about individual martyrs and heroes who had fought and died for the Party. The heroic narrative present in biographies about fallen communists such as Marko Orešković-Krntija (1953), Franjo Ogulinac-Seljo (1954), Blagoje Parović (1955), and others
  223. ^ Čedo Kapor, a long-time president of the Spanish veterans’ organization, was one of the most active in publishing materials related to the Spanish Civil War, such as the five-volume set, Španija 1936–1939, Vjeran Pavlaković, Oriol Lopez Badell,Jugoslavenski dobrovoljci u Španjolskom građanskom ratu: Povijest i kultura sjećanja, Rijeka 2021
  224. ^ Pavlaković 2016, p. 100
  225. ^ e.g. to Nikola Car (Crikvenica), Marko Orešković (Korenica, Belgrade), Robert Domanji (Plaški), Blagoje Parović (Nevesinje), and Žikica Jovanović Španac (Valjevo, Radanovci)
  226. ^ Pavlaković, Lopez Badell 2021, p. 39
  227. ^ the combatants' association was unexpectedly targeted by propaganda as enemies of the people following its claim that the party should organize an open national debate, Pavlaković 2016, pp. 94-95
  228. ^"during the fiftieth anniversary commemorations of the beginning of the Spanish Civil War in 1986, the Yugoslav cultural space was used to promote and celebrate the Spanish veterans, and by extension, the Yugoslav revolutionary tradition. Museums across Yugoslavia prepared exhibits to commemorate Yugoslav volunteers’ participation. The Spanish Civil War, with its associated myths and romanticized heroic narrative, was seen as a tool used to rekindle revolutionary consciousness in the younger generations. The official brochure for the exhibit in Zagreb's Revolutionary Museum of the Peoples of Croatia (Muzej revolucije naroda Hrvatske) referred to the International Brigade members as a 'symbol' and as 'legends', stating that their decision to volunteer was a 'heroic deed ar excellence'." Other cities across Croatia and Serbia organized similar displays. Pavlaković 2016, p. 101
  229. ^e.g. Maks Baće became a recognizable dissident; on the other hand, Kosta Nađ remained a loyal man of the regime
  230. ^ Pavlaković 2016, pp. 103-104. In a Serbian 2004 movieDuga mračna noć a Španac is traditionally presented as a great fighter and organizer, but compared to earlier films there is new thread present; he is also an authoritarian figure, brutal towards anyone challenging him and the party, Pavlaković 2016, pp. 100-101
  231. ^The bust of Ćopić, unveiled in his native Senj in 1976, was removed and its location is unknown, Pavlaković, Lopez Badell 2021, p. 19
  232. ^e.g. the large monument of Blagoje Parović in Nevesinje
  233. ^e.g. the partisan memorial - with explicit references to Spain and International Brigades - in Perjasica (Croatia)
  234. ^ Pavlaković 2016, p. 104
  235. ^ Vjeran Pavlaković,Cultural Memory of Yugoslav Volunteers in the Spanish Civil War, [in:]EuropeanMemories service 16.12.2020
  236. ^Swiss Military Penal Code , SR/RS 321.0(E·D·F·I), art. 94(E·D·F·I)
  237. ^Bednarz, Piotr (2016)."Szwajcarscy ochotnicy w Brygadach Międzynarodowych w Hiszpanii (1936–1939)".Acta Universitatis Lodzensis (in Polish) (97):127–142.doi:10.18778/0208-6050.97.07.
  238. ^Report of the Judicial Committee of the National Council(PDF).admin.ch (Report). 2002. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 27 May 2008.
  239. ^"Parliament pardons Spanish Civil War fighters".Swissinfo. 12 March 2009. Archived fromthe original on 14 September 2012. Retrieved13 March 2009.
  240. ^Bednarz 2016, p. 140
  241. ^Die Schweizer Freiwilligen von A – Z
  242. ^Baxell, Richard (6 September 2012).Unlikely Warriors: The British in the Spanish Civil War and the Struggle Against Fascism (Hardcover). London: Aurum Press Limited. pp. 400.ISBN 978-1-84513-697-0.
  243. ^UK: WAR: INTERNATIONAL BRIGADE RETURN FROM FIGHTING IN SPAIN (1938), 12 November 2020,archived from the original on 10 August 2023, retrieved9 August 2023
  244. ^"Farewell to Geoffrey Servante, our last man standing – International Brigade Memorial Trust".www.international-brigades.org.uk. Archived fromthe original on 1 August 2020. Retrieved24 April 2019.
  245. ^"Map of memorials".International Brigade Memorial Trust. 9 September 2022.
  246. ^"Premature antifascists and the Post-war world". Archived fromthe original on 31 December 2013. Retrieved9 August 2009 – via Abraham Lincoln Brigade Archives — Bill Susman Lecture Series. King Juan Carlos I of Spain Center atNew York University, 1998.
  247. ^Knox, Bernard."Premature Anti-Fascist". Archived fromthe original on 8 February 2014. Retrieved9 August 2009 – via The Abraham Lincoln Brigade Archives — Bill Susman Lecture Series. King Juan Carlos I of Spain Center — New York University, 1998.
  248. ^"Josep Almudéver died on May 23rd".The Economist. 5 June 2021.Archived from the original on 5 December 2022. Retrieved12 June 2021.
  249. ^Herreros i Agüí, Sebastià (2001)."The International Brigades in the Spanish War [sic] 1936–1939: Flags and Symbols"(PDF).Proceedings of the XIXInternational Congress of Vexillology. London:Flag Institute. pp. 141–165. Retrieved18 June 2024.

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