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The Spanish Civil War 1936‐9: Catholicism's minority voice

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 April 2024

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July 18th 1986 saw the fiftieth anniversary of the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, and the event has been widely commemorated both in writing and in exhibitions, both alike often focussing on the heroism of the men of the International Brigade who made the cause of the Spanish Republic their own. Less attention has been paid to the fact summarized by Professor Adrian Hastings in his recent History of English Christianity 19201985 that ‘probably at no other moment in 20th-century history has the English Catholic community, as such, taken up so strongly a political position, and to such effect’ (p. 325). The largely uncritical endorsement of the rebels’ claim to be engaged in the defence of the Catholic Church in Spain against a threat vaguely and frighteningly characterized as a ‘Communist-anarchist dictatorship’ was powerfully and passionately sustained, and the nationalists’ atrocities, for instance at Badajoz on August 15th 1936 or (at the hands of their German supporters) at Guernica in April 1937, either brushed aside or denied.

Of course, the cause of this enthusiasm lay in the appalling actions that accompanied the revolutionary situation of July 1936. The lapse into chaos defined for the nationalists by the murder of the right-wing deputy Calvo Sotelo on July 13th inevitably increased the readiness to welcome the military pronunciamento long in preparation, by social groups feeling their future threatened by the quickening pace of social change. The moderate socialism of Prieto was rapidly being taken over by the radicalism of Largo Caballero, and the fundamental, seemingly intractable issue of agrarian reform tackled no longer by legislation but by spontaneous occupation of land long denied to the landless.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1986 Provincial Council of the English Province of the Order of Preachers

References

1 Collins, London, 1986.

2 On this the late G.L. Steer's The Tree of Guernica (Hodder & Stoughton, 1938)Google Scholar is a near‐classic.

3 After Quiroga's resignation of the premiership, Azaña asked Barrio to negotiate with the rebels. After his failure to come to terms with Mola and the rest, he was replaced by Giral, who authorized the arming of the people's militias.

4 Desclbe de Brouwer, Paris, 1965.

5 op. cit. Chapman & Hall, 1959) pp. 228f.

6 Quoted by Dr Frances Lannon in her essay ‘The Church's Crusade against the Republic’ in Preston, Paul, Revolution and War in Spain, 1931–39 (Methuen 1984, p. 54)Google Scholar.