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9 de may. de 2024 · Spanish Civil War, (1936–39), military revolt against the Republican government of Spain, supported by conservative elements within the country. When an initial military coup failed to win control of the entire country, a bloody civil war ensued, fought with great ferocity on both sides.
- Spanish Civil War
From 1936 to 1939, two opposing groups of citizens waged a...
- Juan Negrín López
Juan Negrín López (born February 3, 1894, Las Palmas, Canary...
- Dolores Ibárruri
Dolores Ibárruri (born Dec. 9, 1895, Gallarta, near Bilbao,...
- Philippine Revolution
Philippine Revolution, (1896–98), Filipino independence...
- Spanish Civil War
In short, the Revolution and Civil War in Spain were merely a bloody and violent interim period. They simply inspired great fear and made the regime of the ruling class harsher. Primo de Rivera’s dictatorship, which held sway (under the aegis of the Spanish monarchy) until 1931, to the proclamation of the Republic, was replaced by a more ...
Despite its failure to deliver political stability, the Revolution of 1868 bequeathed to Spain the model of a modern secular state based on universal suffrage. Anarchism pentrated Spain’s extreme left, especially in rural Andalusia and in industrial Catalonia, where the lower classes deserted a long tradition of political action via the ...
The Spanish Revolution was a workers' social revolution that began at the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in 1936 and for two to three years resulted in the widespread implementation of anarchist and, more broadly, libertarian socialist organizational principles throughout various portions of the country, primarily Catalonia ...
7 de jul. de 2022 · Read this article. The political process that led to the Gloriosa Revolution of September 1868 in Spain has been sufficiently studied. We also know well the ideological foundations, the connection with the economic situation, and the social composition of the groups behind the revolution.
6 de oct. de 2020 · Unite, Proletarian Brothers! examines the origins, unfolding and consequences of a short-lived revolutionary insurrection, at times described as a ‘commune’, in October 1934 within the wider context of the Spanish Second Republic.