Peñalba-Sotorrío, Mercedes (2021) From Civil Conflict to Crusade: Mobilisation and National Identity in the Spanish Civil War. International Journal of Military History and Historiography, 41 (2). pp. 277-307. ISSN 2468-3299
|
Accepted Version
Available under License In Copyright. Download (464kB) | Preview |
Abstract
For decades after its conclusion, the Spanish Civil War (1936–39) was officially described by the newly imposed dictatorship as a Crusade. However, the appropriation of a mythologised medieval past was not just the product of post-war legitimisation. This article explores how, using “crusade” as a placeholder for Reconquista, the rebel army and its supporters responded to three distinct developments: a reaction to Republican anticlericalism; the imposition of a national identity in which Catholicism was understood as an essential element of Spanishness and the basis for its greatness; and a very practical need for popular mobilisation both at home and abroad. However, as this study demonstrates, the adoption of a crusading rhetoric and medieval mythology was a transnational development, in which distinct anti-Bolshevik campaigns, with origins in Rome and Spain, fed off each other and intersected, sometimes in intricate and hidden ways, within the increasingly polarised international context of the 1930s.
Impact and Reach
Statistics
Additional statistics for this dataset are available via IRStats2.