First era The General Military Academy was founded under the
reign of Alfonso XII, on February 20, 1882. The first training center was located in
Alcázar of Toledo. The first head of the Academy was the General Méndez
The Great. The Academy was dissolved on February 8, 1893 by the then Minister of War, General López Domínguez. From then on the Armed Forces and Corps had their own separate training centers. Historian
Eduardo González Calleja interpreted the designation of Franco as "a gesture of reconciliation with
Africanists, achieved after the
operation of summer 1925. Both Primo and Franco, and the majority of colonial soldiers that formed the teacher board wanted to train a kind of official not study-oriented, with a knightly concept of the profession and without any relationship with the social media at the time whatsoever". After the
Second Republic was established and the
military reforms were applied in June 1931 by the provisional Ministry of War, the center was closed. Azaña did not trust the instructions provided at the center and believed its budget was huge in a moment in which military spending was trying to be cut. Conservative, anti-republican officials, thought the closure of the Academy was an attack to the very spirit of the Army, since the Academy was the only place in Spain in which soldiers of all kinds studied together. Franco was devastated, and after the end of the Civil War he restored the institution. However, he obeyed Azaña's commands at the time and closed the Academy.
Third era After the end of the
Spanish Civil War and the reorganization of military studies in Spain, the General Military Academy was established again on September 27, 1940 by
Minister of the Army José Enrique Varela. The old buildings used for training in the second era were used. In 1942, 170 students started studying in the Academy. Francisco Hidalgo de Cisneros y Manso de Zúñiga was named Director of the Academy. Notable alumni are
Juan Carlos I of Spain and his son
Felipe VI of Spain, and future queen of Spain
Leonor, Princess of Asturias (daughter of Felipe VI and
Queen Letizia of Spain). == Current curriculum ==