The so-called (Spanish for "those who've fled" or "fugitives") originated in 1936 when many people fled from the Rebel (
franquista) faction to the mountains after becoming isolated in places like Asturias, León, Galicia, Extremadura, and the province of Huelva. Those in Extremadura and Huelva were rapidly annihilated by Rebels, with only those in the North of the country managing to survive past the war. The outbreak of World War II so soon after the civil war surprised a large part of the
Spanish Republican exiles in France; many of them joined the French Resistance. By 1944, with the German forces in retreat, many of the guerrillas refocused their fight towards Spain. Despite the failure of the invasion of the Val d'Arán that year, some columns continued to progress into the Spanish interior and to connect with the groups that had remained in the mountains since 1939. The apogee of guerrilla action was between 1945 and 1947. After this, the repression from the Franco government intensified, and one by one the groups were destroyed. Many of their members died or were incarcerated. Others escaped to France or
Morocco. In 1952, the last important contingents evacuated from Spain. After that, those who resisted in the forested and mountainous regions, refusing to choose either exile or surrender, fought only for their own survival.
Beginnings The origins of the maquis in Spain lie with those who fled the advancing forces of Franco's Nationalists. The insecurity engendered by the repressive tactics of the Nationalist insurgency turned their political opponents—even many who were not politically active but simply known to sympathize with the republic—into fugitives. At first many hid in relatives' homes, but some sought refuge in the mountains. Their numbers were enhanced by deserters and by escapees from prisons and concentration camps. These constituted the nucleus of those who decided to keep fighting from the forests and mountains. The political character of the guerrillas was as varied as that of the
Popular Front, containing
communists,
socialists, and
anarchists. Despite the diverse ideologies, due to the organizational persistence of the
Communist Party of Spain until 1948, the Communists dominated the other currents.
XIV Cuerpo de Ejército During the war, the idea of the possibility of a guerrilla war at the rearguard of Franco's Nationalists was proposed. The idea came to fruition at the initiative of
Juan Negrín, at the time head of the Republican government and of the Ministry of Defense. He created the (
Guerrilla Army Corps) in October 1937. This name was used for the
Basque section of the
Spanish Republican Army until the collapse of the
front in the north. The short-term objectives of this Corps were the interruption of the communications and supply lines to the Nationalist troops, and the carrying out of special operations. In the long term, they were to continue the war against Franco in the case of defeat on the conventional fronts. At the end of the war, such activities had been set in motion on the fronts of
Teruel,
Andalusia,
Extremadura, and
Toledo. The action with the greatest significance was the liberation, on 23 May 1938, of 300
Asturian political prisoners in
Granada. Throughout 1938 and 1939 the Corps brought together many of the exiles of Andalucía and Extremadura; however, the Republican defeat brought the dissolution of the Corps.
Retreat: the French camps Hundreds of thousands of Republican soldiers and civilians crossed the French border ahead of the advancing Nationalist troops in
Catalonia. Once on the other side, they were put in
concentration camps by the authorities. There were 22 camps in total:
Barcarès,
Agde,
Saint-Cyprien,
Argelès-sur-Mer,
Berck-Plage,
Montpellier Chapallete,
Fort Mahon Plage,
Tour de Carol,
Septfonds,
Baste-les-Foages,
Bram,
Haros,
Gurs,
Vernet d'Ariège,
Rivesaltes,
Fort Colliure, and
Rieucros in
Metropolitan France and, in
French North Africa,
Camp Morand,
Meridja,
Djelfa,
Hadjerat-OM'Guil, and
Ain-el-Curak. In these camps, exiles began to reorganize themselves into guerrilla groups. In the camp of Argelès-sur-Mer a series of meetings were held. Members of the PCE and the Juventudes Socialistas Unificadas (
Unified Socialist Youth) participated. In October 1940, the decision was made to organize
anti-fascist actions in France, together with the French resistance, against the
Vichy government. This was the beginning of the Spanish involvement on a grand scale in the fight against the
occupation of France.
Resistance On 11 October 1940 the Vichy regime started the Companies of Foreign Workers (
Compagnies de Travailleurs Etrangers, CTE), which permitted prisoners to leave the
concentration camps, if they would go to work in factories. This increased the possibilities of escape. Shortly afterwards, the Vichy regime established the Obligatory Work Service (
Service du travail obligatoire, STO) for French citizens, with similar objectives: to provide manual labor to armament factories and the construction of the
Atlantic Wall. Those French who were released through the STO began to escape to the forests and mountains, where they came together with Spanish who escaped from the CTE. The French escapees were mainly civilians, rather than remnants of the defeated French army. From this time, the French term
"maquis" began to be used to refer to the camps, and
"maquisards" for those that occupied them.
Formation of the AGE Some of the Spanish refugees joined French resistance groups, while others formed autonomous groups. In April 1942 a meeting of several Spanish combat groups decided to take the name of the
XIV Cuerpo del Ejército de Guerrilleros Españoles, considering themselves the Corps' successors. In May 1944 the XIV Corps re-formed as the
Agrupación de Guerrilleros Españoles (AGE, roughly
Spanish Guerrilla Group), because they consisted for the most part of Spanish combatants on French soil. This conveyed the group's distancing from the
Francs-Tireurs et Partisans (FTP), the armed branch of the
French Communist Party, with whom they had previously worked closely. By this time, the Spanish resistors had participated in numerous armed actions against the German army, even liberating various populations in the south of France. The numbers of Spanish combatants in the ranks of the Resistance vary quite a bit amongst sources, but in general they accept a number around 10,000. After the German army was driven from France, Spanish maquis returned their focus to Spain.
Invasion of Val d'Aran The most notable operation of the Spanish maquis was the invasion of Spain by between 4,000 and 7,000 The objective of the offensive was to retake the sector of Spanish territory comprising the land between the
Cinca and
Segre Rivers and the French border. Later, the zone was declared conquered by the
Spanish Republican government in exile, with the intention of provoking a general uprising against Franco throughout Spain. It was hoped that it would force the
Allies to "liberate" Spain the same way it was "liberating" the rest of Europe. The main attack in the valley was accompanied by operations in other valleys of the Pyrenees during the previous weeks, with the objective of distracting Franco's forces. The guerrilla army conquered various towns and villages, raising the
Spanish Republican flag, carrying out anti-Franco meetings in the plazas, as well as controlling part of the French border for several days, through which they were able to bring in trucks, material and reinforcements from France. However, the invasion failed to take
Vielha e Mijaran, its principal objective. Finally, overwhelmed by the Nationalists' numerical and material advantage, the guerrillas pulled back. The retreat ended 28 October,
"Agrupaciones Guerrilleras" In spite of the setback of Arán in 1944, the expectations of the exiled Spanish Communist Party (
PCE) remained high, given that all seemed still possible in an international context of general collapse of fascism. All throughout Spain, the level of guerrilla activity went up, precipitated by the incorporation of new contingents forced to cross the border from France All these groups were extremely sectarian in their aims and organization, following invariably the strategies dictated by the Central Committee (controlled by Moscow). The will to keep fighting was maintained by strict discipline imposed by the PCE kommisars. People in these groups who wanted to leave and rejoin a normal civilian life were most of the time treated as deserters and shot, renounced the guerrilla fight, preferring to try to change the state-sanctioned
Spanish Syndical Organization from within. This began the decline of the
agrupaciones, already quite beaten by government repression. The
Agrupaciones Guerrilleras renamed themselves
Comités de Resistencia. The new orientation, however, was not effective, and ultimately a general evacuation was decreed in 1952.
End of the maquis There were several factors in the decline and disappearance of the Spanish maquis. On one side, the commencement of the
Cold War made it evident that the Allies would not intervene in the maquis' fight against the Spanish State. This led the PCE to change strategy, ending its support for the guerrilla groups in the 1950s. The government had a policy of total silence on the actions of the maquis. For this reason, outside of the areas of maquis activity, the population had practically no knowledge of the maquis. On the rare occasion that an item appeared in the press, the maquis were always referred to as
bandoleros (bandits), in order to strip the actions of all political context. Steadily, Francoist forces isolated the guerrillas. Most of their members were middle-aged or older by 1950, with the consequent detriment of their physical capacities accelerated by years of living exposed to the elements and the lack of proper medical and food supplies. In these last years, many attempted to escape to France. Of those who stayed in Spain, some were sentenced only to jail (some spent up to 20 years in prison), some were
judged summarily and shot, and others died at the hands of the Guardia Civil through application of the
Ley de Fugas ("law of fugitives"). Although the period of major guerrilla activity ranged from 1938 ==Areas of activity==