First Republic and restoration In 1868,
popular uprisings led to the overthrow of
Queen Isabella II. In 1873, Isabella's replacement, King
Amadeo I of the
House of Savoy, abdicated, and the short-lived
First Spanish Republic was proclaimed. The Republic was marred with political instability and conflicts and was quickly overthrown by General
Arsenio Martínez Campos in December 1874, after which
the monarchy was restored in the figure of
Alfonso XII, Isabella's son. After the restoration,
Carlists and
anarchists emerged in opposition to the monarchy.
Alejandro Lerroux, Spanish politician and leader of the
Radical Republican Party, helped to bring
republicanism to the fore in
Catalonia.
Conscription was a controversial policy that was eventually implemented by the government of Spain. As evidenced by the
Tragic Week in 1909, resentment and resistance were factors that continued well into the 20th century. was proclaimed two days later. King
Alfonso XIII went into exile.
Spain was neutral in World War I. Following the war, wide swathes of Spanish society, including the armed forces, united in hopes of removing the
corrupt central government of the country in
Madrid, but these circles were ultimately unsuccessful. Popular perception of
communism as a major threat significantly increased during this period.
Dictatorship of Primo de Rivera In 1923, another
military coup brought
Miguel Primo de Rivera to power. As a result, Spain transitioned to government by military dictatorship. Support for the Rivera regime gradually faded, and he resigned in January 1930. He was replaced by General
Dámaso Berenguer, who was in turn himself replaced by
Admiral Juan Bautista Aznar-Cabañas; both men continued a policy of
rule by decree. There was little support for the monarchy in the major cities. Consequently,
King Alfonso XIII of Spain relented to popular pressure and called municipal elections for 12 April 1931.
Left-wing entities such as the
Socialist and Liberal Republicans won almost all the provincial capitals and, following the resignation of Aznar-Cabañas's government, Alfonso XIII fled the country. At this time, the
Second Spanish Republic was formed; this republic remained in place until the Spanish Civil War, which commenced five years later.
Second Republic The revolutionary committee headed by
Niceto Alcalá-Zamora became the provisional government, with Alcalá-Zamora himself as
president and
head of state. The republic had broad support from all segments of society. According to
José Ángel Sánchez Asiaín, the first plans of a counter-revolution against the Republic were discussed on the day when it was proclaimed, when representatives of monarchist circles,
José Antonio Primo de Rivera, the future leader of the Falange, and
José Calvo Sotelo, one of the future leaders of the monarchist party
Spanish Renovation, "met to lay down the financial foundations for subverting the Republic." An immediate action did not follow, but by March 1934 the conspirators would convince
Benito Mussolini, the leader of
Fascist Italy, to agree to aid a future coup. In May 1931, an incident in which a taxi driver was attacked outside a monarchist club sparked anti-clerical violence throughout
Madrid and south-west portion of the country. The slow response on the part of the government disillusioned the right. In June and July, the
Confederación Nacional del Trabajo (CNT) called several
strikes, which led to a violent incident between CNT members and the
Civil Guard, and a brutal crackdown by the Civil Guard and the
Spanish Army against the CNT in
Seville. This led many workers to believe the Second Spanish Republic was just as oppressive as the monarchy, and the CNT announced its intention of overthrowing it by starting a
revolution.
Constituent Cortes and left-wing government (1931–1933) Elections in June 1931 returned a large majority of Republicans and Socialists. With the onset of the
Great Depression, the government tried to assist rural Spain by instituting an
eight-hour day and redistributing
land tenure to farm workers. Newly established labour arbitration boards regulated salaries, contracts, and working hours, but were more favourable to workers than employers. Class struggle intensified as landowners turned to counterrevolutionary organisations and local oligarchs. Strikes, workplace theft, arson, robbery and assaults on shops, strikebreakers, employers, and machines became increasingly common. Republican
Manuel Azaña became prime minister of a minority government in October 1931. In December, a new reformist, liberal and democratic
constitution was declared. It included strong provisions enforcing a broad
secularisation of the Catholic country, which included the abolition of Catholic schools and charities, a move which was met with opposition. The first military coup against the Republic was planned by groups of monarchist generals with the support of exiled monarchist ministers, including Calvo Sotelo. The attempted coup which became known as
Sanjurjada ended in failure. Several hundred generals were dismissed, prominent monarchists were imprisoned or had to flee abroad, and the aristocracy was 'punished' with radicalization of the agrarian reform. The coup contributed to the radicalization of the left. The extreme right did not abandon their plans of overthrowing the Republic, what was manifested in the foundation of the
Spanish Renovation and a small fascist party
Falange Española, the rise of the militant
Carlist movement (
Traditionalist Communion,
Requeté militias), and propaganda of legitimacy of a military uprising spread by such organizations as
Acción Española. Fascism proper was yet a weak ideology, but such historians as
Julián Casanova describe the culture of the Spanish anti-Republican right as
proto-fascist, similar to Italian "pre-Fascism" and the German
Völkisch movement. The anti-Republican right was supported within the Church, especially by its
Integrist groups, and the army. At the same time, the authority of the Republic was undermined by
an anarchist insurrection which culminated in the
Casas Viejas massacre of the anarchists and was followed by state repression. , the leader of the failed
1932 military coup. Having been granted amnesty in 1934 by the right-wing government of the Republic, he was one of the leaders of the 1936 coup.
Right-wing government (1933–1935) In November 1933, right-wing parties won the
general election. The causal factors included the increased resentment of the incumbent government by such reasons as its inability to counter the pressure from the employers' associations and economic instability, including the failure of the agrarian reform to significantly improve the living conditions of rural labourers; the recent enfranchisement of women in Spain, most of whom voted for centre-right parties, the breakup of the coalition between the
Radical Republican Party and the Socialists, the failure of the left to form an electoral coalition similar to the one of the Radicals and the right, and the opposition of the anarchists to the Socialists following the Casas Viejas incident: while earlier they voted for left-wing parties, during the 1933 elections they either voted for the Radicals or abstained. Among the members of the victorious coalition was the new party, the
Spanish Confederation of Autonomous Right-wing Groups (CEDA). The left viewed the CEDA not only as a threat to their progressive reforms, but to the Republic in general, and more to it, as a fascist party. The CEDA and its leader
Gil Robles proclaimed their goals to dissolve workers' movements and parliamentary democracy, purge "Marxists, Freemasons, Separatists and Jews", and establish an authoritarian
corporate state, praising
Benito Mussolini of
Fascist Italy,
Adolf Hitler of
Nazi Germany and
Engelbert Dollfuss of the
Austrian Ständestaat. While Gil Robles rejected such aspects of fascism as reliance on violence, his criticism of fascism was booed by his own followers. The left rejected the validity of the election results on the grounds that the Socialists gained more votes than any party of the Radical-right coalition, and that the elections in southern areas were subject to alleged malpractice and such possible violations as harassment of the voters by employers and right-wing groups and attempted, unsuccessfully, to have President
Niceto Alcalá-Zamora cancel the electoral results. President Alcalá-Zamora, concerned about CEDA's monarchist leanings and its plans to alter the constitution, asked the Radical Party leader Alejandro Lerroux to form a government instead of Gil Robles, who led the largest party in parliament. Although CEDA did not formally join Lerroux's cabinet, it exerted indirect influence because the government depended on its parliamentary support. CEDA reinforced this leverage by threatening to withdraw cooperation. Later, Gil Robles claimed that the Radicals were “carrying out CEDA's programme.” Events in the period after November 1933, called the "
black biennium", seemed to make a civil war more likely. Alejandro Lerroux of the Radical Republican Party (RRP) formed a government, reversing changes made by the previous administration and granting amnesty to Sanjurjo and his collaborators. The Civil Guard adopted "preventive brutality" against workers' movements. Some monarchists joined with the newly formed
Falange Española y de las JONS ("Falange") to help achieve their aims. Through
Antonio Goicoechea, who would later play a role in the
Italian intervention in the Civil War, in 1934 a group of monarchist conspirators within the army reached an agreement with Benito Mussolini, who had supported contacts with anti-Republican circles since 1932 and promised to supply weapons to the plotters and subsidized the Falange. The defeat in the elections and its consequences led to disenchantment with parliamentarism and radicalization within the Socialists. The increasing militancy within the Socialist workers was followed by
Francisco Largo Caballero's adopting a revolutionary Marxist rhetoric which justified revolutionism as a way to combat rising fascism, uncharacteristic of European social democratic mainstream and the reformist traditions of the PSOE. The CNT adopted a similar rhetoric in the wake of the elections, threatening with a revolution if "Fascist tendencies" would win the elections. Open violence occurred in the streets of Spanish cities, and militancy continued to increase, reflecting a movement towards radical upheaval, rather than peaceful means as solutions. A small insurrection by anarchists occurred in December 1933 in response to CEDA's victory, in which around 100 people died.Socialists led by Largo Caballero decided to launch a 'revolution' if the CEDA entered the government, what, according to
Paul Preston, Largo Caballero believed would never happen; this decision was known within the government. The Socialists continued calling local economic strikes, admitting their lack of preparation for actual revolutionary actions, while Gil Robles and his supporter
Rafael Salazar Alonso, the Minister of the Interior, stressed the need to provoke the "revolution" "before it is well prepared." The government increased repression against Socialists, deporting their supporters, and entered censorship, justifying its measures with an alleged threat of a revolutionary strike. The preparations of the Socialists for a possible insurrection had been no secret and easily suppressed by the police. General
Francisco Franco was called to conduct military exercises for a coming uprising. On 1 October, Largo Caballero resigned as the President of the PSOE and its revolutionary committee. On 4 October, Lerroux formed a government with three members of the CEDA. The insurrection launched in response became known as the
Revolution of 1934. In most of Spain, it was suppressed with little resistance, and the Socialist leadership demonstrated its lack of preparation and will to fulfill their revolutionary threats. However, major action took place in the province of Asturias, what became known as the
Asturian Revolution of 1934. Fairly well armed revolutionaries managed to take the whole province of Asturias, killing numerous policemen, clergymen and civilians, destroying religious buildings including churches, convents and part of the university at Oviedo. Rebels in the occupied areas proclaimed revolution for the workers and abolished the existing currency. The uprising was crushed in two weeks by the
Spanish Navy and the
Spanish Republican Army, the latter using mainly
Moorish colonial troops from
Spanish Morocco. Azaña was in Barcelona that day, and the Lerroux-CEDA government tried to implicate him. He was arrested and charged with complicity. In fact, Azaña had no connection with the uprising and was released from prison in January 1935. Reversals of land reform resulted in expulsions, firings and arbitrary changes to working conditions in the central and southern countryside in 1935, with landowners' behaviour at times reaching "genuine cruelty", which included violence against farmworkers and socialists, causing several deaths. One historian argued that the behaviour of the right in the southern countryside was one of the main causes of hatred during the Civil War and possibly even the Civil War itself. Landowners taunted workers by saying that if they went hungry, they should "Go eat the Republic!" Bosses fired leftist workers and imprisoned trade union and socialist militants; wages were reduced to "salaries of hunger". In 1935, the government, led by the
Radical Republican Party, had now endured a series of crises. After a number of corruption scandals, President
Niceto Alcalá-Zamora, who was hostile to this government, called another election.
Popular Front's victory and escalation 1936 The left-wing
Popular Front narrowly won the
1936 general election. The revolutionary left-wing masses took to the streets and freed prisoners. In the thirty-six hours following the election, sixteen people were killed and thirty-nine were seriously injured. Additionally, fifty churches and seventy conservative political centres were attacked or set ablaze.
Manuel Azaña was called to form a government before the electoral process had ended. He shortly replaced Alcala-Zamora as president, taking advantage of a constitutional loophole. Convinced that the left was no longer willing to follow the rule of law and that its vision of Spain was under threat, the right abandoned the parliamentary option and began planning to overthrow the republic, rather than to control it. Disenchantment with Azaña's rule was also voiced by
Miguel de Unamuno, a Republican and one of Spain's most respected intellectuals who, in June 1936, told a reporter that President
Manuel Azaña should commit suicide "as a patriotic act". Laia Balcells observes that polarisation in Spain just before the coup was so intense that physical confrontations between leftists and rightists were a routine occurrence in most localities; six days before the coup occurred, there was a riot between the two in the province of Teruel. Balcells notes that Spanish society was so divided along Left-Right lines that the monk Hilari Raguer stated that in his parish, instead of playing "cops and robbers", children would sometimes play "leftists and rightists". Within the first month of the Popular Front's government, nearly a quarter of the provincial governors had been removed due to their failure to prevent or control strikes, illegal land occupation, political violence and arson. The Popular Front government was more likely to prosecute rightists for violence than leftists who committed similar acts. Between February and July, approximately 300 to 400 deaths occurred from political violence, while hundreds of churches, religious buildings and monuments were destroyed, damaged, or vandalised. Azaña was hesitant to use the army to shoot or stop rioters or protestors as many of them supported his coalition. On the other hand, he was reluctant to disarm the military as he believed he needed them to stop insurrections from the extreme left. Illegal land occupation became widespread—poor tenant farmers knew the government was disinclined to stop them. By April 1936, nearly 100,000 peasants had appropriated 400,000 hectares of land and perhaps as many as 1 million hectares by the start of the civil war; for comparison, the 1931–33 land reform had granted only 6,000 peasants 45,000 hectares. As many strikes occurred between April and July as had occurred in the entirety of 1931. Workers increasingly demanded less work and more pay. "Social crimes"—refusing to pay for goods and rent—became increasingly common. In some cases, this was done in the company of armed militants. Conservatives, the middle classes, businessmen and landowners became convinced that revolution had already begun. Prime Minister
Santiago Casares Quiroga ignored warnings of a military conspiracy involving several generals, who decided that the government had to be replaced to prevent the dissolution of Spain. Both sides had become convinced that, if the other side gained power, it would discriminate against their members and attempt to suppress their political organisations. == Military coup ==