The novel takes place in late May 1937, during the second year of the
Spanish Civil War. References made to
Valladolid,
Segovia,
El Escorial, and
Madrid suggest the novel takes place within the build-up to the
Republican attempt to relieve the
siege of Madrid. The earlier battle of
Guadalajara and the general chaos and disorder (and, more generally, the doomed cause of Republican Spain) serve as a backdrop to the novel: Robert Jordan notes, for instance, that he follows the Communists because of their superior discipline, an allusion to the split and infighting between anarchist and communist factions on the Republican side. The famous and pivotal scene described in Chapter 10, in which Pilar describes the execution of various fascist figures in her village, is drawn from events that took place in
Ronda in 1936. Although Hemingway later claimed (in a 1954 letter to
Bernard Berenson) to have completely fabricated the scene, he in fact drew upon the events at Ronda, embellishing the event by imagining an execution line leading up to the cliff face. A number of actual figures that played a role in the Spanish Civil War are also referred to in the book, including these: •
Vicente Rojo Lluch, the Chief of the General Staff of the Spanish Republican Army, in Chapter 1. •
Gonzalo Queipo de Llano, a Nationalist military leader under Franco noted for his radio broadcasts, in Chapter 8. •
Alejandro Lerroux and
Indalecio Prieto, Spanish Republican leaders prior to and the latter during the Spanish Civil War, in Chapter 13. •
Enrique Líster, communist leader who played important roles during the defense of Madrid, in Chapter 15. •
Andreu Nin, one of the founders of the Workers' Party of Marxist Unification (
POUM), the party mocked by Karkov in Chapter 18. •
Juan Modesto, a Republican army officer described as "most trusted...by the Russians," in Chapter 18. •
Valentín González, a Spanish Republican commander also known as
El Campesino, "the Peasant," in Chapter 18. •
Manfred Stern as "Kleber,"
Máté Zalka as "Lucasz,"
Hans Beimler, and
János Gálicz as "Gall" in Chapter 18. •
Mikhail Koltsov, Soviet journalist who was the basis for the character Karkov. • General
José Miaja, in charge of the defense of Madrid in October 1936, in Chapter 35 •
Dolores Ibárruri, better known as
La Pasionaria, extensively discussed by the group of El Sordo for allegedly sending her son to the Soviet Union during the war, in Chapter 32. •
Francisco Largo Caballero, trade unionist and prime minister of the Spanish Republic during the Spanish Civil War, in Chapter 35. •
Carlos Asensio Cabanillas, Spanish military leader of the Nationalist Army who led an advance during the Siege of Madrid, in Chapter 35. •
Robert Hale Merriman, leader of the American Volunteers in the
International Brigades, and his wife Marion, were well known to Hemingway and served possibly as a model for Hemingway's own hero. •
André Marty, a leading French Communist and political officer in the International Brigades, makes a brief but significant appearance in Chapter 42. Hemingway depicts Marty as a vicious intriguer whose paranoia interferes with Republican objectives in the war. •
Karol Świerczewski, a Polish general who served in the Spanish Civil War as leader of several International Brigades under the name "Walter," was the basis for the character General Golz. •
Francisco Franco, commander of the rebel army who will become the ruling dictator after the war. ==Critical reception and impact==