Political reforms , the
Captain General of Catalonia in 1894 At the time of the Liceu bombing, the police force in Barcelona was numerically weak, with less than 200 officers to police over 400,000 citizens. A French commissioner in Barcelona reported that the anarchist movement was not being monitored enough, despite its size and influence. The Barcelona police were understaffed, poorly paid and badly managed, while the politics of the
Turno had resulted in
cronyism, as new governing parties routinely replaced their predecessors' police chiefs with their own. Police officers were also largely uneducated, with many who failed competency exams or were even
illiterate. The
clientelism network between the police, civil governors and the government resulted in many police officers being paid for no work. Seeking to change this system and appease the upper classes, Arsenio Martínez Campos contacted
Interior Minister and
War Minister José López Domínguez, with whom he discussed how to respond to the threat of further anarchist terrorism. López Domínguez proposed that the government declare a
state of war in
Catalonia, arrest the suspects and bring them before a
military tribunal. Martínez Campos pushed back against this, believing a declaration of war would become a European scandal, and insisted on the maintenance of the
jurisdiction of
civil law. He instead proposed that the
Congress of Deputies pass legislation to suspend
constitutional rights for anarchists and bring the anarchist movement under the jurisdiction of military tribunals, allowing them to prosecute terrorism,
incitement and the possession of explosives. In late November 1893, general
Valeriano Weyler was recalled from the
Philippines and appointed as the new
Captain General of Catalonia. Weyler specialised in
counterinsurgency, having fought in the
Dominican Restoration War, the
Ten Years' War, the
Third Carlist War and the
Filipino insurgency. The government hoped he would be able to suppress the anarchist movement. The following month, the government reformed the Catalan police and judiciary, creating lists of suspected anarchists in every province and instructing judges to issue stronger sentences to anarchists. The created a register of foreign residents in the province, began deporting foreign anarchists and collaborated with French border guards to stop anarchists from crossing the
France–Spain border. However, when the Spanish government requested the deportation of nine anarchists to France, the French government only accepted the three who were French nationals, rejecting the six Italians. The Spanish government then stopped asking their French counterparts and instead covertly smuggled anarchists back over the border into France. In late 1893, the Spanish government attempted to form an alliance with other European states to coordinate an international political repression of the anarchist movement. They received support from
Austria-Hungary and
Portugal, but the proposed accord was rejected by
France and the
United Kingdom. The British government was not concerned about anarchist terrorism, as the UK lacked a substantial anarchist movement. It also distrusted the
authoritarian implications of the proposal. with
Foreign Secretary Archibald Primrose pointing out that it could lead to continent-wide political repression if the accord did not draw a clear line between anarchism and other schools of opinion.
Arrests , who established a
secret police force to carry out
political repression against the anarchist movement in 1894 In the days after the bombing, Barcelona was in panic. Police arrested dozens of known anarchists, suspecting them of possible involvement. The
Queen regent Maria Christina declared a
state of emergency and suspended
constitutional rights in Catalonia. The suspension of constitutional rights allowed the police to carry out arbitrary arrests against the anarchist movement. In the first two months after the bombing, as many as 260 people were arrested. In early 1894,
Mayor of Barcelona attempted to establish a secret police force to repress the anarchist movement. Led by officers of the
Civil Guard, it was ordered to carry out a mass arrest of known and suspected anarchists. The
Jesuits and concerned parents' associations subsequently began reporting "indecency" to the police. By March 1894, police had carried out 415 arrests. Hundreds of prisoners filled up the cells of Montjuïc Castle, the
Drassanes barracks and the Reina Amalia prison in
El Raval, leading to some prisoners being housed on a ship in the
port of Barcelona. Among the arrested were:
Josep Llunas, the editor of the
collectivist anarchist newspaper
La Tramontana, who vehemently opposed terrorism; the anarchist feminist
Teresa Claramunt; and
Lluis Más, who was on the editorial staff of
La Nueva Idea. Rumours about an anarchist
conspiracy quickly spread through the Spanish press, which named
Josep Codina as the leader of the conspiracy. The police soon arrested Codina and his suspected accomplice
Manuel Cerezuela. Roughly 100 anarchists were detained in Montjuïc. Some of the prisoners died due to the conditions of their imprisonment, while some others, including , committed suicide there. As evidence began to build in Barcelona that Salvador was the man responsible for the bombing, the
Civil Guard initiated efforts to track him down. In early 1894, the Civil Guard raided Salvador's cousin's apartment, located near the
Cathedral of the Savior of Zaragoza. There they found Salvador in bed with a hangover. During the arrest, the Guards prevented him from drinking a flask full of poison and shot him in the hip. As no further terrorist acts occurred over the subsequent months, funding for the secret police force was reduced, leading to its dissolution by the spring of 1894.
Trials and sentencing '' The anarchists who were charged with involvement in the Liceu bombing received a closed-door trial by a military tribunal and Montjuïc Castle. The military tribunal was presided over by lieutenant colonel , who rushed through the process, even skipping a number of steps, intending to root out a suspected anarchist
conspiracy. Salvador confessed to sole responsibility for the Liceu bombing, but this was disregarded by the tribunal, which became fixated on allegations of a large anarchist conspiracy. The authorities reopened the Pallàs case and declared the imprisoned anarchists to have been his accomplices. Two other people who confessed to participation in the attack were
Mariano Cerezuela and
Josep Codina, the latter of whom claimed to be the mastermind of the plot and the one who manufactured the bomb. Allegations soon began to circulate that Cerezuela and Codina had been
forced to confess through
torture. In an unpublished letter to
El País, Cerzuela described his experience being tortured, including
sleep deprivation, beatings and even
genital mutilation, which had elicited his
false confession. Accusations of torture and forced confessions were denied by the right-wing press, including
El País, which continued to justify the extrajudicial punishment of the anarchist movement. Republican politician
Baldomer Lostau wrote a letter to the
Minister of War Marcelo Azcárraga, protesting against the torture of prisoners who had been detained after the Liceu bombing. There is a broad
consensus among Spanish historians that torture took place during the process against the imprisoned anarchists. On 20 May, Marzo sentenced Manuel Ars, Josep Bernat, Mariano Cerezuela, Josep Sàbat and Jaume Sogas to
capital punishment; Joan Carbonell and Rafael Miralles were given
life imprisonment. All of the defendants insisted that they had given forced confessions elicited through torture. Following a review by the
Supreme Council of War and the Navy, Josep Codina was sentenced to execution and Francesc Vilarrubias and Domingo Mir were sentenced to life imprisonment. In a last letter to his son, Manuel Ars declared that he would die happy, having given his life for his ideals, and hoping that his death would expose the authoritarianism of the government. He encouraged his son to refute the charges against him, to study anarchism and to give his life for the cause if it were necessary. The condemned were brought into a chapel for religious council, but none except Sogas accepted. At 04:45, they were taken from the chapel to the castle moat and executed by firing squad in front of a crowd of 200 people. The execution took place the same day as the execution of the French anarchist terrorist
Émile Henry, leading historian
José Álvarez Junco to believe that the Spanish government was attempting to bury the story and protect itself from international condemnation. Most contemporary historians are of the opinion that the convicted anarchists were innocent. In August 1894, Salvador changed his story about his motivations; rather than wanting revenge for the execution of Pallàs, he now said that he had begun to plan the bombing attack after he had been beaten by police in
Valencia. He also claimed that his attack had been inspired by Peter Kropotkin's
The Conquest of Bread, despite the book containing no advocacy of terrorism, which led some anarchists to doubt his anarchist convictions or his mental health.
Peter Kropotkin privately sympathised with Salvador's attack, which he considered to be an act of desperation. He went on to express support for the
assassination of Sadi Carnot in 1894 and the
assassination of Antonio Cánovas in 1897. At this time, reports spread that Salvador had renounced anarchism and converted back to
Catholicism. Catholic newspapers publicised the story of his conversion and reported that his cell had become a
shrine, with sacred images on the walls and religious books lining the shelves. Catholics began campaigning for clemency and printed photographs of the new convert, but the Civil Governor banned publication of his photograph. Salvador spent the last night of his life in his cell in Reina Amalia prison, surrounded by members of the clergy. At 08:00, on 21 November 1894, when he was led out of the prison onto the execution platform, he shouted to the gathered crowd "Long live the social revolution! Long live anarchy! Death to all religions!" and sang the first verse of
Hijos del Pueblo. His "conversion" had been a ploy, in an attempt to escape from torture while in prison. He was then
garroted and his body left on the platform until 16:00. He showed no remorse for the bombing. ==Aftermath==