The Spanish Legion was formed by royal decree of King
Alfonso XIII on 28 January 1920, with the Minister of War stating, "With the designation of Foreigners Regiment there will be created an armed military unit, whose recruits, uniform and regulations by which they should be governed will be set by the Minister of War". However, traditionally the Legion has held 20 September 1920, the day the first Legionnaire enlisted, as its founding date.
Predecessor Historically there had been a "Spanish Foreign Legion" which preceded the modern Legion's formation in 1920. On 28 June 1835, the French government had decided to hand the
French Foreign Legion over to the Spanish government in support of
Queen Isabella's claim to the throne during the
First Carlist War. The French Foreign Legion, with around 4,000 men, landed at
Tarragona on 17 August 1835. This became the French Auxilliary Division until it was disbanded on 8 December 1838, when it had dropped to only 500 men.
The Title of the Spanish Legion The Spanish Legion was originally called the
Tercio de Extranjeros (
Tercio of Foreigners) when created in 1920. The word
tercio is an old Spanish military term that applies to a type of military organisation of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The use of "tercio" in the name was to evoke the era of Spain's military supremacy under the Habsburg monarchy. The title's use was purely honorific; the Spanish Legion was always organised regimentally, never as an actual tercio or tercios. The Spanish Legion was modelled on the
French Foreign Legion. Its purpose was to provide a corps of professional troops to fight in Spain's colonial campaigns in North Africa, in place of conscript units that were proving ineffective. The first commanding officer, Lieutenant Colonel
José Millán-Astray Terreros, referred to his unit as ‘La Legión’ from the start but this only became part of the unit's title from 1937. In the original there were Latin Americans, amongst others, one Chinese, three Japanese, one Maltese, one Russian, both German & Austrian, one Italian, two Frenchmen, four Portuguese, one Belgian, unknown Filipino and one Spanish woman from
Puerto Rico. However, soon the majority of its members were Spaniards who joined to fight outside of European Spain. In 1925, the unit title was changed to ("Tercio of Morocco"). This was soon abbreviated to ‘The Tercio’. In 1937 at the height of the Spanish Civil War, the was renamed , the name by which it is still known today.
Early campaigns The Spanish Legion's first major campaign was in Spanish North Africa. In 1920 Spain was facing a major rebellion in the Protectorate of
Spanish Morocco, led by the able Rif leader
Abd el-Krim. On 2 September 1920, King Alfonso XIII conferred command of the new regiment on Lieutenant Colonel of Infantry
José Millán-Astray, chief proponent of its establishment. Millán-Astray was an able soldier but an eccentric and extreme personality. His style and attitude would become part of the mystique of the Legion. On 20 September 1920 the first recruit joined the new Legion, a date which is now celebrated annually. The initial make-up of the regiment was a headquarters unit and three battalions (known as
Banderas, lit. "banners" - another archaic 16th century term). Each battalion was in turn made up of a headquarters company, two rifle companies, and a machine gun company. The regiment's initial location was at the Cuartel del Rey en
Ceuta on the Plaza de Colón. At its height, during the Spanish Civil War, the Legion consisted of 18
banderas, plus a tank
bandera, an assault engineer
bandera and a Special Operations Group.
Banderas 12 to 18 were considered independent units and never served as part of the additional
tercios into which the Legion was organised.
Francisco Franco was the Legion's second-in-command, concurrently commanding the 1st
Bandera. The Legion fought in
Spanish Morocco in the
Rif War (to 1926). Together with the
Regulares (Moorish colonial troops), the Legion made up the
Spanish Army of Africa. Units of both the Legion and the
Regulares were brought to Spain by the Republican government to help put down the
Asturian Revolution of 1934.
Civil War Under the leadership of Lieutenant Colonel
Juan Yagüe, the Army of Africa played an important part in the
Spanish Civil War on the
Nationalist side. The professionalism of the Legion and the
Regulares gave the Nationalist troops a significant initial advantage over the less well trained
Spanish Republican forces. The Army of Africa remained an elite spearhead until the expansion of the rebel armies after April 1937 led to the Legion and Moroccan units being distributed across several fronts.
After the Civil War Following the Francoist victory in 1939, the Legion was reduced in size and returned to its bases in Spanish Morocco. In 1940, it was reorganized into three
Tercios (regiments). The 4th
Tercio of the Legion was established in 1950. Emblems, coats of arms, and names of the
Tercios:
1st Tercio, "Great Captain" Gonzalo Fernandez de Cordoba
2nd Tercio, "Fernando Alvarez de Toledo, Duke of Alba" 3rd Tercio, "Don Juan of Austria" 4th Tercio, "Alexander Farnese, Duke of Parma" When
Morocco gained its independence in 1956, the Legion continued in existence as part of the garrison of the remaining Spanish enclaves and territories in North Africa. The Legion fought Moroccan irregulars in the
Ifni War in 1957–58. On 17 June 1970, Legion units opened fire and killed between two and eleven demonstrators at the Zemla neighbourhood in
El Aaiun,
Spanish Sahara, modern day
Western Sahara. The incident, which became known as the
Zemla Intifada, had a significant influence on pushing the
Sahrawi anticolonial movement into embarking on an armed struggle which continues, though Spain has long since abandoned the territory and handed it over to Morocco. Through the course of the Legion's history, Spaniards (including natives of the colony of
Spanish Guinea) have made up the majority of its members, with foreigners accounting for 25 percent or less. During the Rif War of the 1920s most of the foreigners serving with the Legion were Spanish-speaking Latin Americans. ==Modern legion==