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the 'Red Terror' and Spanish Civil War: Revolutionary Violence Madrid
Barnes and Noble
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the 'Red Terror' and Spanish Civil War: Revolutionary Violence Madrid in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $143.00

Barnes and Noble
the 'Red Terror' and Spanish Civil War: Revolutionary Violence Madrid in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $143.00
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
This book deals with one of most controversial issues of the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939): the “Red Terror.” Approximately 50,000 Spaniards were extrajudically executed in Republican Spain following the failure of the military rebellion in July 1936. This mass killing of “fascists” seriously undermined attempts by the legally constituted Republican government to present itself in foreign quarters as fighting a war for democracy. This study, based on a wealth of scholarship and archival sources, challenges the common view that executions were the work of criminal or anarchist “uncontrollables.” Its focus is on Madrid, which witnessed at least 8,000 executions in 1936. It shows that the terror was organized and was carried out with the complicity of the police, and argues that terror was seen as integral to the antifascist war effort. Indeed, the elimination of the internal enemy – the “Fifth Column” – was regarded as important as the war on the front line.
This book deals with one of most controversial issues of the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939): the “Red Terror.” Approximately 50,000 Spaniards were extrajudically executed in Republican Spain following the failure of the military rebellion in July 1936. This mass killing of “fascists” seriously undermined attempts by the legally constituted Republican government to present itself in foreign quarters as fighting a war for democracy. This study, based on a wealth of scholarship and archival sources, challenges the common view that executions were the work of criminal or anarchist “uncontrollables.” Its focus is on Madrid, which witnessed at least 8,000 executions in 1936. It shows that the terror was organized and was carried out with the complicity of the police, and argues that terror was seen as integral to the antifascist war effort. Indeed, the elimination of the internal enemy – the “Fifth Column” – was regarded as important as the war on the front line.

















