Spanish State Kingdom of Spain |
||||||||||||||||
Estado Español Reino de España |
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
Motto Una, Grande y Libre "One, Great and Free" |
||||||||||||||||
Anthem Marcha Granadera "Grenadier March" |
||||||||||||||||
Territories and colonies of the Spanish State:
|
||||||||||||||||
Capital | ||||||||||||||||
Languages | Spanish (official; sole legal language) | |||||||||||||||
Religion | Roman Catholicism | |||||||||||||||
Government | Francoist one-party Totalitarian Dictatorship | |||||||||||||||
Caudillo (Head of State) | ||||||||||||||||
• | 1936–1975 | Francisco Franco | ||||||||||||||
Prime Minister | ||||||||||||||||
• | 1936 | Miguel Cabanellas (first) | ||||||||||||||
• | 1938–1973 | Francisco Franco | ||||||||||||||
• | 1973–1975 | Carlos A. Navarro (last) | ||||||||||||||
Legislature | Cortes Españolas | |||||||||||||||
Historical era | Interwar period / Cold War | |||||||||||||||
• | Spanish Civil War | 1936–1939 | ||||||||||||||
• | Establishment | 1 October 1936 | ||||||||||||||
• | Republic exiled | 1 April 1939 | ||||||||||||||
• | Law of Succession | 1947 | ||||||||||||||
• | Ifni War | 23 Oct 1957 – 30 Jun 1958 | ||||||||||||||
• | Death of Franco | 20 November 1975 | ||||||||||||||
Area | ||||||||||||||||
• | 1940 | 796,030 km² (307,349 sq mi) | ||||||||||||||
Population | ||||||||||||||||
• | 1940 est. | 25,877,971 | ||||||||||||||
Density | 32.5 /km² (84.2 /sq mi) | |||||||||||||||
• | 1975 est. | 35,563,535 | ||||||||||||||
Density | 44.7 /km² (115.7 /sq mi) | |||||||||||||||
Currency | Spanish peseta | |||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
a. Formally, Franco was titled "Caudillo de España, Por la Gracia de Dios" and was de facto the leader of Spain. |
"Francoist Spain" (also historically "Nationalist Spain" during the Spanish Civil War) refers to the period of Spanish history between 1939, when Francisco Franco took control of Spain from the government of the Second Spanish Republic after winning the Civil War, and 1978, when the Spanish Constitution of 1978 went into effect. It is the opinion of several historians that during the Spanish Civil War, Franco's goal was to turn Spain into a totalitarian state like Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy. However, its entry into the war on the Axis side was prevented largely by, as was much later revealed, British Secret Intelligence Service (MI-6) efforts that included up to $200 million in bribes for Spanish officials to keep the regime from getting involved. Franco was also able to take advantage of the resources of the Axis Powers and chose to avoid becoming heavily involved in the Second World War. Franco's regime evolved into a more classical autocratic regime.
The Spanish Civil War started as a coup by the Spanish military on the peninsula (peninsulares) and in Spanish Morocco (africanistas) on July 17, 1936. The coup had the support of most factions sympathetic to the right-wing cause in Spain, including the majority of Spain's Catholic clergy, the fascist-inclined Falange, and the Alfonsine and Carlist monarchists. The coup escalated into a civil war lasting for three years once Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany agreed to support Franco, starting with airlifting of the africanistas onto the mainland. Other supporters included Portugal's Estado Novo regime under António de Oliveira Salazar, while the presentation of the Civil War as a "crusade" or renewed reconquista attracted the sympathy of Catholics internationally and the participation of Irish Catholic volunteers. Although the government of the United Kingdom was more sympathetic to the Francoists while the Popular Front government of France was anxious to support the Republic, both factions observed the non-intervention agreement of October 1936. The Second Spanish Republic was backed by the Stalinist Soviet Union and Mexico, at the time the Soviet Union's only ideological ally, from December 1936, but the help was much less than that provided to Nationalist Spain.