
The Spanish Civil War (Cambridge Essential Histories)
Cambridge University Press, 10/4/2012
EAN 9780521174701, ISBN10: 0521174708
Paperback, 286 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.7 cm
Language: English
This book presents a new history of the most important conflict in European affairs during the 1930s, the Spanish Civil War. It describes the complex origins of the conflict, the collapse of the Spanish Republic and the outbreak of the only mass worker revolution in the history of Western Europe. Stanley Payne explains the character of the Spanish revolution and the complex web of republican politics, while also examining the development of Franco's counter-revolutionary dictatorship. Payne gives attention to the multiple meanings and interpretations of war and examines why the conflict provoked such strong reactions at the time, and long after. The book also explains the military history of the war and its place in the history of military development, the non-intervention policy of the democracies and the role of German, Italian and Soviet intervention, concluding with an analysis of the place of the war in European affairs, in the context of twentieth-century revolutionary civil wars.
1. Modernization and conflict in Spain
2. From revolutionary insurrection to popular front
3. The breakdown of democracy
4. The military insurrection of the eighteenth of July
5. The Battle of Madrid - the first turning point
6. Revolution
7. Terror
8. A war of religion
9. Franco's counter-revolution
10. Foreign intervention and non-intervention
11. Soviet policy in Spain, 1936–9
12. The propaganda and culture war
13. A second counter-revolution?
the power struggle in the republican zone
14. The decisive northern campaigns of 1937–8
15. The war at sea and in the air
16. Civil wars within a civil war
17. The war in perspective
18. Costs and consequences
the long dictatorship.