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Topic 13.10History (2028+) HL36 flashcards

Democracy, authoritarianism and conflict in Spain (c.1920–2020)

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Card 1 of 3613.10.1
13.10.1
Question

What three interlinked problems undermined Spanish democracy in the early 1920s?

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All Flashcards in Topic 13.10

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13.10.112 cards

Card 1concept
Question

What three interlinked problems undermined Spanish democracy in the early 1920s?

Answer

Political instability (weak, short-lived coalition governments), social unrest (strikes, land hunger among landless peasants, regional separatism in Catalonia and the Basque Country), and economic weakness (an agrarian economy that had not modernised, huge inequality between landowners and labourers).

Card 2definition
Question

Miguel Primo de Rivera

Answer

Army general who led a bloodless coup in September 1923 with King Alfonso XIII's approval and ruled Spain as a military dictator until 1930, suspending the constitution and parliament.

Card 3process
Question

Why did Primo de Rivera's dictatorship (1923–1930) eventually collapse?

Answer

Early economic growth faded once the Great Depression hit in 1929; he lost the backing of the army; the king withdrew his support; and Primo de Rivera resigned in January 1930, discrediting the monarchy that had backed him.

Card 4example
Question

What ended the Spanish monarchy in April 1931?

Answer

Municipal elections showed huge support for republican candidates in the cities. King Alfonso XIII left Spain rather than risk civil war, and the Second Republic was declared on 14 April 1931.

Card 5definition
Question

Manuel Azaña

Answer

Leader of the left-Republican government (1931–1933) who pushed reforms on land, the army, the Church, and Catalan autonomy; returned as Popular Front prime minister/president after 1936.

Card 6definition
Question

José María Gil-Robles

Answer

Leader of CEDA, the main Catholic-conservative party of the Second Republic; his movement's rise alarmed the left, who feared he wanted to dismantle the Republic like Dollfuss had in Austria.

Card 7process
Question

What were the three main phases of the Second Republic before the civil war?

Answer

1931–33: Azaña's reforming left-Republican/Socialist government (the 'Reformist Biennium'). 1933–35: the more conservative CEDA-Radical governments (the 'Right-wing Biennium', sparking the 1934 Asturias rising). 1936: the Popular Front's narrow election win.

Card 8definition
Question

Popular Front

Answer

1936 electoral alliance of Republicans, Socialists, and Communists formed to stop the right (CEDA and monarchists) taking power.

Card 9example
Question

What happened in the February 1936 election?

Answer

The Popular Front narrowly won more seats than the right-wing coalition (helped by Spain's electoral system, which rewarded winning coalitions with bonus seats), though the popular vote was much closer than the seat count suggests.

Card 10process
Question

Why did the July 1936 military coup turn into a full civil war rather than a quick takeover?

Answer

The coup only succeeded fully in some garrison towns; it failed to seize Madrid and Barcelona, where workers' militias and loyal police/army units resisted. Spain was split roughly in two, with neither side able to win outright — so a short coup became a prolonged war.

Card 11process
Question

How did Francisco Franco emerge as leader of the Nationalists?

Answer

Franco commanded the experienced Army of Africa, and after General Sanjurjo (the coup's intended leader) died in a plane crash , Franco was named Head of State and Generalissimo by the rebel junta in Burgos in September–October 1936, unifying command.

Card 12comparison
Question

Compare: was the civil war caused mainly by the Republic's reforms or by the right's refusal to accept them?

Answer

One argument blames Republican/Popular Front policies (land seizures, Church attacks, disorder) for provoking a defensive coup. The opposing argument blames the right's refusal to accept legitimate reform and its readiness to use the army against an elected government. Both currents fed the crisis — Paper 3 essays should weigh them rather than pick one alone.

13.10.212 cards

Card 13concept
Question

What four factors explain the Nationalist victory in the Spanish Civil War?

Answer

Economic factors, role of individuals, foreign involvement, and military/strategic factors — and they reinforced each other rather than acting alone.

Card 14concept
Question

Why was Franco's leadership important to Nationalist success?

Answer

He became Generalísimo (supreme commander) by October 1936, unifying the Nationalist forces and merging rival political groups into one party, the Falange.

Card 15definition
Question

What was the Condor Legion?

Answer

A German air force unit sent to support the Nationalists; it gave them control of the skies and bombed Guernica in April 1937.

Card 16example
Question

How much support did Italy send the Nationalists?

Answer

Around 75,000 troops plus aircraft and warships — the largest single foreign contribution to either side.

Card 17concept
Question

What was 'non-intervention' and how did it affect the war?

Answer

Britain, France, and the USA agreed not to arm either side; this hurt the Republic more, since Germany and Italy largely ignored it while helping the Nationalists.

Card 18example
Question

What happened during the May Days of 1937?

Answer

Rival Republican factions (socialists, communists, anarchists) fought each other in Barcelona, showing the Republic's internal disunity.

Card 19process
Question

How did the Nationalists' control of farmland help them win?

Answer

They held Spain's main grain-growing regions from early in the war, giving them steadier food supplies than the import-dependent Republic.

Card 20definition
Question

What was the 'White Terror'?

Answer

The wave of executions and imprisonments Franco's regime carried out against Republicans after the war ended in 1939.

Card 21definition
Question

What was 'autarky' and what did it cause in 1940s Spain?

Answer

A policy of economic self-sufficiency; it caused stagnation, shortages, and the 'years of hunger' in the 1940s.

Card 22process
Question

What changed in the Spanish economy from 1959 onward?

Answer

The Stabilization Plan opened Spain to trade and tourism, ending autarky and triggering the 1960s 'Spanish Miracle' of rapid growth.

Card 23comparison
Question

How did Franco's regime treat regional identities and the Catholic Church?

Answer

It suppressed Catalan and Basque languages/identities while making National Catholicism the state ideology, giving the Church control over education and marriage law.

Card 24comparison
Question

Compare Nationalist and Republican unity during the Civil War.

Answer

Nationalists: one commander (Franco) and one party (Falange). Republicans: frequent leadership changes and factional infighting, e.g. the May 1937 Barcelona clashes.

13.10.312 cards

Card 25concept
Question

Who did Franco intend as his successor, and what did he actually do?

Answer

King Juan Carlos I — Franco expected him to continue authoritarian rule, but he instead backed democratization and defended it during the 1981 coup attempt.

Card 26definition
Question

What was the Law for Political Reform (1976)?

Answer

A law passed by Franco's own parliament, at Suárez's urging, allowing free elections and legalising political parties — effectively voting the dictatorship's structures out of existence.

Card 27example
Question

What happened on 23 February 1981 ("23-F")?

Answer

Lieutenant Colonel Antonio Tejero led an armed takeover of parliament; King Juan Carlos broadcast on TV ordering the army's loyalty to the constitution, ending the coup attempt.

Card 28concept
Question

What role did Manuel Fraga Iribarne play in the transition?

Answer

A former Francoist minister who founded a legal, moderate conservative party (Alianza Popular, forerunner of the PP), giving the political right a democratic route instead of provoking a coup.

Card 29definition
Question

What were the Moncloa Pacts (1977)?

Answer

Agreements between government, unions and employers to control wages and prices together, stabilising the economy during the fragile early transition.

Card 30definition
Question

What is the "pacto del olvido" (pact of forgetting)?

Answer

An informal agreement not to prosecute Civil War or Francoist-era crimes, which helped keep the peace during the transition but let Francoist officials avoid accountability.

Card 31comparison
Question

Compare Felipe González and José María Aznar's governments.

Answer

González (PSOE, 1982–96): EEC entry (1986), NATO confirmed, built the welfare state. Aznar (PP, 1996–2004): euro adopted (2002), economic liberalization, backed the Iraq War (2003).

Card 32example
Question

What major event marked José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero's government (2004–2011)?

Answer

Legalized same-sex marriage (2005) and withdrew troops from Iraq, but presided over Spain during the severe 2008 financial crisis and mass unemployment.

Card 33definition
Question

What is ETA and what happened to it?

Answer

A Basque separatist group that used violence for independence from 1959; it gradually declined and formally disarmed in 2011.

Card 34comparison
Question

How did Catalan nationalism develop differently from Basque separatism after 1978?

Answer

Basque violence (ETA) declined and ended by 2011, but Catalan nationalism grew stronger, leading to an illegal independence referendum and political crisis in 2017.

Card 35process
Question

Outline the process by which Spain became a democracy, 1975–1982.

Answer

Franco dies (1975) → Juan Carlos backs reform → Suárez PM, 1976 reform law → 1977 free elections and Moncloa Pacts → 1978 constitution → 1981 coup fails → 1982 PSOE wins power peacefully.

Card 36concept
Question

What social factors made Spaniards ready for democracy by the mid-1970s?

Answer

A large new middle class from the 1960s economic boom, exposure to democracies abroad through tourism/emigration, a post-Civil-War generation, and a more reformist Catholic Church.

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