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Catalonia Offensive

The Catalonia Offensive (Catalan: Ofensiva de Catalunya, Spanish: Ofensiva de Cataluña) was part of the Spanish Civil War. The Nationalist Army started the offensive on 23 December 1938 and rapidly conquered Republican-held Catalonia with Barcelona (the Republic's capital city from October 1937).[10] Barcelona was captured on 26 January 1939. The Republican government headed for the French border. Thousands of people fleeing the Nationalists also crossed the frontier in the following month, to be placed in internment camps. Franco closed the border with France by 10 February 1939.

Catalonia Offensive
Part of the Spanish Civil War

Map of Spain in November 1938, after the end of the Battle of the Ebro and immediately before the start of the Catalonia Offensive. Republican territory is in red, and Nationalist territory is blue.
Date23 December 1938 – 10 February 1939
Location
Northeastern Spain
Result Nationalist victory
Belligerents

Republicans

Commanders and leaders
Strength
Thomas: 300,000[1]
Beevor: 220,000[2]
Jackson: 90,000[3]
Thomas: 360 artillery pieces[4]
Beevor: 250 artillery pieces[2]
Thomas: 200 tanks and armoured cars[4]
Beevor: 40 tanks and armoured cars[2]
Thomas: 80 aircraft[4]
Beevor: 106 aircraft[5]
Jackson: 350,000[3]
Beevor: 340,000[6]
Thomas: 300,000[1]
Beevor: 1,400 artillery pieces[6]
Thomas: 565 artillery pieces[1]
300 tanks[6]
500 aircraft[7]
Casualties and losses
? dead
10,000 wounded
60,000 captured[8]
220,000 disarmed in France[9]
? dead
? wounded
? captured

Background

After its defeat at the Battle of the Ebro the Republican Army was broken and would never recover. The Republicans had lost most of their armament and experienced units.[11] Furthermore, in October 1938 the Republican government agreed to withdraw the volunteers of the International Brigades.[12] On the other hand, the Nationalists received new supplies of ammunition, weapons and aircraft from Germany.[13] Furthermore, after the Munich Agreement, the hope of an intervention of the Western democracies in order to aid the Republic against Germany and Italy vanished.[11] France had closed the frontier again in mid-June 1938 and frozen Republican financial assets in French banks.[14]

Opposing forces

Nationalists

At the beginning of December, the nationalist faction concentrated an Army Group, the Army of the North, of 300,000[1]–340,000[6] men led by the general Fidel Dávila in order to conquer Catalonia. The Nationalists assembled their best divisions all along the front from the Pyrenees to the Mediterranean. Along the Segre the Nationalists deployed Muñoz Grandes's Army of Urgel, Garcia Valiño's Army of Maestrazgo and Moscardo's Aragon Army; in the confluence of the Segre with the Ebro Gambara's Italian Cuerpo Legionario Italiano of four divisions (55,000 men) and Solchaga's Army Corps of Navarra; and in the Ebro the Yagüe's Moroccan Corps.[1] The Nationalists also had, according to Beevor, 300 tanks, more than 500 aircraft (among them the Bf 109E and Heinkel 112 fighters) and 1,400 cannon.[15]

Republicans

Opposing the Nationalists, the Republicans had Colonel Perea's East Army and Colonel Juan Modesto's Ebro Army under the command of General Juan Hernandez Saravia, commander of the Oriental Region's Army Group, with 220,000[2]–300,000[1] men, many unarmed (Hernandez Saravia said that the Republican army had only 17,000 rifles for all Catalonia),[16] 106 airplanes[5] (most of them Chatos), 250 cannons and 40 tanks (many of them unserviceable due to shortage of spare parts).[2] The Soviet government agreed to send to Catalonia a shipment of 250 aircraft, 250 tanks and 650 cannons,[1] but the shipment did not reach Bordeaux until 15 January and only a small part of it crossed the border.[17] Furthermore, because of the international isolation of the Republic and the lack of food (according to Beevor, in Barcelona the ration per day was down to 100 grams of lentils)[5] the morale of the government troops and civil population in the Republican zone was very low. The people only wished the end of the war: "...just let it be over, it doesn’t matter how it ends, but let it end now."[18]

Battle

Nationalist offensive

The Nationalist offensive was planned for 10 December but was postponed to 23 December.[1] On 23 December the Italians and the Navarreses crossed the Segre at Mequinenza, broke the Republican lines, and advanced sixteen kilometres, but they were stopped by the V and XV Republican corps led by Lister on 25 December. On the left flank, Muñoz Grandes and Garcia Valiño advanced towards Cervera and Artesa, but they were blocked by the 26th Republican Division. On the south, Yagüe's troops were held back by the Ebro's floodwater. The Republicans had stopped the first Nationalist attack; nevertheless, they had lost 40 aircraft in the first ten days of the battle.[19]

On 3 January Solchaga attacked Les Borges Blanques, Muñoz Grandes and Garcia Valiño occupied Artesa, and Yagüe crossed the Ebro. Moscardo attacked from Lleida and the Italians occupied Les Borges Blanques on 5 January. The same day, the Republican army started a surprise attack in Extremadura towards Peñarroya in order to divert Nationalist forces, but the offensive was halted after a few days and the Nationalist offensive in Catalonia continued.[20] On 9 January the Moscardo's Aragon Army Corps joined Gambara at Mollerusa and broke the northern part of the front. The V and XV Republican Corps collapsed and retreated in disorder. On 15 January the Aragon and Maestrazgo Corps conquered Cervera and the Moroccan Corps after a one-day march of 50 km occupied Tarragona. By this day, the Nationalists had conquered a third of Catalonia, had taken 23,000 prisoners, and had killed 5,000 Republican soldiers.[21]

Fall of Barcelona

The Republican government then attempted to organize a defense of Barcelona, ordering the general mobilization of all men to forty-five and militarized all the industry. Nevertheless, the successive defensive lines (L1, L2, L3) fell,[22] the Republican forces were outnumbered six to one and the Nationalist air force bombed Barcelona every day (40 times between 21 and 25 January).[23] It became clear that the defense of the city was impossible.[24] On 22 January Solchaga and Yagüe reached the Llobregat only a few miles west of Barcelona, Muñoz Grandes and Garcia Valiño attacked Sabadell and Terrassa, and Gambara advanced to Badalona. The chief of staff of the Republican Army, Rojo told the Republican prime minister Negrín that the front had ceased to exist so the government abandoned Barcelona after releasing most of its prisoners.[25] A large part of the Barcelona population fled from the city as well. On 24 January Garcia Valiño occupied Manresa,[4] and on 25 January the Nationalist vanguard occupied the Tibidabo in the outskirts of Barcelona. The Nationalists finally occupied Barcelona on 26 January[26] and there were five days of looting by the Yagüe's Regulares[27] and extrajudicial killings (paseos).[28]

Retreat

After the occupation of Barcelona, the Nationalist troops, tired from the long marches, slowed their advance but soon resumed their offensive, pursuing the retreating columns of Republican soldiers and civilians.[25] On 1 February Negrín proposed, in the last meeting of the Cortes in the Figueres Castle, capitulation with the sole condition of respecting the lives of the vanquished and the holding of a plebiscite so the Spanish people could decide the form of government, but Franco did not accept.[29] On 2 February the Nationalists entered Girona, arrived within 50 kilometers of the frontier on 3 February, occupied Figueres on 8 February and Rojo ordered the Republican troops to withdraw to the French frontier.[8] Hundreds of thousands of Republican soldiers, women, children and old men marched to the French frontier on foot and on carts, buses and trucks[26] through bitterly cold sleet and snow. Their retreat was covered by units of the Republican Army, which carried out hit and run attacks and ambushes.[30] The Nationalist air force and the Condor Legion bombed and strafed the roads leading to France.[31] On 28 January the French government announced that civilians could cross the frontier and, on 5 February, the Republican soldiers as well.[32] Between 400,000[33] and 500,000,[8] Republican refugees crossed the frontier, among them the president of the Republic (Manuel Azaña), the prime minister (Juan Negrín) and the chief of staff of the Republican Army (Vicente Rojo), as well the president of Catalonia (Lluís Companys) and the members of the Catalan government. Negrín returned to Spain on 9 February but Azaña and Rojo refused to return.[31] By 9 February the Nationalists reached the frontier, and on the following day the last units of Modesto's Army of the Ebro crossed into France and the Nationalists sealed the frontier.[1]

Aftermath

Military and political consequences

 
Spain after the conclusion of the Catalonia Offensive. Nationalist Spain is in gray and Republican Spain is in white.

With the fall of Catalonia, the Republic lost the second largest city of the country, the Catalan war industry and a large part of its army (more than 200,000 soldiers).[32] On 2 February Azaña resigned and the same day France and the United Kingdom recognized the Francoist government.[34] Further military resistance became impossible and the war was lost for the Republic, despite the fact that 30% of Spain was still under Republican control after the offensive and Prime Minister Juan Negrín insisted that the Republic could continue to resist.[35]

The Catalonia autonomy was abolished. The Catalan language, the Sardana and Catalan Christian names were forbidden. All Catalan newspapers were requisitioned and the forbidden books retired and burned.[36] Even the inscriptions on tombs in the Montjuïc Cemetery commemorating Durruti, Ascaso and Ferrer i Guardia were removed.[37]

Fate of the Republican refugees

The Republican exiles were interned in fifteen improvised camps (mostly barbed-wire enclosures on the sand, without basic shelter, sanitary or cooking facilities)[38] by the French government in places such as Argelès, Gurs, Rivesaltes and Vernet.[39] The living conditions in the camps were very harsh: in the first six months, 14,672 refugees died from malnutrition or dysentery.[38] The French government encouraged the refugees to return and, by the end of 1939, between 70,000[40] and 180,000 refugees returned to Spain. However, 300,000 never returned.[41] Many sought asylum in other countries: the Soviet Union (between 3,000[41] and 5,000),[42] USA and Canada (about 1,000), Great Britain, Belgium and other European countries (between 3,000[43] and 5,000)[41] and Latin America (30,000 to Mexico, 10,000 to Argentina, 5,000 to Venezuela, 5,000 to Dominican Republic, 3,500 to Chile, etc.).[43][44] Nevertheless, at least 140,000 refugees remained in France while 19,000 went to the French colonies of North Africa.[43] After the fall of France 10,000[45]–15,000[46] refugees were detained by the Nazis and deported to concentration camps. Another 10,000 joined the French Resistance[47] and more than 2,000 joined the Free French Forces.[42]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Thomas 2001, p. 844.
  2. ^ a b c d e Beevor 2006, p. 373.
  3. ^ a b Jackson 1967, p. 463.
  4. ^ a b c d Thomas 2001, p. 845.
  5. ^ a b c Beevor 2006, p. 368.
  6. ^ a b c d Beevor 2006, p. 372.
  7. ^ Beevor 2006, p. 372; Thomas 2001, p. 844.
  8. ^ a b c Beevor 2006, p. 382.
  9. ^ Thomas 2001, p. 877.
  10. ^ Graham 2005, p. 102.
  11. ^ a b Preston 2006, p. 292.
  12. ^ Preston 2006, pp. 292–293.
  13. ^ Preston 2006, p. 294.
  14. ^ Graham 2005, p. 99.
  15. ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 372–373.
  16. ^ Thomas 2001, p. 847.
  17. ^ Beevor 2006, p. 488.
  18. ^ Graham 2005, p. 111.
  19. ^ Beevor 2006, p. 374.
  20. ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 375–376.
  21. ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 374–376.
  22. ^ Thomas 2001, p. 848.
  23. ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 376, 484.
  24. ^ Beevor 2006, p. 376.
  25. ^ a b Beevor 2006, p. 377.
  26. ^ a b Preston 2002, p. 374.
  27. ^ Beevor 2006, p. 378.
  28. ^ Thomas 2001, p. 850.
  29. ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 380–381.
  30. ^ Beevor 2006, p. 379.
  31. ^ a b Preston 2006, p. 295.
  32. ^ a b Thomas 2001, p. 854.
  33. ^ Thomas 2001, p. 860.
  34. ^ Graham 2005, p. 165.
  35. ^ Preston 2006, p. 296.
  36. ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 378–379.
  37. ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 850–851.
  38. ^ a b Preston 2002, p. 180.
  39. ^ Beevor 2006, pp. 411–412.
  40. ^ Graham 2005, p. 117.
  41. ^ a b c Beevor 2006, p. 412.
  42. ^ a b Graham 2005, p. 120.
  43. ^ a b c . Archived from the original on 8 May 2012. Retrieved 25 November 2011.
  44. ^ Graham 2005, p. 115.
  45. ^ Graham 2005, p. 126.
  46. ^ Preston 2006, p. 315.
  47. ^ Graham 2005, p. 125.

Sources

catalonia, offensive, confused, with, operation, catalonia, catalan, ofensiva, catalunya, spanish, ofensiva, cataluña, part, spanish, civil, nationalist, army, started, offensive, december, 1938, rapidly, conquered, republican, held, catalonia, with, barcelona. Not to be confused with Operation Catalonia The Catalonia Offensive Catalan Ofensiva de Catalunya Spanish Ofensiva de Cataluna was part of the Spanish Civil War The Nationalist Army started the offensive on 23 December 1938 and rapidly conquered Republican held Catalonia with Barcelona the Republic s capital city from October 1937 10 Barcelona was captured on 26 January 1939 The Republican government headed for the French border Thousands of people fleeing the Nationalists also crossed the frontier in the following month to be placed in internment camps Franco closed the border with France by 10 February 1939 Catalonia OffensivePart of the Spanish Civil WarMap of Spain in November 1938 after the end of the Battle of the Ebro and immediately before the start of the Catalonia Offensive Republican territory is in red and Nationalist territory is blue Date23 December 1938 10 February 1939LocationNortheastern SpainResultNationalist victoryBelligerentsRepublicans Generalitat of CataloniaNationalistsCTVCondor LegionCommanders and leadersHernandez SaraviaEnrique JuradoVicente Rojo LluchJuan Perea CapulinoJuan Guilloto LeonEnrique ListerFrancisco FrancoFidel Davila ArrondoJuan YagueRafael Garcia ValinoJose Moscardo ItuarteGastone GambaraStrengthThomas 300 000 1 Beevor 220 000 2 Jackson 90 000 3 Thomas 360 artillery pieces 4 Beevor 250 artillery pieces 2 Thomas 200 tanks and armoured cars 4 Beevor 40 tanks and armoured cars 2 Thomas 80 aircraft 4 Beevor 106 aircraft 5 Jackson 350 000 3 Beevor 340 000 6 Thomas 300 000 1 Beevor 1 400 artillery pieces 6 Thomas 565 artillery pieces 1 300 tanks 6 500 aircraft 7 Casualties and losses dead10 000 wounded60 000 captured 8 220 000 disarmed in France 9 dead wounded captured Contents 1 Background 2 Opposing forces 2 1 Nationalists 2 2 Republicans 3 Battle 3 1 Nationalist offensive 3 2 Fall of Barcelona 3 3 Retreat 4 Aftermath 4 1 Military and political consequences 4 2 Fate of the Republican refugees 5 See also 6 Notes 7 SourcesBackground EditAfter its defeat at the Battle of the Ebro the Republican Army was broken and would never recover The Republicans had lost most of their armament and experienced units 11 Furthermore in October 1938 the Republican government agreed to withdraw the volunteers of the International Brigades 12 On the other hand the Nationalists received new supplies of ammunition weapons and aircraft from Germany 13 Furthermore after the Munich Agreement the hope of an intervention of the Western democracies in order to aid the Republic against Germany and Italy vanished 11 France had closed the frontier again in mid June 1938 and frozen Republican financial assets in French banks 14 Opposing forces EditNationalists Edit At the beginning of December the nationalist faction concentrated an Army Group the Army of the North of 300 000 1 340 000 6 men led by the general Fidel Davila in order to conquer Catalonia The Nationalists assembled their best divisions all along the front from the Pyrenees to the Mediterranean Along the Segre the Nationalists deployed Munoz Grandes s Army of Urgel Garcia Valino s Army of Maestrazgo and Moscardo s Aragon Army in the confluence of the Segre with the Ebro Gambara s Italian Cuerpo Legionario Italiano of four divisions 55 000 men and Solchaga s Army Corps of Navarra and in the Ebro the Yague s Moroccan Corps 1 The Nationalists also had according to Beevor 300 tanks more than 500 aircraft among them the Bf 109E and Heinkel 112 fighters and 1 400 cannon 15 Republicans Edit Main article Eastern Region Army Group Opposing the Nationalists the Republicans had Colonel Perea s East Army and Colonel Juan Modesto s Ebro Army under the command of General Juan Hernandez Saravia commander of the Oriental Region s Army Group with 220 000 2 300 000 1 men many unarmed Hernandez Saravia said that the Republican army had only 17 000 rifles for all Catalonia 16 106 airplanes 5 most of them Chatos 250 cannons and 40 tanks many of them unserviceable due to shortage of spare parts 2 The Soviet government agreed to send to Catalonia a shipment of 250 aircraft 250 tanks and 650 cannons 1 but the shipment did not reach Bordeaux until 15 January and only a small part of it crossed the border 17 Furthermore because of the international isolation of the Republic and the lack of food according to Beevor in Barcelona the ration per day was down to 100 grams of lentils 5 the morale of the government troops and civil population in the Republican zone was very low The people only wished the end of the war just let it be over it doesn t matter how it ends but let it end now 18 Battle EditNationalist offensive Edit The Nationalist offensive was planned for 10 December but was postponed to 23 December 1 On 23 December the Italians and the Navarreses crossed the Segre at Mequinenza broke the Republican lines and advanced sixteen kilometres but they were stopped by the V and XV Republican corps led by Lister on 25 December On the left flank Munoz Grandes and Garcia Valino advanced towards Cervera and Artesa but they were blocked by the 26th Republican Division On the south Yague s troops were held back by the Ebro s floodwater The Republicans had stopped the first Nationalist attack nevertheless they had lost 40 aircraft in the first ten days of the battle 19 On 3 January Solchaga attacked Les Borges Blanques Munoz Grandes and Garcia Valino occupied Artesa and Yague crossed the Ebro Moscardo attacked from Lleida and the Italians occupied Les Borges Blanques on 5 January The same day the Republican army started a surprise attack in Extremadura towards Penarroya in order to divert Nationalist forces but the offensive was halted after a few days and the Nationalist offensive in Catalonia continued 20 On 9 January the Moscardo s Aragon Army Corps joined Gambara at Mollerusa and broke the northern part of the front The V and XV Republican Corps collapsed and retreated in disorder On 15 January the Aragon and Maestrazgo Corps conquered Cervera and the Moroccan Corps after a one day march of 50 km occupied Tarragona By this day the Nationalists had conquered a third of Catalonia had taken 23 000 prisoners and had killed 5 000 Republican soldiers 21 Fall of Barcelona Edit The Republican government then attempted to organize a defense of Barcelona ordering the general mobilization of all men to forty five and militarized all the industry Nevertheless the successive defensive lines L1 L2 L3 fell 22 the Republican forces were outnumbered six to one and the Nationalist air force bombed Barcelona every day 40 times between 21 and 25 January 23 It became clear that the defense of the city was impossible 24 On 22 January Solchaga and Yague reached the Llobregat only a few miles west of Barcelona Munoz Grandes and Garcia Valino attacked Sabadell and Terrassa and Gambara advanced to Badalona The chief of staff of the Republican Army Rojo told the Republican prime minister Negrin that the front had ceased to exist so the government abandoned Barcelona after releasing most of its prisoners 25 A large part of the Barcelona population fled from the city as well On 24 January Garcia Valino occupied Manresa 4 and on 25 January the Nationalist vanguard occupied the Tibidabo in the outskirts of Barcelona The Nationalists finally occupied Barcelona on 26 January 26 and there were five days of looting by the Yague s Regulares 27 and extrajudicial killings paseos 28 Retreat Edit After the occupation of Barcelona the Nationalist troops tired from the long marches slowed their advance but soon resumed their offensive pursuing the retreating columns of Republican soldiers and civilians 25 On 1 February Negrin proposed in the last meeting of the Cortes in the Figueres Castle capitulation with the sole condition of respecting the lives of the vanquished and the holding of a plebiscite so the Spanish people could decide the form of government but Franco did not accept 29 On 2 February the Nationalists entered Girona arrived within 50 kilometers of the frontier on 3 February occupied Figueres on 8 February and Rojo ordered the Republican troops to withdraw to the French frontier 8 Hundreds of thousands of Republican soldiers women children and old men marched to the French frontier on foot and on carts buses and trucks 26 through bitterly cold sleet and snow Their retreat was covered by units of the Republican Army which carried out hit and run attacks and ambushes 30 The Nationalist air force and the Condor Legion bombed and strafed the roads leading to France 31 On 28 January the French government announced that civilians could cross the frontier and on 5 February the Republican soldiers as well 32 Between 400 000 33 and 500 000 8 Republican refugees crossed the frontier among them the president of the Republic Manuel Azana the prime minister Juan Negrin and the chief of staff of the Republican Army Vicente Rojo as well the president of Catalonia Lluis Companys and the members of the Catalan government Negrin returned to Spain on 9 February but Azana and Rojo refused to return 31 By 9 February the Nationalists reached the frontier and on the following day the last units of Modesto s Army of the Ebro crossed into France and the Nationalists sealed the frontier 1 Aftermath EditMilitary and political consequences Edit Spain after the conclusion of the Catalonia Offensive Nationalist Spain is in gray and Republican Spain is in white With the fall of Catalonia the Republic lost the second largest city of the country the Catalan war industry and a large part of its army more than 200 000 soldiers 32 On 2 February Azana resigned and the same day France and the United Kingdom recognized the Francoist government 34 Further military resistance became impossible and the war was lost for the Republic despite the fact that 30 of Spain was still under Republican control after the offensive and Prime Minister Juan Negrin insisted that the Republic could continue to resist 35 The Catalonia autonomy was abolished The Catalan language the Sardana and Catalan Christian names were forbidden All Catalan newspapers were requisitioned and the forbidden books retired and burned 36 Even the inscriptions on tombs in the Montjuic Cemetery commemorating Durruti Ascaso and Ferrer i Guardia were removed 37 Fate of the Republican refugees Edit The Republican exiles were interned in fifteen improvised camps mostly barbed wire enclosures on the sand without basic shelter sanitary or cooking facilities 38 by the French government in places such as Argeles Gurs Rivesaltes and Vernet 39 The living conditions in the camps were very harsh in the first six months 14 672 refugees died from malnutrition or dysentery 38 The French government encouraged the refugees to return and by the end of 1939 between 70 000 40 and 180 000 refugees returned to Spain However 300 000 never returned 41 Many sought asylum in other countries the Soviet Union between 3 000 41 and 5 000 42 USA and Canada about 1 000 Great Britain Belgium and other European countries between 3 000 43 and 5 000 41 and Latin America 30 000 to Mexico 10 000 to Argentina 5 000 to Venezuela 5 000 to Dominican Republic 3 500 to Chile etc 43 44 Nevertheless at least 140 000 refugees remained in France while 19 000 went to the French colonies of North Africa 43 After the fall of France 10 000 45 15 000 46 refugees were detained by the Nazis and deported to concentration camps Another 10 000 joined the French Resistance 47 and more than 2 000 joined the Free French Forces 42 See also EditEastern Region Army Group GERO Camp de concentration d Argeles sur Mer List of Spanish Nationalist military equipment of the Spanish Civil War List of weapons of the Corpo Truppe Volontarie Condor Legion Cami de la RetiradaNotes Edit a b c d e f g h i Thomas 2001 p 844 a b c d e Beevor 2006 p 373 a b Jackson 1967 p 463 a b c d Thomas 2001 p 845 a b c Beevor 2006 p 368 a b c d Beevor 2006 p 372 Beevor 2006 p 372 Thomas 2001 p 844 a b c Beevor 2006 p 382 Thomas 2001 p 877 Graham 2005 p 102 a b Preston 2006 p 292 Preston 2006 pp 292 293 Preston 2006 p 294 Graham 2005 p 99 Beevor 2006 pp 372 373 Thomas 2001 p 847 Beevor 2006 p 488 Graham 2005 p 111 Beevor 2006 p 374 Beevor 2006 pp 375 376 Beevor 2006 pp 374 376 Thomas 2001 p 848 Beevor 2006 pp 376 484 Beevor 2006 p 376 a b Beevor 2006 p 377 a b Preston 2002 p 374 Beevor 2006 p 378 Thomas 2001 p 850 Beevor 2006 pp 380 381 Beevor 2006 p 379 a b Preston 2006 p 295 a b Thomas 2001 p 854 Thomas 2001 p 860 Graham 2005 p 165 Preston 2006 p 296 Beevor 2006 pp 378 379 Beevor 2006 pp 850 851 a b Preston 2002 p 180 Beevor 2006 pp 411 412 Graham 2005 p 117 a b c Beevor 2006 p 412 a b Graham 2005 p 120 a b c Mapa del exilio republicano Archived from the original on 8 May 2012 Retrieved 25 November 2011 Graham 2005 p 115 Graham 2005 p 126 Preston 2006 p 315 Graham 2005 p 125 Sources EditBeevor Antony 2006 1982 The Battle for Spain The Spanish Civil War 1936 1939 London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 0 297 84832 1 Graham Helen 2005 The Spanish Civil War A very short introduction New York NY Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 actrade 9780192803771 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 280377 1 Jackson Gabriel 1967 The Spanish Republic and the Civil War 1931 1939 Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 00757 8 OCLC 185862219 Preston Paul 2002 Doves of War Four Women of Spain London HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 00 638694 0 Preston Paul 2006 The Spanish Civil War Reaction Revolution and Revenge New York WW Norton amp Co ISBN 0 393 32987 9 Thomas Hugh 2001 The Spanish Civil War Modern Library ISBN 0 375 75515 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Catalonia Offensive amp oldid 1131193657, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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