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Dabrowski Battalion

The Dabrowski Battalion, also known as Dąbrowszczacy (Polish pronunciation: [dɔmbrɔfˈʂt͡ʂat͡sɨ]), was a battalion of the International Brigades in the Spanish Civil War. It was initially formed entirely of volunteers, "chiefly composed of Polish miners recently living and working in France and Belgium".[1][2] Due to the relatively short travelling distances, these men were amongst the first to arrive in Spain. The battalion had a strong Polish flavour and even when, towards the end of the war, Poles were heavily outnumbered by Spanish troops, the officers and non-commissioned officers were still predominantly Polish. It also contained a significant nucleus of Red Army officers.[3] It fought from 1936-1939.

Dabrowski Battalion
Active1936–1939
CountryPoland
Allegiance Spain
Branch 11th Mobile Brigade (XI "Hans Beimler" International Brigade)
XII International Brigade
150th International Brigade
XIII International Brigade
TypeBattalion of the International Brigades
Nickname(s)Dąbrowszczacy
Motto(s)For our freedom and yours
Mascot(s)Jarosław Dąbrowski
EngagementsSiege of Madrid
Battle of Jarama
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Józef Strzelczyk

The battalion was raised in Albacete (the headquarters depot of the International Brigades) in mid-October 1936.[4]

Soldiers edit

 
Soldiers of the Brigade.

About 5,000 Poles fought in the unit. The Brigade was named after the 19th century Polish general Jarosław Dąbrowski.[4][5][6][7] The unit was formed as Dąbrowski's battalion in October 1936.[8]

In June 1937 it was reorganised into the 150th Brigade, which was renamed to the 13th Dąbrowski's International Brigade in August.[9] The brigade was demobilized in 1938 but volunteered back to service in 1939. On 9 January it crossed the French border and was finally dissolved; most of its soldiers were interned.

Most of the Dabrowski Battalion were Polish communists. For their communist orientation they were condemned by the Second Polish Republic, which cancelled the citizenship of many of them (in spite of the fact that Poland was the second-largest arms supplier to the Republic, just after the USSR). On the other hand, they were portrayed as heroes in the Polish People's Republic; many of them served in the Berling Army, Armia Ludowa and Gwardia Ludowa during the Second World War.[10]

Commanders edit

  • Stanisław Ulanowski (October – 21 November 1936)[4][11]
  • Antoni Kochanek (21 November 1936 – 2 January 1937)
  • Józef Strzelczyk „Jan Barwiński” (16 April – 15 July 1937)
  • Wacław Komar właśc. Mendel Kossoj (15 July 1937 – 13 February 1938)
  • Franciszek Księżarczyk (13–16 February 1938)
  • Antoni Pietrzak (16 February – 17 March 1938)
  • José Martinez (17 March – 3 September 1938)
  • Emiliano Chamon (3–24 September 1938)

Operational history edit

Formation edit

This battalion was originally part of XI Brigada Movil ("11th Mobile Brigade") which was formed 14–17 October 1936. The volunteers were grouped by language into four battalions to make communication easier. On 22 October 1936, the IX Brigada Movil was renamed the XI International Brigade (also known as the 13th Hans Beimler Brigade), with General "Kléber" (Manfred Stern) commanding.[12][13] The four component battalions were renamed as follows:

  • 1st Bn Franco-Belge became Commune de Paris Battalion.
  • 2nd Bn Austro-German became Edgar André Battalion
  • 3rd Bn Italo-Espanol became Garibaldi Battalion
  • 4th Bn Polish-Balkan became Jarosław Dąbrowski Battalion, commanded by Major Tadeusz Oppman.[1]
  • An entirely Spanish volunteer unit - the Asturias-Heredia Battalion - was added after the Battle of Madrid to bring the brigade up to strength.[citation needed]

Siege of Madrid edit

By early November, the Siege of Madrid was underway and the need for men was great. The 600-man strong[14] Dabrowski Battalion, along with the rest of XI International Brigade were the first units of the International Brigades to go into action.

The first intervention of the International Brigades, in the siege of Madrid on 8 November 1936, would become legendary. The first Brigade to arrive was the XI with 1,700 men, mainly Germans, French, Belgians and Poles, followed by the XII four days later with another 1,550. The CNT press in the capital reported their arrival in the early hours of the morning 'in silent and damp streets: Marching firmly, their footsteps echoing on the cobblestones... singing revolutionary songs in French, German, Italian... The people ran out to cheer them,' convinced these strangely uniformed men had been sent by Russia and 'if their powerful ally Russia...intervened on their side anything was possible...the cry rang out from many a balcony--Long live the Russians !' After two days of combat half the XI were dead. ***CITATION***

The Dabrowski Battalion was in the thick of the action - at the University City and Casa de Campo - losing two thirds of its men.[14] It was subsequently reinforced by new volunteers arriving from Albacete and by Spanish volunteers,[14] and reorganised into three Polish/Balkan companies and one Spanish company.

Battle of Jarama edit

The Dąbrowski Battalion, as part of the XII brigade, was sent to Jarama, a few kilometres from Madrid, to block a Nationalist attack. The Nationalist aim was to take the main Madrid to Valencia highway and thus cut Madrid off from Andalusia, where the Republican government was based. The fighting was ferocious with all five International Brigades engaged along a continuous front.[15]

At Jarama, the battalion was commanded by Józef Strzelczyk. During the course of the battle, the Battalion lost a third of their effectives (6–27 February 1937).[14]

Order of battle edit

The Dabrowski Battalion served as part of several brigades. As its numbers were reduced by casualties, it absorbed various other understrength international battalions, supplemented by Spanish conscript companies, but it never again reached full strength. It was disbanded in September 1938.

Date joined Date left Brigade Comment
26 Oct 1936 28 Nov 1936 XI International Brigade 11th Hans Beimler Brigade
28 Nov 1936 30 Apr 1937 XII International Brigade 12th Garibaldi Brigade
1 May 1937 4 Aug 1937 150th International Brigade
4 Aug 1937 23 Sep 1938 XIII International Brigade 13th Dabrowski Brigade Disbanded

See also edit

Notes and references edit

  • Hugh Thomas, The Spanish Civil War
  1. ^ a b Thomas, The Spanish Civil War, p. 324
  2. ^ See also Polish Volunteers in the Spanish Civil War
  3. ^ Beevor, Antony (2006). The Battle for Spain. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. p. 182. ISBN 978-0-7538-2165-7.
  4. ^ a b c "Brigada Internacional Batalló Jaroslaw Dabrowski". lernen-aus-der-geschichte.de (in German). Retrieved 27 November 2019.
  5. ^ Mall, Volker (2014-11-03). Die Häftlinge des KZ-Außenlagers Hailfingen/Tailfingen: Daten und Porträts aller Häftlinge (in German). BoD – Books on Demand. ISBN 978-3-7386-0332-3.
  6. ^ "Spanischer Bürgerkrieg". doi:10.1163/2468-2845_ejgk_dum_0822. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  7. ^ Hassel, Florian. "Polen: Die große Umbenennung". Süddeutsche.de (in German). Retrieved 2019-11-27.
  8. ^ Cordery, Bob (2017). La Ultima Cruzada. ISBN 9780244070311. Retrieved 27 November 2019.
  9. ^ Mugnai, Bruno (2019-04-16). Foreign volunteers and International Brigades in the Spanish civil war (1936-39). Soldiershop Publishing. ISBN 978-88-9327-452-4.
  10. ^ „Dąbrowszczacy” 2008-06-24 at the Wayback Machine in Institute of National Remembrance
  11. ^ "El Batallón y la Brigada Dombrowski" (PDF). sidbrint.ub.edu. Retrieved 28 November 2019.
  12. ^ Gutiérrez, Lucía Pintado; Villanueva, Alicia Castillo (2018). New Approaches to Translation, Conflict and Memory: Narratives of the Spanish Civil War and the Dictatorship. Springer. ISBN 978-3-030-00698-3.
  13. ^ Herreros, Sebastià (March 2003). "The International Brigades in the Spanish war 1936-1939: Flags and Symbols" (PDF). flaginstitute.org. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  14. ^ a b c d ES:Brigada Dabrowski
  15. ^ Hugh Thomas, The Spanish Civil War, pg. 490

External links edit

dabrowski, battalion, this, article, about, battalion, dabrowski, brigade, international, brigade, also, known, dąbrowszczacy, polish, pronunciation, dɔmbrɔfˈʂt, ʂat, battalion, international, brigades, spanish, civil, initially, formed, entirely, volunteers, . This article is about the battalion For the Dabrowski Brigade see CL International Brigade The Dabrowski Battalion also known as Dabrowszczacy Polish pronunciation dɔmbrɔfˈʂt ʂat sɨ was a battalion of the International Brigades in the Spanish Civil War It was initially formed entirely of volunteers chiefly composed of Polish miners recently living and working in France and Belgium 1 2 Due to the relatively short travelling distances these men were amongst the first to arrive in Spain The battalion had a strong Polish flavour and even when towards the end of the war Poles were heavily outnumbered by Spanish troops the officers and non commissioned officers were still predominantly Polish It also contained a significant nucleus of Red Army officers 3 It fought from 1936 1939 Dabrowski BattalionActive1936 1939CountryPolandAllegianceSpainBranch11th Mobile Brigade XI Hans Beimler International Brigade XII International Brigade 150th International Brigade XIII International BrigadeTypeBattalion of the International BrigadesNickname s DabrowszczacyMotto s For our freedom and yoursMascot s Jaroslaw DabrowskiEngagementsSiege of Madrid Battle of JaramaCommandersNotablecommandersJozef Strzelczyk The battalion was raised in Albacete the headquarters depot of the International Brigades in mid October 1936 4 Contents 1 Soldiers 1 1 Commanders 2 Operational history 2 1 Formation 2 2 Siege of Madrid 2 3 Battle of Jarama 3 Order of battle 4 See also 5 Notes and references 6 External linksSoldiers edit nbsp Soldiers of the Brigade About 5 000 Poles fought in the unit The Brigade was named after the 19th century Polish general Jaroslaw Dabrowski 4 5 6 7 The unit was formed as Dabrowski s battalion in October 1936 8 In June 1937 it was reorganised into the 150th Brigade which was renamed to the 13th Dabrowski s International Brigade in August 9 The brigade was demobilized in 1938 but volunteered back to service in 1939 On 9 January it crossed the French border and was finally dissolved most of its soldiers were interned Most of the Dabrowski Battalion were Polish communists For their communist orientation they were condemned by the Second Polish Republic which cancelled the citizenship of many of them in spite of the fact that Poland was the second largest arms supplier to the Republic just after the USSR On the other hand they were portrayed as heroes in the Polish People s Republic many of them served in the Berling Army Armia Ludowa and Gwardia Ludowa during the Second World War 10 Commanders edit Stanislaw Ulanowski October 21 November 1936 4 11 Antoni Kochanek 21 November 1936 2 January 1937 Jozef Strzelczyk Jan Barwinski 16 April 15 July 1937 Waclaw Komar wlasc Mendel Kossoj 15 July 1937 13 February 1938 Franciszek Ksiezarczyk 13 16 February 1938 Antoni Pietrzak 16 February 17 March 1938 Jose Martinez 17 March 3 September 1938 Emiliano Chamon 3 24 September 1938 Operational history editFormation edit This battalion was originally part of XI Brigada Movil 11th Mobile Brigade which was formed 14 17 October 1936 The volunteers were grouped by language into four battalions to make communication easier On 22 October 1936 the IX Brigada Movil was renamed the XI International Brigade also known as the 13th Hans Beimler Brigade with General Kleber Manfred Stern commanding 12 13 The four component battalions were renamed as follows 1st Bn Franco Belge became Commune de Paris Battalion 2nd Bn Austro German became Edgar Andre Battalion 3rd Bn Italo Espanol became Garibaldi Battalion 4th Bn Polish Balkan became Jaroslaw Dabrowski Battalion commanded by Major Tadeusz Oppman 1 An entirely Spanish volunteer unit the Asturias Heredia Battalion was added after the Battle of Madrid to bring the brigade up to strength citation needed Siege of Madrid edit Main article Siege of Madrid By early November the Siege of Madrid was underway and the need for men was great The 600 man strong 14 Dabrowski Battalion along with the rest of XI International Brigade were the first units of the International Brigades to go into action The first intervention of the International Brigades in the siege of Madrid on 8 November 1936 would become legendary The first Brigade to arrive was the XI with 1 700 men mainly Germans French Belgians and Poles followed by the XII four days later with another 1 550 The CNT press in the capital reported their arrival in the early hours of the morning in silent and damp streets Marching firmly their footsteps echoing on the cobblestones singing revolutionary songs in French German Italian The people ran out to cheer them convinced these strangely uniformed men had been sent by Russia and if their powerful ally Russia intervened on their side anything was possible the cry rang out from many a balcony Long live the Russians After two days of combat half the XI were dead CITATION The Dabrowski Battalion was in the thick of the action at the University City and Casa de Campo losing two thirds of its men 14 It was subsequently reinforced by new volunteers arriving from Albacete and by Spanish volunteers 14 and reorganised into three Polish Balkan companies and one Spanish company Battle of Jarama edit Main article Battle of Jarama The Dabrowski Battalion as part of the XII brigade was sent to Jarama a few kilometres from Madrid to block a Nationalist attack The Nationalist aim was to take the main Madrid to Valencia highway and thus cut Madrid off from Andalusia where the Republican government was based The fighting was ferocious with all five International Brigades engaged along a continuous front 15 At Jarama the battalion was commanded by Jozef Strzelczyk During the course of the battle the Battalion lost a third of their effectives 6 27 February 1937 14 Order of battle editThe Dabrowski Battalion served as part of several brigades As its numbers were reduced by casualties it absorbed various other understrength international battalions supplemented by Spanish conscript companies but it never again reached full strength It was disbanded in September 1938 Date joined Date left Brigade Comment 26 Oct 1936 28 Nov 1936 XI International Brigade 11th Hans Beimler Brigade 28 Nov 1936 30 Apr 1937 XII International Brigade 12th Garibaldi Brigade 1 May 1937 4 Aug 1937 150th International Brigade 4 Aug 1937 23 Sep 1938 XIII International Brigade 13th Dabrowski Brigade DisbandedSee also editPolish volunteers in the Spanish Civil War Boleslaw MolojecNotes and references editHugh Thomas The Spanish Civil War a b Thomas The Spanish Civil War p 324 See also Polish Volunteers in the Spanish Civil War Beevor Antony 2006 The Battle for Spain London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson p 182 ISBN 978 0 7538 2165 7 a b c Brigada Internacional Batallo Jaroslaw Dabrowski lernen aus der geschichte de in German Retrieved 27 November 2019 Mall Volker 2014 11 03 Die Haftlinge des KZ Aussenlagers Hailfingen Tailfingen Daten und Portrats aller Haftlinge in German BoD Books on Demand ISBN 978 3 7386 0332 3 Spanischer Burgerkrieg doi 10 1163 2468 2845 ejgk dum 0822 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Hassel Florian Polen Die grosse Umbenennung Suddeutsche de in German Retrieved 2019 11 27 Cordery Bob 2017 La Ultima Cruzada ISBN 9780244070311 Retrieved 27 November 2019 Mugnai Bruno 2019 04 16 Foreign volunteers and International Brigades in the Spanish civil war 1936 39 Soldiershop Publishing ISBN 978 88 9327 452 4 Dabrowszczacy Archived 2008 06 24 at the Wayback Machine in Institute of National Remembrance El Batallon y la Brigada Dombrowski PDF sidbrint ub edu Retrieved 28 November 2019 Gutierrez Lucia Pintado Villanueva Alicia Castillo 2018 New Approaches to Translation Conflict and Memory Narratives of the Spanish Civil War and the Dictatorship Springer ISBN 978 3 030 00698 3 Herreros Sebastia March 2003 The International Brigades in the Spanish war 1936 1939 Flags and Symbols PDF flaginstitute org Retrieved 29 November 2019 a b c d ES Brigada Dabrowski Hugh Thomas The Spanish Civil War pg 490External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dabrowszczacy in Polish Dabrowszczacy obroncy Republiki i demokracji Krytyka Polityczna Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dabrowski Battalion amp oldid 1222313901, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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