fbpx
Wikipedia

Tomás Domínguez Arévalo

Tomás Domínguez Arévalo, 6th Count of Rodezno,[note 1] 12th Marquis of San Martin[note 2] (1882–1952) was a Spanish Carlist and Francoist politician. He is known mostly as the first Francoist Minister of Justice (1938–1939). He is also recognised for his key role in negotiating Carlist access to the coup of July 1936 and in emergence of carlo-francoism, the branch of Carlism which actively engaged in the Francoist regime.

The Count of Rodezno
Born
Tomás Domínguez Arévalo

1882[1]
Died1952
NationalitySpanish
Occupationlandowner
Known forpolitician
Political partyCT

Family and youth edit

 
father

Tomás Domínguez y de Arévalo Romera y Fernández Navarrete was a descendant of two landowner families from the very south and from the very north of Spain. The paternal Domínguez family has been for centuries related to the Andalusian town of Carmona (Seville province). Its first representatives were noted as regidores in the 18th century and intermarried with another distinguished local family, the Romeras.[9] Their descendant was Tomás' father, Tomás Domínguez Romera (1848–1931),[note 3] who inherited the local Campo de la Plata estate.[13] He demonstrated political sympathies hardly typical for the region siding with the legitimists during the Third Carlist War[14] and had to leave the country afterwards.[15] Following the amnesty he returned to Spain and at unspecified date[note 4] he married María de Arévalo y Fernandez de Navarrete (1854–1919),[16] descendant to a Riojan-Navarrese Arévalo family. Her father, Justo Arévalo y Escudero, was a well known conservative politician; in the mid-19th century he served in the Cortes[17] and later as a long-time senator from Navarre (1876–1891).[18] As at the time of the marriage she was already condesa de Rodezno,[19] Tomás Domínguez Romera became conde consorte.

In the late 1880s Tomás Domínguez Romera emerged holding major posts within the Madrid Carlist structures. In 1888 he was president of comisión de propaganda of the Madrid Junta Directiva del Circula Tradicionalista de Madrid[20] the same year elected its secretario general,[21] but when unsuccessfully running for the Cortes in the 1890s, he stood in Haro (Logroño province).[22] He emerged triumphant in 4 successive elections between 1905 and 1914, voted in from the Navarrese district of Aoiz.[23] At that time he was already member of the national Carlist executive; in 1912 he entered Junta Nacional Tradicionalista representing Castilla La Nueva,[24][note 5] in 1913 entered comisión de Tesoro de la Tradición[26] and chaired party gatherings interchanging with the likes of Cerralbo, Feliu or de Mella.[note 6]

 
mother

It is not clear whether Tomás Domínguez Arévalo spent his early childhood in the capital or in Villafranca. He was then educated in the Jesuit Colegio de San Isidoro in Madrid,[29] at unspecified date commencing law studies at the University of Madrid;[30] he followed classes of the then Carlist political leader, Matías Barrio y Mier. It is during his academic years that Domínguez came to know Jaime Chicharro and Luis Hernando de Larramendi, active in Juventud Jaimista but also in literary and artistic circles.[31][32] He graduated in 1904;[33] some authors, contemporary press and the official Cortes service refer to him as "abogado",[34] though none of the sources consulted confirms that he practiced as a lawyer. Urbane and gregarious,[35] in 1917[36] Domínguez married Asunción López-Montenegro y García Pelayo,[37] descendant to a wealthy aristocratic terrateniente family from Cáceres, with its representatives holding prestigious posts in the city and in the province.[38] The couple settled in Villafranca; they had one child, María Domínguez y López-Montenegro.[39] Following the death of his mother in 1919,[40] in 1920 Tomás Domínguez Arévalo inherited the title of conde de Rodezno;[note 7] following the death of his father in 1931 he became marqués de San Martín.[note 8]

Early political career edit

 
Carlist electoral meeting, ca 1910

There is almost no information on Domínguez's public activity in the first decade of the 20th century; he was probably active in Juventud Jaimista and Juventud Hispanoamericana.[note 9] In 1909 he published his first work, a booklet dedicated to medieval rulers of Navarre,[45] followed by articles in scholarly reviews focusing on history of the province[note 10] and short biographical studies, also anchored in history of Navarre.[note 11] Domínguez also tried his hand in Pamplona dailies as a literary critic.[note 12] Some authors claim that his first public assignment was mayorship of Villafranca,[47][48][note 13] but when first running for seat in the Cortes, he was referred to by the press only as "joven abogado y escritor".[49]

Domínguez's entry into politics was facilitated by memory of his late maternal grandfather and especially by standing of his father, one of the most distinguished politicians of Navarre;[note 14] his position is dubbed as "cacicato" and the Aoiz district was considered his personal fiefdom.[52] It is not known why he decided not to renew his mandate in the 1916 campaign. Initially Domínguez Romera was to be substituted as Jaimista candidate by Joaquín Argamasilla, but in unclear circumstances the latter was replaced by Domínguez Arévalo. Argamasilla stroke back with a pamphlet, lambasting alleged alliance with the liberals and charging his substitute with flexibility bordering opportunism.[53] Though resident of another Navarrese district of Tafalla,[note 15] Domínguez Arévalo was also presented as a cuckoo candidate.[note 16] Despite the critique, he was narrowly[note 17] elected;[57] he renewed his ticket, though also marginally, in the 1918 campaign in the same district.[58]

 
Juan Vázquez de Mella

At that time Carlism was increasingly paralyzed by tension between its top theorist Vazquez de Mella and the claimant Don Jaime; Domínguez was counted among supporters of the former.[note 18] According to some historians[note 19] he considered orthodox Carlism a dead-end street given the Carlist dynasty was already certain to extinguish.[note 20] He shared de Mella's vision of a grand extreme-right coalition, which would be new possibilist reincarnation of Traditionalism;[61] he also considered sort of transfer of legitimist rights to the Alfonsine dynasty.[note 21] However, at the 1919 moment of breakup he decided to stay loyal to Don Jaime,[63][note 22] even given discrepancies between him and his king were already public.[65]

In the 1919 campaign Domínguez Arévalo presented his bid in Aoiz,[66] but lost to a Maurista candidate by the smallest margin possible.[67] In 1920 the same two hopefuls competed in the same district;[68] this time Domínguez, already conde de Rodezno, lost more decisively,[note 23] the visible sign of increasingly loose Carlist grip on Navarre. A mere week after the defeat he presented his candidature to the Senate.[71] As indirect elections to the upper chamber were more about behind-the-stage party dealings rather than about seeking popular vote, the Jaimistas managed to negotiate Rodezno's success.[72] He was also re-elected for the successive term in 1922. His activity as recorded in the Senate archive was insignificant.[73] One of his few interventions referred to tariffs on cork exports,[74] the issue he was personally interested in as there was cork produced on his Andalusian Carmona estate.[75]

Dictatorship edit

 
Rodezno with knights of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta

Advent of the Primo de Rivera dictatorship suspended Rodezno's parliamentarian career. Having lost his senate mandate he abandoned politics and is not listed as active in any of the primoderiverista institutions, be it either Somatén, Unión Patriotica or any other organization.[note 24] However, he did not withdraw from public life. Rodezno took part in various Christian activities, contributed to cultural initiatives, remained engaged in Carlist structures and pursued his career as author and historian, at the same time dedicating his time to family and business.

A member of the Catholic aristocracy, Rodezno was active in the Sovereign Military Order of Malta and remained on good terms with Spanish hierarchy and the papal nuncio.[77] He forged particularly good relationship with Pedro Segura, welcoming the new bishop in Cáceres,[78] 6 years later greeting him as new archbishop of Burgos during the homage celebrations in the same city,[note 25] and in 1928 taking part in Toledo celebrations following Segura's ascendance to the primate of Spain.[80] On the more practical side, adhering to Segura's knack for social action he co-organized Acción Social Diocesana in Cáceres[81] and gave lectures during various initiatives like Semana Social, organized by Acción Católica.[82]

 
Alfonso de Borbón and Miguel Primo de Rivera

Rodezno's cultural activities were strongly flavored by Carlism. In Pamplona he organized anniversary homage celebrations to veterans of the Third Carlist War,[83] in San Sebastián he took part in works of Sociedad de Estudios Vascos when preparing "La exposición de las Guerras Civiles" of the 19th century,[84] and in Madrid he co-organized fundraising and himself donated large sums to the planned monument of Vázquez de Mella.[85] However, he became most noted for his historical effort. Apart from inedita,[86] in 1928 he published La princesa de Beira y los hijos de D. Carlos[note 26] and in 1929 Carlos VII, duque de Madrid, monographs dedicated to already mythical Carlist figures; both books were widely discussed on literary pages of the Spanish press of the day.[87] Though they pursued a personal approach of the author, both remain quoted and referenced also by present-day scholars.[note 27]

Rodezno and his wife held land estates scattered across Spain: in Navarre, inherited from his mother; in Extremadura, brought into the marriage by his wife; and in Andalusia, inherited from his father. Some authors refer to him as "grande terrateniente"[89] "cacique terrateniente",[note 28] "grandee proprietor"[91][note 29] or "prominent landowner", an exemplary case of link between landownership and power,[note 30] though exact size of his holdings is unclear and probably did not exceed 500 ha combined.[note 31] He was head of Federacion Catolico Agraria de Navarra,[99] co-founder of Asociación de Terratenientes de Navarra[100] and member of Asociacion de Propietarios de Alcornocales.[101] On behalf of some of these pressure groups he held talks with various ministers,[note 32] publishing also analytical studies on agricultural credit[104] and land ownership.[note 33] In his opinion in terms of rural property the Navarrese structure was close to ideal, almost reaching the objective "que todos los agricultores fueran propietarios";[106] later in the republic he defended the arrendamiento structure.[92]

Jefe edit

 

Though mostly dormant in times of the dictatorship, during Dictablanda Carlism assumed more active stance. In June 1930 the new Navarrese junta with Rodezno its member was set up, an attempt to enforce more cautious policy towards Basque nationalism and to shift focus from foral to religious issues.[107][108] The move might have backfired following declaration of the Republic, as the Carlists decided to forge electoral coalition with PNV; when concluded as "lista católico-fuerista"[108] it enabled Rodezno, elected from Navarre, to resume his parliamentary career in 1931.[109][note 34] In the Cortes he was the least-Basque minded among Carlist deputies;[note 35] he ceased to support the autonomy draft when it turned out that it would not allow autonomous religious policy[113] and started to toy with the idea of an exclusively Navarrese statute.[114]

Already in the late 1920s advocating reconciliation with the Mellistas,[115] Rodezno more than welcomed re-unification of three Traditionalist streams in the new organization, Comunión Tradicionalista.[116] Early 1932 he was appointed to its Supreme National Junta, intended to assist the ailing Jefe Delegado, marqués de Villores.[117] After his death in May that year Rodezno was nominated its president,[118] effectively becoming the Carlist political leader.[119]

Rodezno was acutely sensitive to threat of revolution and convinced that democracy could not contain it; he responded warmly to the mood of authoritarian nationalism, covering in his opinion a broad spectrum from fascist Mussolini regime to MacDonald’s National Government.[120] Hostile especially to militant republican secularism[121] and agrarian reform,[122] he remained vehement opponent in the parliament and was once hit by a flying glass in return.[123] Touring the country[124] he boasted that “Carlist shock troops are ready to defend society against Marxist threat”.[125] However, he was not among those pressing an insurgent strategy. Aware of the planned Sanjurjo coup he steered clear of direct collaboration,[126] which did not spare him expropriations administered by the government afterwards.[127]

 
Rodezno at Carlist meeting, 1932

Rodezno's term as the leader emphasized politics and propaganda rather than organization and militancy;[128] some scholars claim that obsolete structures of Communión, favoring "placentera y anárquica autonomia",[129] could not bear the weight of dynamically growing movement.[128][130] This, combined with internal protest against pro-Alfonsist advances and his "tactica transaccionista y el gradualismo",[131] brought about a major challenge. When former Integrists suggested that Manuel Fal become president of the Junta, Rodezno proposed he rather become personal secretary to the claimant.[132] As Don Alfonso Carlos at that time decided to abandon plans of dynastic reconciliation,[note 36] in April 1934 Rodezno agreed to step down from leadership.[134] He remained the local Navarrese jefe.[135]

Conspiracy and coup edit

 
requetés in captured Donostia, 1936

Though Rodezno's supporters complained about "fascistización" of the Communion under the new leadership of Fal,[136][note 37] Carlism firmly changed course from political negotiations to organizational build-up.[note 38] Rodezno was not appointed head of any of the newly created sections,[139] nominated to Consejo de Cultura instead.[140][141] Fal initially considered Rodezno an acceptable leader and insisted on changing structures rather than people. He criticised Rodezno rather for lack of faith.[note 39] Re-elected to the Cortes in 1933[143] and 1936,[144] Rodezno became chairman of the 10-men Carlist minority.[145] He was permitted to pursue talks with the Alfonsinos on the private business basis; in 1936 these contacts started to take shape of negotiating a joint insurgency.[note 40] According to one source he was on the target list of the hit-team which, in his absence, shot Calvo Sotelo instead.[147]

Rodezno played vital role in negotiating Carlist role in the military coup. Talks between Mola and Fal stalled as both failed to reach a compromise on terms of the Carlist access;[note 41] at that point the general opened parallel talks with Navarrese leaders, headed by Rodezno.[149][150] Bypassing Fal and ready to confront him if needed,[note 42] they suggested that Navarrese issues are discussed locally and offered requeté support in return for usage of monarchist flag and assurance that Navarre would be left as Carlist political fiefdom.[154][155][156] Facing sort of internal rebellion, Fal considered dismissing the entire Navarrese junta.[147][note 43] He was finally outmaneuvered when Rodezno and the Navarros assured conditional support of claimants' envoy, Don Javier;[note 44] Mola and Fal decided to act together on the basis of a vague letter, sent by pre-agreed leader of the insurgency, general Sanjurjo.[note 45]

During the coup Rodezno was in Pamplona, the city easily captured by insurgents. Though Fal considered him disloyal, in late August he had no option but to include Domínguez in Junta Nacional Carlista de Guerra, a newly constituted Carlist wartime executive; within this body he entered Section of General Affairs heading Delegación Política, a sub-section entrusted with handling relations with military junta and local authorities.[152][160][161] Rodezno settled in the emergent military headquarters in Salamanca,[note 46] but went on pursuing independent policy engineered by a local Navarrese executive, transformed into Junta Central Carlista de Guerra de Navarra.[note 47] Following death of the claimant and assumption of regent duties by his successor Don Javier, the so-called Rodeznistas[165] were visibly disappointed with Fal's confirmation as political leader in October 1936.[166][note 48]

 
Carlist standard

The Carlists, who initially imagined their position as equals of the military, within few months acknowledged that they were being reduced to junior role, especially that despite mobilization of their supporters, Falange attracted far more recruits.[note 49] Their attempt to safeguard autonomous standing crashed in December 1936, when following Fal's decision to set up a Carlist military academy he was summoned to Franco's headquarters and presented with the choice between firing squad and exile abroad.[note 50] Some authors speculate whether the unusual overreaction of Franco was not intended to get rid of Fal and replace him with complacent Rodezno.[170][171][172] At the Carlist emergency meeting the Rodeznistas enforced the decision to comply with the exile alternative,[173][note 51] though later Rodezno himself visited Franco trying to get Jefe Delegado re-admitted.[note 52]

Unification edit

 
Francisco Franco

With Fal on exile and party leadership assumed by France-based Don Javier, Rodezno emerged as "máxima figura carlista en España";[177] Fal was not happy about Rodezno's pre-eminence and when on exile intended to send him abroad, possibly on a diplomatic mission to Vatican.[172] Starting January 1937 he and other party bigwigs were approached by the military and the Falangists about forming a monopolist state party;[note 53] the pressure started to mount later on. The Carlist leaders met 3 times to address the challenge: in Ínsua (February), in Burgos (March) and in Pamplona (April), all attended by Rodezno.[note 54] He and the faction he headed advocated compliance with political amalgamation, pressed by the military;[note 55] they were confronted by the Falcondistas, opting for intransigence.[note 56] As the formal party executive Junta Nacional was getting decomposed and theoretically local, Rodeznista-dominated Junta Central assumed a key role,[note 57] the balance tipped towards unification. The fusion was presented as means to build a new state, Catholic, regionalist,[note 58] social and ultimately formatted as Traditionalist monarchy.[187][174][188][note 59]

On April 22 Rodezno was nominated to Secretariado Político[note 60] of the new party, Falange Española Tradicionalista,[191] one of 4 Carlists[note 61] within the 10-member body.[192][193][194][195] The Falangists like Girón were extremely unhappy about its performance and composition, with very few members "fielmente el espíritu de nuestro Movimiento".[196] Rodezno and other Carlists learned of the party program only once its 21 points were announced and immediately demonstrated some unease.[note 62] His relations with Fal and Don Javier remained extremely tense, though falling short of total breakup; both considered him a fronding rebel;[198] he was held among, "maximos responsables de la actitud de rebeldia mantenida por el carlismo navarro frente a la autoridad de don Javier".[199] Rodezno's efforts to elicit authorization from the regent produced no effect.[200] During the next few months he presided over absorption into Falange rather than a fusion,[note 63] bombarded with queries and protests from Carlist rank-and-file about total predomination and arrogance of camisas azules.[202][note 64] Possibly as a result of complaints about the Falangists' lack of give and take in October 1937 Franco called up theoretically governing structure of the party, the National Council;[note 65] Despite Fal's calls to decline, Rodezno accepted the seat and in December 1937 Don Javier expulsed him from Carlism;[208] Rodezno did not take notice.[200] Some authors claim he was expulsed already in the spring, following accepting post in Secretariado.[209]

 
Falangist standard

Rodezno's motives are unclear; apart from partisan claims that he traded Carlist principles for a few Navarrese alcaldías,[note 66] there are many conflicting interpretations offered. According to one, he feared that internal divisions within the Nationalist camp might lead to defeat in the war.[211][note 67] According to another, he has never been a genuine Carlist and is better described as a conservative monarchist.[note 68] Some scholars claim that he was a possibilist, who realized that Traditionalism was unable to seize power single-handedly and needed coalition partners;[note 69] one more clue might have been that perceiving Carlism as rooted in family and regional values, he downplayed the issues of organization and structures.[217] Others underline that he considered the emerging system largely in line with the Carlist vision and did not think it worthwhile to be marginalized for the sake of defending second-rate discrepancies.[218] Finally, there are authors who believe that he realized neither gravity of the moment nor totalitarian nature of the new party; Rodezno – the theory goes – imagined the structure either as a new incarnation of Unión Patriotica or as a loose alliance, both permitting Carlism to maintain its proper identity;[219] immediately following announcement of the FET programme, largely a copy-paste from the original Falange 27 points, Rodezno visited Franco to voice his disgust;[220] following three months he ceased to attend sittings of the FET secretariat, considering it pointless.[221]

Francoism edit

 
prison, Spain

In January 1938 Rodezno entered the first regular Francoist government as Minister of Justice.[222] At this position he commenced work on revoking the Republican laws, focusing mostly on the laic legislation. Though the task was completed by his successor, it was Rodezno who ensured that the Church re-took a key role in a number of areas, especially education, and that intimate Church-state relations were restored.[222][223] When setting the direction he had to overcome the Falangist resistance and outmaneuver its key exponents, Jordana and Yanguas;[224] in 1942 Rodezno managed to defeat "serranistas" drafting the future legislation.[225] He is best remembered, however, for his role in Francoist repressions. Wartime purges rested on most tortured juridical basis and produced some 72,000 executions;[226] it is difficult to tell to what extent Rodezno might be held liable, especially that most of them were carried out under military jurisdiction and before he assumed office. According to some sources, he was "responsable de la firma de unas 50.000 penas de muerte";[227] according to scholars, there were some 51,000 death sentences administered during the first few years after the War;[228] most of that time it was Esteban Bilbao holding the post of Minister of Justice. He started to replace the chaotic practice by laying the foundations of the repressive Francoist judicial system, including massive purges in the judiciary.[229] Its first pillar, Ley de Responsabilidades Políticas, retroactive to 1934, was adopted in 1939,[note 70] supplemented by many other laws and regulations. One of them required all persons of legal age to hold a personal ID card, obligation introduced for the first time in Spanish history.[231] There were some 100,000 political prisoners[232] before he stepped down as minister in August 1939.[233]

It is not clear whether Rodezno's departure from the government was related to tension between the Falangists and the Carlists, though he was on rather poor terms with Serrano Súñer.[234] The two clashed especially on issues related to centralisation and regional rights. Serrano intervened to make sure the address of Rodezno, delivered when accepting the hijo predilecto title from Navarrese diputación, is not distributed.[235] Already in early 1938 heavily disappointed with the new party, in April 1938 Rodezno complained to Franco about marginalisation of Carlism and apparently managed to extract from caudillo a fairly frank opinion; the generalissimo valued the Carlists higher than the Falangists, yet noted that they were "pocos y sin atractivo pasa los masas", while Falange enjoyed "capacidad proselitista y captadora",[236] and the emering regime in general. Rodezno admitted that "no dejaba de sentirse cierta tristeza por el desengaño y la decepción que producía la disparidad entre el esfuerzo aportado y el rumbo amenazador de las cosas para el porvenir".[237] In 1939 he moved back to Navarre. Though expelled from formally illegal Comunión Tradicionalista he was eager to take part in the movement, e.g. in 1939 he took part in the first Montejurra ascent, riding all the way to the summit on the horse.[238][239]

 
Francoist Spain, 1939

Some authors consider him leader of Rodeznistas, the informal collaborative faction,[240][241] other scholars prefer to name him leader of Navarrese Carlism[242] or even of Spanish Carlism altogether.[243] In the immediate post-war period he tried to support Carlist cultural outposts, either preventing their amalgamation in the Francoist machinery,[note 71] or creating the new ones.[note 72] Some orthodox Carlists considered him indispensable, as it was with their support that Rodezno was elected vice-president of Navarrese Diputación Provincial in 1940.[248] At this post he took part in provincial battle for power against the Falangists[note 73] and clashed with some of their leaders also on the national level; in June 1939 Rodezno clashed with the Falangist pundit Giménez Caballero, who accused Navarre of historical disobedience and lambasted the fueros as sinister separatism. Rodezno as minister prevented the publication of his harangue in the press except Arriba, firmly controlled by Falange.[251] It is partially thanks to his efforts that Navarre was, together with Álava, the only province which retained some regional establishments. According to account of Esteban Bilbao, he was supported by Rodezno when objecting to homogenisation designs of Minister of Economy.[252]

Though apparently overwhelmed by fascistoid nature of the emerging regime[note 74] and by actual shape of the unification - up to contributing to its failure in Navarre[note 75] - Rodezno kept pursuing the collaborative line even when it became painfully evident that Carlism was entirely marginalized in the new state party.[255] In 1943 Rodezno resigned from the Navarrese government to enter the Francoist quasi-parliament, Cortes Españolas;[256] he was ensured its mandate as member of Consejo Nacional.[257] The term lasted three years and was not renewed in 1946, which suggests that at that time he had already dropped out from the Falangist executive. Auto of judge Garzón raises charges based on Rodezno's role in FET between April 20, 1937 (coincides with the day of his nomination to Secretariado) and 1951 (no daily date).[258]

Juanista edit

 
Don Javier on the cover of a Carlist periodical

Already in the 1910s Rodezno timidly advanced the idea of transferring legitimist rights to an appropriate Alfonsist candidate once the Carlist dynasty would extinguish;[63] also during the Republican years he was the most enthusiastic supporter of rapprochement within the monarchist camp and in 1935 proposed that Don Alfonso Carlos names Don Juan his legitimate heir.[133] When the last direct Carlist claimant indeed died in September 1936 Rodezno was the last to acknowledge the regency of Don Javier. At that time he was already considering another regency, this of Franco on behalf of Don Juan,[259][174] whom he held well familiar with Traditionalist ideas. It is not clear when the two first met; during the Civil War Rodezno and the Alfonsist prince already exchanged friendly correspondence. Rodezno was in touch with Don Juan since 1937 and considered him knowledgeable of Traditionalist ideas.[260]

In the early 1940s Rodezno turned into an open advocate of Don Juan as a future Carlist king, especially once the latter inherited the Alfonsist title after his late father in 1941. Theoretically this support did not breach the rules of Don Javier's regency, which permitted forming factions around prospective candidates; in practice this mattered little, as Rodezno was already expulsed from the Comunión.[261] When the new Alfonsist claimant was assembling a team of collaborators, José María Oriol travelled to meet him in Lausanne to suggest (in vain) that Rodezno is nominated the official Alfonsist representative in Spain.[262][263][264] In the mid-1940s Fal mounted an offensive offering various Carlist regentialist solutions to Franco;[265] in December 1945 Fal also wrote to Don Juan asking him to acknowledge the regency of Don Javier.[266] As a response, in April 1945 Rodezno travelled to Portugal[note 76] to meet Don Juan and prepare ground for his Carlist legitimization.[268] The initiative bore fruit in February 1946, when the Alfonsist claimant signed a Rodezno co-drafted document, intended to confirm his Traditionalist spirit. Known as "Bases institucionales para la restauración de la monarquía" or simply as "Bases de Estoril", it outlined the basics of the future monarchy.[269] They very much resembled the Traditionalist principles, though the document fell short of declaring Don Juan the legitimate Carlist claimant.[note 77]

 
Juan de Borbón

The 1946 "Bases de Estoril" was the last major Rodezno's initiative and little is known either about his political views or about his public activity in the very last years of his life. In 1944 he entered Real Academia de Jurisprudencia y Legislación.[270] He remained leader of informal but very significant collaborative and pro-Juanista faction of Carlism, the movement which as a whole was rapidly disintegrating into even more branches.[note 78] Though most Carlist rank-and-file remained utterly hostile to the despised Liberal dynasty, many if not the majority of Carlist pre-war leadership inclined towards accepting Don Juan.[271] Also after Rodezno's death they kept pursuing the idea of Alfonso XIII's son assuming the Carlist title. Named Rodeznistas, Juancarlistas, Juanistas or Estorilos they officially declared Don Juan the legitimate Carlist heir in 1957, the act considered climax of the earlier Rodezno's policy. In 1957 around 70 Carlist politicians travelled to Estoril and declared Don Juan the legitimate Carlist heir. The late Rodezno was considered "principal promoter" of the initiative.[272] Some authors even claim that Rodezno was present at the ceremony.[273][274] In historiography the term "Rodeznistas" is last applied to the year 1959.[275]

Legacy and reception edit

 
old banner (now unused)[note 79]

During Francoism Rodezno was honored by a number of prestigious orders, like Cruz de Isabel la Católica or Cruz de San Raimundo de Peñafort; in the mid-1940s he entered Real Academia de Jurisprudencia y Legislación[276] and Real Academia de la Historia,[277] named also hijo predilecto by the province of Navarre and by his native town of Villafranca.[278] Posthumously Franco conferred upon him Grandeza de España, title currently born by his descendants.[279] Some streets and plazas were named upon him, the most prestigious one in Pamplona.

After transition to democracy the perception of Rodezno changed dramatically. In the current Spanish public discourse he is associated mostly with the most repressive phase of Francoism.[280] Naming of the Pamplona plaza was subject to heated public debate in Navarre and elsewhere following adoption of ley de Símbolos de Navarra and ley de Memoria Histórica. The 2008-2009 discussion, involving present-day political parties and related to some present-day political issues,[note 80] has eventually led to renaming the plaza to "Conde de Rodezno", an aristocratic title formally not associated with any individual,[note 81] until in 2016 it was renamed to "Plaza de la Libertad".[285] The former Pamplona mausoleum erected during Francoism to honor the fallen requetés has been renamed to "Sala de exposiciones Conde de Rodezno"[286] but in public it prefers to be named "Sala de exposiciónes". In 2008 Audiencia Nacional, the Spanish high tribunal, launched formal bid to acknowledge Rodezno as guilty of crimes against humanity during his tenure as Minister of Justice and afterwards, but the motion bore no fruit due to procedural reasons.[287] Judge Baltasar Garzón was later charged with perversion of justice for launching the bid, which was defined as an error by the Supreme Court of Spain.[288] In 2010 a group of authors associated with a Pamplonese Ateneo Basilio Lacort published a vehemently militant work which presents Rodezno as a criminal.[289]

 
former placard (now removed)

In Traditionalist historiographical narration Rodezno is one of the black characters, among the likes of Rafael Maroto, Alejandro Pidal or Don Carlos Hugo. He is charged with blatant political miscalculation at best and with treason of principles and kings at worst. His vacillating stance during the Mellista crisis in 1914-1919, rapprochement towards the Alfonsinos in the Republic years or bypassing Carlist command when pushing for almost unconditional adherence to the generals' coup of 1936 are less of an issue; it is Rodezno's stance on unification and pro-Juanista lobbying which earned him most hostility from works of Partido Carlista sponsored socialismo autogestionario supporters.[note 82] Though scholars speculate on his different motives, the opinion which gained particular popularity is that he has never been a genuine Carlist, adhering to the movement mostly out of respect for his father.[note 83] None of the currently existing organizations claiming Carlist identity, be it either those pursuing a socialist path (javierocarlistas, Partido Carlista) or those attached to Traditionalist values (tronovacantista CTC, sixtinos, carloctavistas) admits deference to his name.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ sequential artistocratic title quoted after Diputacion Permanente y Consejo de la Grandeza de Espana y Titulos del Reino service, available here. However, there are conflicting views on which count in sequence he was. According to different sources, Tomás' mother was the 5th condesa de Rodezno,[3] or the 6th condesa de Rodezno.[4][5] Yet another version, incomplete and erroneous, is pursued at Euskalnet service.[6]
  2. ^ sequential number is unclear. He is considered the 12th marquis by the Fundacion Nacional Francisco Franco,[7] and the 13th marquis by Fz. de Bobadilla.[8]
  3. ^ some sources wrongly claim he died in 1920, e.g. Geneall.net,[10] however 1931 is the correct date of his death.[11][12]
  4. ^ probably between 1878 (the amnesty) and 1882 (birth of Tomás)
  5. ^ some sources claim that he headed Castilla la Nueva y Extremadura.[25]
  6. ^ like in 1911.[27] Some authors consider him a politician who betrayed Carlism in 1911, allegedly mounting a coalition with the Integrists and the Conservatives.[28]
  7. ^ his mother held 2 titles, condesa de Rodezno and condesa de Valdellano. The first one was inherited by Tomás, the second one by his younger brother José María.[41][42]
  8. ^ Domínguez Romera inherited the title from maternal line in 1911.[43]
  9. ^ later on, in 1919, he grew to vice-president of the organisation.[44]
  10. ^ in 1912 he published Un Infante de Navarra, yerno del Cid and in 1913 De tiempos lejanos. Glosas históricas, both in Revista de Historia y Genealogía
  11. ^ his 1915 and 1916 articles on genealogy are available online[46]
  12. ^ see his Arturo Campión. Semblanza literaria, published in Diario de Navarra between 20.1.12 and 18.02.12
  13. ^ his 1952 obituary also referred to him as ex-alcalde de Villafranca but specified no period of his term in office, see ABC 19.08.52, available here
  14. ^ periodically serving also as dean of the Navarrese deputies and senators.[50] At that time the strength of Carlism was at its peak in the province, with the movement gaining 70–85% of deputy seats available and controlling the remaining pool by means of electoral alliances. Some authors maintain that Domínguez Romera was jefe of Navarrese Carlism and that his son "inherited" the post; this claim about Domínguez Romero's Navarrese jefatura is not confirmed elsewhere. Until 1916 the Navarrese jefe was Francisco Martinez, and after 1916 it was Romualdo Cesareo Sanz Escartin.[51]
  15. ^ Villafranca was part of the Peralta zone, itself forming the Tafalla electoral district.[54]
  16. ^ by their opponents both Domínguez Romera and Domínguez Arévalo were presented as "cuneros".[55]
  17. ^ both candidates won in two out of 4 comarcas of the district, but Domínguez Arévalo won in more populous ones.[56]
  18. ^ some authors claim that Domínguez was from his youth a "fiel seguidor desde su juventud de Juan Vázquez de Mella"[59]
  19. ^ the opinion of Melchor Ferrer, approvingly repeated in Andrés Martín (2000).[60]
  20. ^ the Carlist king Jaime III was over 50 and still a bachelor; he had no brothers and his uncle was over 70 with no descendants
  21. ^ this stand was lambasted as "dishonor" by the orthodox Jaimistas.[62]
  22. ^ another historian claims he followed de Mella.[64]
  23. ^ his counter-candidate gained 55.8% of the votes.[69][70]
  24. ^ however, he is recorded as not particularly averse towards the dictatorship. Having learnt of his Villafranca mayorship Luis Hernando de Larramendi asked Rodezno: "pero cómo puedes soportar eso?", to which the latter replied "mira chico, el caso es mandar".[76]
  25. ^ which at that time formed part of the Burgos archdiocese.[79]
  26. ^ entire book available here
  27. ^ as a historian he blamed the second wife of Carlos VII, Bertha de Rohan, for his alleged ineptitude during late phases of his life, when he "no era el arriscado caudillo de Navarra de 1873."[88]
  28. ^ some even blame him for the 1894 events, when 800 soldiers protected estate of his grandfather during social unrest in Villafranca.[90]
  29. ^ Blinkhorn (2008) claims also that Rodezno owned a señorio in La Rioja.[92]
  30. ^ and quote him as exemplary case of a link between landownership and power.[93]
  31. ^ he had 502 robadas in Villafranca, divided into 47 fincas.[94] Given a robada was ca 0,09 ha his estate covered some 45 ha and was far behind largest estates in the area, exceeding even 100 ha. In Carmona he and his wife held 200 ha.[95] The estates did not make an impressive figure by national Spanish standards; as late as in 1919 duque de Peñaranda possessed 51,000 ha.[96] In the sole Cordoba district there were around 30 landholders with estates exceeding 1,000 ha[97] (surface area is listed in fanegas (fgs), a fanega differed from province to province, though one scholar suggests an average of 1 fg was 1,044 ha for the nearby Almeria province.[98]
  32. ^ like the minister of economy, meeting with a group of "cerealistas" in 1926,[102] and the minister of infrastructure in 1930.[103]
  33. ^ in 1926 he published La propiedad privada en Navarra, y un informe sobre reforma tributaria[105]
  34. ^ Another Carlist elected from Navarre was Joaquin Beunza. Detailed analysis in Serrano Moreno 1988,[110] and 1989.[111]
  35. ^ highlighting differences between "these" [Basque] provinces and Kingdom of Navarre.[112]
  36. ^ in 1935 Rodezno pressed Don Alfonso Carlos to nominate Don Juan as heredero.[133]
  37. ^ what was meant by that was probably strong leadership and organizational build-up of the party and its satellite structures; some Carlists grumbled at uninspiring mediocre Fal compared to eloquent and gregarious Rodezno.[137]
  38. ^ including the paramilitary. However, it was Rodezno who agreed to a send few Carlists, together with Alfonsists conspirators, to Rome; the objective was military training, negotiating financial support and arms supply.[138]
  39. ^ "El jefe delegado ideal es Rodezno. Solo le falta fe en lo nuestro"[142]
  40. ^ he also visited in prison José Antonio Primo de Rivera.[146]
  41. ^ Fal demanded that Republican regime is replaced with corporative Catholic state, possibly a monarchy, and insurgency is directed by a directory headed by Sanjurjo and including two civilians acceptable to the Comunión. Mola insisted on Republican regime and state separated from the Church, with insurgency commanded by the military at their own discretion.[148]
  42. ^ he considered purely a Carlist rising "a ludicrous dream" and nurtured no doubt that alliances are needed; Republic should be overthrown as first objective, with further goals to be discussed later.[151] What interested him was not so much the total victory of Carlism – attractive as that was – as obtaining of certain minimum gains plus control over their own corner of Spain.[152][153]
  43. ^ some authors claim that Fal refrained from taking steps against the Navarrese junta conscious that also the Navarrese rank-and-file were more than enthusiastic to join the insurgency regardless of the terms agreed.[157]
  44. ^ who initially opposed compromising 100 years of Carlist history in exchange for local ayuntamientos.[158]
  45. ^ its basic lines were that Carlists may conditionally use monarchical flag, provisional government would be apolitical with civilian members, Republican legislation rectified, parties would be abolished and "new state" would be built.[159]
  46. ^ Fal, heading the Military Section, settled in Toledo.[162]
  47. ^ some scholars claim JCCNG was "liderada por el conde de Rodezno",[163] though other authors maintain that it was formally headed by Berasáin. Its official constituting document does not contain the name of Rodezno at all.[164]
  48. ^ the rodeznista-controlled El Pensamiento Navarro wrote that "monarchists live even if kings die", a rather ambiguous statement given Carlists had a regent not a monarch now.[167]
  49. ^ compare graphs and tables in Parejo Fernández (2008).[168]
  50. ^ details in del Burgo Tajadura (1992).[169]
  51. ^ Canal (2000) gives the date as January 1937.[174]
  52. ^ noting that though he considered the idea of a Carlist military academy tempting, at the same time he did not approve of the way Fal pursued it.[175][176]
  53. ^ the first meeting recorded was with Sancho Dávila in early January 1937.[178]
  54. ^ early March Rodezno moved to his Cáceres estate and remained there until April 12, when he was summoned to Burgos by Franco.[179][180]
  55. ^ according to his own account, when summoned to Burgos on April 12 he told Franco that in Portugal it had not been necessary to create partido único, to which Franco replied that Salazar did not enjoy popular support. The caudillo made clear that unification would not be transitory phase but an ultimate objective.[181]
  56. ^ most thorough account of Carlist response to the unification threat in Bernaldo (1996);[182] somewhat less detailed but still very informative chapters in Pérez (2008).[183]
  57. ^ Bernaldo (1996) prefers to talk about "carlismo regional" prevailing over "carlismo nacional";[184] he also notes that one of the factors enhancing position of JCCGN over JNG was that there were still new requeté tercios being formed in Navarre in the spring of 1937
  58. ^ "organización estatal que reconozca las peculiaridades regionales"[185] Until mid-1937 Rodezno believed that decentralised vision based on "autarquias regionales" was possible and called not to revert to "centralismo liberal".[186]
  59. ^ most Carlists might have understood this as future instauration of a Carlist dynasty, e.g. the Borbón-Parmas, the Borbón-Habsburgos or other, Rodezno has probably meant a dynastical accord with the Alfonsinos, most likely with Franco nominated regent for Don Juan de Borbón.
  60. ^ some authors refer to this body as Junta Política or Secretería General.[189] In official Francoist document the body was referred to as "Secretariado o Junta Política".[190]
  61. ^ the other three were Luis Arellano, Tomás Dolz de Espejo and José María Mazón Sainz
  62. ^ he was also susprised and concerned by detention of Manuel Hedilla. Franco assured Rodezno that Traditionalist doctrine will be embodied in outlook of the new party "en su dia"[197]
  63. ^ opinions of Payne, Canal, Blinkhorn, and Fraser[who?], approvingly referred by Martorell Pérez (2008).[201]
  64. ^ detailed discussion in Peñalba Sotorrío 2013, especially the chapter Conflictos y tensiones durante el periodo de integracion. Un analisis estadistico, pp. 91-105. The province where most formal complaints were received was the Integrist stronghold, Seville (220), followed by Navarre (169) and the Catalan provinces, Cadiz and Ourense (60-90).[203]
  65. ^ at this point Secretariado Politico ceased to function;[204] in fact, Rodezno ceased to take part in its sittings already in August 1937.[205] Within its ranks the Carlists were even worse-off, only 11 of them among its 50 members.[200] Canal (2000) claims there were 12 Carlists,[206] while Payne (1987) claims the correct number is 13.[207]
  66. ^ dubbed "el traidor por unas alcaldías".[210]
  67. ^ though he does not mention Rodezno personally, also Payne points to this feature.[212] Putting common goal against particularisms on the Nationalist side is also confronted with internal power struggle within the Republican camp.[213][214]
  68. ^ version coined mostly by Melchor Ferrer, Historia del Tradicionalismo Español, vol XXIX, referred after Martorell Pérez 2008, p. 183; another scholar seems to adhere, noting that Rodezno also sided with "corriente conservadora autoritaria" rather than with "populismo tradicionalista".[215]
  69. ^ according to this approach, unlike ideologically driven Fal, Rodezno was above all a realist who considered that ideal of a purely Carlist seizure of power as a dream. Alliances were inevitable and as its result, Carlists might have to settle for the second-best option. This does not necessarily boil down to the "dead-end street" vision of Carlism; Rodezno viewed it as a spiritual and ideological force guiding a new formation, built possibly on a new monarchist but fundamentally Traditionalist platform.[216]
  70. ^ though the law itself was drafted by Gónzalez Bueno.[230]
  71. ^ he took part in the plot intended to counter takeover of El Pensamiento Navarro by the Francoist press conglomerate by converting it into a formally commercial newspaper, owned by a company named Editorial Navarra; Rodezno became its primary shareholder with 600 shares, other major owners were Luis Arellano (150 shares), and the Baleztena brothers (50 each).[244][245]
  72. ^ he founded and became the first president of Principe de Viana, formally the cultural institution managed by the Navarrese provincial government.[246][247]
  73. ^ detailed discussion in Bari (2013),[249] and Etxeberria (2006).[250]
  74. ^ at one point in 1938 he told Franco: "mi general, la doctrina tradicionalista no es el fascismo".[253]
  75. ^ he anyway acknowledged that "un año había bastado para apreciar que era imposible de fraguar la unificación y menos en Navarra, donde el desengaño cundia entre los nuestros".[254]
  76. ^ monarchist alliance concept was made easier by Don Javier's unhappy absence in 1944-1945, when he was held captive in the Nazi concentration camp.[267]
  77. ^ "Religión, Unidad, Monarquía, representación orgánica".[266]
  78. ^ carloctavistas, sivattistas, javieristas, rodeznistas
  79. ^ picture taken in 2007. For 2012 banner, see here
  80. ^ like the question of Navarrismo and the Basque role in Navarre
  81. ^ it might refer to Tomás Domínguez Arévalo, but also to his father Tomás Domínguez Romera, his maternal grandfather Justo Arévalo y Escudero or previous holders of the title from the Jiménez-Navarro family.[281][282][283][284]
  82. ^ like Clemente 1977,[290] 1999,[291] and 2011,[292] or Pérez-Nievas Borderas 1999,[293] to scholarly discourse flavored by political sympathies like Martorell Pérez 2009,[294] to orthodox Traditionalist discourse of Alcalá 2001.[295]
  83. ^ "Rodezno no sentía el carlismo, no pensó nunca en su triunfo y, con su característica ligereza, podría decirse que lo aceptaba como aquel personaje de Valle Inclán que lo quería declarar monumento nacional (...) Sus opiniones pro-alfonsinas acrecentaban el confusionismo de unos y los recelos de los leales. Cuando al fin dio el paso definitivo, reconociendo públicamente como su Rey al pretendiente Don Juan, coronaba una historia política de una lógica implacable, pero aquel día perdía la única virtud que, en los salones aristocráticos, tenía el Conde de Rodezno: el mantenerse leal a la dinastía legítima", opinion of Melchor Ferrer quoted after Martorell Pérez 2009.[296]

References edit

  1. ^ the Real Academia de Historia site gives the birth date as September 26, 1882, see here. Obituaries claimed he was born in 1883, see ABC 12.08.52, available here
  2. ^ also the birthplace of Tomás, is disputed; most scholarly sources claim he was born Madrid; this version is repeated on the official senate site allegedly after the birth certificate reproduced, though handwriting is entirely illegible, compare here. Obituaries claimed he was born in Villafranca, see ABC (Seville version) 12.08.52, available here or in Pamplona, see ABC (Madrid version) 12.08.52, available here; both give the birth date as 1883, not 1882
  3. ^ F. Fz. de Bobadilla, Vinculación riojana del Condado de Rodezno y su historia, pp. 548–49, available here
  4. ^ María de los Dolores de Arévalo y Fernandez de Navarrete, 6º condessa de Rodezno, 6º condessa de Valdellano entry at Geneall service, available here
  5. ^ Compactgen service, available here
  6. ^ Euskalnet
  7. ^ Tomás Domínguez Arévalo, Conde de Rodezno, Ministro de Justicia y Consejero Nacional, [in:] Fundacion Nacional Francisco Franco service, available here
  8. ^ F. Fz. de Bobadilla, Vinculación riojana del Condado de Rodezno y su historia, pp. 548–49
  9. ^ Antonio Lería, Proclamación y jura reales. El caso de Carmona, [in:] Carel. Revista de estudios locales, 2/2 (2004), pp. 591–667
  10. ^ Tomás Domínguez Romera entry at Geneall service, available here
  11. ^ La Epoca 12.05.31, available here
  12. ^ El Siglo Futuro 12.05.31, available here
  13. ^ Jorge Maier, Jorge Bonsor, 1855-1930: un académico correspondiente de la Real Academia de la Historia y la Arqueología Española, Madrid 1999, ISBN 9788489512306, p. 55
  14. ^ Tomás Domínguez Romera Pérez de Pomar entry at Auñamendi Eusko Entziklopedia service online, available here
  15. ^ Juan Sebastián Elián, El gran libro de los apellidos y la heráldica, Barcelona 2001, ISBN 9788479275495, p. 100
  16. ^ María de los Dolores de Arévalo y Fernandez de Navarrete, 6º condessa de Rodezno, 6º condessa de Valdellano entry at Generallnet service, available here
  17. ^ official Cortes service, available here
  18. ^ official Senate service, available here
  19. ^ Annuario del comercio, de la industria, de la magistratura y de la administración 1883, p. 42, available here. Her mother was María de los Ángeles Fernández de Navarrete, condesa de Rodezno, who died in 1856; at that moment her father from conde consorte converted to conde viudo. The couple had two children; the older son also died early and at that point the title passed to María de los Dolores
  20. ^ Fernández Escudero 2012, pp. 84–5.
  21. ^ Fernández Escudero 2012, p. 118.
  22. ^ Fernández Escudero 2012, p. 249.
  23. ^ official Cortes service, available here
  24. ^ Fernández Escudero 2012, p. 443.
  25. ^ "Domínguez Romera Pérez de Pomar, Tomás". Auñamendi Eusko Entziklopedia.
  26. ^ Fernández Escudero 2012, p. 458.
  27. ^ Fernández Escudero 2012, p. 436.
  28. ^ Clemente 2011, p. 232.
  29. ^ La Voz 03.05.29, available here; the college closed one Jesuits were expulsed in the early days of the Second Republic, see another alumni meeting 23 years later, ABC 03.06.52, available here
  30. ^ Pavón 1954, p. 188.
  31. ^ Pavón 1954, p. 188-189.
  32. ^ Ignacio de Hernando de Larramendi, Así si hizo Mapfre, Madrid 2000, ISBN 9788487863875, p. 28
  33. ^ María Dolores Andrés Prieto, La mujer en la política y la política de la memoria. María Rosa Urraca Pastor, una estrella fugaz [MA thesis], Salamanca 2012, p. 60
  34. ^ Leandro Álvarez Rey, La derecha en la II República: Sevilla, 1931-1936, Sevilla 1993, ISBN 978-8447201525, p. 140; also La Epoca 23.05.16, available here
  35. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 50.
  36. ^ Miguel Muñoz de San Pedro, Cuando vestí mis primeros pantalones largos, [in:] Alcántara 20/146 (1966), p. 10, available here, also La Nación 06.03.17, available here
  37. ^ Asunción López-Montenegro y García Pelayo entry at Geni genealogical service, available here
  38. ^ Manuel Vaz-Romero, Cristina Nuñez, López-Montenegro fue un franquista coyuntural y episodico, [in:] Hoy 12.02.06, available here; her father had already passed away when she was getting married
  39. ^ María del Sagrado Corazón Domínguez y López-Montenegro, 8º condessa de Rodezno entry at Geneall service, available here
  40. ^ La Acción 28.11.19, available here
  41. ^ La Corespondencia de España 03.03.20, available here
  42. ^ La Corespondencia de España 04.03.20, available here
  43. ^ La Corespondencia de España 05.05.11, available here
  44. ^ Cervantes. Revista Hispanoamericana 1919, p. 97, available here
  45. ^ Los Teobaldos de Navarra. Ensayo de crítica histórica, Madrid 1909
  46. ^ see here and here
  47. ^ Tomás Domínguez Arévalo, Conde de Rodezno, un político profundamente antidemocrático, responsable y cómplice del exterminio político, [in:] Autobús de la memoria 21.06.08, available here
  48. ^ Tomás Domínguez Arévalo, Conde de Rodezno, Ministro de Justicia y Consejero Nacional, [in:] Fundacion Nacional Francisco Franco service, available here
  49. ^ La Epoca 23.03.16, available here
  50. ^ Federico Suárez, Estudios de historia moderna y contemporánea: homenaje a Federico Suárez Verdeguer, Madrid 1991, ISBN 9788432127489, p. 478
  51. ^ Fernández Escudero 2012, p. 487–88.
  52. ^ "en Navarra tambien existieron cacicatos estables, como el de los carlistas condes de Rodezno en el distrito de Aoiz", María del Mar Larazza, Navarra, [in:] José Varela Ortega (ed.), El poder de la influencia: geografía del caciquismo en España (1875-1923), Madrid 2001, ISBN 9788425911521, p. 443
  53. ^ "este señor hubiera logrado el apoyo de los elementos independientes del mismo modo como ha conseguido la ayuda fervorosa de los jefes liberales de Navarra sin tener por eso la desgracia de ser sospechoso entre los suyos", quoted after Jesús María Fuente Langas, Elecciones de 1916 en Navarra, [in:] Príncipe de Viana 51 (1990), p. 951
  54. ^ Jesús María Zaratiegui Labiano, Efectos de la aplicación del sufragio universal en Navarra. Las elecciones generals de 1886 y 1891, [in:] Príncipe de Viana 57 (1996), p. 222; currently it is part of the Tudela merindad, compare real estate Definde service available here
  55. ^ Ángel García-Sanz Marcotegui, Elites económicas y políticas en la Restauración. La diversidad de las derechas navarras, [in:] Historia contemporánea, 23 (2001), p. 600
  56. ^ Fuente Langas 1990, p. 956
  57. ^ 1916 file at official Cortes service, available here
  58. ^ 1918 file at official Cortes service, available here
  59. ^ El Conde de Rodezno (1883-1952) entry [in:] Guerra civil española dia a dia service 27.12.12, available here
  60. ^ Andrés Martín 2000, p. 181–182.
  61. ^ Andrés Martín 2000, p. 181
  62. ^ Andrés Martín 2000, p. 182
  63. ^ a b Andrés Martín 2000, p. 182.
  64. ^ Clemente 1999, p. 21.
  65. ^ José Luis Orella Martínez, El origen del primer católicismo social Español [PhD thesis UNED], Madrid 2012, p. 182
  66. ^ La Epoca 24.05.19, available here
  67. ^ out of two competitors running, his counter-candidate gained 50.52% of votes, see his 1919 file at official Cortes service here
  68. ^ La Libertad 12.12.20, available here
  69. ^ 1920 file at official Cortes site here
  70. ^ La Acción 20.12.20, available here
  71. ^ El Globo 29.12.20, available here
  72. ^ official Senate site, available here
  73. ^ Diario de sesiones bookmark at the Senate site here
  74. ^ Diario de Sesiones de Cortes for May 1921, p. 1210, available here
  75. ^ Madrid Cientifico 1929, p. 8, available here
  76. ^ Larramendi 2000, p. 30
  77. ^ El Imparcial, 26.06.288
  78. ^ Martínez Sánchez 2002, p. 65.
  79. ^ El Siglo Futuro 03.01.27, available here
  80. ^ El Siglo Futuro 25.01.28, available here
  81. ^ Revista católica de cuestiones sociales February 1925, p. 52, available here
  82. ^ Revista católica de cuestiones sociales November 1930, p. 56, available here
  83. ^ El Sol 25.05.26, available here
  84. ^ El Sol 16.07.27, available here
  85. ^ La Época 12.12.29, available here
  86. ^ La abdicación de D. Carlos y el Conde de Montemolín and La muerte de Zumalacárregui, DOMÍNGUEZ ARÉVALO, Tomás entry [in:] Gran Enciclopedia Navarra, available here
  87. ^ "Ia obra, repetimos, es de valor histórico y biográfico" – as noted with reservation by one of the papers, anxious not to be suspected of Carlist leaning, La Voz 07.03.30, available here
  88. ^ Fernández Escudero 2012, p. 305.
  89. ^ Javier Dronda Martínez, Con Cristo o contra Cristo. Religión y movilización antirrepublicana en navarra (1931-1936), Tafalla 2013, ISBN 9788415313311, p. 163
  90. ^ Floren Aoiz, El jarrón roto: la transición en Navarra: una cuestión de Estado, Tafalla 2005, ISBN 8481363294, 9788481363296, p. 31
  91. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 128.
  92. ^ a b Blinkhorn 2008, p. 80.
  93. ^ Ralph Gibson, Landownership and Power in Modern Europe, London 1991, ISBN 9780049400917, p. 229
  94. ^ Ramón Lapeskera, Villafranca, a merced de las ideologías del Capital, [in:] Revista del Centro de Estudios Merindad de Tudela 4 (1992), p. 84
  95. ^ Alvarez Rey 1993, p. 140
  96. ^ Antonio Manuel Moral Roncal, Aristocracia y poder económico en la España del siglo XX, [in:] Vegueta 7 (2003), p. 157
  97. ^ Magrama.gob.es p. 80-81
  98. ^ here, p. 88
  99. ^ La Correspondencia de España 20.11.23, available here
  100. ^ Gorka Pérez de Viñaspre, José María Pérez Bustero, Vascones, Tafalla 2002, ISBN 9788481362343, p. 496
  101. ^ Madrid Cientifico 1930, p. 8, available here
  102. ^ El Siglo Futuro 17.06.26, available here
  103. ^ Heraldo de Madrid 25.03.30, available here and also minister of economy in 1930, Heraldo de Madrid 09.12.30, available here
  104. ^ Madrid Cientifico 1924, available here
  105. ^ El Siglo Futuro 15.04.26, available here
  106. ^ Aoiz 2005, p. 35
  107. ^ Jesus María Fuente Langas, Los tradicionalistas navarros bajo la dictadura de Primo de Rivera (1923–1930), [in:] Príncipe de Viana 55 (1994), pp. 424-5
  108. ^ a b Blinkhorn 2008, p. 54.
  109. ^ 1931 file at official Cortes service here
  110. ^ Ana Serrano Moreno, Los resultados de las elecciones a Cortes Constituyentes de 1931 en el municipio de Pamplona: un análisis especial, [in:] Principe de Viana 49 (1988), pp. 457-464
  111. ^ Ana Serrano Moreno, Las elecciones a Cortes Constituyentes de 1931 en Navarra, [in:] Príncipe de Viana, 50 (1989), pp. 687-776
  112. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 58.
  113. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 65. Anyway he did not like the project as corresponding to "concepción nacionalista euzkadiana", Dronda Martínez 2013, p.332; He also voiced against the Catalan statute as unrepresentative, Blinkhorn| 2008, p=81
  114. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 82. In 1935 he declared that PNV revealed its true revolutionary colours in 1934 and no longer deserved alliance with the Carlists, Blinkhorn 2008, p. 205
  115. ^ Fuente Langas 1994, p. 425
  116. ^ “Fue uno de los principales agentes de la reunificación de las tres familias de la Comunión: jaimistas, mellistas e integristas”, Tomás Domínguez Arévalo, Conde de Rodezno, Ministro de Justicia y Consejero Nacional entry [in:] Fundación Nacional Francisco Franco sercice, available here
  117. ^ Jordi Canal, El carlismo, Madrid 2000, ISBN 8420639478, p. 295
  118. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, pp. 73-74, Canal 2000, p. 304, Robert Vallverdú i Martí, El Carlisme Català Durant La Segona República Espanyola 1931-1936, Barcelona 2008, ISBN 8478260803, 9788478260805, p.90
  119. ^ in 1933 the body was replaced with much smalled Delegate Junta, still headed by Rodezno, Blinkhorn 2008, p. 133, Canal 2000, p. 304
  120. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 143; though when choosing between the Italians and the British in 1935, Rodezno gave in to anglophobia and declared in the Cortes that Spanish interests in the Mediterranean lie with Italy, the ultimate objective the recovery of Tangier and, implicitly, Gibraltar, Blinkhorn 2008, p. 164
  121. ^ when commenting on draft of the Republican constitution he warned that it would open an abyss between the Republic and the Catholics, Blinkhorn 2008, p. 66, Dronda Martínez 2013, p. 376. In June 1931 he protested to authorities against measures taken against Segura, Antonio Manuel Moral Roncal, 1868 en la memoria carlista de 1931: dos revoluciones anticlericales y un paralelo, [in:] Hispania Sacra, 59/119 (2007), p. 335
  122. ^ by a Brisith historian Rodezno is presented as staunch defender his own and other landowners’ interests, e.g. when protesting against the agrarian reform and defending arrendamiento structure, which ensured also political domination of landowners over the tenants, Blinkhorn 2008, p. 80. Also later on he opposed modest Rural Leases Act pursued by Giménez Fernandez, Blinkhorn 2008, p. 195; he claimed that in Navarre the reform was not needed at all since almost all peasants were owners of the plots they worked, Dronda Martínez 2013, p. 105
  123. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 128, Canal 2000, p. 318
  124. ^ in early 1936 he was touring the country and delivering lectures as far as Seville, Cadiz and Jerez de la Frontera in early 1932, Leandro Álvarez Rey, La contribución del carlismo vasconavarro a la formación del tradicionalismo en Andalucía (1931-1936), [in:] Príncipe de Viana 10 (1988), p. 26. He harangued in Andalusia also in 1934 and 1935, Álvarez Rey 1988, p. 30
  125. ^ Calleja, Aróstegui 1994, p. 40, Blinkhorn 2008, p. 185
  126. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, pp. 89-90, 326f, Vallverdú 2008, pp. 107-8
  127. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, pp. 128, 92
  128. ^ a b Blinkhorn 2008, p. 133.
  129. ^ Eduardo González Calleja, La violencia y sus discursos:los límites de la «fascistización»de la derecha española duranteel régimen de la Segunda República, [in:] Ayer 71 (2008), p. 100
  130. ^ Vallverdú 2008, p. 157.
  131. ^ Canal 2000, p. 311.
  132. ^ Calleja & Aróstegui 1994, p. 40.
  133. ^ a b Martínez Sánchez 2002, p. 257-258.
  134. ^ Vallverdú 2008, p=278, Blinkhorn 2008, pp. 137-138
  135. ^ Peñas Bernaldo 1996, p. 20
  136. ^ González Calleja 2008, p. 100
  137. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 215.
  138. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 136.
  139. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 207-208.
  140. ^ Eduardo González Calleja, La prensa carlista y falangista durante la Segunda República y la Guerra Civil (1931-1937), [in:] El Argonauta Espanol 9 (2012), p. 5
  141. ^ Vallverdú 2008, p. 163.
  142. ^ Martínez Sánchez 2002, p. 237.
  143. ^ 1933 file at official Cortes service here
  144. ^ 1936 file at official Cortes service here
  145. ^ Vallverdú 2008, p. 174.
  146. ^ Manuel Ferrer Muñoz, Navarra y País Vasco, 1936: conspiración contra la República, [in:] Vasconia. Cuadernos de Sección Historia-Geografía 22 (1994), p. 254
  147. ^ a b Blinkhorn 2008, p. 249.
  148. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 144-145.
  149. ^ Peñas Bernaldo 1996, p. 32-33.
  150. ^ Mercedes Peñalba Sotorrío, Entre la boina roja y la camisa azul, Estella 2013, ISBN 9788423533657, pp. 20-21
  151. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 238-239.
  152. ^ a b Blinkhorn 2008, p. 269.
  153. ^ Peñas Bernaldo 1996, p. 35.
  154. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 246-7.
  155. ^ Canal 2000, p. 326.
  156. ^ Vallverdú 2008, pp. 309-310
  157. ^ Peñas Bernaldo 1996, p. 39.
  158. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 248.
  159. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 247-250.
  160. ^ Canal 2000, p. 332.
  161. ^ Peñas Bernaldo 1996, p. 219.
  162. ^ Burgo Tajadura 1992, p. 492.
  163. ^ Manuel Martorell Pérez, Navarra 1937-1939: el fiasco de la Unificación, [in:] Príncipe de Viana 69 (2008), p. 437
  164. ^ Ricardo Ollaquindia Aguirre, La Oficina de Prensa y Propaganda Carlista de Pamplona al comienzo de la guerra de 1936, [in:] Príncipe de Viana 56 (1995), p. 499
  165. ^ Iker Cantabrana Morras, Lo viejo y lo nuevo: Díputación-FET de las JONS. La convulsa dinámica política de la "leal" Alava (Primera parte: 1936-1938), [in:] Sancho el Sabio 21 (2004), p. 167
  166. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 273.
  167. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 266.
  168. ^ José Antonio Parejo Fernández, Falangistas y requetés: historia de una absorción violenta, [in:] María Encarna Nicolás Marín, Carmen González Martínez (eds.), Ayeres en discusión: temas clave de Historia Contemporánea hoy, Madrid 2008, ISBN 9788483717721, pp. 4-5, 9
  169. ^ Burgo Tajadura 1992.
  170. ^ Peñas Bernaldo 1996, p. 238-239.
  171. ^ Martorell Pérez 2009, p. 32.
  172. ^ a b Martínez Sánchez 2002, p. 303.
  173. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 277.
  174. ^ a b c Canal 2000, p. 338.
  175. ^ Peñalba Sotorrío 2013, p. 34
  176. ^ Burgo Tajadura 1992, p. 502.
  177. ^ Martínez Sánchez 2002, p. 304.
  178. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 282.
  179. ^ Peñas Bernaldo 1996, p. 261, 270.
  180. ^ Maximiliano García Venero, Historia de la Unificacion, Madrid 1970, p. 86
  181. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 272.
  182. ^ Peñas Bernaldo 1996, p. 241-301.
  183. ^ Martorell Pérez 2008, p. 28-50, and Peñalba Sotorrio 2013, pp. 30-47
  184. ^ Peñas Bernaldo 1996, p. 241-247.
  185. ^ Peñas Bernaldo 1996, p. 273.
  186. ^ Xosé Manoel Núñez Seixas, La región y lo local en el primer franquismo, [in:] Stéphane Michonneau, Xosé M. Núñez Seixas (eds.), Imaginarios y representaciones de España durante el franquismo, Madrid, 2014, ISBN 9788415636656, p. 135
  187. ^ Peñas Bernaldo 1996, p. 252, 273.
  188. ^ Peñalba Sotorrio 2013, p. 45
  189. ^ Mercedes Peñalba Sotorrio, La Secretaría General del Movimiento como pilar estructural del primer franquismo, 1937-1945, [in:] Miguel Ángel Ruiz Carnicer (ed), Falange. Las culturas políticas del fascismo en la España de Franco (1936-1975), Zaragoza 2013, ISBN 9788499112169
  190. ^ Boletin Oficial de la Provincia de Soría 28.04.37, available here
  191. ^ Garcia Venero 1970, p. 109
  192. ^ Cantabrana Morras 2004, p. 167
  193. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 291.
  194. ^ Canal 2000, p. 339.
  195. ^ Garcia Venero 1970, p. 109
  196. ^ Peñalba Sotorrio 2013, p. 83
  197. ^ Peñalba Sotorrio 2013, p. 54
  198. ^ Martorell Pérez 2008, p. 41
  199. ^ Aurora Villanueva Martínez, Organización, actividad y bases del carlismo navarro durante el primer franquismo [in:] Gerónimo de Uztáriz 19 (2003), p. 101
  200. ^ a b c Blinkhorn 2008, p. 293.
  201. ^ Martorell Pérez 2008, p. 11
  202. ^ Peñas Bernaldo 1996, p. 294.
  203. ^ Peñalba Sotorrío 2013, p. 96
  204. ^ Peñalba Sotorrio 2013, p. 81
  205. ^ Peñalba Sotorrio 2013, p. 133
  206. ^ Canal 2000, p. 340.
  207. ^ Payne 1987, p. 178.
  208. ^ Peñas Bernaldo 1996, p. 297.
  209. ^ José Carlos Clemente Muñoz, El carlismo en el novecientos español (1876-1936), Madrid 1999, ISBN 9788483741535, p. 90
  210. ^ Clemente 2011, p. 232
  211. ^ Burgo Tajadura 2013, p. 293.
  212. ^ Stanley G. Payne, Prólogo, [in:] Navarra fue la primera 1936-1939, Pamplona 2006, ISBN 8493508187
  213. ^ Stanley G. Payne, The Spanish Civil War, Cambridge 2012, ISBN 9781107002265, chapter Second Counterrevolution? The Power Struggle in the Republican Zone (p. 169-182)
  214. ^ Antony Beevor, The Battle for Spain; The Spanish Civil War 1936-1939, London 2006, ISBN 9780143037651, chapter The Civil War within Civil War (pp. 263-274)
  215. ^ Dronda Martínez 2013, p. 95
  216. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 296.
  217. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 153–154.
  218. ^ Villanueva Martínez 2003, p. 99
  219. ^ Peñas Bernaldo 1996, p. 275.
  220. ^ Peñalba Sotorrio 2013, p. 54
  221. ^ Peñalba Sotorrio 2013, p. 133
  222. ^ a b Blinkhorn 2008, p. 294.
  223. ^ Dronda Martínez 2013, p. 388
  224. ^ Martínez Sánchez 2002, p. 329.
  225. ^ Martínez Sánchez 2002, p. 415.
  226. ^ Payne 1987, p. 219.
  227. ^ Diario de Navarra 10 March 2009, available here
  228. ^ Payne 2012, p. 245
  229. ^ Payne 2012, p. 246
  230. ^ Payne 1987, p. 221-222.
  231. ^ Payne 1987, p. 220.
  232. ^ Payne 1987, p. 221.
  233. ^ Canal 2000, p. 343.
  234. ^ Serrano described Rodezno in his memoirs as follows: "era alto, de rostro afilado, con un gesto entre triste y burlón; con su ademán mezclado de solemnidad, indolencia y cortesía. Era puntillosamente leal a sus tradiciones, aunque políticamente parecía más consecuente que creyente...", El Conde de Rodezno (1883-1952) entry [in:] Guerra civil española dia a dia service 27.12.12, available here.
  235. ^ Martorell Pérez 2008, p. 176
  236. ^ Javier Tusell, Franco en la Guerra Civil, Madrid 1992, ISBN 9788472236486, p. 298
  237. ^ Martorell Pérez 2008, p. 170
  238. ^ Francisco Javier Caspistegui Gorasurreta, El naufragio de las ortodoxias. El carlismo, 1962-1977, Pamplona 1997; ISBN 9788431315641, p. 287
  239. ^ Francisco Javier Caspistegui Gorasurreta, Navarra y el carlismo durante el régimen de Franco: la utopía de la identidad unitaria, [in:] Investigaciones históricas: Época moderna y contemporánea, 17 (1997), p. 309
  240. ^ Villanueva Martínez 2003
  241. ^ Jeremy MacClancy, The Decline of Carlism, Reno 2000, ISBN 9780874173444, p. 76
  242. ^ Burgo Tajadura 2013, p. 291: "principal dirigente de los Carlistas Navarros"
  243. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 299: "leadership of Spain's Carlists rested unchallengeably with Rodezno and his mainly Navarrese circle".
  244. ^ Villanueva Martínez 2003, p. 115
  245. ^ González Calleja 2012, p. 29
  246. ^ Enciclopedia navarra
  247. ^ Álvaro Baraibar Etxeberria, Una visión falangista de la foralidad navarra, [in:] Gerónimo de Uztáriz 2006, p. 13
  248. ^ Villanueva Martínez 2003, pp. 103, 113
  249. ^ María del Mar Larazza Micheltorena, Alvaro Baraibar Etxeberria, La Navarra sotto il Franchismo: la lotta per il controllo provinciale tra i governatori civili e la Diputacion Foral (1945-1955), [in:] Nazioni e Regioni, Bari 2013, pp. 101-120,
  250. ^ Etxeberria 2006, pp. 12-13. "Conde de Rodezno, dentro de la Diputacion o despu.s de haber cesado en ella a voluntad propia, dio a este organismo una influencia, una prepotencia y una brillantez", opinion quoted after Baraibar Etxeberria 2006, p. 19
  251. ^ Baraibar Etxeberria 2006, pp. 10, 33
  252. ^ Entrevista a Esteban Bilbao, [in:] Esfuerzo común 102 (1969)
  253. ^ Javier Tusell, Franco en la guerra civil, Barcelona 1992, ISBN 9788472236486, p. 298, referred after Stanley G. Payne, El Carlismo en la política española, [in:] Stanley G. Payne (ed.), Identidad y nacionalismo an la España contemporánea: el carlismo, 1833-1975, Madrid 2002, ISBN 8487863469, p. 111
  254. ^ Peñalba Sotorrio 2013, p. 86
  255. ^ Peñalba Sotorrio 2013, p. 90
  256. ^ 1943 file on the official Cortes service
  257. ^ ABC 24.11.42, available here
  258. ^ Juzgado Central de Instruccion No 5. Audiencia Nacional, Madrid. Sumario 53/2008 E, Auto, pp. 140-141
  259. ^ Peñas Bernaldo 1996, p. 273, 252.
  260. ^ Martínez Sánchez 2002, p. 306.
  261. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 301.
  262. ^ Ballestero 2014, p. 79
  263. ^ Cantabrana Morras 2005, p. 145
  264. ^ Martínez Sánchez 2002, p. 421.
  265. ^ MacClancy 2000, p. 79
  266. ^ a b Martínez Sánchez 2002, p. 448-449.
  267. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 299.
  268. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 300.
  269. ^ Caspistegui Gorasurreta 1997, p. 23
  270. ^ Filosofia.org
  271. ^ Blinkhorn 2008, p. 301-302.
  272. ^ Canal 2000, p. 351, 361.
  273. ^ Clemente 1977, p. 46.
  274. ^ José María Toquero, El carlismo vasconavarro y Don Juan de Borbón. La influencia del conde de Rodezno, [in:] Euskal herriaren historiari buruzko biltzarra 7 (1988), pp. 261-274
  275. ^ Mercedes Vázquez de Prada Tiffe, El papel del carlismo navarro en el inicio de la fragmentación definitiva de la comunión tradicionalista (1957-1960), [in:] Príncipe de Viana 72 (2011), p. 404
  276. ^ ABC 11.02.43, available here
  277. ^ ABC 12.11.44, available here
  278. ^ ABC 19.08.52, available here
  279. ^ ABC 01.10.52, available here
  280. ^ "Tomás Domínguez de Arévalo una persona afín al régimen franquista", Plaza Conde de Rodezno de ida y vuelta [in:] Diario de Navarra 06.03.09, available here, also Tomás Domínguez Arévalo, Conde de Rodezno, un político profundamente antidemocrático, responsable y cómplice del exterminio político, [in:] Autobús de la memoria 21.06.08, available here
  281. ^ Diario de Noticias 21.06.08
  282. ^ Diario de Navarra 06.03.09
  283. ^ Diario de Navarra 10.03.09
  284. ^ Diario de Noticias 11.03.09
  285. ^ La Plaza de la Libertad estrena placa con su nuevo nombre para "reivindicar la memoria histórica", [in:] Diario de Navarra 14.04.16
  286. ^ official Pamplona ayuntamiento site, available here
  287. ^ document as published by El Pais service, available here
  288. ^ El País
  289. ^ Conde de Rodezno. La justicia al revés, Iruña-Pamplona 2010, available online here
  290. ^ Clemente 1977.
  291. ^ Clemente 1999.
  292. ^ Clemente 2011.
  293. ^ Pérez-Nievas Borderas 1999.
  294. ^ Martorell Pérez 2009.
  295. ^ Alcalá 2001.
  296. ^ Martorell Pérez 2009, p. 183.

Sources edit

  • Alcalá, César (2001). D. Mauricio de Sivatte. Una biografía política (1901-1980). Barcelona. ISBN 8493109797.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Juan-Cruz Alli Aranguren, Los inicios del franquismo en dos obras inéditas del conde de Rodezno, [in:] Huarte de San Juan. Geografía e Historia 30 (2023), pp. 217–249
  • Blinkhorn, Martin [in Spanish] (2008). Carlism and Crisis in Spain 1931-1939. Cambridge. ISBN 9780521086349.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • del Burgo, Jaime (1992). Un episodio poco conocido de la guerra civil española. La Real Academia Militar de Requetés y el Destierro de Fal Conde.
  • del Burgo, Jaime (2013). El carlismo y su agónico final.
  • Canal, Jordi (2000). El carlismo. Madrid. ISBN 8420639478.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Calleja, Eduardo; Aróstegui, Julio (1994). La tradición recuperada: el Requeté Carlista y la insurrección.
  • Clemente, Josep Carles [in Spanish] (1977). Historia del Carlismo contemporaneo. Barcelona. ISBN 9788425307591.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Clemente, Josep Carles [in Spanish] (1999). Seis estudios sobre el carlismo. Madrid. ISBN 8483741520.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Clemente, Josep Carles [in Spanish] (2011). Breve historia de las guerras carlistas. Madrid. ISBN 978-8499671710.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Conde de Rodezno. La justicia al revés, Iruña-Pamplona 2010, ISBN 9788476816332
  • Agustín Fernández Escudero (2012). "El marqués de Cerralbo (1845-1922): biografía politica" (PDF). Madrid.
  • Jesús María Fuente Langas, Elecciones de 1916 en Navarra, [in:] Príncipe de Viana 51 (1990), pp. 947–957
  • Pavón, Jesús (1954). Semblanza del Conde de Rodezno.
  • Payne, Stanley G. (1987). The Franco Regime. London. ISBN 9780299110741.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Manuel Martorell Pérez, Retorno a la lealtad; el desafío carlista al franquismo, Madrid 2010, ISBN 9788497391115
  • Martorell Pérez, Manuel [in Spanish] (2009). La continuidad ideológica del carlismo tras la Guerra Civil (Thesis). Valencia.
  • Jesús Pabón, Elogio académico del Conde de Rodezno, [in:] Jesús Pabón, Días de ayer, historias e historiadores contemporáneos, Barcelona 1963, pp. 67–71
  • Ramón de Andrés Martín, Juan (2000). El cisma mellista. Historia de una ambición política. Madrid. ISBN 9788487863820.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Martínez Sánchez, Santiago (2002). "El Cardenal Pedro Segura y Sáenz (1880-1957)" (PDF). Pamplona.
  • Mercedes Peñalba Sotorrío, Entre la boina roja y la camisa azul, Estella 2013, ISBN 9788423533657
  • Peñas Bernaldo de Quirós, Juan Carlos (1996). El Carlismo, la República y la Guerra Civil (1936-1937). De la conspiración a la unificación. Madrid. ISBN 9788487863523.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Pérez-Nievas Borderas, Fermín (1999). Contra viento y marea. Historia de la evolución ideological del carlismo a través de dos siglos de lucha. Pamplona. ISBN 8460589323.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • José María Toquero, El carlismo vasconavarro y Don Juan de Borbón. La influencia del conde de Rodezno, [in:] Euskal herriaren historiari buruzko biltzarra 7 (1988), pp. 261–274
  • Vallverdú i Martí, Robert (2008). El Carlisme Català Durant La Segona República Espanyola 1931-1936. Barcelona. ISBN 978-8478260805.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Aurora Villanueva Martínez, El carlismo navarro durante el primer franquismo, 1937-1951, Madrid 1998, ISBN 9788487863714
  • Aurora Villanueva Martínez, Organización, actividad y bases del carlismo navarro durante el primer franquismo [in:] Gerónimo de Uztáriz 19 (2003), pp. 97–117

External links edit

 
former Plaza Conde de Rodezno
  • Princesa de Beira by Rodezno 2018-08-13 at the Wayback Machine
  • Rodezno by a Basque encyclopaedia
  • Rodezno by a Francoist site
  • Rodezno by a Navarrese encyclopaedia
  • Rodezno's obituary
  • Rodezno charged with crimes against humanity
  • Institucion Principe de Viana website
  • Por Dios y por España; contemporary Carlist propaganda on YouTube

tomás, domínguez, arévalo, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, domínguez, second, maternal, family, name, arévalo, count, rodezno, note, 12th, marquis, martin, note, 1882, 1952, spanish, carlist, francoist, politician, known, mostly, first, francois. In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Dominguez and the second or maternal family name is Arevalo Tomas Dominguez Arevalo 6th Count of Rodezno note 1 12th Marquis of San Martin note 2 1882 1952 was a Spanish Carlist and Francoist politician He is known mostly as the first Francoist Minister of Justice 1938 1939 He is also recognised for his key role in negotiating Carlist access to the coup of July 1936 and in emergence of carlo francoism the branch of Carlism which actively engaged in the Francoist regime The Most ExcellentThe Count of RodeznoBornTomas Dominguez Arevalo1882 1 Madrid 2 Died1952VillafrancaNationalitySpanishOccupationlandownerKnown forpoliticianPolitical partyCT Contents 1 Family and youth 2 Early political career 3 Dictatorship 4 Jefe 5 Conspiracy and coup 6 Unification 7 Francoism 8 Juanista 9 Legacy and reception 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Sources 14 External linksFamily and youth edit nbsp father Tomas Dominguez y de Arevalo Romera y Fernandez Navarrete was a descendant of two landowner families from the very south and from the very north of Spain The paternal Dominguez family has been for centuries related to the Andalusian town of Carmona Seville province Its first representatives were noted as regidores in the 18th century and intermarried with another distinguished local family the Romeras 9 Their descendant was Tomas father Tomas Dominguez Romera 1848 1931 note 3 who inherited the local Campo de la Plata estate 13 He demonstrated political sympathies hardly typical for the region siding with the legitimists during the Third Carlist War 14 and had to leave the country afterwards 15 Following the amnesty he returned to Spain and at unspecified date note 4 he married Maria de Arevalo y Fernandez de Navarrete 1854 1919 16 descendant to a Riojan Navarrese Arevalo family Her father Justo Arevalo y Escudero was a well known conservative politician in the mid 19th century he served in the Cortes 17 and later as a long time senator from Navarre 1876 1891 18 As at the time of the marriage she was already condesa de Rodezno 19 Tomas Dominguez Romera became conde consorte In the late 1880s Tomas Dominguez Romera emerged holding major posts within the Madrid Carlist structures In 1888 he was president of comision de propaganda of the Madrid Junta Directiva del Circula Tradicionalista de Madrid 20 the same year elected its secretario general 21 but when unsuccessfully running for the Cortes in the 1890s he stood in Haro Logrono province 22 He emerged triumphant in 4 successive elections between 1905 and 1914 voted in from the Navarrese district of Aoiz 23 At that time he was already member of the national Carlist executive in 1912 he entered Junta Nacional Tradicionalista representing Castilla La Nueva 24 note 5 in 1913 entered comision de Tesoro de la Tradicion 26 and chaired party gatherings interchanging with the likes of Cerralbo Feliu or de Mella note 6 nbsp mother It is not clear whether Tomas Dominguez Arevalo spent his early childhood in the capital or in Villafranca He was then educated in the Jesuit Colegio de San Isidoro in Madrid 29 at unspecified date commencing law studies at the University of Madrid 30 he followed classes of the then Carlist political leader Matias Barrio y Mier It is during his academic years that Dominguez came to know Jaime Chicharro and Luis Hernando de Larramendi active in Juventud Jaimista but also in literary and artistic circles 31 32 He graduated in 1904 33 some authors contemporary press and the official Cortes service refer to him as abogado 34 though none of the sources consulted confirms that he practiced as a lawyer Urbane and gregarious 35 in 1917 36 Dominguez married Asuncion Lopez Montenegro y Garcia Pelayo 37 descendant to a wealthy aristocratic terrateniente family from Caceres with its representatives holding prestigious posts in the city and in the province 38 The couple settled in Villafranca they had one child Maria Dominguez y Lopez Montenegro 39 Following the death of his mother in 1919 40 in 1920 Tomas Dominguez Arevalo inherited the title of conde de Rodezno note 7 following the death of his father in 1931 he became marques de San Martin note 8 Early political career edit nbsp Carlist electoral meeting ca 1910 There is almost no information on Dominguez s public activity in the first decade of the 20th century he was probably active in Juventud Jaimista and Juventud Hispanoamericana note 9 In 1909 he published his first work a booklet dedicated to medieval rulers of Navarre 45 followed by articles in scholarly reviews focusing on history of the province note 10 and short biographical studies also anchored in history of Navarre note 11 Dominguez also tried his hand in Pamplona dailies as a literary critic note 12 Some authors claim that his first public assignment was mayorship of Villafranca 47 48 note 13 but when first running for seat in the Cortes he was referred to by the press only as joven abogado y escritor 49 Dominguez s entry into politics was facilitated by memory of his late maternal grandfather and especially by standing of his father one of the most distinguished politicians of Navarre note 14 his position is dubbed as cacicato and the Aoiz district was considered his personal fiefdom 52 It is not known why he decided not to renew his mandate in the 1916 campaign Initially Dominguez Romera was to be substituted as Jaimista candidate by Joaquin Argamasilla but in unclear circumstances the latter was replaced by Dominguez Arevalo Argamasilla stroke back with a pamphlet lambasting alleged alliance with the liberals and charging his substitute with flexibility bordering opportunism 53 Though resident of another Navarrese district of Tafalla note 15 Dominguez Arevalo was also presented as a cuckoo candidate note 16 Despite the critique he was narrowly note 17 elected 57 he renewed his ticket though also marginally in the 1918 campaign in the same district 58 nbsp Juan Vazquez de Mella At that time Carlism was increasingly paralyzed by tension between its top theorist Vazquez de Mella and the claimant Don Jaime Dominguez was counted among supporters of the former note 18 According to some historians note 19 he considered orthodox Carlism a dead end street given the Carlist dynasty was already certain to extinguish note 20 He shared de Mella s vision of a grand extreme right coalition which would be new possibilist reincarnation of Traditionalism 61 he also considered sort of transfer of legitimist rights to the Alfonsine dynasty note 21 However at the 1919 moment of breakup he decided to stay loyal to Don Jaime 63 note 22 even given discrepancies between him and his king were already public 65 In the 1919 campaign Dominguez Arevalo presented his bid in Aoiz 66 but lost to a Maurista candidate by the smallest margin possible 67 In 1920 the same two hopefuls competed in the same district 68 this time Dominguez already conde de Rodezno lost more decisively note 23 the visible sign of increasingly loose Carlist grip on Navarre A mere week after the defeat he presented his candidature to the Senate 71 As indirect elections to the upper chamber were more about behind the stage party dealings rather than about seeking popular vote the Jaimistas managed to negotiate Rodezno s success 72 He was also re elected for the successive term in 1922 His activity as recorded in the Senate archive was insignificant 73 One of his few interventions referred to tariffs on cork exports 74 the issue he was personally interested in as there was cork produced on his Andalusian Carmona estate 75 Dictatorship edit nbsp Rodezno with knights of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta Advent of the Primo de Rivera dictatorship suspended Rodezno s parliamentarian career Having lost his senate mandate he abandoned politics and is not listed as active in any of the primoderiverista institutions be it either Somaten Union Patriotica or any other organization note 24 However he did not withdraw from public life Rodezno took part in various Christian activities contributed to cultural initiatives remained engaged in Carlist structures and pursued his career as author and historian at the same time dedicating his time to family and business A member of the Catholic aristocracy Rodezno was active in the Sovereign Military Order of Malta and remained on good terms with Spanish hierarchy and the papal nuncio 77 He forged particularly good relationship with Pedro Segura welcoming the new bishop in Caceres 78 6 years later greeting him as new archbishop of Burgos during the homage celebrations in the same city note 25 and in 1928 taking part in Toledo celebrations following Segura s ascendance to the primate of Spain 80 On the more practical side adhering to Segura s knack for social action he co organized Accion Social Diocesana in Caceres 81 and gave lectures during various initiatives like Semana Social organized by Accion Catolica 82 nbsp Alfonso de Borbon and Miguel Primo de Rivera Rodezno s cultural activities were strongly flavored by Carlism In Pamplona he organized anniversary homage celebrations to veterans of the Third Carlist War 83 in San Sebastian he took part in works of Sociedad de Estudios Vascos when preparing La exposicion de las Guerras Civiles of the 19th century 84 and in Madrid he co organized fundraising and himself donated large sums to the planned monument of Vazquez de Mella 85 However he became most noted for his historical effort Apart from inedita 86 in 1928 he published La princesa de Beira y los hijos de D Carlos note 26 and in 1929 Carlos VII duque de Madrid monographs dedicated to already mythical Carlist figures both books were widely discussed on literary pages of the Spanish press of the day 87 Though they pursued a personal approach of the author both remain quoted and referenced also by present day scholars note 27 Rodezno and his wife held land estates scattered across Spain in Navarre inherited from his mother in Extremadura brought into the marriage by his wife and in Andalusia inherited from his father Some authors refer to him as grande terrateniente 89 cacique terrateniente note 28 grandee proprietor 91 note 29 or prominent landowner an exemplary case of link between landownership and power note 30 though exact size of his holdings is unclear and probably did not exceed 500 ha combined note 31 He was head of Federacion Catolico Agraria de Navarra 99 co founder of Asociacion de Terratenientes de Navarra 100 and member of Asociacion de Propietarios de Alcornocales 101 On behalf of some of these pressure groups he held talks with various ministers note 32 publishing also analytical studies on agricultural credit 104 and land ownership note 33 In his opinion in terms of rural property the Navarrese structure was close to ideal almost reaching the objective que todos los agricultores fueran propietarios 106 later in the republic he defended the arrendamiento structure 92 Jefe edit nbsp Rodezno in Basque Carlist minority Though mostly dormant in times of the dictatorship during Dictablanda Carlism assumed more active stance In June 1930 the new Navarrese junta with Rodezno its member was set up an attempt to enforce more cautious policy towards Basque nationalism and to shift focus from foral to religious issues 107 108 The move might have backfired following declaration of the Republic as the Carlists decided to forge electoral coalition with PNV when concluded as lista catolico fuerista 108 it enabled Rodezno elected from Navarre to resume his parliamentary career in 1931 109 note 34 In the Cortes he was the least Basque minded among Carlist deputies note 35 he ceased to support the autonomy draft when it turned out that it would not allow autonomous religious policy 113 and started to toy with the idea of an exclusively Navarrese statute 114 Already in the late 1920s advocating reconciliation with the Mellistas 115 Rodezno more than welcomed re unification of three Traditionalist streams in the new organization Comunion Tradicionalista 116 Early 1932 he was appointed to its Supreme National Junta intended to assist the ailing Jefe Delegado marques de Villores 117 After his death in May that year Rodezno was nominated its president 118 effectively becoming the Carlist political leader 119 Rodezno was acutely sensitive to threat of revolution and convinced that democracy could not contain it he responded warmly to the mood of authoritarian nationalism covering in his opinion a broad spectrum from fascist Mussolini regime to MacDonald s National Government 120 Hostile especially to militant republican secularism 121 and agrarian reform 122 he remained vehement opponent in the parliament and was once hit by a flying glass in return 123 Touring the country 124 he boasted that Carlist shock troops are ready to defend society against Marxist threat 125 However he was not among those pressing an insurgent strategy Aware of the planned Sanjurjo coup he steered clear of direct collaboration 126 which did not spare him expropriations administered by the government afterwards 127 nbsp Rodezno at Carlist meeting 1932 Rodezno s term as the leader emphasized politics and propaganda rather than organization and militancy 128 some scholars claim that obsolete structures of Communion favoring placentera y anarquica autonomia 129 could not bear the weight of dynamically growing movement 128 130 This combined with internal protest against pro Alfonsist advances and his tactica transaccionista y el gradualismo 131 brought about a major challenge When former Integrists suggested that Manuel Fal become president of the Junta Rodezno proposed he rather become personal secretary to the claimant 132 As Don Alfonso Carlos at that time decided to abandon plans of dynastic reconciliation note 36 in April 1934 Rodezno agreed to step down from leadership 134 He remained the local Navarrese jefe 135 Conspiracy and coup edit nbsp requetes in captured Donostia 1936 Though Rodezno s supporters complained about fascistizacion of the Communion under the new leadership of Fal 136 note 37 Carlism firmly changed course from political negotiations to organizational build up note 38 Rodezno was not appointed head of any of the newly created sections 139 nominated to Consejo de Cultura instead 140 141 Fal initially considered Rodezno an acceptable leader and insisted on changing structures rather than people He criticised Rodezno rather for lack of faith note 39 Re elected to the Cortes in 1933 143 and 1936 144 Rodezno became chairman of the 10 men Carlist minority 145 He was permitted to pursue talks with the Alfonsinos on the private business basis in 1936 these contacts started to take shape of negotiating a joint insurgency note 40 According to one source he was on the target list of the hit team which in his absence shot Calvo Sotelo instead 147 Rodezno played vital role in negotiating Carlist role in the military coup Talks between Mola and Fal stalled as both failed to reach a compromise on terms of the Carlist access note 41 at that point the general opened parallel talks with Navarrese leaders headed by Rodezno 149 150 Bypassing Fal and ready to confront him if needed note 42 they suggested that Navarrese issues are discussed locally and offered requete support in return for usage of monarchist flag and assurance that Navarre would be left as Carlist political fiefdom 154 155 156 Facing sort of internal rebellion Fal considered dismissing the entire Navarrese junta 147 note 43 He was finally outmaneuvered when Rodezno and the Navarros assured conditional support of claimants envoy Don Javier note 44 Mola and Fal decided to act together on the basis of a vague letter sent by pre agreed leader of the insurgency general Sanjurjo note 45 During the coup Rodezno was in Pamplona the city easily captured by insurgents Though Fal considered him disloyal in late August he had no option but to include Dominguez in Junta Nacional Carlista de Guerra a newly constituted Carlist wartime executive within this body he entered Section of General Affairs heading Delegacion Politica a sub section entrusted with handling relations with military junta and local authorities 152 160 161 Rodezno settled in the emergent military headquarters in Salamanca note 46 but went on pursuing independent policy engineered by a local Navarrese executive transformed into Junta Central Carlista de Guerra de Navarra note 47 Following death of the claimant and assumption of regent duties by his successor Don Javier the so called Rodeznistas 165 were visibly disappointed with Fal s confirmation as political leader in October 1936 166 note 48 nbsp Carlist standard The Carlists who initially imagined their position as equals of the military within few months acknowledged that they were being reduced to junior role especially that despite mobilization of their supporters Falange attracted far more recruits note 49 Their attempt to safeguard autonomous standing crashed in December 1936 when following Fal s decision to set up a Carlist military academy he was summoned to Franco s headquarters and presented with the choice between firing squad and exile abroad note 50 Some authors speculate whether the unusual overreaction of Franco was not intended to get rid of Fal and replace him with complacent Rodezno 170 171 172 At the Carlist emergency meeting the Rodeznistas enforced the decision to comply with the exile alternative 173 note 51 though later Rodezno himself visited Franco trying to get Jefe Delegado re admitted note 52 Unification edit nbsp Francisco Franco With Fal on exile and party leadership assumed by France based Don Javier Rodezno emerged as maxima figura carlista en Espana 177 Fal was not happy about Rodezno s pre eminence and when on exile intended to send him abroad possibly on a diplomatic mission to Vatican 172 Starting January 1937 he and other party bigwigs were approached by the military and the Falangists about forming a monopolist state party note 53 the pressure started to mount later on The Carlist leaders met 3 times to address the challenge in Insua February in Burgos March and in Pamplona April all attended by Rodezno note 54 He and the faction he headed advocated compliance with political amalgamation pressed by the military note 55 they were confronted by the Falcondistas opting for intransigence note 56 As the formal party executive Junta Nacional was getting decomposed and theoretically local Rodeznista dominated Junta Central assumed a key role note 57 the balance tipped towards unification The fusion was presented as means to build a new state Catholic regionalist note 58 social and ultimately formatted as Traditionalist monarchy 187 174 188 note 59 On April 22 Rodezno was nominated to Secretariado Politico note 60 of the new party Falange Espanola Tradicionalista 191 one of 4 Carlists note 61 within the 10 member body 192 193 194 195 The Falangists like Giron were extremely unhappy about its performance and composition with very few members fielmente el espiritu de nuestro Movimiento 196 Rodezno and other Carlists learned of the party program only once its 21 points were announced and immediately demonstrated some unease note 62 His relations with Fal and Don Javier remained extremely tense though falling short of total breakup both considered him a fronding rebel 198 he was held among maximos responsables de la actitud de rebeldia mantenida por el carlismo navarro frente a la autoridad de don Javier 199 Rodezno s efforts to elicit authorization from the regent produced no effect 200 During the next few months he presided over absorption into Falange rather than a fusion note 63 bombarded with queries and protests from Carlist rank and file about total predomination and arrogance of camisas azules 202 note 64 Possibly as a result of complaints about the Falangists lack of give and take in October 1937 Franco called up theoretically governing structure of the party the National Council note 65 Despite Fal s calls to decline Rodezno accepted the seat and in December 1937 Don Javier expulsed him from Carlism 208 Rodezno did not take notice 200 Some authors claim he was expulsed already in the spring following accepting post in Secretariado 209 nbsp Falangist standard Rodezno s motives are unclear apart from partisan claims that he traded Carlist principles for a few Navarrese alcaldias note 66 there are many conflicting interpretations offered According to one he feared that internal divisions within the Nationalist camp might lead to defeat in the war 211 note 67 According to another he has never been a genuine Carlist and is better described as a conservative monarchist note 68 Some scholars claim that he was a possibilist who realized that Traditionalism was unable to seize power single handedly and needed coalition partners note 69 one more clue might have been that perceiving Carlism as rooted in family and regional values he downplayed the issues of organization and structures 217 Others underline that he considered the emerging system largely in line with the Carlist vision and did not think it worthwhile to be marginalized for the sake of defending second rate discrepancies 218 Finally there are authors who believe that he realized neither gravity of the moment nor totalitarian nature of the new party Rodezno the theory goes imagined the structure either as a new incarnation of Union Patriotica or as a loose alliance both permitting Carlism to maintain its proper identity 219 immediately following announcement of the FET programme largely a copy paste from the original Falange 27 points Rodezno visited Franco to voice his disgust 220 following three months he ceased to attend sittings of the FET secretariat considering it pointless 221 Francoism edit nbsp prison Spain In January 1938 Rodezno entered the first regular Francoist government as Minister of Justice 222 At this position he commenced work on revoking the Republican laws focusing mostly on the laic legislation Though the task was completed by his successor it was Rodezno who ensured that the Church re took a key role in a number of areas especially education and that intimate Church state relations were restored 222 223 When setting the direction he had to overcome the Falangist resistance and outmaneuver its key exponents Jordana and Yanguas 224 in 1942 Rodezno managed to defeat serranistas drafting the future legislation 225 He is best remembered however for his role in Francoist repressions Wartime purges rested on most tortured juridical basis and produced some 72 000 executions 226 it is difficult to tell to what extent Rodezno might be held liable especially that most of them were carried out under military jurisdiction and before he assumed office According to some sources he was responsable de la firma de unas 50 000 penas de muerte 227 according to scholars there were some 51 000 death sentences administered during the first few years after the War 228 most of that time it was Esteban Bilbao holding the post of Minister of Justice He started to replace the chaotic practice by laying the foundations of the repressive Francoist judicial system including massive purges in the judiciary 229 Its first pillar Ley de Responsabilidades Politicas retroactive to 1934 was adopted in 1939 note 70 supplemented by many other laws and regulations One of them required all persons of legal age to hold a personal ID card obligation introduced for the first time in Spanish history 231 There were some 100 000 political prisoners 232 before he stepped down as minister in August 1939 233 It is not clear whether Rodezno s departure from the government was related to tension between the Falangists and the Carlists though he was on rather poor terms with Serrano Suner 234 The two clashed especially on issues related to centralisation and regional rights Serrano intervened to make sure the address of Rodezno delivered when accepting the hijo predilecto title from Navarrese diputacion is not distributed 235 Already in early 1938 heavily disappointed with the new party in April 1938 Rodezno complained to Franco about marginalisation of Carlism and apparently managed to extract from caudillo a fairly frank opinion the generalissimo valued the Carlists higher than the Falangists yet noted that they were pocos y sin atractivo pasa los masas while Falange enjoyed capacidad proselitista y captadora 236 and the emering regime in general Rodezno admitted that no dejaba de sentirse cierta tristeza por el desengano y la decepcion que producia la disparidad entre el esfuerzo aportado y el rumbo amenazador de las cosas para el porvenir 237 In 1939 he moved back to Navarre Though expelled from formally illegal Comunion Tradicionalista he was eager to take part in the movement e g in 1939 he took part in the first Montejurra ascent riding all the way to the summit on the horse 238 239 nbsp Francoist Spain 1939 Some authors consider him leader of Rodeznistas the informal collaborative faction 240 241 other scholars prefer to name him leader of Navarrese Carlism 242 or even of Spanish Carlism altogether 243 In the immediate post war period he tried to support Carlist cultural outposts either preventing their amalgamation in the Francoist machinery note 71 or creating the new ones note 72 Some orthodox Carlists considered him indispensable as it was with their support that Rodezno was elected vice president of Navarrese Diputacion Provincial in 1940 248 At this post he took part in provincial battle for power against the Falangists note 73 and clashed with some of their leaders also on the national level in June 1939 Rodezno clashed with the Falangist pundit Gimenez Caballero who accused Navarre of historical disobedience and lambasted the fueros as sinister separatism Rodezno as minister prevented the publication of his harangue in the press except Arriba firmly controlled by Falange 251 It is partially thanks to his efforts that Navarre was together with Alava the only province which retained some regional establishments According to account of Esteban Bilbao he was supported by Rodezno when objecting to homogenisation designs of Minister of Economy 252 Though apparently overwhelmed by fascistoid nature of the emerging regime note 74 and by actual shape of the unification up to contributing to its failure in Navarre note 75 Rodezno kept pursuing the collaborative line even when it became painfully evident that Carlism was entirely marginalized in the new state party 255 In 1943 Rodezno resigned from the Navarrese government to enter the Francoist quasi parliament Cortes Espanolas 256 he was ensured its mandate as member of Consejo Nacional 257 The term lasted three years and was not renewed in 1946 which suggests that at that time he had already dropped out from the Falangist executive Auto of judge Garzon raises charges based on Rodezno s role in FET between April 20 1937 coincides with the day of his nomination to Secretariado and 1951 no daily date 258 Juanista edit nbsp Don Javier on the cover of a Carlist periodical Already in the 1910s Rodezno timidly advanced the idea of transferring legitimist rights to an appropriate Alfonsist candidate once the Carlist dynasty would extinguish 63 also during the Republican years he was the most enthusiastic supporter of rapprochement within the monarchist camp and in 1935 proposed that Don Alfonso Carlos names Don Juan his legitimate heir 133 When the last direct Carlist claimant indeed died in September 1936 Rodezno was the last to acknowledge the regency of Don Javier At that time he was already considering another regency this of Franco on behalf of Don Juan 259 174 whom he held well familiar with Traditionalist ideas It is not clear when the two first met during the Civil War Rodezno and the Alfonsist prince already exchanged friendly correspondence Rodezno was in touch with Don Juan since 1937 and considered him knowledgeable of Traditionalist ideas 260 In the early 1940s Rodezno turned into an open advocate of Don Juan as a future Carlist king especially once the latter inherited the Alfonsist title after his late father in 1941 Theoretically this support did not breach the rules of Don Javier s regency which permitted forming factions around prospective candidates in practice this mattered little as Rodezno was already expulsed from the Comunion 261 When the new Alfonsist claimant was assembling a team of collaborators Jose Maria Oriol travelled to meet him in Lausanne to suggest in vain that Rodezno is nominated the official Alfonsist representative in Spain 262 263 264 In the mid 1940s Fal mounted an offensive offering various Carlist regentialist solutions to Franco 265 in December 1945 Fal also wrote to Don Juan asking him to acknowledge the regency of Don Javier 266 As a response in April 1945 Rodezno travelled to Portugal note 76 to meet Don Juan and prepare ground for his Carlist legitimization 268 The initiative bore fruit in February 1946 when the Alfonsist claimant signed a Rodezno co drafted document intended to confirm his Traditionalist spirit Known as Bases institucionales para la restauracion de la monarquia or simply as Bases de Estoril it outlined the basics of the future monarchy 269 They very much resembled the Traditionalist principles though the document fell short of declaring Don Juan the legitimate Carlist claimant note 77 nbsp Juan de Borbon The 1946 Bases de Estoril was the last major Rodezno s initiative and little is known either about his political views or about his public activity in the very last years of his life In 1944 he entered Real Academia de Jurisprudencia y Legislacion 270 He remained leader of informal but very significant collaborative and pro Juanista faction of Carlism the movement which as a whole was rapidly disintegrating into even more branches note 78 Though most Carlist rank and file remained utterly hostile to the despised Liberal dynasty many if not the majority of Carlist pre war leadership inclined towards accepting Don Juan 271 Also after Rodezno s death they kept pursuing the idea of Alfonso XIII s son assuming the Carlist title Named Rodeznistas Juancarlistas Juanistas or Estorilos they officially declared Don Juan the legitimate Carlist heir in 1957 the act considered climax of the earlier Rodezno s policy In 1957 around 70 Carlist politicians travelled to Estoril and declared Don Juan the legitimate Carlist heir The late Rodezno was considered principal promoter of the initiative 272 Some authors even claim that Rodezno was present at the ceremony 273 274 In historiography the term Rodeznistas is last applied to the year 1959 275 Legacy and reception edit nbsp old banner now unused note 79 During Francoism Rodezno was honored by a number of prestigious orders like Cruz de Isabel la Catolica or Cruz de San Raimundo de Penafort in the mid 1940s he entered Real Academia de Jurisprudencia y Legislacion 276 and Real Academia de la Historia 277 named also hijo predilecto by the province of Navarre and by his native town of Villafranca 278 Posthumously Franco conferred upon him Grandeza de Espana title currently born by his descendants 279 Some streets and plazas were named upon him the most prestigious one in Pamplona After transition to democracy the perception of Rodezno changed dramatically In the current Spanish public discourse he is associated mostly with the most repressive phase of Francoism 280 Naming of the Pamplona plaza was subject to heated public debate in Navarre and elsewhere following adoption of ley de Simbolos de Navarra and ley de Memoria Historica The 2008 2009 discussion involving present day political parties and related to some present day political issues note 80 has eventually led to renaming the plaza to Conde de Rodezno an aristocratic title formally not associated with any individual note 81 until in 2016 it was renamed to Plaza de la Libertad 285 The former Pamplona mausoleum erected during Francoism to honor the fallen requetes has been renamed to Sala de exposiciones Conde de Rodezno 286 but in public it prefers to be named Sala de exposiciones In 2008 Audiencia Nacional the Spanish high tribunal launched formal bid to acknowledge Rodezno as guilty of crimes against humanity during his tenure as Minister of Justice and afterwards but the motion bore no fruit due to procedural reasons 287 Judge Baltasar Garzon was later charged with perversion of justice for launching the bid which was defined as an error by the Supreme Court of Spain 288 In 2010 a group of authors associated with a Pamplonese Ateneo Basilio Lacort published a vehemently militant work which presents Rodezno as a criminal 289 nbsp former placard now removed In Traditionalist historiographical narration Rodezno is one of the black characters among the likes of Rafael Maroto Alejandro Pidal or Don Carlos Hugo He is charged with blatant political miscalculation at best and with treason of principles and kings at worst His vacillating stance during the Mellista crisis in 1914 1919 rapprochement towards the Alfonsinos in the Republic years or bypassing Carlist command when pushing for almost unconditional adherence to the generals coup of 1936 are less of an issue it is Rodezno s stance on unification and pro Juanista lobbying which earned him most hostility from works of Partido Carlista sponsored socialismo autogestionario supporters note 82 Though scholars speculate on his different motives the opinion which gained particular popularity is that he has never been a genuine Carlist adhering to the movement mostly out of respect for his father note 83 None of the currently existing organizations claiming Carlist identity be it either those pursuing a socialist path javierocarlistas Partido Carlista or those attached to Traditionalist values tronovacantista CTC sixtinos carloctavistas admits deference to his name See also editCarlism Electoral Carlism Restoration Navarrese electoral Carlism Restoration Francoist Spain Carlo francoism White Terror Spain Institucion Principe de Viana Condado de RodeznoNotes edit sequential artistocratic title quoted after Diputacion Permanente y Consejo de la Grandeza de Espana y Titulos del Reino service available here However there are conflicting views on which count in sequence he was According to different sources Tomas mother was the 5th condesa de Rodezno 3 or the 6th condesa de Rodezno 4 5 Yet another version incomplete and erroneous is pursued at Euskalnet service 6 sequential number is unclear He is considered the 12th marquis by the Fundacion Nacional Francisco Franco 7 and the 13th marquis by Fz de Bobadilla 8 some sources wrongly claim he died in 1920 e g Geneall net 10 however 1931 is the correct date of his death 11 12 probably between 1878 the amnesty and 1882 birth of Tomas some sources claim that he headed Castilla la Nueva y Extremadura 25 like in 1911 27 Some authors consider him a politician who betrayed Carlism in 1911 allegedly mounting a coalition with the Integrists and the Conservatives 28 his mother held 2 titles condesa de Rodezno and condesa de Valdellano The first one was inherited by Tomas the second one by his younger brother Jose Maria 41 42 Dominguez Romera inherited the title from maternal line in 1911 43 later on in 1919 he grew to vice president of the organisation 44 in 1912 he published Un Infante de Navarra yerno del Cid and in 1913 De tiempos lejanos Glosas historicas both in Revista de Historia y Genealogia his 1915 and 1916 articles on genealogy are available online 46 see his Arturo Campion Semblanza literaria published in Diario de Navarra between 20 1 12 and 18 02 12 his 1952 obituary also referred to him as ex alcalde de Villafranca but specified no period of his term in office see ABC 19 08 52 available here periodically serving also as dean of the Navarrese deputies and senators 50 At that time the strength of Carlism was at its peak in the province with the movement gaining 70 85 of deputy seats available and controlling the remaining pool by means of electoral alliances Some authors maintain that Dominguez Romera was jefe of Navarrese Carlism and that his son inherited the post this claim about Dominguez Romero s Navarrese jefatura is not confirmed elsewhere Until 1916 the Navarrese jefe was Francisco Martinez and after 1916 it was Romualdo Cesareo Sanz Escartin 51 Villafranca was part of the Peralta zone itself forming the Tafalla electoral district 54 by their opponents both Dominguez Romera and Dominguez Arevalo were presented as cuneros 55 both candidates won in two out of 4 comarcas of the district but Dominguez Arevalo won in more populous ones 56 some authors claim that Dominguez was from his youth a fiel seguidor desde su juventud de Juan Vazquez de Mella 59 the opinion of Melchor Ferrer approvingly repeated in Andres Martin 2000 60 the Carlist king Jaime III was over 50 and still a bachelor he had no brothers and his uncle was over 70 with no descendants this stand was lambasted as dishonor by the orthodox Jaimistas 62 another historian claims he followed de Mella 64 his counter candidate gained 55 8 of the votes 69 70 however he is recorded as not particularly averse towards the dictatorship Having learnt of his Villafranca mayorship Luis Hernando de Larramendi asked Rodezno pero como puedes soportar eso to which the latter replied mira chico el caso es mandar 76 which at that time formed part of the Burgos archdiocese 79 entire book available here as a historian he blamed the second wife of Carlos VII Bertha de Rohan for his alleged ineptitude during late phases of his life when he no era el arriscado caudillo de Navarra de 1873 88 some even blame him for the 1894 events when 800 soldiers protected estate of his grandfather during social unrest in Villafranca 90 Blinkhorn 2008 claims also that Rodezno owned a senorio in La Rioja 92 and quote him as exemplary case of a link between landownership and power 93 he had 502 robadas in Villafranca divided into 47 fincas 94 Given a robada was ca 0 09 ha his estate covered some 45 ha and was far behind largest estates in the area exceeding even 100 ha In Carmona he and his wife held 200 ha 95 The estates did not make an impressive figure by national Spanish standards as late as in 1919 duque de Penaranda possessed 51 000 ha 96 In the sole Cordoba district there were around 30 landholders with estates exceeding 1 000 ha 97 surface area is listed in fanegas fgs a fanega differed from province to province though one scholar suggests an average of 1 fg was 1 044 ha for the nearby Almeria province 98 like the minister of economy meeting with a group of cerealistas in 1926 102 and the minister of infrastructure in 1930 103 in 1926 he published La propiedad privada en Navarra y un informe sobre reforma tributaria 105 Another Carlist elected from Navarre was Joaquin Beunza Detailed analysis in Serrano Moreno 1988 110 and 1989 111 highlighting differences between these Basque provinces and Kingdom of Navarre 112 in 1935 Rodezno pressed Don Alfonso Carlos to nominate Don Juan as heredero 133 what was meant by that was probably strong leadership and organizational build up of the party and its satellite structures some Carlists grumbled at uninspiring mediocre Fal compared to eloquent and gregarious Rodezno 137 including the paramilitary However it was Rodezno who agreed to a send few Carlists together with Alfonsists conspirators to Rome the objective was military training negotiating financial support and arms supply 138 El jefe delegado ideal es Rodezno Solo le falta fe en lo nuestro 142 he also visited in prison Jose Antonio Primo de Rivera 146 Fal demanded that Republican regime is replaced with corporative Catholic state possibly a monarchy and insurgency is directed by a directory headed by Sanjurjo and including two civilians acceptable to the Comunion Mola insisted on Republican regime and state separated from the Church with insurgency commanded by the military at their own discretion 148 he considered purely a Carlist rising a ludicrous dream and nurtured no doubt that alliances are needed Republic should be overthrown as first objective with further goals to be discussed later 151 What interested him was not so much the total victory of Carlism attractive as that was as obtaining of certain minimum gains plus control over their own corner of Spain 152 153 some authors claim that Fal refrained from taking steps against the Navarrese junta conscious that also the Navarrese rank and file were more than enthusiastic to join the insurgency regardless of the terms agreed 157 who initially opposed compromising 100 years of Carlist history in exchange for local ayuntamientos 158 its basic lines were that Carlists may conditionally use monarchical flag provisional government would be apolitical with civilian members Republican legislation rectified parties would be abolished and new state would be built 159 Fal heading the Military Section settled in Toledo 162 some scholars claim JCCNG was liderada por el conde de Rodezno 163 though other authors maintain that it was formally headed by Berasain Its official constituting document does not contain the name of Rodezno at all 164 the rodeznista controlled El Pensamiento Navarro wrote that monarchists live even if kings die a rather ambiguous statement given Carlists had a regent not a monarch now 167 compare graphs and tables in Parejo Fernandez 2008 168 details in del Burgo Tajadura 1992 169 Canal 2000 gives the date as January 1937 174 noting that though he considered the idea of a Carlist military academy tempting at the same time he did not approve of the way Fal pursued it 175 176 the first meeting recorded was with Sancho Davila in early January 1937 178 early March Rodezno moved to his Caceres estate and remained there until April 12 when he was summoned to Burgos by Franco 179 180 according to his own account when summoned to Burgos on April 12 he told Franco that in Portugal it had not been necessary to create partido unico to which Franco replied that Salazar did not enjoy popular support The caudillo made clear that unification would not be transitory phase but an ultimate objective 181 most thorough account of Carlist response to the unification threat in Bernaldo 1996 182 somewhat less detailed but still very informative chapters in Perez 2008 183 Bernaldo 1996 prefers to talk about carlismo regional prevailing over carlismo nacional 184 he also notes that one of the factors enhancing position of JCCGN over JNG was that there were still new requete tercios being formed in Navarre in the spring of 1937 organizacion estatal que reconozca las peculiaridades regionales 185 Until mid 1937 Rodezno believed that decentralised vision based on autarquias regionales was possible and called not to revert to centralismo liberal 186 most Carlists might have understood this as future instauration of a Carlist dynasty e g the Borbon Parmas the Borbon Habsburgos or other Rodezno has probably meant a dynastical accord with the Alfonsinos most likely with Franco nominated regent for Don Juan de Borbon some authors refer to this body as Junta Politica or Secreteria General 189 In official Francoist document the body was referred to as Secretariado o Junta Politica 190 the other three were Luis Arellano Tomas Dolz de Espejo and Jose Maria Mazon Sainz he was also susprised and concerned by detention of Manuel Hedilla Franco assured Rodezno that Traditionalist doctrine will be embodied in outlook of the new party en su dia 197 opinions of Payne Canal Blinkhorn and Fraser who approvingly referred by Martorell Perez 2008 201 detailed discussion in Penalba Sotorrio 2013 especially the chapter Conflictos y tensiones durante el periodo de integracion Un analisis estadistico pp 91 105 The province where most formal complaints were received was the Integrist stronghold Seville 220 followed by Navarre 169 and the Catalan provinces Cadiz and Ourense 60 90 203 at this point Secretariado Politico ceased to function 204 in fact Rodezno ceased to take part in its sittings already in August 1937 205 Within its ranks the Carlists were even worse off only 11 of them among its 50 members 200 Canal 2000 claims there were 12 Carlists 206 while Payne 1987 claims the correct number is 13 207 dubbed el traidor por unas alcaldias 210 though he does not mention Rodezno personally also Payne points to this feature 212 Putting common goal against particularisms on the Nationalist side is also confronted with internal power struggle within the Republican camp 213 214 version coined mostly by Melchor Ferrer Historia del Tradicionalismo Espanol vol XXIX referred after Martorell Perez 2008 p 183 another scholar seems to adhere noting that Rodezno also sided with corriente conservadora autoritaria rather than with populismo tradicionalista 215 according to this approach unlike ideologically driven Fal Rodezno was above all a realist who considered that ideal of a purely Carlist seizure of power as a dream Alliances were inevitable and as its result Carlists might have to settle for the second best option This does not necessarily boil down to the dead end street vision of Carlism Rodezno viewed it as a spiritual and ideological force guiding a new formation built possibly on a new monarchist but fundamentally Traditionalist platform 216 though the law itself was drafted by Gonzalez Bueno 230 he took part in the plot intended to counter takeover of El Pensamiento Navarro by the Francoist press conglomerate by converting it into a formally commercial newspaper owned by a company named Editorial Navarra Rodezno became its primary shareholder with 600 shares other major owners were Luis Arellano 150 shares and the Baleztena brothers 50 each 244 245 he founded and became the first president of Principe de Viana formally the cultural institution managed by the Navarrese provincial government 246 247 detailed discussion in Bari 2013 249 and Etxeberria 2006 250 at one point in 1938 he told Franco mi general la doctrina tradicionalista no es el fascismo 253 he anyway acknowledged that un ano habia bastado para apreciar que era imposible de fraguar la unificacion y menos en Navarra donde el desengano cundia entre los nuestros 254 monarchist alliance concept was made easier by Don Javier s unhappy absence in 1944 1945 when he was held captive in the Nazi concentration camp 267 Religion Unidad Monarquia representacion organica 266 carloctavistas sivattistas javieristas rodeznistas picture taken in 2007 For 2012 banner see here like the question of Navarrismo and the Basque role in Navarre it might refer to Tomas Dominguez Arevalo but also to his father Tomas Dominguez Romera his maternal grandfather Justo Arevalo y Escudero or previous holders of the title from the Jimenez Navarro family 281 282 283 284 like Clemente 1977 290 1999 291 and 2011 292 or Perez Nievas Borderas 1999 293 to scholarly discourse flavored by political sympathies like Martorell Perez 2009 294 to orthodox Traditionalist discourse of Alcala 2001 295 Rodezno no sentia el carlismo no penso nunca en su triunfo y con su caracteristica ligereza podria decirse que lo aceptaba como aquel personaje de Valle Inclan que lo queria declarar monumento nacional Sus opiniones pro alfonsinas acrecentaban el confusionismo de unos y los recelos de los leales Cuando al fin dio el paso definitivo reconociendo publicamente como su Rey al pretendiente Don Juan coronaba una historia politica de una logica implacable pero aquel dia perdia la unica virtud que en los salones aristocraticos tenia el Conde de Rodezno el mantenerse leal a la dinastia legitima opinion of Melchor Ferrer quoted after Martorell Perez 2009 296 References edit the Real Academia de Historia site gives the birth date as September 26 1882 see here Obituaries claimed he was born in 1883 see ABC 12 08 52 available here also the birthplace of Tomas is disputed most scholarly sources claim he was born Madrid this version is repeated on the official senate site allegedly after the birth certificate reproduced though handwriting is entirely illegible compare here Obituaries claimed he was born in Villafranca see ABC Seville version 12 08 52 available here or in Pamplona see ABC Madrid version 12 08 52 available here both give the birth date as 1883 not 1882 F Fz de Bobadilla Vinculacion riojana del Condado de Rodezno y su historia pp 548 49 available here Maria de los Dolores de Arevalo y Fernandez de Navarrete 6º condessa de Rodezno 6º condessa de Valdellano entry at Geneall service available here Compactgen service available here Euskalnet Tomas Dominguez Arevalo Conde de Rodezno Ministro de Justicia y Consejero Nacional in Fundacion Nacional Francisco Franco service available here F Fz de Bobadilla Vinculacion riojana del Condado de Rodezno y su historia pp 548 49 Antonio Leria Proclamacion y jura reales El caso de Carmona in Carel Revista de estudios locales 2 2 2004 pp 591 667 Tomas Dominguez Romera entry at Geneall service available here La Epoca 12 05 31 available here El Siglo Futuro 12 05 31 available here Jorge Maier Jorge Bonsor 1855 1930 un academico correspondiente de la Real Academia de la Historia y la Arqueologia Espanola Madrid 1999 ISBN 9788489512306 p 55 Tomas Dominguez Romera Perez de Pomar entry at Aunamendi Eusko Entziklopedia service online available here Juan Sebastian Elian El gran libro de los apellidos y la heraldica Barcelona 2001 ISBN 9788479275495 p 100 Maria de los Dolores de Arevalo y Fernandez de Navarrete 6º condessa de Rodezno 6º condessa de Valdellano entry at Generallnet service available here official Cortes service available here official Senate service available here Annuario del comercio de la industria de la magistratura y de la administracion 1883 p 42 available here Her mother was Maria de los Angeles Fernandez de Navarrete condesa de Rodezno who died in 1856 at that moment her father from conde consorte converted to conde viudo The couple had two children the older son also died early and at that point the title passed to Maria de los Dolores Fernandez Escudero 2012 pp 84 5 Fernandez Escudero 2012 p 118 Fernandez Escudero 2012 p 249 official Cortes service available here Fernandez Escudero 2012 p 443 Dominguez Romera Perez de Pomar Tomas Aunamendi Eusko Entziklopedia Fernandez Escudero 2012 p 458 Fernandez Escudero 2012 p 436 Clemente 2011 p 232 La Voz 03 05 29 available here the college closed one Jesuits were expulsed in the early days of the Second Republic see another alumni meeting 23 years later ABC 03 06 52 available here Pavon 1954 p 188 Pavon 1954 p 188 189 Ignacio de Hernando de Larramendi Asi si hizo Mapfre Madrid 2000 ISBN 9788487863875 p 28 Maria Dolores Andres Prieto La mujer en la politica y la politica de la memoria Maria Rosa Urraca Pastor una estrella fugaz MA thesis Salamanca 2012 p 60 Leandro Alvarez Rey La derecha en la II Republica Sevilla 1931 1936 Sevilla 1993 ISBN 978 8447201525 p 140 also La Epoca 23 05 16 available here Blinkhorn 2008 p 50 Miguel Munoz de San Pedro Cuando vesti mis primeros pantalones largos in Alcantara 20 146 1966 p 10 available here also La Nacion 06 03 17 available here Asuncion Lopez Montenegro y Garcia Pelayo entry at Geni genealogical service available here Manuel Vaz Romero Cristina Nunez Lopez Montenegro fue un franquista coyuntural y episodico in Hoy 12 02 06 available here her father had already passed away when she was getting married Maria del Sagrado Corazon Dominguez y Lopez Montenegro 8º condessa de Rodezno entry at Geneall service available here La Accion 28 11 19 available here La Corespondencia de Espana 03 03 20 available here La Corespondencia de Espana 04 03 20 available here La Corespondencia de Espana 05 05 11 available here Cervantes Revista Hispanoamericana 1919 p 97 available here Los Teobaldos de Navarra Ensayo de critica historica Madrid 1909 see here and here Tomas Dominguez Arevalo Conde de Rodezno un politico profundamente antidemocratico responsable y complice del exterminio politico in Autobus de la memoria 21 06 08 available here Tomas Dominguez Arevalo Conde de Rodezno Ministro de Justicia y Consejero Nacional in Fundacion Nacional Francisco Franco service available here La Epoca 23 03 16 available here Federico Suarez Estudios de historia moderna y contemporanea homenaje a Federico Suarez Verdeguer Madrid 1991 ISBN 9788432127489 p 478 Fernandez Escudero 2012 p 487 88 en Navarra tambien existieron cacicatos estables como el de los carlistas condes de Rodezno en el distrito de Aoiz Maria del Mar Larazza Navarra in Jose Varela Ortega ed El poder de la influencia geografia del caciquismo en Espana 1875 1923 Madrid 2001 ISBN 9788425911521 p 443 este senor hubiera logrado el apoyo de los elementos independientes del mismo modo como ha conseguido la ayuda fervorosa de los jefes liberales de Navarra sin tener por eso la desgracia de ser sospechoso entre los suyos quoted after Jesus Maria Fuente Langas Elecciones de 1916 en Navarra in Principe de Viana 51 1990 p 951 Jesus Maria Zaratiegui Labiano Efectos de la aplicacion del sufragio universal en Navarra Las elecciones generals de 1886 y 1891 in Principe de Viana 57 1996 p 222 currently it is part of the Tudela merindad compare real estate Definde service available here Angel Garcia Sanz Marcotegui Elites economicas y politicas en la Restauracion La diversidad de las derechas navarras in Historia contemporanea 23 2001 p 600 Fuente Langas 1990 p 956 1916 file at official Cortes service available here 1918 file at official Cortes service available here El Conde de Rodezno 1883 1952 entry in Guerra civil espanola dia a dia service 27 12 12 available here Andres Martin 2000 p 181 182 Andres Martin 2000 p 181 Andres Martin 2000 p 182 a b Andres Martin 2000 p 182 Clemente 1999 p 21 Jose Luis Orella Martinez El origen del primer catolicismo social Espanol PhD thesis UNED Madrid 2012 p 182 La Epoca 24 05 19 available here out of two competitors running his counter candidate gained 50 52 of votes see his 1919 file at official Cortes service here La Libertad 12 12 20 available here 1920 file at official Cortes site here La Accion 20 12 20 available here El Globo 29 12 20 available here official Senate site available here Diario de sesiones bookmark at the Senate site here Diario de Sesiones de Cortes for May 1921 p 1210 available here Madrid Cientifico 1929 p 8 available here Larramendi 2000 p 30 El Imparcial 26 06 288 Martinez Sanchez 2002 p 65 El Siglo Futuro 03 01 27 available here El Siglo Futuro 25 01 28 available here Revista catolica de cuestiones sociales February 1925 p 52 available here Revista catolica de cuestiones sociales November 1930 p 56 available here El Sol 25 05 26 available here El Sol 16 07 27 available here La Epoca 12 12 29 available here La abdicacion de D Carlos y el Conde de Montemolin and La muerte de Zumalacarregui DOMINGUEZ AREVALO Tomas entry in Gran Enciclopedia Navarra available here Ia obra repetimos es de valor historico y biografico as noted with reservation by one of the papers anxious not to be suspected of Carlist leaning La Voz 07 03 30 available here Fernandez Escudero 2012 p 305 Javier Dronda Martinez Con Cristo o contra Cristo Religion y movilizacion antirrepublicana en navarra 1931 1936 Tafalla 2013 ISBN 9788415313311 p 163 Floren Aoiz El jarron roto la transicion en Navarra una cuestion de Estado Tafalla 2005 ISBN 8481363294 9788481363296 p 31 Blinkhorn 2008 p 128 a b Blinkhorn 2008 p 80 Ralph Gibson Landownership and Power in Modern Europe London 1991 ISBN 9780049400917 p 229 Ramon Lapeskera Villafranca a merced de las ideologias del Capital in Revista del Centro de Estudios Merindad de Tudela 4 1992 p 84 Alvarez Rey 1993 p 140 Antonio Manuel Moral Roncal Aristocracia y poder economico en la Espana del siglo XX in Vegueta 7 2003 p 157 Magrama gob es p 80 81 here p 88 La Correspondencia de Espana 20 11 23 available here Gorka Perez de Vinaspre Jose Maria Perez Bustero Vascones Tafalla 2002 ISBN 9788481362343 p 496 Madrid Cientifico 1930 p 8 available here El Siglo Futuro 17 06 26 available here Heraldo de Madrid 25 03 30 available here and also minister of economy in 1930 Heraldo de Madrid 09 12 30 available here Madrid Cientifico 1924 available here El Siglo Futuro 15 04 26 available here Aoiz 2005 p 35 Jesus Maria Fuente Langas Los tradicionalistas navarros bajo la dictadura de Primo de Rivera 1923 1930 in Principe de Viana 55 1994 pp 424 5 a b Blinkhorn 2008 p 54 1931 file at official Cortes service here Ana Serrano Moreno Los resultados de las elecciones a Cortes Constituyentes de 1931 en el municipio de Pamplona un analisis especial in Principe de Viana 49 1988 pp 457 464 Ana Serrano Moreno Las elecciones a Cortes Constituyentes de 1931 en Navarra in Principe de Viana 50 1989 pp 687 776 Blinkhorn 2008 p 58 Blinkhorn 2008 p 65 Anyway he did not like the project as corresponding to concepcion nacionalista euzkadiana Dronda Martinez 2013 p 332 He also voiced against the Catalan statute as unrepresentative Blinkhorn 2008 p 81 Blinkhorn 2008 p 82 In 1935 he declared that PNV revealed its true revolutionary colours in 1934 and no longer deserved alliance with the Carlists Blinkhorn 2008 p 205 Fuente Langas 1994 p 425 Fue uno de los principales agentes de la reunificacion de las tres familias de la Comunion jaimistas mellistas e integristas Tomas Dominguez Arevalo Conde de Rodezno Ministro de Justicia y Consejero Nacional entry in Fundacion Nacional Francisco Franco sercice available here Jordi Canal El carlismo Madrid 2000 ISBN 8420639478 p 295 Blinkhorn 2008 pp 73 74 Canal 2000 p 304 Robert Vallverdu i Marti El Carlisme Catala Durant La Segona Republica Espanyola 1931 1936 Barcelona 2008 ISBN 8478260803 9788478260805 p 90 in 1933 the body was replaced with much smalled Delegate Junta still headed by Rodezno Blinkhorn 2008 p 133 Canal 2000 p 304 Blinkhorn 2008 p 143 though when choosing between the Italians and the British in 1935 Rodezno gave in to anglophobia and declared in the Cortes that Spanish interests in the Mediterranean lie with Italy the ultimate objective the recovery of Tangier and implicitly Gibraltar Blinkhorn 2008 p 164 when commenting on draft of the Republican constitution he warned that it would open an abyss between the Republic and the Catholics Blinkhorn 2008 p 66 Dronda Martinez 2013 p 376 In June 1931 he protested to authorities against measures taken against Segura Antonio Manuel Moral Roncal 1868 en la memoria carlista de 1931 dos revoluciones anticlericales y un paralelo in Hispania Sacra 59 119 2007 p 335 by a Brisith historian Rodezno is presented as staunch defender his own and other landowners interests e g when protesting against the agrarian reform and defending arrendamiento structure which ensured also political domination of landowners over the tenants Blinkhorn 2008 p 80 Also later on he opposed modest Rural Leases Act pursued by Gimenez Fernandez Blinkhorn 2008 p 195 he claimed that in Navarre the reform was not needed at all since almost all peasants were owners of the plots they worked Dronda Martinez 2013 p 105 Blinkhorn 2008 p 128 Canal 2000 p 318 in early 1936 he was touring the country and delivering lectures as far as Seville Cadiz and Jerez de la Frontera in early 1932 Leandro Alvarez Rey La contribucion del carlismo vasconavarro a la formacion del tradicionalismo en Andalucia 1931 1936 in Principe de Viana 10 1988 p 26 He harangued in Andalusia also in 1934 and 1935 Alvarez Rey 1988 p 30 Calleja Arostegui 1994 p 40 Blinkhorn 2008 p 185 Blinkhorn 2008 pp 89 90 326f Vallverdu 2008 pp 107 8 Blinkhorn 2008 pp 128 92 a b Blinkhorn 2008 p 133 Eduardo Gonzalez Calleja La violencia y sus discursos los limites de la fascistizacion de la derecha espanola duranteel regimen de la Segunda Republica in Ayer 71 2008 p 100 Vallverdu 2008 p 157 Canal 2000 p 311 Calleja amp Arostegui 1994 p 40 a b Martinez Sanchez 2002 p 257 258 Vallverdu 2008 p 278 Blinkhorn 2008 pp 137 138 Penas Bernaldo 1996 p 20 Gonzalez Calleja 2008 p 100 Blinkhorn 2008 p 215 Blinkhorn 2008 p 136 Blinkhorn 2008 p 207 208 Eduardo Gonzalez Calleja La prensa carlista y falangista durante la Segunda Republica y la Guerra Civil 1931 1937 in El Argonauta Espanol 9 2012 p 5 Vallverdu 2008 p 163 Martinez Sanchez 2002 p 237 1933 file at official Cortes service here 1936 file at official Cortes service here Vallverdu 2008 p 174 Manuel Ferrer Munoz Navarra y Pais Vasco 1936 conspiracion contra la Republica in Vasconia Cuadernos de Seccion Historia Geografia 22 1994 p 254 a b Blinkhorn 2008 p 249 Blinkhorn 2008 p 144 145 Penas Bernaldo 1996 p 32 33 Mercedes Penalba Sotorrio Entre la boina roja y la camisa azul Estella 2013 ISBN 9788423533657 pp 20 21 Blinkhorn 2008 p 238 239 a b Blinkhorn 2008 p 269 Penas Bernaldo 1996 p 35 Blinkhorn 2008 p 246 7 Canal 2000 p 326 Vallverdu 2008 pp 309 310 Penas Bernaldo 1996 p 39 Blinkhorn 2008 p 248 Blinkhorn 2008 p 247 250 Canal 2000 p 332 Penas Bernaldo 1996 p 219 Burgo Tajadura 1992 p 492 Manuel Martorell Perez Navarra 1937 1939 el fiasco de la Unificacion in Principe de Viana 69 2008 p 437 Ricardo Ollaquindia Aguirre La Oficina de Prensa y Propaganda Carlista de Pamplona al comienzo de la guerra de 1936 in Principe de Viana 56 1995 p 499 Iker Cantabrana Morras Lo viejo y lo nuevo Diputacion FET de las JONS La convulsa dinamica politica de la leal Alava Primera parte 1936 1938 in Sancho el Sabio 21 2004 p 167 Blinkhorn 2008 p 273 Blinkhorn 2008 p 266 Jose Antonio Parejo Fernandez Falangistas y requetes historia de una absorcion violenta in Maria Encarna Nicolas Marin Carmen Gonzalez Martinez eds Ayeres en discusion temas clave de Historia Contemporanea hoy Madrid 2008 ISBN 9788483717721 pp 4 5 9 Burgo Tajadura 1992 Penas Bernaldo 1996 p 238 239 Martorell Perez 2009 p 32 a b Martinez Sanchez 2002 p 303 Blinkhorn 2008 p 277 a b c Canal 2000 p 338 Penalba Sotorrio 2013 p 34 Burgo Tajadura 1992 p 502 Martinez Sanchez 2002 p 304 Blinkhorn 2008 p 282 Penas Bernaldo 1996 p 261 270 Maximiliano Garcia Venero Historia de la Unificacion Madrid 1970 p 86 Blinkhorn 2008 p 272 Penas Bernaldo 1996 p 241 301 Martorell Perez 2008 p 28 50 and Penalba Sotorrio 2013 pp 30 47 Penas Bernaldo 1996 p 241 247 Penas Bernaldo 1996 p 273 Xose Manoel Nunez Seixas La region y lo local en el primer franquismo in Stephane Michonneau Xose M Nunez Seixas eds Imaginarios y representaciones de Espana durante el franquismo Madrid 2014 ISBN 9788415636656 p 135 Penas Bernaldo 1996 p 252 273 Penalba Sotorrio 2013 p 45 Mercedes Penalba Sotorrio La Secretaria General del Movimiento como pilar estructural del primer franquismo 1937 1945 in Miguel Angel Ruiz Carnicer ed Falange Las culturas politicas del fascismo en la Espana de Franco 1936 1975 Zaragoza 2013 ISBN 9788499112169 Boletin Oficial de la Provincia de Soria 28 04 37 available here Garcia Venero 1970 p 109 Cantabrana Morras 2004 p 167 Blinkhorn 2008 p 291 Canal 2000 p 339 Garcia Venero 1970 p 109 Penalba Sotorrio 2013 p 83 Penalba Sotorrio 2013 p 54 Martorell Perez 2008 p 41 Aurora Villanueva Martinez Organizacion actividad y bases del carlismo navarro durante el primer franquismo in Geronimo de Uztariz 19 2003 p 101 a b c Blinkhorn 2008 p 293 Martorell Perez 2008 p 11 Penas Bernaldo 1996 p 294 Penalba Sotorrio 2013 p 96 Penalba Sotorrio 2013 p 81 Penalba Sotorrio 2013 p 133 Canal 2000 p 340 Payne 1987 p 178 Penas Bernaldo 1996 p 297 Jose Carlos Clemente Munoz El carlismo en el novecientos espanol 1876 1936 Madrid 1999 ISBN 9788483741535 p 90 Clemente 2011 p 232 Burgo Tajadura 2013 p 293 Stanley G Payne Prologo in Navarra fue la primera 1936 1939 Pamplona 2006 ISBN 8493508187 Stanley G Payne The Spanish Civil War Cambridge 2012 ISBN 9781107002265 chapter Second Counterrevolution The Power Struggle in the Republican Zone p 169 182 Antony Beevor The Battle for Spain The Spanish Civil War 1936 1939 London 2006 ISBN 9780143037651 chapter The Civil War within Civil War pp 263 274 Dronda Martinez 2013 p 95 Blinkhorn 2008 p 296 Blinkhorn 2008 p 153 154 Villanueva Martinez 2003 p 99 Penas Bernaldo 1996 p 275 Penalba Sotorrio 2013 p 54 Penalba Sotorrio 2013 p 133 a b Blinkhorn 2008 p 294 Dronda Martinez 2013 p 388 Martinez Sanchez 2002 p 329 Martinez Sanchez 2002 p 415 Payne 1987 p 219 Diario de Navarra 10 March 2009 available here Payne 2012 p 245 Payne 2012 p 246 Payne 1987 p 221 222 Payne 1987 p 220 Payne 1987 p 221 Canal 2000 p 343 Serrano described Rodezno in his memoirs as follows era alto de rostro afilado con un gesto entre triste y burlon con su ademan mezclado de solemnidad indolencia y cortesia Era puntillosamente leal a sus tradiciones aunque politicamente parecia mas consecuente que creyente El Conde de Rodezno 1883 1952 entry in Guerra civil espanola dia a dia service 27 12 12 available here Martorell Perez 2008 p 176 Javier Tusell Franco en la Guerra Civil Madrid 1992 ISBN 9788472236486 p 298 Martorell Perez 2008 p 170 Francisco Javier Caspistegui Gorasurreta El naufragio de las ortodoxias El carlismo 1962 1977 Pamplona 1997 ISBN 9788431315641 p 287 Francisco Javier Caspistegui Gorasurreta Navarra y el carlismo durante el regimen de Franco la utopia de la identidad unitaria in Investigaciones historicas Epoca moderna y contemporanea 17 1997 p 309 Villanueva Martinez 2003 Jeremy MacClancy The Decline of Carlism Reno 2000 ISBN 9780874173444 p 76 Burgo Tajadura 2013 p 291 principal dirigente de los Carlistas Navarros Blinkhorn 2008 p 299 leadership of Spain s Carlists rested unchallengeably with Rodezno and his mainly Navarrese circle Villanueva Martinez 2003 p 115 Gonzalez Calleja 2012 p 29 Enciclopedia navarra Alvaro Baraibar Etxeberria Una vision falangista de la foralidad navarra in Geronimo de Uztariz 2006 p 13 Villanueva Martinez 2003 pp 103 113 Maria del Mar Larazza Micheltorena Alvaro Baraibar Etxeberria La Navarra sotto il Franchismo la lotta per il controllo provinciale tra i governatori civili e la Diputacion Foral 1945 1955 in Nazioni e Regioni Bari 2013 pp 101 120 Etxeberria 2006 pp 12 13 Conde de Rodezno dentro de la Diputacion o despu s de haber cesado en ella a voluntad propia dio a este organismo una influencia una prepotencia y una brillantez opinion quoted after Baraibar Etxeberria 2006 p 19 Baraibar Etxeberria 2006 pp 10 33 Entrevista a Esteban Bilbao in Esfuerzo comun 102 1969 Javier Tusell Franco en la guerra civil Barcelona 1992 ISBN 9788472236486 p 298 referred after Stanley G Payne El Carlismo en la politica espanola in Stanley G Payne ed Identidad y nacionalismo an la Espana contemporanea el carlismo 1833 1975 Madrid 2002 ISBN 8487863469 p 111 Penalba Sotorrio 2013 p 86 Penalba Sotorrio 2013 p 90 1943 file on the official Cortes service ABC 24 11 42 available here Juzgado Central de Instruccion No 5 Audiencia Nacional Madrid Sumario 53 2008 E Auto pp 140 141 Penas Bernaldo 1996 p 273 252 Martinez Sanchez 2002 p 306 Blinkhorn 2008 p 301 Ballestero 2014 p 79 Cantabrana Morras 2005 p 145 Martinez Sanchez 2002 p 421 MacClancy 2000 p 79 a b Martinez Sanchez 2002 p 448 449 Blinkhorn 2008 p 299 Blinkhorn 2008 p 300 Caspistegui Gorasurreta 1997 p 23 Filosofia org Blinkhorn 2008 p 301 302 Canal 2000 p 351 361 Clemente 1977 p 46 Jose Maria Toquero El carlismo vasconavarro y Don Juan de Borbon La influencia del conde de Rodezno in Euskal herriaren historiari buruzko biltzarra 7 1988 pp 261 274 Mercedes Vazquez de Prada Tiffe El papel del carlismo navarro en el inicio de la fragmentacion definitiva de la comunion tradicionalista 1957 1960 in Principe de Viana 72 2011 p 404 ABC 11 02 43 available here ABC 12 11 44 available here ABC 19 08 52 available here ABC 01 10 52 available here Tomas Dominguez de Arevalo una persona afin al regimen franquista Plaza Conde de Rodezno de ida y vuelta in Diario de Navarra 06 03 09 available here also Tomas Dominguez Arevalo Conde de Rodezno un politico profundamente antidemocratico responsable y complice del exterminio politico in Autobus de la memoria 21 06 08 available here Diario de Noticias 21 06 08 Diario de Navarra 06 03 09 Diario de Navarra 10 03 09 Diario de Noticias 11 03 09 La Plaza de la Libertad estrena placa con su nuevo nombre para reivindicar la memoria historica in Diario de Navarra 14 04 16 official Pamplona ayuntamiento site available here document as published by El Pais service available here El Pais Conde de Rodezno La justicia al reves Iruna Pamplona 2010 available online here Clemente 1977 Clemente 1999 Clemente 2011 Perez Nievas Borderas 1999 Martorell Perez 2009 Alcala 2001 Martorell Perez 2009 p 183 Sources editAlcala Cesar 2001 D Mauricio de Sivatte Una biografia politica 1901 1980 Barcelona ISBN 8493109797 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Juan Cruz Alli Aranguren Los inicios del franquismo en dos obras ineditas del conde de Rodezno in Huarte de San Juan Geografia e Historia 30 2023 pp 217 249 Blinkhorn Martin in Spanish 2008 Carlism and Crisis in Spain 1931 1939 Cambridge ISBN 9780521086349 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link del Burgo Jaime 1992 Un episodio poco conocido de la guerra civil espanola La Real Academia Militar de Requetes y el Destierro de Fal Conde del Burgo Jaime 2013 El carlismo y su agonico final Canal Jordi 2000 El carlismo Madrid ISBN 8420639478 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Calleja Eduardo Arostegui Julio 1994 La tradicion recuperada el Requete Carlista y la insurreccion Clemente Josep Carles in Spanish 1977 Historia del Carlismo contemporaneo Barcelona ISBN 9788425307591 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Clemente Josep Carles in Spanish 1999 Seis estudios sobre el carlismo Madrid ISBN 8483741520 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Clemente Josep Carles in Spanish 2011 Breve historia de las guerras carlistas Madrid ISBN 978 8499671710 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Conde de Rodezno La justicia al reves Iruna Pamplona 2010 ISBN 9788476816332 Agustin Fernandez Escudero 2012 El marques de Cerralbo 1845 1922 biografia politica PDF Madrid Jesus Maria Fuente Langas Elecciones de 1916 en Navarra in Principe de Viana 51 1990 pp 947 957 Pavon Jesus 1954 Semblanza del Conde de Rodezno Payne Stanley G 1987 The Franco Regime London ISBN 9780299110741 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Manuel Martorell Perez Retorno a la lealtad el desafio carlista al franquismo Madrid 2010 ISBN 9788497391115 Martorell Perez Manuel in Spanish 2009 La continuidad ideologica del carlismo tras la Guerra Civil Thesis Valencia Jesus Pabon Elogio academico del Conde de Rodezno in Jesus Pabon Dias de ayer historias e historiadores contemporaneos Barcelona 1963 pp 67 71 Ramon de Andres Martin Juan 2000 El cisma mellista Historia de una ambicion politica Madrid ISBN 9788487863820 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Martinez Sanchez Santiago 2002 El Cardenal Pedro Segura y Saenz 1880 1957 PDF Pamplona Mercedes Penalba Sotorrio Entre la boina roja y la camisa azul Estella 2013 ISBN 9788423533657 Penas Bernaldo de Quiros Juan Carlos 1996 El Carlismo la Republica y la Guerra Civil 1936 1937 De la conspiracion a la unificacion Madrid ISBN 9788487863523 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Perez Nievas Borderas Fermin 1999 Contra viento y marea Historia de la evolucion ideological del carlismo a traves de dos siglos de lucha Pamplona ISBN 8460589323 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Jose Maria Toquero El carlismo vasconavarro y Don Juan de Borbon La influencia del conde de Rodezno in Euskal herriaren historiari buruzko biltzarra 7 1988 pp 261 274 Vallverdu i Marti Robert 2008 El Carlisme Catala Durant La Segona Republica Espanyola 1931 1936 Barcelona ISBN 978 8478260805 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Aurora Villanueva Martinez El carlismo navarro durante el primer franquismo 1937 1951 Madrid 1998 ISBN 9788487863714 Aurora Villanueva Martinez Organizacion actividad y bases del carlismo navarro durante el primer franquismo in Geronimo de Uztariz 19 2003 pp 97 117External links edit nbsp former Plaza Conde de Rodezno Princesa de Beira by Rodezno Archived 2018 08 13 at the Wayback Machine Rodezno by a Basque encyclopaedia Rodezno by a Francoist site Rodezno by a Navarrese encyclopaedia Rodezno s obituary Rodezno charged with crimes against humanity Institucion Principe de Viana website Por Dios y por Espana contemporary Carlist propaganda on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tomas Dominguez Arevalo amp oldid 1221694699, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.