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Víctor Pradera Larumbe

Juan Víctor Pradera Larumbe (1872–1936) was a Spanish political theorist and a Carlist politician.

Víctor Pradera Larumbe
Born
Juan Víctor Pradera Larumbe

1872 (1872)
Died1936 (aged 63–64)
NationalitySpanish
OccupationLawyer
Known forPolitician
Political partyPartido Católico Tradicionalista, Partido Social Popular, Comunión Tradicionalista

Family and youth Edit

 
San Sebastián, late 19th century

Víctor's paternal family originated from France; his grandfather, Juan Pradera Martinena, lived in the Basque town of Sare (Labourd province),[1] but moved across the Pyrenees and settled in Endara de Etxalar.[2] Víctor's father, Francisco Pradera Leiza, was an indiano. As a youngster he emigrated to America and spent 16 years in Cuba;[3] enriched, he returned to Navarre[4] and married a pamplonesa,[5] Filomena Larumbe,[6] descendant to a petty bourgeoisie family. Her father, Ángel Larumbe Iturralde,[7] sided with the legitimists during the First Carlist War and narrowly escaped execution, later to settle in Vera de Bidasoa and to practise as a notary.[8] Juan Víctor was born[9] as the first of four sons, Juan Víctor, Luis, Juan[10] and Germán. In 1879 he moved with the family to San Sebastian following the professional lot of his father, who ran a commercial construction business.[11]

Having obtained bachillerato in Instituto de San Sebastian[12] in 1887[13] he spent a year in Bordeaux and then another one in Bilbao, studying at the Jesuit Deusto college and preparing for engineer studies.[14] Having moved to Madrid Pradera entered Escuela de Ingenieros,[15] exact year of his graduation is unknown. He returned to Gipuzkoa in 1897[16] and settled in Tolosa, engaged in the paper mill business of his father.[17] Reportedly successful as a manager, Pradera later amalgamated the family enterprise into the Papelera Española trust of Rafael Picavea and became a shareholder of this company,[18] involved in its activities until the early 20th century.[19]

At the turn of the century he commenced studying law as an unenrolled student in Madrid,[20] which he continued for 2 years.[21] Having graduated, in San Sebastian he opened the law chancery and practiced as Inspector General in Cuerpo de Ingenieros de Canales y Puertos simultaneously.[22] At unspecified date he obtained PhD in law in Madrid.[23] In 1899[24] Pradera married a donostiarra, María Ortega,[25] with whom he had 4 children, Javier to become a prominent Francoist politician.[26] Víctor's grandson, Javier Pradera, made his name as a well-known anti-Francoist journalist and publisher, dubbed watchman of the Spanish transition to democracy.[27]

Young Carlist Edit

During his academic years, Pradera was active in various Catholic organizations and developed interest in politics. Raised in a liberal ambience and – apart from his maternal grandfather – with no family antecedents, in the 1890s he neared Carlism as a result of his lectures; unlike most Traditionalists who inherited their outlook from forefathers, Pradera considered himself a “scientific Carlist”.[28] Already recognized as an orator, in 1899[29] he was agreed to stand as an unofficial[30] Carlist candidate in Tolosa. Benefitting from just commencing rapprochement between mainstream Carlists and the Integrists, he was elected defeating a governmental candidate;[31] Matias Barrio appointed him speaker of the small Carlist minority.[32]

In the aftermath of 1898 disaster Pradera formed the first wave of regeneracionistas, demanding profound if not revolutionary change.[33] A young newcomer in the chamber, he regularly clashed with Silvela,[34] demonstrating logic combined with oratory skills[35] as well as hot temper.[36] Re-elected in 1901,[37] he went on confronting the old liberal enemies and took on the new ones, especially republican radicals and nationalists.[38] He intended to run for re-election in the subsequent campaign of 1903, but eventually resigned due to financial issues.[39] In 1904 Pradera was elected from Tolosa to Diputación Provincial.[40] Together with Esteban de Bilbao Eguía and Julio Urquijo he formed a new generation of activists, promoted by the claimant Carlos VII and the party leader marqués de Cerralbo in their bid to build a modern Carlist network.[41]

Dissident Edit

 
Vázquez de Mella

His deputy duties terminated, Pradera dedicated himself to family life, business[42] and intellectual work.[43] He remained engaged in party life, though his relations with local leadership deteriorated. In course of the 1910 electoral campaign he sought rapprochement with the mauristas and supported a stand-alone candidate;[44] both were expelled from the party by its Gipuzkoan jefe, Tirso de Olazabal.[45] Re-admitted in 1912,[46] Pradera continued his career as an orator on public meetings.[47] Addressing a wide range of issues, he was increasingly focused on confronting the emerging Basque national aspirations.[48] As he gained a nationwide expert recognition, in 1917 de Romanones called him into extra-parliamentarian committee to discuss Catalan autonomy.[49] Elected to the Cortes in 1918,[50] he became the key Carlist speaker.[51] Forging friendship with Antonio Maura, he nevertheless opposed grand but hazy coalitions aimed at preserving shaky stability of the late Restoration. Aware of the forthcoming revolutionary tide,[52] he advocated a radical Traditionalist change.[53]

At that time Jaimismo was increasingly paralysed by a multidimensional conflict between its key ideologue, Juan Vázquez de Mella, and the claimant himself. Pradera, who befriended de Mella and remained heavily influenced by his vision, sided with the rebels,[54] in 1919 joining their Partido Católico Tradicionalista.[55] Animating the Mellist Diario de Navarra,[56] he unsuccessfully ran for the Cortes in 1919,[57] failing also in his 1920 bid for the Senate.[58] During final years of Restauración he was in vain lured by both partidos turnistas, offering him safe place on electoral lists and ministerial jobs;[59] Pradera remained the PCT party jefe in Gipzukoa.[60]

In the early 1920s Pradera's relations with de Mella deteriorated. According to one theory, Mella favored a loose federation of extreme Right parties, while Pradera opted for a new party of the Right. According to another, Mella perceived Pradera's vision as minimalist, suspecting him of hidden secularism and embracing parliamentarianism.[61] Most detailed study available pursues the theory of orthodox de Mella disdainful to "possibilist" and "minimalist" Pradera.[62] One more theory claims that the two clashed later and the point of contention was policy towards the Primo de Rivera dictatorship.[63] Pradera decided to go his own way, taking a number of mellistas with him;[64] de Mella himself, plagued by health problems and with both his legs amputated,[65] gradually retired into private and intellectual life.[66]

Social-Catholic Edit

 
Pradera speaking

In 1922 Pradera set up Partido Social Popular,[67] intended to be a vehicle of a new, possibilist policy making.[68] Incompatible with the Carlist intransigence,[69] it was envisioned as a broad alliance rather than a party.[70] Most scholars suggest it was principally inspired by social theories of Leo XIII,[71] at that time advanced in Spain mostly by the Zaragoza school of Salvador Minguijon;[72] it was supposed to confront the rising socialist tide.[73] Though the party is occasionally described as a distant preconfiguration of Christian Democracy,[74] proto-Fascism or renewed Traditionalism,[75] most summarise its program as social-Catholicism,[76] modeled on the German Catholic Centre Party.[77] The party slogan was: Religión, Patria, Estado, Propiedad y Familia.[78] PSP opposed representation based on popular election system and advocated a corporative representation instead;[79] Pradera appreciated good will of Christian-democrats like Herrera Oria, but claimed that their malmenorismo opens the door to revolution, he also preferred monarchism to Christian-democratic accidentalism.[80] The PSP social program included progressive taxation and social legislation.[81] Though some of its leaders clearly excluded ruling by force, Pradera remained rather ambiguous on this issue.[82]

 
Primo de Rivera

Most “pesepistas” welcomed Primo de Rivera dictatorship;[83] Pradera greeted him enthusiastically[84] as a long overdue regeneracionismo. Asked by Primo for an interview,[85] Pradera suggested that the new regime should ban all parties,[86] introduce corporative representation, build a presidentialist government and construct a regionalist state,[87] a vision developed further on in 4 memoranda, supplied to the dictator.[88] Pradera engaged in advocating dictatorship in the press[89] and remained officially Primo's assessor until 1927,[90] when he entered Asamblea Nacional. Member of the Proyectos de Leyes Constitucionales section,[91] he strived to institutionalize the system by working on a new constitution, conceived in line with his corporativist vision.[92]

Pradera's intellectual contribution to Primo's rule was so eminent that he is sometimes considered a point of reference for primoderiverismo.[93] However, his relations with the dictator deteriorated, the first controversies surfacing in 1924.[94] Pradera was disturbed by the perceived self-adulation of Primo, preserving liberal features of the ancient regime, and generally inertia prevailing over a decisive change.[95] He considered Union Patriotica a mistake,[96] opposed centralization and did not agree with Calvo Sotelo on financial policy, the fiscal system in particular.[97] Though in the late 1920s Primo was increasingly irritated by Pradera's criticism, the latter remained supportive until the very end.[98] It was only long after the regime's fall that Pradera started to view it as a delusive spell of stability between bewilderment of the late Restauración and chaos of the Republic.[99]

Reconciled Carlist Edit

 
Carlist standard

During the first republican electoral campaign of 1931 Pradera was supposed to join lista católico-fuerista, but eventually he refused to form ranks with the despised Basque nationalists and withdrew.[100] He drew close to the Jaimistas,[101] but remained hesitant about returning to their party.[102] It was only after the death of Don Jaime that in 1932 Pradera decided to lead his followers and the orphaned mellistas[103] to the united Carlist organization, Comunión Tradicionalista,[104] entering its executive.[105] He also became head of the newly established Council of Culture,[106] rising into a formally acknowledged movement's intellectual leader. His career of a public servant was crowned in 1933, when he was elected[107] to Tribunal de Garantías Constitucionales de España.[108] In 1934 he unsuccessfully run for its presidency.[109] In 1936 Pradera was admitted to Academia de Jurisprudencia y Legislación.[110]

Pradera did not display a dynastical zeal; as the new claimant was an octogenarian with no issue, he considered recognising Don Juan as Carlist king.[111] Within Comunión Pradera formed an influential minority endorsing a broad monarchical alliance with the Alfonsists. He wholeheartedly engaged in Acción Española[112] and became vice-president of Sociedad Cultural Española, the official owner of Acción Española periodical.[113] He then proved one of key Carlists joining Bloque Nacional,[114] entering its executive committee and working out its manifesto, most likely a compromise between himself and Calvo Sotelo.[115] Pradera continued confronting accidentalist Christian-democracy; his campaign against CEDA was so virulent that Carlist leaders felt pressed to call for moderation.[116]

Initially, Pradera's drive towards a monarchist alliance was shared by the party leaders; it was rather the rank-and-file who saw no purpose mixing with debris of the hated liberal dynasty.[117] When Alfonso Carlos replaced Tomás Domínguez Arévalo with the intransigent Manuel Fal, Pradera and the entire Junta resigned.[118] Though Fal permitted Rodezno and Pradera to pursue their tactics on a private business basis, none of them was a match for the personality of Calvo Sotelo. As the growing feeling was that Alfonsinos were gaining the upper hand in Bloque Nacional, Fal decided to withdraw and Pradera hesitantly complied; he focused on fighting secularization, democracy, socialism, nationalism and all perceived evils of the republic as an author, publishing press articles and books.[119]

Theorist Edit

 
El Estado Nuevo

Pradera's political vision was taking shape in course of some 40 years, to be finally integrated in El Estado Nuevo, the book published in 1935.[120] His theory is usually viewed as anchored in works of Vázquez de Mella, considered by Pradera the intellectual master. Other sources of inspiration listed are papal encyclicals, Maurras, Donoso Cortes and, last but not least, Thomas Aquinas.[121]

According to Pradera, rights of a man exist only when combined with his duties towards God[122] and are unacceptable as deified Rousseau's “human rights”.[123] It is natural that men form different entities (e.g. families, guilds, regions etc.), which interact with one another.[124] They are topped by a nation, which is an organically constituted society of societies.[125] A nation is best expressed as a monarchy, its unity ensured by King and Church.[126] Royal powers are limited by principles of divine order and by sovereignty of the nation's components.[127] A democratic individualist representation can not express this sovereignty, which is to be voiced by an organic representation.[128] Since parties tear every society apart, the Cortes should be composed of representatives of 6 main classes,[129] plus delegates of various state bodies.[130] The law is defined by the king, with auxiliary role of the Cortes and the council. The state is a fairly withdrawn structure;[131] its principal responsibilities defined as safeguarding the country, ensuring internal order and executing justice.[132] Catholic principles provide the logic,[133] and the corporativist state provides the machinery to solve social problems and implement mechanisms regulating distribution of wealth.[134] How this vision was to be achieved remained unclear.[135]

 
Francisco Franco

El Estado Nuevo was enthusiastically accepted among Carlists,[136] Pradera replacing de Mella as their top theorist.[137] Also other sections of the Spanish Right, deprived of a comparable credo, viewed the work with respect if not envy.[138] Republican intellectuals pointed that Pradera questioned all political science and reduced politics to following historical circumstances.[139] Pradera's impact on Franco remains disputed. In the newspaper version he appears as "one of the icons and pilars of Francoism".[140] Indeed, many scholars consider Pradera one of caudillo's masters,[141] pointing to his prologue to the 1945 re-edition[142] and later references;[143] to them, Estado Nuevo is a forerunner of Francoist state and its clear theoretical lecture.[144] Though some in-depth studies on Francoism even claim that the regime was related to Traditionalism rather than to fascism,[145] other detailed works on the topic barely mention Pradera.[146] Most detailed biographical studies refrain from making direct links between Pradera and Francoism.[147]

Contemporary scholars do not agree how Pradera's theory should be classified.[148] Most extensive studies suggest that his vision falls somewhere between social-Catholicism and corporativism, the closest European incarnations having been DolfussAustria and Salazar's Portugal.[149] Other options offered are traditionalism,[150] national traditionalism,[151] corporative neotraditionalist monarchism,[152] organicism,[153] reactionary authoritarianism,[154] proto-fascism (prefascism),[155] traditionalist fascism[156] or simply an intellectual magma.[157]

Regionalist Edit

 
Basque nationalism: Euzkadi

The regionalist question posed an indispensable component of Pradera's theory; it also kept coming back as a major thread of his political activities. Today among many Spanish citizens – especially the Basques[158] – Pradera is principally recognized only for his stance on this very topic,[159] usually as a sworn enemy of national minorities.[160]

From the onset of his career Pradera declared himself a supporter of traditional regionalism fueros,[161] and identified himself as unswervingly regionalist.[162] In his political vision the regions,[163] with their specific legal, economic and social establishments, were among key entities forming a nation, and his recommendations to Primo endorsed a strongly regionalist state. The fueros, however, did not provide an autonomous legal framework,[164] but to the contrary, they were viewed as a pact between a region and the Spanish state.[165] Hence, he consistently fought all designs perceived as fostering separatism[166] and embracing autonomy,[167] confronting Liga Autonomista,[168] lambasting Wilsonian arguments on self-determination, fighting theories advanced by Sabino Arana and Arturo Campión,[169] thwarting autonomy projects of late Restauración,[170] publicly admonishing Primo de Rivera for fostering separatism,[171] fighting Vasco-Navarrese autonomy drafts during the Republic[172] - with particular hostility to incorporating Navarre into the autonomous project[173] - and voting against the Catalan Leases Act in Tribunal de Garantias.[174]

 
Traditionalism: Euskalerria

Pradera denied the Basques and the Catalans a separate political identity, be it historical[175] or contemporary, and was particularly infuriated by racist thread of the Basque national discourse.[176] Recognising their separate ethnic status, he considered the minorities "pueblos",[177] forming part of the Spanish political nation.[178] He remained restless denouncing what he considered invented nationalist myths[179] and proving that the Basques had neither formed a unitarian cultural entity nor had ever possessed a common political self.[180] As confronting Basque and Catalan political aspirations became a major thread of Pradera's activity, driven by concern for unity of Spain, he soon grew into the nationalist Basques' primary foe, accused of españolismo, hyperpatriotism and jingoism.[181]

Prisoner Edit

 
Basque republican militia, Gipuzkoa

Pradera's contribution to anti-Republican coup consisted chiefly of conducting talks with the would-be Alfonsist allies in Navarre and in the Basque provinces, though exact scale of his engagement remains unknown.[182] In February 1936 he declined Franco's proposal to join him on Canary Islands;[183] fully aware of the forthcoming coup and anxious not to be called a coward, he cancelled a formal visit to France, scheduled on July 13 as part of Tribunal de Garantias duties, and remained in San Sebastian.[184] He was also anxious not to leave his daughter, who at the time was pregnant and due in short time.[185] He is quoted as declaring to Rodezno on July 16, 1936: "Thomas, let God help us. If we fail, we will have our throats cut".[186]

During the initial days of the insurgency, Pradera remained in San Sebastián, where the coup indeed failed; he soon found himself cut off from the nationalist zone. Early August[187] he was arrested by the Basque militia[188] and detained in the Ondarreta prison; his son Javier joined him soon afterwards.[189] Accounts of his last days differ. Most studies claim he was trialed by a makeshift Tribunal Popular and was sentenced to death;[190] other works suggest that as the city was already under the nationalist siege, the Republican militia units stormed the prison fearing the detainees might be soon set free.[191] On September 6, within a group of other prisoners, Pradera was driven to the nearby Polloe cemetery and executed,[192] his son meeting the same fate shortly afterwards. In 1949 Franco posthumously conferred upon Pradera the title of conde de Pradera, which is functional until today.[193]

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ Carlos Guinea Suárez, Víctor Pradera, (series Temas españoles, n. 37), Madrid 1953, available here
  2. ^ José Luis Orella Martínez, Víctor Pradera: Un católico en la vida pública de principios de siglo, Madrid 2000, ISBN 8479145579, p. 14
  3. ^ Orella Martínez 2000, p. 15
  4. ^ Guinea Suárez 1953, Orella Martínez 2000, p. 14, also Idioia Estornés Zubizarreta, Victor Pradera Larumbe entry at Auñamendi Eusko Entziklopedia, available here
  5. ^ Orella Martínez 2000, p. 15
  6. ^ some sources prefer the “Larrumbe” spelling, see the official Cortes service here
  7. ^ Guinea Suárez 1953, Orella Martínez 2000, p. 14, LARUMBE ITURRALDE, Ángel entry at Gran Enciclopedia Navarra online available here
  8. ^ he also supported the Carlists during the Second Carlist War, Guinea Suárez 1953, Orella Martínez 2000, p. 14
  9. ^ the first Pradera’s biography claimed he was born 1873, see Maximilian García Venero, Víctor Pradera, guerrillero de la unidad, Madrid 1943, s. 17, and this information has been adopted by almost all other authors; the recent biography claims the correct date is 1872, see Orella Martínez 2000, p. 17, also his El origen del primer católicismo Español, [PhD thesis], Madrid 2012, p. 213
  10. ^ to distinguish between Juan Víctor and Juan José, the older brother was called Victor and this is how he passed into history, Guinea Suárez 1953
  11. ^ some sources claim he constructed houses, see Orella Martínez 2000, p. 15, some sources suggest he was running a commerce business related to construction, Francisco J. Carballo, Recordando a Víctor Pradera. Homenaje y crítica, [in:] Aportes 81 (2013), p. 99
  12. ^ Orella Martínez 2000, p. 15
  13. ^ Guinea Suárez 1953
  14. ^ Guinea Suárez 1953, Orella Martínez 2000, p. 15
  15. ^ Guinea Suárez 1953, Orella Martínez 2000, p. 17;
  16. ^ Estornés Zubizarreta, Victor Pradera Larumbe, Orella Martínez 2000, p. 17
  17. ^ Guinea Suárez 1953
  18. ^ Orella Martínez 2000, p. 17
  19. ^ some authors claim he gave up business in 1902, see Orella Martínez 2000, p. 17, though he was reported as engaged as late as 1904, see Madrid cientifico 1904, p. 19, available here
  20. ^ Guinea Suárez 1953, Carballo 2013, p. 101
  21. ^ at that time he was already a Cortes deputy; taking the exams unrecognised, Pradera did not reveal his deputy status, see Carballo 2013, p 101
  22. ^ Carballo 2013, p. 101
  23. ^ Javier Ibarra, Biografias de los ilustres navarros del siglo XIX y parte del XX, v. 4, Pamplona 1953, p. 318
  24. ^ Guinea Suárez 1953
  25. ^ Carballo 2013, p. 101; Rafael Castela Santos, La ejemplar muerte del diputado carlista Víctor Pradera en 1936, [in:] A casa de Sarto, 13.10.05, available here
  26. ^ see his entry at Indice Historico de Diputados, available here
  27. ^ see El Pais 21.11.11, available here
  28. ^ Orella Martínez 2012, p. 183, Carballo 2013, p. 99
  29. ^ at a minimum legal age, Carballo 2013, p. 100
  30. ^ Jose María Remirez de Ganuza López, Las Elecciones Generales de 1898 y 1899 en Navarra, [in] Príncipe de Viana 49 (1988), p. 382
  31. ^ Agustín Fernández Escudero, El marqués de Cerralbo (1845-1922): biografía politica [PhD thesis], Madrid 2012, p. 360; Pradera was sworn two weeks behind schedule, the usual practice employed by the Carlists, who declined to swear obedience to the Alfonsist monarchy, see Guinea Suárez 1953
  32. ^ Carballo 2013, p. 100
  33. ^ Guinea Suárez 1953
  34. ^ apart from other issues, also protesting the cession of Caroline Islands to Germany, see Carballo 2013, p. 100
  35. ^ Guinea Suárez 1953
  36. ^ there were penal proceedings launched against Pradera for assaulting “agentes de la autoridad”, see La Epoca 22.01.00, available here
  37. ^ this time as an official Carlist candidate, see Indice Historico de Diputados available here
  38. ^ Orella Martínez 2000, pp. 25-41
  39. ^ a highly apologetic source claims that Pradera refused to engage in corruption practices, see Guinea Suárez 1953. Contemporary scholars suggest there was no corruption involved and he rather considered it immoral to finance his own campaign, see Carballo 2013, p. 101; ABC 04.09.86 claims he was defeated, see here
  40. ^ though it is not clear whether he served only one term or was re-elected, Estornés Zubizarreta, Victor Pradera Larumbe, see also Gestión de Las Diputaciones available here
  41. ^ José Luis Orella Martínez, El origen del primer catolicismo social español [PhD thesis at Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia], Madrid 2012, p. 223
  42. ^ he owned shares of a number of San Sebastian companies, see Felix Luengo Teixidor, Crecimiento económico y cambio social. Guipuscoa 1917-1923, Bilbao 1990, ISBN 9788460073741, p. 353, Angel García-Sanz Marcotegui, Elites económicas y políticas en la Restauración, a diversidad de las derechas navarras [in:] Historia contemporánea 23 (2001), p. 602; apart from Papeleria Española the company identified was Cooperativa Eléctrica Donostiarra, see Juan Antonio Saez García, Infrastructuras de servicios urbanos, [in:] Geografia e historia de Donostia-San Sebastian, available here
  43. ^ Orella Martínez 2013, p. 213
  44. ^ José Joaquín Castañeda, son of Joaquín Castañeda y Otermín, see Juan Ramón de Andrés Martín, El cisma mellista. Historia de una ambición política, Madrid 2000, ISBN 9788487863820, p. 54
  45. ^ Estornés Zubizarreta, Victor Pradera Larumbe. The background of this conflict remains unknown, though there are some suggestions in Luis M.a de Zavala y Fernández de Heredia (ed.), La sociedad vasca del siglo XIX en la correspondencia del Archivo de la Casa de Zavala, Lasarte 2008, ISBN 9788496288706, p. 67: “Siendo tildado su mandato como personalista, en 1910 expulsó a Víctor Pradera del Partido por indisciplina”; Juan Ramón de Andrés Martín, Precendentes del proyecto ultraderechista mellista en el periodo 1900-1912, [in:] Boletín de la Real Academia de la Historia, 202 (2005), p. 125 approaches this conflict as a pre-Mellist controversy; the press communique does not go into details, see El Imparcial 05.05.10, available here
  46. ^ following personal meeting with Don Jaime in San Jean de Luz in May 1912, see La correspondencia militar 14.05.12, available here
  47. ^ Ana Calavia Urdaniz, «La Conciliación» de Pamplona y sus relaciones con los sindicatos católico-libres (1915-1923), [in:] Principe de Viana 49 (1988), p. 80
  48. ^ Carballo 2013, p. 148
  49. ^ with Alcala Zamora, Sanchez Toca and Maura, Orella Martínez 2013, p. 172,
  50. ^ as substitute of de Mella, who refused to stand, El Siglo Futuro 08.04.18, available here
  51. ^ in 1918 it was Pradera outlining the Carlist policy in the Cortes, Fernández Escudero 2012, p. 500
  52. ^ Pradera opposed amnesting Besteiro and Largo, convicted of 1917 revolt, Carballo 2013, p. 102
  53. ^ Guinea Suárez 1953
  54. ^ Orella Martínez 2012, p. 183, since Pradera was attracted to Carlism by its theory and not dynastical allegiance, the decision to abandon Don Jaime was not hard for him, see Carballo 2013, p. 99; the same author claims (p. 105) that Pradera joined de Mella sharing his anti-Entente views
  55. ^ he was appointed the regional jefe in Gipuzkoa, Orella Martínez 2012, p. 268, details in Orella Martinez 2000, pp. 69-89
  56. ^ its editor-in-chief was Raimundo García, Eduardo González Calleja, La prensa carlista y falangista durante la Segunda República y la Guerra Civil (1931-1937), [in:] El Argonauta español 9 (2012), p. 29, p. 4; Ignacio Olabarri Gortázar, Notas sobre la implantación, la estructura organizativa y el ideario de los partidos del turno en Navarra, 1901-1923, [in:] Príncipe de Viana 49 (1988), p 323, claims that Diario de Navarra was indeed identified with Pradera during the last years of Restoration
  57. ^ Carballo 2013, p. 102 does not specify whether Pradera ran on Jaimist or Mellist ticket; according to La Correspondencia de España 21.05.19 available here the national Carlist political leader Pascual Comín disauthorised Pradera as a Mellist
  58. ^ he was reported by the contemporary press as fielding his candidacy, but it is unclear whether he actually ran, see El Globo 24.12.20 available here
  59. ^ Guinea Suárez 1953, Carballo 2013, p. 101
  60. ^ Andrés Martín 2000, p. 238
  61. ^ Carballo 2013, p. 106
  62. ^ Andrés Martín 2000, pp. 228-237, 253-256; in this vision, praderismo differed from mellismo by recognition of Alfonso XIII, ideological reductionism, adopting authoritarian threads and broadening the alliance base
  63. ^ Manuel Martorell Pérez, La continuidad ideológica del carlismo tras la Guerra Civil [PhD thesis in Historia Contemporanea, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia], Valencia 2009, p. 358. According to the author, Mella preferred the loosely organised empire of España de los Austrias, while Pradera opted for España de Reyes Catolicos, idealised and unitarian, p. 359
  64. ^ Some claim that PSP enabled survival of Mellismo, embracing most of the orphaned Mellistas, as officially Mellism amalgamated into Jaimismo in 1927, see Carballo 2013, p. 106, also Orella Martínez 2000, p. 195
  65. ^ Jacek Bartyzel, Umierac ale powoli, Krakow 2006, ISBN 8386225742, p. 277
  66. ^ Orella Martínez 2012, p. 268. In the aftermath of de Mella’s death in 1928 Pradera was president of Comisión Ejecutiva de la Junta de Homenaje, Carballo 2013, p. 100
  67. ^ Guinea Suárez 1953
  68. ^ Ignacio Olábarri Gortázar, Víctor Pradera y el Partido Social Popular (1922-1923), [in:] Estudios de historia moderna y contemporánea: homenaje a Federico Suárez Verdeguer, Madrid 1991, p. 300
  69. ^ Olabarri Gortazar 1991, pp. 300-301
  70. ^ Olabarri Gortazar 1991, p. 309
  71. ^ Orella Martínez 2000, Orella Martínez 2012, Carballo 2013; some authors claim that emergence of the party was also spurred by Catalan and Basque electoral successes of 1917-1918, and Pradera was primarily concerned with unity and integrity of Spain, Olabarri Gortazar 1991, p. 303
  72. ^ Olabarri Gortazar 1991, p. 301
  73. ^ Pradera perceived socialism as an ideology depriving a human of its transcendence, literally the devil’s work, Orella Martínez 2012, pp. 215-217
  74. ^ Miguel Ayuso, El Carlismo y su signo, [in:] Anales de la Fundación Francisco Elías de Tejada, 14 (2008), p. 122 criticizes Orella’s work for downplaying Pradera’s hostility to christian democracy and to Angel Herrera; Orella Martínez 2012, pp. 259, 378 suggests that it was rather Ossorio representing christian democracy, while Pradera stood for corporativism
  75. ^ Olabarri Gortazar 1991, p. 309
  76. ^ Orella Martínez 2012, pp. 214, 268, Orella Martínez 2000, pp. 89-117
  77. ^ Orella Martínez 2012, p. 213
  78. ^ Olabarri Gortazar 1991, p. 304
  79. ^ which later gave rise to claims of the party having been proto-fascist, see Olabarri Gortazar 1991, p. 306,
  80. ^ Carballo 2013, p. 107
  81. ^ Olabarri Gortazar 1991, p. 306. However, Pradera was reluctant to accept employee stock ownership, tenants’ right to buy off the land cultivated and the female vote, see Orella Martínez 2012, p. 259
  82. ^ Olabarri Gortazar 1991, p. 308
  83. ^ Olabarri Gortazar 1991, pp. 308-309
  84. ^ Pradera did not know Primo personally and was rather skeptical of him, mostly due to his alleged idea of abandoning Marocco; the Mellistas nurtured a vision of a federation between Spain, Portugal and Morocco, Carballo 2013, p. 107
  85. ^ José Manuel Cuenca Toribio, La Unión Patriótica. Una revisión, [in:] Espacio, Tiempo y Forma, 9 (1996), p. 127, Rafael Gambra, Víctor Pradera en el pórtico doctrinal del Alzamiento, [in:] Revista de Estudios Políticos 192 (1973), p. 158
  86. ^ including his own
  87. ^ Carballo 2013, p. 108
  88. ^ on state organization, elections, organization of justice and organization of the government and its relations with the Cortes, see Guinea Suárez 1953; Olabarri Gortazar 1991, p. 308, Orella Martínez 2012, p. 173
  89. ^ in top dailies like ABC or El Debate, see Carballo 2013, p. 108
  90. ^ Carballo 2013, p. 108
  91. ^ Orella Martínez 2012, p. 275
  92. ^ and with the government responsible before the king, not before the parliament, Guinea Suárez 1953
  93. ^ Jesus Maria Fuente Langas, Los tradicionalistas navarros bajo la dictadura de Primo de Rivera (1923–1930), [in:] Príncipe de Viana 55 (1994), p. 420
  94. ^ Carballo 2013, p. 111
  95. ^ Orella Martínez 2012, p. 213
  96. ^ Gambra 1973, pp. 158-9
  97. ^ Carballo 2013, p. 110
  98. ^ Orella Martínez 2000, pp. 117-135
  99. ^ Gambra 1973, p. 158
  100. ^ Maximiliano Garcia Venero, Historia de la Unificacion, Madrid 1970, p. 65, Ana Serrano Moreno, Las elecciones a Cortes Constituyentes de 1931 en Navarra, [in:] Príncipe de Viana 50 (1989), p. 699, Manuel Ferrer Muñoz, Los frustrados intentos de colaboración entre el partido nacionalista vasco y la derecha navarra durante la segunda república, [in:] Principe de Viana 49 (1988), p. 130
  101. ^ e.g. taking part in joint initiatives like a letter protesting measures applied against cardinal Segura, Antonio Manuel Moral Roncal, 1868 en la memoria carlista de 1931: dos revoluciones anticlericales y un paralelo, [in:] Hispania Sacra 119 (2007), p. 355
  102. ^ Martorell Pérez 2009, p. 358
  103. ^ some claim they were named "praderistas" at the time, see the Partido Carlista version available here
  104. ^ Eduardo González Calleja 2012, p. 70
  105. ^ González Calleja 2012, p. 192, Martin Blinkhorn, Carlism and Crisis in Spain 1931-1939, Cambridge 1975, ISBN 9780521207294, p.133
  106. ^ the Carlist body entrusted with synthesis and diffusion of the ideology, Blinkhorn 1975, p. 208
  107. ^ from Navarre and the Basque Country, Estornés Zubizarreta, Victor Pradera Larumbe
  108. ^ elected into the Tribunal, he could no longer serve as a deputy, Carballo 2013, p. 103
  109. ^ but with 27 votes gained he lost to Fernando Gasset Lacasaña, who got 262, Salvador Belles, El alcalde que o quiso ser embajador, available here
  110. ^ José Miguel de Mayoralgo y Lodo, Movimiento Nobiliario 1936, available here
  111. ^ and sounded him on that perspective, Santiago Sanchez Martinez, El cardelnal Pedro Segura y Saenz (1880-1957) [PhD Univ de Navarra], Pamplona 2002, p. 256, also Carballo 2013, p. 114
  112. ^ the alliance was dominated by Alfonsinos, with only Pradera and Rodezno representing Carlism, Orella Martínez 2012, p. 441
  113. ^ Pradera was persuaded to withdraw as his presence gave rise to controvereies, Carballo 2013, p. 113-4; some authors claim he was the only Carlist in the board, see Blinkhorn 1975, p. 132
  114. ^ some authors consider him a co-founder of Bloque Nacional, see Eduardo Palomar Baró, Victor Pradera Larumbe (1873-1936) entry at generalisimofranco site available here, Garcia Venero 1970, p. 72
  115. ^ Blinkhorn 1975, pp. 189-190
  116. ^ Pradera was also outraged that when looking for coalition allies, Gil Robles preferred Lerroux to Carlists, Carballo 2013, p. 116, Blinkhorn 1975, p. 126
  117. ^ Moral Roncal 2007, p. 358, Carballo 2013, pp. 112-3
  118. ^ fellow Carlists ironically dubbed them “reconocementeros”, a mockery derivate of “reconocimiento”, see Calleja 2012, p. 196
  119. ^ compare Blinkhorn 1975, p. 346
  120. ^ and containing articles published in Acción Española throughout 1934, José Luis Orella Martínez, Víctor Pradera; un intelectual entre los ismos de una época, [in:] Navarra: memoria e imagen vol. 2, Pamplona 2006, ISBN 8477681791. Available also here
  121. ^ Pedro Carlos González Cuevas, La recepción del pensamiento conservador-radical europeo en España (1913-1930), [in:] Espacio, Tiempo, Forma, 3 (1990), p. 224, Carballo 2013, p. 114, 122, Gambra 1973, p. 149, Orella Martínez 2012, p. 217
  122. ^ Orella Martínez 2006, pp. 257-268
  123. ^ Pradera considered Rousseau’s vision another version of Pelagianism, Carballo 2013, p. 118
  124. ^ Pedro Carlos González Cuevas, Las derechas españolas ante la crisis del 98, [in:] Historia contemporánea 15 (1997), p. 208
  125. ^ Orella Martínez 2006, pp. 257-268
  126. ^ González Cuevas 1997, p. 208
  127. ^ Carballo 2013, pp. 119-121, Bartyzel 2006, p. 293
  128. ^ Carballo 2013, pp. 119, 123-125
  129. ^ David Soto Carrasco, Víctor Pradera: políticas viejas para un estado nuevo, available here
  130. ^ Orella Martínez 2006, pp. 257-268
  131. ^ some authors claim that state envisaged by Pradera was still far stronger than that envisioned by most Carlists, and “sovereignty” was reserved only for this very state, see Martorell Pérez 2009, pp. 359-360
  132. ^ Stanley G Payne, Navarrismo y españolismo en la política navarra bajo la Segunda República, [in:] Príncipe de Viana, 166-167 (1982), p. 901
  133. ^ Bartyzel 2006, p. 293
  134. ^ economic issues discussed in detail by Carballo 2013, pp. 132-142
  135. ^ Blinkhorn, a highly critical British historian who in 1975 could not resist the temptation to engage in polemics with Pradera, argued that the weak point of Estado Nuevo was missing vision of how the Praderian state should be achieved. He suggested that Pradera simply presupposed the existence of a sympathetic consensus, Blinkhorn 1975, p. 151, the same opinion in Bartyzel 2006, p. 294
  136. ^ Blinkhorn 1975, p. 146, José Luis Rodríguez Jiménez, La extrema derecha en España: del tardofranquismo a la consolidación de la democracia (1957-1982) [PhD thesis], Madrid 2001, ISBN 8484661296, p. 138
  137. ^ Pradera’s reception among the Carlists is a history of its own. Initially he was acknowledged with enthusiasm. Once he started to serve as a founding father of Francoism, Carlists began to ignore Pradera, see Martorell Peréz 2009, pp. 355, 370. For the Carlist progressists he was worse than ignored – he was banned; “Nosotros nunca citamos a Víctor Pradera” – declared Massó, see Martorell Peréz 2009, pp. 400-02. At that point the Carlist traditionalists like Gambra ceased to “forget” Pradera (Martorell Peréz 2009, pp. 403, 408); it was in 1971 that Tejada and Gambra referred to Pradera in ¿Qué es el carlismo? and started quoting him as a Carlist master, see Gambra 1973. He was hailed as intellectual giant by Fuerza Nueva, see Rodríguez Jiménez, 2002, pp. 271–2, 288. Today Traditionalist Carlists refer to Pradera with caution, considering him a sincere Carlist who got eclectic over time, compare Ayuso 2008, p. 122
  138. ^ there are also scholars who claim exactly the opposite, namely that Pradera was throwing “jealous insults” towards Jose Antonio and the Spanish fascists, see Ferrán Gallego, El evangelio fascista: la formación de la cultura política del franquismo (1930-1950), Madrid 2014, ISBN 8498926769, 9788498926767, p. 32
  139. ^ like Ortega y Marañon, see Soto Carrasco, Víctor Pradera: políticas viejas para un estado nuevo, p. 5
  140. ^ Apart from being “an unknown and forgotten man”, nowadays, see Jorge Trias Sagnier, De Pradera a Companys, [in:] ABC 25.10.04, available here
  141. ^ according to some, Estado Nuevo “ se convirtió en breviario político e institucional de Franco”, see Eduardo Palomar Baró, Victor Pradera Larumbe (1873-1936), while Estado Nuevo was “uno de los libros que más influyó en el pensamiento político de Franco”, Payne 1982, p. 901
  142. ^ actual text here
  143. ^ Xose Manoel Nuñez Seixas, Nations in arms against the invader: on nationalist discourses during the Spanish civil war, [in:] Chris Ealham and Michael Richards (eds.), The Splintering of Spain. Cultural History and the Spanish Civil War, 1936 –1939, p. 56
  144. ^ David Soto Carrasco, Víctor Pradera: políticas viejas para un estado nuevo; also Serrano Suñer appreciated Pradera as a theorist, see Rodríguez Jiménez 2001, p. 181
  145. ^ Gonzalo Redondo Galvez, Política, cultura y sociedad en la España de Franco, 1939–1975, vol. 1, La configuración del Estado espanol, nacional y católico (1939–1947), Pamplona 1999, ISBN 8431317132; accordint to the author, "el autoritarismo franquista no fue de signo fascista sino tradicionalista", see Juan María Sanchez-Prieto, Lo que fué y lo que no fué Franco, [in:] Nueva Revista de Política, Cultura y Arte 69 (2000), pp. 30-38
  146. ^ Carlos Pulpillo Leiva, Orígenes del Franquismo: la construcción de la “Nueva España” (1936–1941), [PhD thesis], Madrid 2013, esp. pp. 717-737
  147. ^ with Francoist omnipotent state, accidentalist regime, centralization, monopolist party, arbitrarily designed representation and Church subservient to state deemed incompatible with Pradera's vision of a withdrawn state, monarchism, regionalisation, abolishment of parties, corporative representation and state subservient to Church, see Orella Martinez's works listed
  148. ^ in a recent work Pradera is presented as a pivotal figure in the process of Carlism gradually melting down within a broad extreme Right between 1876 and 1936, see Javier Esteve Martí, El carlismo ante la reorganización de las derechas. De la Segunda Guerra Carlista a la Guerra Civil [in:] Pasado y Memoria. Revista de Historia Contemporánea 13 (2014), pp. 119-140
  149. ^ Orella Martínez 2000, p. 11, Orella Martínez 2006, pp. 257-268. The author notes that in countries like Portugal, Austria, Romania and Hungary the conservatives persecuted fascists, while in Belgium, Norway, Italy and Slovakia the two formations worked hand in hand
  150. ^ some consider Pradera’s works Traditionalism at its best, see Gonzalo Fernández de la Mora, Los teóricos izquierdistas de la democracia orgánica, Barcelona 1985, p. 188, others see it as evolution of typical Carlism, since regionalism and dynastical allegiance gave way to corporativism and organicism
  151. ^ most quoted phrase from the book was that “Estado Nuevo is the old traditional state”, Javier Ugarte Tellería, El carlismo en la guerra del 36. La formación de un cuasi-estado nacional-corporativo y foral en la zona vasco-navarra, [in:] Historia contemporánea 38 (2009), p. 68
  152. ^ Stanley G. Payne, Fascism. Comparisons and Definitions, Madison 1980, ISBN 0299080609, p. 143; in another of his works, Payne applies a more typical description of "societal corporatism", see his The Franco Regime, Madison 1987, ISBN 0299110702, pp. 53-54
  153. ^ González Cuevas 1997, p. 208
  154. ^ or simply “authoritarian”, 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. 170, also Agustín José Menéndez, Shifting legal dogma: From Republicanism to Fascist Ideology under the Early Franquismo, [in:] Arena working papers 20 (2000), available here
  155. ^ many authors invoke Pradera against the fascist background, indicate similarities, and apply fascistoid qualifications, but stop just short of naming him fascist, see Enrique Moradiellos, Evangelios fascistas, [in:] Revista de Libros 12 (2014), p. 30, Olabarri Gortázar 1988, p. 323, Ernesto Mila, Renovación Española y Acción Española, la “derecha fascista española”, [in:] Revista de Historia del Fascismo, 2 (2011), María Cruz Mina Apat, Elecciones y partidos políticos en Navarra (1891-1923), [in:] J. L. García-Delgado (ed.), La España de la Restauración: política, economía, legislación y cultura), Madrid 1985, ISBN 8432305111, 9788432305115, pp. 120-121, S. Fernandez Viguera, Ideologia de Raimundo Garcia ‘Garcilaso’ en torno al tema foral, [in:] Principe de Viana 47 (1986), pp. 511-531. Only in unrestrained cyberspace Pradera is plainly called fascist, compare here. There are also many scholars who highlight what they consider fundamental differences between Pradera and fascism, see Orella Martínez 2006, pp. 257-268, Fernando del Rey Reguillo, Manuel Álvarez Tardío, The Spanish Second Republic Revisited: From Democratic Hopes to the Civil War (1931-1936), Madrid 2012, ISBN 9781845194598, pp. 250-251, Carballo 2013, pp. 126-131, Martin Blinkhorn, Fascists & Conservatives. The radical Right and the establishment in twentieth-century Europe, London 2003, ISBN 9781134997121, p. 126, Jacek Bartyzel, Tradycjonalizm (hiszpański) wobec faszyzmu, hitleryzmu i totalitaryzmu, [in:] Pro Fide Rege et Lege 71 (2013), p. 26
  156. ^ and “fascist project turned firmly towards the past”, see Dylan Riley, The Civic Foundations of Fascism in Europe: Italy, Spain, and Romania, 1870–1945, Baltimore 2010, ISBN 9780801894275, pp. 19-20
  157. ^ Manuel Martorell-Pérez, Nuevas aportaciones históricas sobre la evolución ideológica del carlismo, [in:] Gerónimo de Uztariz 16 (2000), pp. 103-104. The author claims that de Mella broke with Pradera because of magmatic nature of his work, which contributed not to excellence, but to the intellectual decay of Carlism; similar opinion, though not expressed that boldly, is presented in Andres Martin 2000, pp. 253-257; the author a number of times points to "minimalist" Praderian strategy of seeking understanding with very broad Right-wing political spectrum
  158. ^ none of the sources consulted clarifies what Pradera’s mothertongue was, though he is reported to have spoken Basque perfectly, Carballo 2013, p. 143
  159. ^ compare Pradera’s entry at Auñamendi Eusko Entziklopedia
  160. ^ compare Carballo 2013, pp. 142-146
  161. ^ though he remained ambivalent as to their re-introduction; in 1916-1918 he declared that "la situación actual de España no es la oportuna para plantear el pleito de la reintegración foral”, quoted after Estornés Zubizarreta, Victor Pradera Larumbe
  162. ^ Estornés Zubizarreta, Victor Pradera Larumbe; "Regionalismo no es separatismo. [...] El separatismo, o sea la independencia, no lo admitimos nosotros; al contrario, queremos la unidad de la Patria, respetando los derechos que corresponden a todas las provincias”, quoted after Guinea Suárez 1953
  163. ^ according to Pradera municipios are naturally grouped in comarcas, not provincias; actually, he did not recognise official “provincias”, and when advocating “provincial” rights he meant “regiones”, Carballo 2013, pp. 109-110
  164. ^ scholars differ on this point. Martorell Peréz 2009, pp. 359-360, claims that unlike in case of Mella, for Pradera fueros did not provide a “sovereignty” framework; others claim that Pradera envisioned regions as self-established entities, united in federal or confederal Spain, see González Cuevas 1997, pp. 208-9, Olabarri Gortazar 1991, p. 304
  165. ^ Iñaki Iriarte López, Euskaros, nacionalistas y navarristas. Ideologías del pacto y la agonía en Navarra, [in:] Revista Internacional de los Estudios Vascos 44 (1999), p. 62. Other sources claim that Pradera, obsessed by Spanish unity, was not a fuerista at all, see Josep Miralles Climent, Aspectos de la cultura política del carlismo en el siglo XX, [in:] Espacio, Tiempo y Forma, 17 (2005), p. 154
  166. ^ Pradera assailed also cultural initiatives suspected of advancing disunion, like the 1920 unveiling of a monument to the 1522 defenders of Navarre against Castillans, dubbed “traidores, villanos y dignos del patíbulo”, quoted after Emilio Majuelo, La idea de historia en Arturo Campion, Donostia 2011, ISBN 9788484192206. p. 116, details in Jesús Etayo Zalduendo, Navarra, una soberanía secuestrada: historia y periodismo (1923-1931), Tafalla 2004, ISBN 8481363596, 9788481363593, pp. 196-7, 407-409
  167. ^ Orella Martínez 2012, p. 11
  168. ^ Estornés Zubizarreta, Victor Pradera Larumbe
  169. ^ see Gambra 1973, p. 150-151, Orella Martínez 2000, pp. 53-69
  170. ^ Carballo 2013, p. 153, Guinea Suárez 1953, Estornés Zubizarreta, Victor Pradera Larumbe
  171. ^ dubbed “paladín del españolismo a secas”, Estornés Zubizarreta, Victor Pradera Larumbe
  172. ^ In 1931-1933 Pradera and Juan Olazabal formed the nucleus of the Carlist opponents to the Basque autonomy, Iriarte López 1999, p. 63, González Calleja 2012, p. 72, Ferrer Muñoz 1988, pp. 130-1 (claiming that especially the Gestoras version was lambasted as “laico, antiforal and antieconomico”), Manuel Ferrer Muñoz, La Cuestión estatutaria en Navarra durante la Segunda República, [in:] Príncipe de Viana 52 (1991), p. 205, Santiago de Pablo, El carlismo guipuzcoano y el Estatuto Vasco, [in:] Bilduma Rentería 2 (1988), p. 196
  173. ^ Pradera is sometimes considered one of the founding fathers of navarrismo, see Juan María Sánchez-Prieto, Garcia-Sanz, Iriarte, Mikelarena, Historia del navarrismo (1841-1936) [review], [in:] Revista Internacional de Estudios Vascos 48 (2003), p. 732; the author claims that Pradera is fundamental to change in Navarrese perception of their enemies: before it was the Spanish state, after it was the Basque nationalism; Roldán Jimeno Aranguren, Los derechos históricos en la renovación del régimen autonómico de Navarra (2004-2006), [in:] Revista interdisciplinar de estudios histórico-jurídicos, 15 (2007/8), p. 344
  174. ^ Blinkhorn 1975, p. 186; full pronouncement of the Tribunal in Memoria elevada al Gobierno de la Republica, Madrid 1934, available here, see also his own explanation as produced during a public meeting here
  175. ^ e.g. when discussing political regime of Vasco-Navarrese region during the Reconquista, he pointed out that Navarre formed a militarised monarchy, Álava was almost republican, Gipuzkoa resembled constitutional monarchy and Biscay formed a señorío, see Carballo 2013, p. 149
  176. ^ González Cuevas 1997, p. 208, Orella Martínez 2000, pp. 48-50
  177. ^ Carballo 2013, p. 154
  178. ^ "irrevocable espańolidad de las Provincias Vascongadas", quoted after Carballo 2013, p. 143, also “Cataluńa no tiene derecho a ser Estado porque no era nación”, Carballo 2013, p. 155
  179. ^ the level of detail and complexity involved in this highly expert debate can be grasped by looking at Pradera’s discussion with Arturo Campión on dating convention of the papal documents from 1512, see Carballo 2013, p. 148;
  180. ^ Pradera’s lecture which made particular impact was Regionalismo y Nacionalismo address of 1917, re-emphasized and re-formatted as a scholarly discourse titled El mistero de los Fueros Vascos and delivered at Real Academia de Jurisprudencia y Legislación; in Por Navarra, para España (1921) Pradera claimed that under the old regime Spain was in fact a confederation, Olabarri Gortazar 1991, p. 304, Blinkhorn 1975, pp. 147-8
  181. ^ Estornés Zubizarreta, Victor Pradera Larumbe, Guinea Suárez 1953
  182. ^ Eduardo G. Calleja, Julio Aróstegui Sánchez, La tradición recuperada; el Requeté carlista y la insurrección, [in:] Historia contemporánea, 11 (1994), p. 36; some claim Pradera did not participate actively and was merely informed on progress, Carballo 2013, p. 117
  183. ^ Pradera forged an amicable if not friendly personal relationship with Franco, allegedly considering him “the man of the future”, Guinea Suárez 1953; when leaving Madrid to assume his post in the Canary Islands, Franco asked Pradera to join him, see Garcia Venero 1970, p. 91
  184. ^ Carballo 2013, pp. 103-4
  185. ^ Jose Orella, Victor Pradera, el asesinato de un vocal del Tribunal de Garantias Constitutionales, [in:] La Razon 06.01.21, available here
  186. ^ Guinea Suárez 1953
  187. ^ some sources claim it was on August 2, Pedro Barruso, Verano y la revolución. La Guerra Civil en Gipuzkoa, [in:] gipuzkoa1936 service, available here
  188. ^ at the order of Telesforo Monzon, Orella Martínez 2012, p. 214, or Manuel Irujo, Guinea Suárez 1953
  189. ^ Guinea Suárez 1953
  190. ^ Pedro Barruso Barés, La represión en las zonas republicana y franquista del País Vasco durante la Guerra Civil, [in:] Historia contemporánea 35 (2007), p. 656, Pedro Barruso Barés, Manuel de Irujo y la Guerra Civil en Guipúzcoa en el verano de 1936, [in:] Vasconia: Cuadernos de historia - geografía, 32 (2002), p. 71; no documentation of such a tribunal has ever been found, Pedro Barruso, Verano y la revolución. La Guerra Civil en Gipuzkoa
  191. ^ Guinea Suárez 1953
  192. ^ according to some sources, in the highly Christian spirit Pradera forgave his killers before death, Carballo 2013, p. 156
  193. ^ Boletin Oficial del Estado 18.07.49, available here

Further reading Edit

  • Juan Ramón de Andrés Martín, El cisma mellista. Historia de una ambición política, Madrid 2000, ISBN 9788487863820
  • Martin Blinkhorn, Carlism and Crisis in Spain 1931-1939, Cambridge 1975, ISBN 9780521207294
  • Francisco J. Carballo, Recordando a Víctor Pradera. Homenaje y crítica, [in:] Aportes 81 (2013), pp. 97–158
  • Ander Delgado, Víctor Pradera: mártir de España y de la causa católica, [in:] Alejandro Quiroga, Miguel Angel Del Arco (eds.), Soldados de Dios y apóstoles de la patria. Las derechas españolas en la Europa de entreguerras, Granada 2010, ISBN 9788498366433
  • Javier Esteve Martí, El carlismo ante la reorganización de las derechas. De la Segunda Guerra Carlista a la Guerra Civil [in:] Pasado y Memoria. Revista de Historia Contemporánea 13 (2014), pp. 119–140
  • Sergio Fernández Riquelme, De la Tradición a la Reacción. Víctor Pradera y el Estado nuevo español en la era de entreguerras, [in:] La Razón histórica: revista hispanoamericana de historia de las ideas políticas y sociales 42 (2019), pp. 236–260
  • Rafael Gambra, Víctor Pradera en el pórtico doctrinal del Alzamiento, [in:] Revista de Estudios Políticos 192 (1973), pp. 149–164
  • Carlos Guinea Suárez, Víctor Pradera (series Temas españoles, n. 37), Madrid 1953
  • Ignacio Olábarri Gortázar, Víctor Pradera y el Partido Social Popular (1922-1923), [in:] Estudios de historia moderna y contemporánea, Madrid 1991, ISBN 8432127485, 9788432127489, pp. 299–310
  • José Luis Orella Martínez, El origen del primer católicismo social español [PhD thesis UNED], Madrid 2012
  • José Luis Orella Martínez, El pensamiento carlista de Víctor Pradera, [in:] Aportes 31 (1996), pp. 80–96
  • José Luis Orella Martínez, Víctor Pradera: Un católico en la vida pública de principios de siglo, Madrid 2000, ISBN 8479145579
  • José Luis Orella Martínez, Víctor Pradera y la derecha católica española [PhD thesis Deusto], Bilbao 1995
  • Maximiliano G. Venero, Víctor Pradera: guerrillero de la unidad, Madrid 1943

External links Edit

  • Victor Pradera in Euskomedia
  • Victor Pradera at Indice Historico de Diputados
  • Victor Pradera from the francoist perspective
  • Por Dios y por España; contemporary Carlist propaganda on YouTube

víctor, pradera, larumbe, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, pradera, second, maternal, family, name, larumbe, juan, 1872, 1936, spanish, political, theorist, carlist, politician, bornjuan, 1872, 1872, pamplonadied1936, aged, sebastiánnationalitysp. In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Pradera and the second or maternal family name is Larumbe Juan Victor Pradera Larumbe 1872 1936 was a Spanish political theorist and a Carlist politician Victor Pradera LarumbeBornJuan Victor Pradera Larumbe1872 1872 PamplonaDied1936 aged 63 64 San SebastianNationalitySpanishOccupationLawyerKnown forPoliticianPolitical partyPartido Catolico Tradicionalista Partido Social Popular Comunion Tradicionalista Contents 1 Family and youth 2 Young Carlist 3 Dissident 4 Social Catholic 5 Reconciled Carlist 6 Theorist 7 Regionalist 8 Prisoner 9 Footnotes 10 Further reading 11 External linksFamily and youth Edit nbsp San Sebastian late 19th centuryVictor s paternal family originated from France his grandfather Juan Pradera Martinena lived in the Basque town of Sare Labourd province 1 but moved across the Pyrenees and settled in Endara de Etxalar 2 Victor s father Francisco Pradera Leiza was an indiano As a youngster he emigrated to America and spent 16 years in Cuba 3 enriched he returned to Navarre 4 and married a pamplonesa 5 Filomena Larumbe 6 descendant to a petty bourgeoisie family Her father Angel Larumbe Iturralde 7 sided with the legitimists during the First Carlist War and narrowly escaped execution later to settle in Vera de Bidasoa and to practise as a notary 8 Juan Victor was born 9 as the first of four sons Juan Victor Luis Juan 10 and German In 1879 he moved with the family to San Sebastian following the professional lot of his father who ran a commercial construction business 11 Having obtained bachillerato in Instituto de San Sebastian 12 in 1887 13 he spent a year in Bordeaux and then another one in Bilbao studying at the Jesuit Deusto college and preparing for engineer studies 14 Having moved to Madrid Pradera entered Escuela de Ingenieros 15 exact year of his graduation is unknown He returned to Gipuzkoa in 1897 16 and settled in Tolosa engaged in the paper mill business of his father 17 Reportedly successful as a manager Pradera later amalgamated the family enterprise into the Papelera Espanola trust of Rafael Picavea and became a shareholder of this company 18 involved in its activities until the early 20th century 19 At the turn of the century he commenced studying law as an unenrolled student in Madrid 20 which he continued for 2 years 21 Having graduated in San Sebastian he opened the law chancery and practiced as Inspector General in Cuerpo de Ingenieros de Canales y Puertos simultaneously 22 At unspecified date he obtained PhD in law in Madrid 23 In 1899 24 Pradera married a donostiarra Maria Ortega 25 with whom he had 4 children Javier to become a prominent Francoist politician 26 Victor s grandson Javier Pradera made his name as a well known anti Francoist journalist and publisher dubbed watchman of the Spanish transition to democracy 27 Young Carlist EditDuring his academic years Pradera was active in various Catholic organizations and developed interest in politics Raised in a liberal ambience and apart from his maternal grandfather with no family antecedents in the 1890s he neared Carlism as a result of his lectures unlike most Traditionalists who inherited their outlook from forefathers Pradera considered himself a scientific Carlist 28 Already recognized as an orator in 1899 29 he was agreed to stand as an unofficial 30 Carlist candidate in Tolosa Benefitting from just commencing rapprochement between mainstream Carlists and the Integrists he was elected defeating a governmental candidate 31 Matias Barrio appointed him speaker of the small Carlist minority 32 In the aftermath of 1898 disaster Pradera formed the first wave of regeneracionistas demanding profound if not revolutionary change 33 A young newcomer in the chamber he regularly clashed with Silvela 34 demonstrating logic combined with oratory skills 35 as well as hot temper 36 Re elected in 1901 37 he went on confronting the old liberal enemies and took on the new ones especially republican radicals and nationalists 38 He intended to run for re election in the subsequent campaign of 1903 but eventually resigned due to financial issues 39 In 1904 Pradera was elected from Tolosa to Diputacion Provincial 40 Together with Esteban de Bilbao Eguia and Julio Urquijo he formed a new generation of activists promoted by the claimant Carlos VII and the party leader marques de Cerralbo in their bid to build a modern Carlist network 41 Dissident Edit nbsp Vazquez de MellaHis deputy duties terminated Pradera dedicated himself to family life business 42 and intellectual work 43 He remained engaged in party life though his relations with local leadership deteriorated In course of the 1910 electoral campaign he sought rapprochement with the mauristas and supported a stand alone candidate 44 both were expelled from the party by its Gipuzkoan jefe Tirso de Olazabal 45 Re admitted in 1912 46 Pradera continued his career as an orator on public meetings 47 Addressing a wide range of issues he was increasingly focused on confronting the emerging Basque national aspirations 48 As he gained a nationwide expert recognition in 1917 de Romanones called him into extra parliamentarian committee to discuss Catalan autonomy 49 Elected to the Cortes in 1918 50 he became the key Carlist speaker 51 Forging friendship with Antonio Maura he nevertheless opposed grand but hazy coalitions aimed at preserving shaky stability of the late Restoration Aware of the forthcoming revolutionary tide 52 he advocated a radical Traditionalist change 53 At that time Jaimismo was increasingly paralysed by a multidimensional conflict between its key ideologue Juan Vazquez de Mella and the claimant himself Pradera who befriended de Mella and remained heavily influenced by his vision sided with the rebels 54 in 1919 joining their Partido Catolico Tradicionalista 55 Animating the Mellist Diario de Navarra 56 he unsuccessfully ran for the Cortes in 1919 57 failing also in his 1920 bid for the Senate 58 During final years of Restauracion he was in vain lured by both partidos turnistas offering him safe place on electoral lists and ministerial jobs 59 Pradera remained the PCT party jefe in Gipzukoa 60 In the early 1920s Pradera s relations with de Mella deteriorated According to one theory Mella favored a loose federation of extreme Right parties while Pradera opted for a new party of the Right According to another Mella perceived Pradera s vision as minimalist suspecting him of hidden secularism and embracing parliamentarianism 61 Most detailed study available pursues the theory of orthodox de Mella disdainful to possibilist and minimalist Pradera 62 One more theory claims that the two clashed later and the point of contention was policy towards the Primo de Rivera dictatorship 63 Pradera decided to go his own way taking a number of mellistas with him 64 de Mella himself plagued by health problems and with both his legs amputated 65 gradually retired into private and intellectual life 66 Social Catholic Edit nbsp Pradera speakingIn 1922 Pradera set up Partido Social Popular 67 intended to be a vehicle of a new possibilist policy making 68 Incompatible with the Carlist intransigence 69 it was envisioned as a broad alliance rather than a party 70 Most scholars suggest it was principally inspired by social theories of Leo XIII 71 at that time advanced in Spain mostly by the Zaragoza school of Salvador Minguijon 72 it was supposed to confront the rising socialist tide 73 Though the party is occasionally described as a distant preconfiguration of Christian Democracy 74 proto Fascism or renewed Traditionalism 75 most summarise its program as social Catholicism 76 modeled on the German Catholic Centre Party 77 The party slogan was Religion Patria Estado Propiedad y Familia 78 PSP opposed representation based on popular election system and advocated a corporative representation instead 79 Pradera appreciated good will of Christian democrats like Herrera Oria but claimed that their malmenorismo opens the door to revolution he also preferred monarchism to Christian democratic accidentalism 80 The PSP social program included progressive taxation and social legislation 81 Though some of its leaders clearly excluded ruling by force Pradera remained rather ambiguous on this issue 82 nbsp Primo de RiveraMost pesepistas welcomed Primo de Rivera dictatorship 83 Pradera greeted him enthusiastically 84 as a long overdue regeneracionismo Asked by Primo for an interview 85 Pradera suggested that the new regime should ban all parties 86 introduce corporative representation build a presidentialist government and construct a regionalist state 87 a vision developed further on in 4 memoranda supplied to the dictator 88 Pradera engaged in advocating dictatorship in the press 89 and remained officially Primo s assessor until 1927 90 when he entered Asamblea Nacional Member of the Proyectos de Leyes Constitucionales section 91 he strived to institutionalize the system by working on a new constitution conceived in line with his corporativist vision 92 Pradera s intellectual contribution to Primo s rule was so eminent that he is sometimes considered a point of reference for primoderiverismo 93 However his relations with the dictator deteriorated the first controversies surfacing in 1924 94 Pradera was disturbed by the perceived self adulation of Primo preserving liberal features of the ancient regime and generally inertia prevailing over a decisive change 95 He considered Union Patriotica a mistake 96 opposed centralization and did not agree with Calvo Sotelo on financial policy the fiscal system in particular 97 Though in the late 1920s Primo was increasingly irritated by Pradera s criticism the latter remained supportive until the very end 98 It was only long after the regime s fall that Pradera started to view it as a delusive spell of stability between bewilderment of the late Restauracion and chaos of the Republic 99 Reconciled Carlist Edit nbsp Carlist standardDuring the first republican electoral campaign of 1931 Pradera was supposed to join lista catolico fuerista but eventually he refused to form ranks with the despised Basque nationalists and withdrew 100 He drew close to the Jaimistas 101 but remained hesitant about returning to their party 102 It was only after the death of Don Jaime that in 1932 Pradera decided to lead his followers and the orphaned mellistas 103 to the united Carlist organization Comunion Tradicionalista 104 entering its executive 105 He also became head of the newly established Council of Culture 106 rising into a formally acknowledged movement s intellectual leader His career of a public servant was crowned in 1933 when he was elected 107 to Tribunal de Garantias Constitucionales de Espana 108 In 1934 he unsuccessfully run for its presidency 109 In 1936 Pradera was admitted to Academia de Jurisprudencia y Legislacion 110 Pradera did not display a dynastical zeal as the new claimant was an octogenarian with no issue he considered recognising Don Juan as Carlist king 111 Within Comunion Pradera formed an influential minority endorsing a broad monarchical alliance with the Alfonsists He wholeheartedly engaged in Accion Espanola 112 and became vice president of Sociedad Cultural Espanola the official owner of Accion Espanola periodical 113 He then proved one of key Carlists joining Bloque Nacional 114 entering its executive committee and working out its manifesto most likely a compromise between himself and Calvo Sotelo 115 Pradera continued confronting accidentalist Christian democracy his campaign against CEDA was so virulent that Carlist leaders felt pressed to call for moderation 116 Initially Pradera s drive towards a monarchist alliance was shared by the party leaders it was rather the rank and file who saw no purpose mixing with debris of the hated liberal dynasty 117 When Alfonso Carlos replaced Tomas Dominguez Arevalo with the intransigent Manuel Fal Pradera and the entire Junta resigned 118 Though Fal permitted Rodezno and Pradera to pursue their tactics on a private business basis none of them was a match for the personality of Calvo Sotelo As the growing feeling was that Alfonsinos were gaining the upper hand in Bloque Nacional Fal decided to withdraw and Pradera hesitantly complied he focused on fighting secularization democracy socialism nationalism and all perceived evils of the republic as an author publishing press articles and books 119 Theorist EditMain article The New State nbsp El Estado NuevoPradera s political vision was taking shape in course of some 40 years to be finally integrated in El Estado Nuevo the book published in 1935 120 His theory is usually viewed as anchored in works of Vazquez de Mella considered by Pradera the intellectual master Other sources of inspiration listed are papal encyclicals Maurras Donoso Cortes and last but not least Thomas Aquinas 121 According to Pradera rights of a man exist only when combined with his duties towards God 122 and are unacceptable as deified Rousseau s human rights 123 It is natural that men form different entities e g families guilds regions etc which interact with one another 124 They are topped by a nation which is an organically constituted society of societies 125 A nation is best expressed as a monarchy its unity ensured by King and Church 126 Royal powers are limited by principles of divine order and by sovereignty of the nation s components 127 A democratic individualist representation can not express this sovereignty which is to be voiced by an organic representation 128 Since parties tear every society apart the Cortes should be composed of representatives of 6 main classes 129 plus delegates of various state bodies 130 The law is defined by the king with auxiliary role of the Cortes and the council The state is a fairly withdrawn structure 131 its principal responsibilities defined as safeguarding the country ensuring internal order and executing justice 132 Catholic principles provide the logic 133 and the corporativist state provides the machinery to solve social problems and implement mechanisms regulating distribution of wealth 134 How this vision was to be achieved remained unclear 135 nbsp Francisco FrancoEl Estado Nuevo was enthusiastically accepted among Carlists 136 Pradera replacing de Mella as their top theorist 137 Also other sections of the Spanish Right deprived of a comparable credo viewed the work with respect if not envy 138 Republican intellectuals pointed that Pradera questioned all political science and reduced politics to following historical circumstances 139 Pradera s impact on Franco remains disputed In the newspaper version he appears as one of the icons and pilars of Francoism 140 Indeed many scholars consider Pradera one of caudillo s masters 141 pointing to his prologue to the 1945 re edition 142 and later references 143 to them Estado Nuevo is a forerunner of Francoist state and its clear theoretical lecture 144 Though some in depth studies on Francoism even claim that the regime was related to Traditionalism rather than to fascism 145 other detailed works on the topic barely mention Pradera 146 Most detailed biographical studies refrain from making direct links between Pradera and Francoism 147 Contemporary scholars do not agree how Pradera s theory should be classified 148 Most extensive studies suggest that his vision falls somewhere between social Catholicism and corporativism the closest European incarnations having been Dolfuss Austria and Salazar s Portugal 149 Other options offered are traditionalism 150 national traditionalism 151 corporative neotraditionalist monarchism 152 organicism 153 reactionary authoritarianism 154 proto fascism prefascism 155 traditionalist fascism 156 or simply an intellectual magma 157 Regionalist Edit nbsp Basque nationalism EuzkadiThe regionalist question posed an indispensable component of Pradera s theory it also kept coming back as a major thread of his political activities Today among many Spanish citizens especially the Basques 158 Pradera is principally recognized only for his stance on this very topic 159 usually as a sworn enemy of national minorities 160 From the onset of his career Pradera declared himself a supporter of traditional regionalism fueros 161 and identified himself as unswervingly regionalist 162 In his political vision the regions 163 with their specific legal economic and social establishments were among key entities forming a nation and his recommendations to Primo endorsed a strongly regionalist state The fueros however did not provide an autonomous legal framework 164 but to the contrary they were viewed as a pact between a region and the Spanish state 165 Hence he consistently fought all designs perceived as fostering separatism 166 and embracing autonomy 167 confronting Liga Autonomista 168 lambasting Wilsonian arguments on self determination fighting theories advanced by Sabino Arana and Arturo Campion 169 thwarting autonomy projects of late Restauracion 170 publicly admonishing Primo de Rivera for fostering separatism 171 fighting Vasco Navarrese autonomy drafts during the Republic 172 with particular hostility to incorporating Navarre into the autonomous project 173 and voting against the Catalan Leases Act in Tribunal de Garantias 174 nbsp Traditionalism EuskalerriaPradera denied the Basques and the Catalans a separate political identity be it historical 175 or contemporary and was particularly infuriated by racist thread of the Basque national discourse 176 Recognising their separate ethnic status he considered the minorities pueblos 177 forming part of the Spanish political nation 178 He remained restless denouncing what he considered invented nationalist myths 179 and proving that the Basques had neither formed a unitarian cultural entity nor had ever possessed a common political self 180 As confronting Basque and Catalan political aspirations became a major thread of Pradera s activity driven by concern for unity of Spain he soon grew into the nationalist Basques primary foe accused of espanolismo hyperpatriotism and jingoism 181 Prisoner Edit nbsp Basque republican militia GipuzkoaPradera s contribution to anti Republican coup consisted chiefly of conducting talks with the would be Alfonsist allies in Navarre and in the Basque provinces though exact scale of his engagement remains unknown 182 In February 1936 he declined Franco s proposal to join him on Canary Islands 183 fully aware of the forthcoming coup and anxious not to be called a coward he cancelled a formal visit to France scheduled on July 13 as part of Tribunal de Garantias duties and remained in San Sebastian 184 He was also anxious not to leave his daughter who at the time was pregnant and due in short time 185 He is quoted as declaring to Rodezno on July 16 1936 Thomas let God help us If we fail we will have our throats cut 186 During the initial days of the insurgency Pradera remained in San Sebastian where the coup indeed failed he soon found himself cut off from the nationalist zone Early August 187 he was arrested by the Basque militia 188 and detained in the Ondarreta prison his son Javier joined him soon afterwards 189 Accounts of his last days differ Most studies claim he was trialed by a makeshift Tribunal Popular and was sentenced to death 190 other works suggest that as the city was already under the nationalist siege the Republican militia units stormed the prison fearing the detainees might be soon set free 191 On September 6 within a group of other prisoners Pradera was driven to the nearby Polloe cemetery and executed 192 his son meeting the same fate shortly afterwards In 1949 Franco posthumously conferred upon Pradera the title of conde de Pradera which is functional until today 193 Footnotes Edit Carlos Guinea Suarez Victor Pradera series Temas espanoles n 37 Madrid 1953 available here Jose Luis Orella Martinez Victor Pradera Un catolico en la vida publica de principios de siglo Madrid 2000 ISBN 8479145579 p 14 Orella Martinez 2000 p 15 Guinea Suarez 1953 Orella Martinez 2000 p 14 also Idioia Estornes Zubizarreta Victor Pradera Larumbe entry at Aunamendi Eusko Entziklopedia available here Orella Martinez 2000 p 15 some sources prefer the Larrumbe spelling see the official Cortes service here Guinea Suarez 1953 Orella Martinez 2000 p 14 LARUMBE ITURRALDE Angel entry at Gran Enciclopedia Navarra online available here he also supported the Carlists during the Second Carlist War Guinea Suarez 1953 Orella Martinez 2000 p 14 the first Pradera s biography claimed he was born 1873 see Maximilian Garcia Venero Victor Pradera guerrillero de la unidad Madrid 1943 s 17 and this information has been adopted by almost all other authors the recent biography claims the correct date is 1872 see Orella Martinez 2000 p 17 also his El origen del primer catolicismo Espanol PhD thesis Madrid 2012 p 213 to distinguish between Juan Victor and Juan Jose the older brother was called Victor and this is how he passed into history Guinea Suarez 1953 some sources claim he constructed houses see Orella Martinez 2000 p 15 some sources suggest he was running a commerce business related to construction Francisco J Carballo Recordando a Victor Pradera Homenaje y critica in Aportes 81 2013 p 99 Orella Martinez 2000 p 15 Guinea Suarez 1953 Guinea Suarez 1953 Orella Martinez 2000 p 15 Guinea Suarez 1953 Orella Martinez 2000 p 17 Estornes Zubizarreta Victor Pradera Larumbe Orella Martinez 2000 p 17 Guinea Suarez 1953 Orella Martinez 2000 p 17 some authors claim he gave up business in 1902 see Orella Martinez 2000 p 17 though he was reported as engaged as late as 1904 see Madrid cientifico 1904 p 19 available here Guinea Suarez 1953 Carballo 2013 p 101 at that time he was already a Cortes deputy taking the exams unrecognised Pradera did not reveal his deputy status see Carballo 2013 p 101 Carballo 2013 p 101 Javier Ibarra Biografias de los ilustres navarros del siglo XIX y parte del XX v 4 Pamplona 1953 p 318 Guinea Suarez 1953 Carballo 2013 p 101 Rafael Castela Santos La ejemplar muerte del diputado carlista Victor Pradera en 1936 in A casa de Sarto 13 10 05 available here see his entry at Indice Historico de Diputados available here see El Pais 21 11 11 available here Orella Martinez 2012 p 183 Carballo 2013 p 99 at a minimum legal age Carballo 2013 p 100 Jose Maria Remirez de Ganuza Lopez Las Elecciones Generales de 1898 y 1899 en Navarra in Principe de Viana 49 1988 p 382 Agustin Fernandez Escudero El marques de Cerralbo 1845 1922 biografia politica PhD thesis Madrid 2012 p 360 Pradera was sworn two weeks behind schedule the usual practice employed by the Carlists who declined to swear obedience to the Alfonsist monarchy see Guinea Suarez 1953 Carballo 2013 p 100 Guinea Suarez 1953 apart from other issues also protesting the cession of Caroline Islands to Germany see Carballo 2013 p 100 Guinea Suarez 1953 there were penal proceedings launched against Pradera for assaulting agentes de la autoridad see La Epoca 22 01 00 available here this time as an official Carlist candidate see Indice Historico de Diputados available here Orella Martinez 2000 pp 25 41 a highly apologetic source claims that Pradera refused to engage in corruption practices see Guinea Suarez 1953 Contemporary scholars suggest there was no corruption involved and he rather considered it immoral to finance his own campaign see Carballo 2013 p 101 ABC 04 09 86 claims he was defeated see here though it is not clear whether he served only one term or was re elected Estornes Zubizarreta Victor Pradera Larumbe see also Gestion de Las Diputaciones available here Jose Luis Orella Martinez El origen del primer catolicismo social espanol PhD thesis at Universidad Nacional de Educacion a Distancia Madrid 2012 p 223 he owned shares of a number of San Sebastian companies see Felix Luengo Teixidor Crecimiento economico y cambio social Guipuscoa 1917 1923 Bilbao 1990 ISBN 9788460073741 p 353 Angel Garcia Sanz Marcotegui Elites economicas y politicas en la Restauracion a diversidad de las derechas navarras in Historia contemporanea 23 2001 p 602 apart from Papeleria Espanola the company identified was Cooperativa Electrica Donostiarra see Juan Antonio Saez Garcia Infrastructuras de servicios urbanos in Geografia e historia de Donostia San Sebastian available here Orella Martinez 2013 p 213 Jose Joaquin Castaneda son of Joaquin Castaneda y Otermin see Juan Ramon de Andres Martin El cisma mellista Historia de una ambicion politica Madrid 2000 ISBN 9788487863820 p 54 Estornes Zubizarreta Victor Pradera Larumbe The background of this conflict remains unknown though there are some suggestions in Luis M a de Zavala y Fernandez de Heredia ed La sociedad vasca del siglo XIX en la correspondencia del Archivo de la Casa de Zavala Lasarte 2008 ISBN 9788496288706 p 67 Siendo tildado su mandato como personalista en 1910 expulso a Victor Pradera del Partido por indisciplina Juan Ramon de Andres Martin Precendentes del proyecto ultraderechista mellista en el periodo 1900 1912 in Boletin de la Real Academia de la Historia 202 2005 p 125 approaches this conflict as a pre Mellist controversy the press communique does not go into details see El Imparcial 05 05 10 available here following personal meeting with Don Jaime in San Jean de Luz in May 1912 see La correspondencia militar 14 05 12 available here Ana Calavia Urdaniz La Conciliacion de Pamplona y sus relaciones con los sindicatos catolico libres 1915 1923 in Principe de Viana 49 1988 p 80 Carballo 2013 p 148 with Alcala Zamora Sanchez Toca and Maura Orella Martinez 2013 p 172 as substitute of de Mella who refused to stand El Siglo Futuro 08 04 18 available here in 1918 it was Pradera outlining the Carlist policy in the Cortes Fernandez Escudero 2012 p 500 Pradera opposed amnesting Besteiro and Largo convicted of 1917 revolt Carballo 2013 p 102 Guinea Suarez 1953 Orella Martinez 2012 p 183 since Pradera was attracted to Carlism by its theory and not dynastical allegiance the decision to abandon Don Jaime was not hard for him see Carballo 2013 p 99 the same author claims p 105 that Pradera joined de Mella sharing his anti Entente views he was appointed the regional jefe in Gipuzkoa Orella Martinez 2012 p 268 details in Orella Martinez 2000 pp 69 89 its editor in chief was Raimundo Garcia 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 29 p 4 Ignacio Olabarri Gortazar Notas sobre la implantacion la estructura organizativa y el ideario de los partidos del turno en Navarra 1901 1923 in Principe de Viana 49 1988 p 323 claims that Diario de Navarra was indeed identified with Pradera during the last years of Restoration Carballo 2013 p 102 does not specify whether Pradera ran on Jaimist or Mellist ticket according to La Correspondencia de Espana 21 05 19 available here the national Carlist political leader Pascual Comin disauthorised Pradera as a Mellist he was reported by the contemporary press as fielding his candidacy but it is unclear whether he actually ran see El Globo 24 12 20 available here Guinea Suarez 1953 Carballo 2013 p 101 Andres Martin 2000 p 238 Carballo 2013 p 106 Andres Martin 2000 pp 228 237 253 256 in this vision praderismo differed from mellismo by recognition of Alfonso XIII ideological reductionism adopting authoritarian threads and broadening the alliance base Manuel Martorell Perez La continuidad ideologica del carlismo tras la Guerra Civil PhD thesis in Historia Contemporanea Universidad Nacional de Educacion a Distancia Valencia 2009 p 358 According to the author Mella preferred the loosely organised empire of Espana de los Austrias while Pradera opted for Espana de Reyes Catolicos idealised and unitarian p 359 Some claim that PSP enabled survival of Mellismo embracing most of the orphaned Mellistas as officially Mellism amalgamated into Jaimismo in 1927 see Carballo 2013 p 106 also Orella Martinez 2000 p 195 Jacek Bartyzel Umierac ale powoli Krakow 2006 ISBN 8386225742 p 277 Orella Martinez 2012 p 268 In the aftermath of de Mella s death in 1928 Pradera was president of Comision Ejecutiva de la Junta de Homenaje Carballo 2013 p 100 Guinea Suarez 1953 Ignacio Olabarri Gortazar Victor Pradera y el Partido Social Popular 1922 1923 in Estudios de historia moderna y contemporanea homenaje a Federico Suarez Verdeguer Madrid 1991 p 300 Olabarri Gortazar 1991 pp 300 301 Olabarri Gortazar 1991 p 309 Orella Martinez 2000 Orella Martinez 2012 Carballo 2013 some authors claim that emergence of the party was also spurred by Catalan and Basque electoral successes of 1917 1918 and Pradera was primarily concerned with unity and integrity of Spain Olabarri Gortazar 1991 p 303 Olabarri Gortazar 1991 p 301 Pradera perceived socialism as an ideology depriving a human of its transcendence literally the devil s work Orella Martinez 2012 pp 215 217 Miguel Ayuso El Carlismo y su signo in Anales de la Fundacion Francisco Elias de Tejada 14 2008 p 122 criticizes Orella s work for downplaying Pradera s hostility to christian democracy and to Angel Herrera Orella Martinez 2012 pp 259 378 suggests that it was rather Ossorio representing christian democracy while Pradera stood for corporativism Olabarri Gortazar 1991 p 309 Orella Martinez 2012 pp 214 268 Orella Martinez 2000 pp 89 117 Orella Martinez 2012 p 213 Olabarri Gortazar 1991 p 304 which later gave rise to claims of the party having been proto fascist see Olabarri Gortazar 1991 p 306 Carballo 2013 p 107 Olabarri Gortazar 1991 p 306 However Pradera was reluctant to accept employee stock ownership tenants right to buy off the land cultivated and the female vote see Orella Martinez 2012 p 259 Olabarri Gortazar 1991 p 308 Olabarri Gortazar 1991 pp 308 309 Pradera did not know Primo personally and was rather skeptical of him mostly due to his alleged idea of abandoning Marocco the Mellistas nurtured a vision of a federation between Spain Portugal and Morocco Carballo 2013 p 107 Jose Manuel Cuenca Toribio La Union Patriotica Una revision in Espacio Tiempo y Forma 9 1996 p 127 Rafael Gambra Victor Pradera en el portico doctrinal del Alzamiento in Revista de Estudios Politicos 192 1973 p 158 including his own Carballo 2013 p 108 on state organization elections organization of justice and organization of the government and its relations with the Cortes see Guinea Suarez 1953 Olabarri Gortazar 1991 p 308 Orella Martinez 2012 p 173 in top dailies like ABC or El Debate see Carballo 2013 p 108 Carballo 2013 p 108 Orella Martinez 2012 p 275 and with the government responsible before the king not before the parliament Guinea Suarez 1953 Jesus Maria Fuente Langas Los tradicionalistas navarros bajo la dictadura de Primo de Rivera 1923 1930 in Principe de Viana 55 1994 p 420 Carballo 2013 p 111 Orella Martinez 2012 p 213 Gambra 1973 pp 158 9 Carballo 2013 p 110 Orella Martinez 2000 pp 117 135 Gambra 1973 p 158 Maximiliano Garcia Venero Historia de la Unificacion Madrid 1970 p 65 Ana Serrano Moreno Las elecciones a Cortes Constituyentes de 1931 en Navarra in Principe de Viana 50 1989 p 699 Manuel Ferrer Munoz Los frustrados intentos de colaboracion entre el partido nacionalista vasco y la derecha navarra durante la segunda republica in Principe de Viana 49 1988 p 130 e g taking part in joint initiatives like a letter protesting measures applied against cardinal Segura Antonio Manuel Moral Roncal 1868 en la memoria carlista de 1931 dos revoluciones anticlericales y un paralelo in Hispania Sacra 119 2007 p 355 Martorell Perez 2009 p 358 some claim they were named praderistas at the time see the Partido Carlista version available here Eduardo Gonzalez Calleja 2012 p 70 Gonzalez Calleja 2012 p 192 Martin Blinkhorn Carlism and Crisis in Spain 1931 1939 Cambridge 1975 ISBN 9780521207294 p 133 the Carlist body entrusted with synthesis and diffusion of the ideology Blinkhorn 1975 p 208 from Navarre and the Basque Country Estornes Zubizarreta Victor Pradera Larumbe elected into the Tribunal he could no longer serve as a deputy Carballo 2013 p 103 but with 27 votes gained he lost to Fernando Gasset Lacasana who got 262 Salvador Belles El alcalde que o quiso ser embajador available here Jose Miguel de Mayoralgo y Lodo Movimiento Nobiliario 1936 available here and sounded him on that perspective Santiago Sanchez Martinez El cardelnal Pedro Segura y Saenz 1880 1957 PhD Univ de Navarra Pamplona 2002 p 256 also Carballo 2013 p 114 the alliance was dominated by Alfonsinos with only Pradera and Rodezno representing Carlism Orella Martinez 2012 p 441 Pradera was persuaded to withdraw as his presence gave rise to controvereies Carballo 2013 p 113 4 some authors claim he was the only Carlist in the board see Blinkhorn 1975 p 132 some authors consider him a co founder of Bloque Nacional see Eduardo Palomar Baro Victor Pradera Larumbe 1873 1936 entry at generalisimofranco site available here Garcia Venero 1970 p 72 Blinkhorn 1975 pp 189 190 Pradera was also outraged that when looking for coalition allies Gil Robles preferred Lerroux to Carlists Carballo 2013 p 116 Blinkhorn 1975 p 126 Moral Roncal 2007 p 358 Carballo 2013 pp 112 3 fellow Carlists ironically dubbed them reconocementeros a mockery derivate of reconocimiento see Calleja 2012 p 196 compare Blinkhorn 1975 p 346 and containing articles published in Accion Espanola throughout 1934 Jose Luis Orella Martinez Victor Pradera un intelectual entre los ismos de una epoca in Navarra memoria e imagen vol 2 Pamplona 2006 ISBN 8477681791 Available also here Pedro Carlos Gonzalez Cuevas La recepcion del pensamiento conservador radical europeo en Espana 1913 1930 in Espacio Tiempo Forma 3 1990 p 224 Carballo 2013 p 114 122 Gambra 1973 p 149 Orella Martinez 2012 p 217 Orella Martinez 2006 pp 257 268 Pradera considered Rousseau s vision another version of Pelagianism Carballo 2013 p 118 Pedro Carlos Gonzalez Cuevas Las derechas espanolas ante la crisis del 98 in Historia contemporanea 15 1997 p 208 Orella Martinez 2006 pp 257 268 Gonzalez Cuevas 1997 p 208 Carballo 2013 pp 119 121 Bartyzel 2006 p 293 Carballo 2013 pp 119 123 125 David Soto Carrasco Victor Pradera politicas viejas para un estado nuevo available here Orella Martinez 2006 pp 257 268 some authors claim that state envisaged by Pradera was still far stronger than that envisioned by most Carlists and sovereignty was reserved only for this very state see Martorell Perez 2009 pp 359 360 Stanley G Payne Navarrismo y espanolismo en la politica navarra bajo la Segunda Republica in Principe de Viana 166 167 1982 p 901 Bartyzel 2006 p 293 economic issues discussed in detail by Carballo 2013 pp 132 142 Blinkhorn a highly critical British historian who in 1975 could not resist the temptation to engage in polemics with Pradera argued that the weak point of Estado Nuevo was missing vision of how the Praderian state should be achieved He suggested that Pradera simply presupposed the existence of a sympathetic consensus Blinkhorn 1975 p 151 the same opinion in Bartyzel 2006 p 294 Blinkhorn 1975 p 146 Jose Luis Rodriguez Jimenez La extrema derecha en Espana del tardofranquismo a la consolidacion de la democracia 1957 1982 PhD thesis Madrid 2001 ISBN 8484661296 p 138 Pradera s reception among the Carlists is a history of its own Initially he was acknowledged with enthusiasm Once he started to serve as a founding father of Francoism Carlists began to ignore Pradera see Martorell Perez 2009 pp 355 370 For the Carlist progressists he was worse than ignored he was banned Nosotros nunca citamos a Victor Pradera declared Masso see Martorell Perez 2009 pp 400 02 At that point the Carlist traditionalists like Gambra ceased to forget Pradera Martorell Perez 2009 pp 403 408 it was in 1971 that Tejada and Gambra referred to Pradera in Que es el carlismo and started quoting him as a Carlist master see Gambra 1973 He was hailed as intellectual giant by Fuerza Nueva see Rodriguez Jimenez 2002 pp 271 2 288 Today Traditionalist Carlists refer to Pradera with caution considering him a sincere Carlist who got eclectic over time compare Ayuso 2008 p 122 there are also scholars who claim exactly the opposite namely that Pradera was throwing jealous insults towards Jose Antonio and the Spanish fascists see Ferran Gallego El evangelio fascista la formacion de la cultura politica del franquismo 1930 1950 Madrid 2014 ISBN 8498926769 9788498926767 p 32 like Ortega y Maranon see Soto Carrasco Victor Pradera politicas viejas para un estado nuevo p 5 Apart from being an unknown and forgotten man nowadays see Jorge Trias Sagnier De Pradera a Companys in ABC 25 10 04 available here according to some Estado Nuevo se convirtio en breviario politico e institucional de Franco see Eduardo Palomar Baro Victor Pradera Larumbe 1873 1936 while Estado Nuevo was uno de los libros que mas influyo en el pensamiento politico de Franco Payne 1982 p 901 actual text here Xose Manoel Nunez Seixas Nations in arms against the invader on nationalist discourses during the Spanish civil war in Chris Ealham and Michael Richards eds The Splintering of Spain Cultural History and the Spanish Civil War 1936 1939 p 56 David Soto Carrasco Victor Pradera politicas viejas para un estado nuevo also Serrano Suner appreciated Pradera as a theorist see Rodriguez Jimenez 2001 p 181 Gonzalo Redondo Galvez Politica cultura y sociedad en la Espana de Franco 1939 1975 vol 1 La configuracion del Estado espanol nacional y catolico 1939 1947 Pamplona 1999 ISBN 8431317132 accordint to the author el autoritarismo franquista no fue de signo fascista sino tradicionalista see Juan Maria Sanchez Prieto Lo que fue y lo que no fue Franco in Nueva Revista de Politica Cultura y Arte 69 2000 pp 30 38 Carlos Pulpillo Leiva Origenes del Franquismo la construccion de la Nueva Espana 1936 1941 PhD thesis Madrid 2013 esp pp 717 737 with Francoist omnipotent state accidentalist regime centralization monopolist party arbitrarily designed representation and Church subservient to state deemed incompatible with Pradera s vision of a withdrawn state monarchism regionalisation abolishment of parties corporative representation and state subservient to Church see Orella Martinez s works listed in a recent work Pradera is presented as a pivotal figure in the process of Carlism gradually melting down within a broad extreme Right between 1876 and 1936 see Javier Esteve Marti El carlismo ante la reorganizacion de las derechas De la Segunda Guerra Carlista a la Guerra Civil in Pasado y Memoria Revista de Historia Contemporanea 13 2014 pp 119 140 Orella Martinez 2000 p 11 Orella Martinez 2006 pp 257 268 The author notes that in countries like Portugal Austria Romania and Hungary the conservatives persecuted fascists while in Belgium Norway Italy and Slovakia the two formations worked hand in hand some consider Pradera s works Traditionalism at its best see Gonzalo Fernandez de la Mora Los teoricos izquierdistas de la democracia organica Barcelona 1985 p 188 others see it as evolution of typical Carlism since regionalism and dynastical allegiance gave way to corporativism and organicism most quoted phrase from the book was that Estado Nuevo is the old traditional state Javier Ugarte Telleria El carlismo en la guerra del 36 La formacion de un cuasi estado nacional corporativo y foral en la zona vasco navarra in Historia contemporanea 38 2009 p 68 Stanley G Payne Fascism Comparisons and Definitions Madison 1980 ISBN 0299080609 p 143 in another of his works Payne applies a more typical description of societal corporatism see his The Franco Regime Madison 1987 ISBN 0299110702 pp 53 54 Gonzalez Cuevas 1997 p 208 or simply authoritarian 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 170 also Agustin Jose Menendez Shifting legal dogma From Republicanism to Fascist Ideology under the Early Franquismo in Arena working papers 20 2000 available here many authors invoke Pradera against the fascist background indicate similarities and apply fascistoid qualifications but stop just short of naming him fascist see Enrique Moradiellos Evangelios fascistas in Revista de Libros 12 2014 p 30 Olabarri Gortazar 1988 p 323 Ernesto Mila Renovacion Espanola y Accion Espanola la derecha fascista espanola in Revista de Historia del Fascismo 2 2011 Maria Cruz Mina Apat Elecciones y partidos politicos en Navarra 1891 1923 in J L Garcia Delgado ed La Espana de la Restauracion politica economia legislacion y cultura Madrid 1985 ISBN 8432305111 9788432305115 pp 120 121 S Fernandez Viguera Ideologia de Raimundo Garcia Garcilaso en torno al tema foral in Principe de Viana 47 1986 pp 511 531 Only in unrestrained cyberspace Pradera is plainly called fascist compare here There are also many scholars who highlight what they consider fundamental differences between Pradera and fascism see Orella Martinez 2006 pp 257 268 Fernando del Rey Reguillo Manuel Alvarez Tardio The Spanish Second Republic Revisited From Democratic Hopes to the Civil War 1931 1936 Madrid 2012 ISBN 9781845194598 pp 250 251 Carballo 2013 pp 126 131 Martin Blinkhorn Fascists amp Conservatives The radical Right and the establishment in twentieth century Europe London 2003 ISBN 9781134997121 p 126 Jacek Bartyzel Tradycjonalizm hiszpanski wobec faszyzmu hitleryzmu i totalitaryzmu in Pro Fide Rege et Lege 71 2013 p 26 and fascist project turned firmly towards the past see Dylan Riley The Civic Foundations of Fascism in Europe Italy Spain and Romania 1870 1945 Baltimore 2010 ISBN 9780801894275 pp 19 20 Manuel Martorell Perez Nuevas aportaciones historicas sobre la evolucion ideologica del carlismo in Geronimo de Uztariz 16 2000 pp 103 104 The author claims that de Mella broke with Pradera because of magmatic nature of his work which contributed not to excellence but to the intellectual decay of Carlism similar opinion though not expressed that boldly is presented in Andres Martin 2000 pp 253 257 the author a number of times points to minimalist Praderian strategy of seeking understanding with very broad Right wing political spectrum none of the sources consulted clarifies what Pradera s mothertongue was though he is reported to have spoken Basque perfectly Carballo 2013 p 143 compare Pradera s entry at Aunamendi Eusko Entziklopedia compare Carballo 2013 pp 142 146 though he remained ambivalent as to their re introduction in 1916 1918 he declared that la situacion actual de Espana no es la oportuna para plantear el pleito de la reintegracion foral quoted after Estornes Zubizarreta Victor Pradera Larumbe Estornes Zubizarreta Victor Pradera Larumbe Regionalismo no es separatismo El separatismo o sea la independencia no lo admitimos nosotros al contrario queremos la unidad de la Patria respetando los derechos que corresponden a todas las provincias quoted after Guinea Suarez 1953 according to Pradera municipios are naturally grouped in comarcas not provincias actually he did not recognise official provincias and when advocating provincial rights he meant regiones Carballo 2013 pp 109 110 scholars differ on this point Martorell Perez 2009 pp 359 360 claims that unlike in case of Mella for Pradera fueros did not provide a sovereignty framework others claim that Pradera envisioned regions as self established entities united in federal or confederal Spain see Gonzalez Cuevas 1997 pp 208 9 Olabarri Gortazar 1991 p 304 Inaki Iriarte Lopez Euskaros nacionalistas y navarristas Ideologias del pacto y la agonia en Navarra in Revista Internacional de los Estudios Vascos 44 1999 p 62 Other sources claim that Pradera obsessed by Spanish unity was not a fuerista at all see Josep Miralles Climent Aspectos de la cultura politica del carlismo en el siglo XX in Espacio Tiempo y Forma 17 2005 p 154 Pradera assailed also cultural initiatives suspected of advancing disunion like the 1920 unveiling of a monument to the 1522 defenders of Navarre against Castillans dubbed traidores villanos y dignos del patibulo quoted after Emilio Majuelo La idea de historia en Arturo Campion Donostia 2011 ISBN 9788484192206 p 116 details in Jesus Etayo Zalduendo Navarra una soberania secuestrada historia y periodismo 1923 1931 Tafalla 2004 ISBN 8481363596 9788481363593 pp 196 7 407 409 Orella Martinez 2012 p 11 Estornes Zubizarreta Victor Pradera Larumbe see Gambra 1973 p 150 151 Orella Martinez 2000 pp 53 69 Carballo 2013 p 153 Guinea Suarez 1953 Estornes Zubizarreta Victor Pradera Larumbe dubbed paladin del espanolismo a secas Estornes Zubizarreta Victor Pradera Larumbe In 1931 1933 Pradera and Juan Olazabal formed the nucleus of the Carlist opponents to the Basque autonomy Iriarte Lopez 1999 p 63 Gonzalez Calleja 2012 p 72 Ferrer Munoz 1988 pp 130 1 claiming that especially the Gestoras version was lambasted as laico antiforal and antieconomico Manuel Ferrer Munoz La Cuestion estatutaria en Navarra durante la Segunda Republica in Principe de Viana 52 1991 p 205 Santiago de Pablo El carlismo guipuzcoano y el Estatuto Vasco in Bilduma Renteria 2 1988 p 196 Pradera is sometimes considered one of the founding fathers of navarrismo see Juan Maria Sanchez Prieto Garcia Sanz Iriarte Mikelarena Historia del navarrismo 1841 1936 review in Revista Internacional de Estudios Vascos 48 2003 p 732 the author claims that Pradera is fundamental to change in Navarrese perception of their enemies before it was the Spanish state after it was the Basque nationalism Roldan Jimeno Aranguren Los derechos historicos en la renovacion del regimen autonomico de Navarra 2004 2006 in Revista interdisciplinar de estudios historico juridicos 15 2007 8 p 344 Blinkhorn 1975 p 186 full pronouncement of the Tribunal in Memoria elevada al Gobierno de la Republica Madrid 1934 available here see also his own explanation as produced during a public meeting here e g when discussing political regime of Vasco Navarrese region during the Reconquista he pointed out that Navarre formed a militarised monarchy Alava was almost republican Gipuzkoa resembled constitutional monarchy and Biscay formed a senorio see Carballo 2013 p 149 Gonzalez Cuevas 1997 p 208 Orella Martinez 2000 pp 48 50 Carballo 2013 p 154 irrevocable espanolidad de las Provincias Vascongadas quoted after Carballo 2013 p 143 also Cataluna no tiene derecho a ser Estado porque no era nacion Carballo 2013 p 155 the level of detail and complexity involved in this highly expert debate can be grasped by looking at Pradera s discussion with Arturo Campion on dating convention of the papal documents from 1512 see Carballo 2013 p 148 Pradera s lecture which made particular impact was Regionalismo y Nacionalismo address of 1917 re emphasized and re formatted as a scholarly discourse titled El mistero de los Fueros Vascos and delivered at Real Academia de Jurisprudencia y Legislacion in Por Navarra para Espana 1921 Pradera claimed that under the old regime Spain was in fact a confederation Olabarri Gortazar 1991 p 304 Blinkhorn 1975 pp 147 8 Estornes Zubizarreta Victor Pradera Larumbe Guinea Suarez 1953 Eduardo G Calleja Julio Arostegui Sanchez La tradicion recuperada el Requete carlista y la insurreccion in Historia contemporanea 11 1994 p 36 some claim Pradera did not participate actively and was merely informed on progress Carballo 2013 p 117 Pradera forged an amicable if not friendly personal relationship with Franco allegedly considering him the man of the future Guinea Suarez 1953 when leaving Madrid to assume his post in the Canary Islands Franco asked Pradera to join him see Garcia Venero 1970 p 91 Carballo 2013 pp 103 4 Jose Orella Victor Pradera el asesinato de un vocal del Tribunal de Garantias Constitutionales in La Razon 06 01 21 available here Guinea Suarez 1953 some sources claim it was on August 2 Pedro Barruso Verano y la revolucion La Guerra Civil en Gipuzkoa in gipuzkoa1936 service available here at the order of Telesforo Monzon Orella Martinez 2012 p 214 or Manuel Irujo Guinea Suarez 1953 Guinea Suarez 1953 Pedro Barruso Bares La represion en las zonas republicana y franquista del Pais Vasco durante la Guerra Civil in Historia contemporanea 35 2007 p 656 Pedro Barruso Bares Manuel de Irujo y la Guerra Civil en Guipuzcoa en el verano de 1936 in Vasconia Cuadernos de historia geografia 32 2002 p 71 no documentation of such a tribunal has ever been found Pedro Barruso Verano y la revolucion La Guerra Civil en Gipuzkoa Guinea Suarez 1953 according to some sources in the highly Christian spirit Pradera forgave his killers before death Carballo 2013 p 156 Boletin Oficial del Estado 18 07 49 available hereFurther reading EditJuan Ramon de Andres Martin El cisma mellista Historia de una ambicion politica Madrid 2000 ISBN 9788487863820 Martin Blinkhorn Carlism and Crisis in Spain 1931 1939 Cambridge 1975 ISBN 9780521207294 Francisco J Carballo Recordando a Victor Pradera Homenaje y critica in Aportes 81 2013 pp 97 158 Ander Delgado Victor Pradera martir de Espana y de la causa catolica in Alejandro Quiroga Miguel Angel Del Arco eds Soldados de Dios y apostoles de la patria Las derechas espanolas en la Europa de entreguerras Granada 2010 ISBN 9788498366433 Javier Esteve Marti El carlismo ante la reorganizacion de las derechas De la Segunda Guerra Carlista a la Guerra Civil in Pasado y Memoria Revista de Historia Contemporanea 13 2014 pp 119 140 Sergio Fernandez Riquelme De la Tradicion a la Reaccion Victor Pradera y el Estado nuevo espanol en la era de entreguerras in La Razon historica revista hispanoamericana de historia de las ideas politicas y sociales 42 2019 pp 236 260 Rafael Gambra Victor Pradera en el portico doctrinal del Alzamiento in Revista de Estudios Politicos 192 1973 pp 149 164 Carlos Guinea Suarez Victor Pradera series Temas espanoles n 37 Madrid 1953 Ignacio Olabarri Gortazar Victor Pradera y el Partido Social Popular 1922 1923 in Estudios de historia moderna y contemporanea Madrid 1991 ISBN 8432127485 9788432127489 pp 299 310 Jose Luis Orella Martinez El origen del primer catolicismo social espanol PhD thesis UNED Madrid 2012 Jose Luis Orella Martinez El pensamiento carlista de Victor Pradera in Aportes 31 1996 pp 80 96 Jose Luis Orella Martinez Victor Pradera Un catolico en la vida publica de principios de siglo Madrid 2000 ISBN 8479145579 Jose Luis Orella Martinez Victor Pradera y la derecha catolica espanola PhD thesis Deusto Bilbao 1995 Maximiliano G Venero Victor Pradera guerrillero de la unidad Madrid 1943External links EditVictor Pradera in Euskomedia Victor Pradera at Indice Historico de Diputados Victor Pradera from the francoist perspective Por Dios y por Espana contemporary Carlist propaganda on YouTube Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Victor Pradera Larumbe amp oldid 1179096749, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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