Spanish Beaches
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Spanish Beaches
Brand It Like Beckham 

Time Magazine - Jan 12 7:07 AM
Here's a tale for our times.
Spanish Conquistador
Q: How Did Cortés and 600 Spaniards Subdue 5 Million Aztecs? 
Blogcritics.org - Jan 12 12:12 PM
A: When the Spanish invaded Mexico and Peru in the early 16th century, they wielded weaponry far superior to anything the Aztecs and Incas could've imagined. The 600 Spaniards who landed at the site of modern-day Vera Cruz in 1519, under the command of Hornando Cortés, carried firearms -- muskets -- and small cannons, and rode horses, all of which terrified the Aztec natives. And although the ...

Spanish Flys
Where we were born 
Tucson Citizen - Dec 16 6:18 AM
Failure is not an option. Of all the ideas floated for Rio Nuevo, there is one indispensable piece: the plaza on the Santa Cruz River that will celebrate the history of people in this valley for the past 3,500 years.

Spanish Dancers
They're going to learn how to fly 
Miami Herald - Jan 13 9:38 AM
About 150 young artists -- dancers, singers, actors, photographers, painters and writers -- from across the country have been training and performing in Miami this week for the finals of the National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts' annual talent competition.

Spanish Flags
GIs are uplifted by Iraq services in Spanish 
Los Angeles Times - Jan 13 12:19 AM
The language helps Marines discuss their feelings and seek God's assistance as they face questions of mortality, a Navy chaplain says. CAMP FALLOUJA, IRAQ — The Navy chaplain brought his guitar. The Marines brought their M-16s.

Spanish Newspaper
Imperial Tobacco reportedly eyes Franco-Spanish Altadis 
Market Watch - Jan 11 3:58 AM
LONDON (MarketWatch) -- Britain's Imperial Tobacco Group is mulling a 10 billion-euro ($13 billion) bid for Franco-Spanish rival Altadis, according to a media report Thursday.

Spanish Newspapers
Spanish Woman Is World's Oldest Blogger 
Ohmynews - Jan 12 3:22 AM
Dear friends and family of the Internet, today I had the best news that I could give you. Today I went to eat with my other grandson and his wife. To my surprise they informed me that I am going to be a great-grandmother...

Spanish Films
The top 10 films of 2006: A critic cries out 
The Frisco Enterprise - Jan 12 10:33 PM
Last year's best films laid out, and laid bare, the politics of the world's predicament. This year's films consider the possibilities for morality and heroism in our dispiriting times. Most of my 10 best films of 2006 deal with those questions in some way whether fancifully or tragically.

Spanish Rapier
Goodbye to all this: Britons show they are prepared to get up and go 
The Observer - Dec 30 4:13 PM
What makes us abandon our roots, friends and homes to move overseas? For most, it's a new job, relationship, health, a place in the sun or a wish to start all over again - and with London-based Johannes Angenent it was all five of those reasons.

Spanish Chica
Ready, set, GO! 
Journal and Courier - Jan 12 2:02 AM
Trio con Brio Copenhagen seem to have all of the tools to make a splash in the international classical music scene. They're young and passionate. They have an interesting look as well with Korean sisters Soo-Jin Hong and Soo-Kyung Hong on violin and cello, respectively, and pianist Jens Elvekjaer.

Spanish Dance
Arts: An Evening of Film and Dance at La Peña 
Berkeley Daily Planet - Jan 12 8:41 AM
Though Eve A. Ma traveled the world, she spends much of her time trying to bring that world back home to the rest of us. Ma is the entrepreneurial force behind Palomino Productions, a Berkeley-based company producing DVDs and television programs on the art of dance.

Spanish Lesson
School immerses students in Spanish 
Gazette.Net - Jan 10 7:50 PM
Multiplication can be a challenge for elementary school pupils, but the third- and fourth-graders in Gioniceo Flores’ class at Maryland International Day School were having no difficulty Monday morning as they worked through their math problems aloud — in Spanish.

Spanish Phonics
BULLETIN BOARD 
Bradenton Herald - Jan 11 4:34 AM
The new and improved version of the Driver Safety Program is now being offered through the AARP. Changes include expanded video segments. The class is open to anyone older than 50 and consists of two 4-hour sessions. The certificate of completion is good for three years with your auto insurance company. Cost: $10. To register, call 776-1158, 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday-Friday.

Spanish Pronunciation
Pronunciation makes a difference 
The News-Press - Jan 10 10:37 PM
A friend of mine looked for a position at a fast-food restaurant. He filled out an application and then answered few questions.

Spanish Software
Vestas wins order for 10 2.0 MW turbines for Chile from Eolica Navarra unit 
Sharewatch - Jan 12 3:14 AM
No financial details were released. The order, which comprises supply and installation, a 5-year service contract a software system, was placed by the developer Energias Renovables del Bio Bio SA, which is a company fully owned by the Spanish company Eolica Navarra.

Spanish Castles
FAMILY BRIEFS 
Bradenton Herald - Jan 06 12:06 AM
The New Balance Ringling Bridge IV-A Family Event will feature a team event Jan. 13. This year the event is open to any group, company, team or association that wants to put three or more people together to participate and complete the Ringling Bridge Run Four-mile run. Registration is now open and fees will benefit the Bari Brooks Teen Center at the Frank G. Berlin Sr. Branch of the YMCA. For ...

Spanish Months
Spanish Today: En vs. el 
San Antonio Express News - Jan 12 4:32 PM
Test your knowledge of grammar in Spanish.

Spanish Painters
They're going to learn how to fly 
Miami Herald - Jan 13 9:38 AM
About 150 young artists -- dancers, singers, actors, photographers, painters and writers -- from across the country have been training and performing in Miami this week for the finals of the National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts' annual talent competition.

Spanish Men
RM rules against men who abuse their women, children 
The Jamaica Observer - Jan 12 8:32 PM
SPANISH TOWN, St Catherine - Senior St Catherine Resident Magistrate Lorna Errar-Gayle on Tuesday made clear her disgust for men who abuse their women and children as she handed down judgments on several of those cases.

Spanish Proverbs
From the Pulpit 
Chico Enterprise-Record - Jan 13 12:25 AM
Calvary Chapel of Chico, 1888 Springfield Drive: "Fellowship and Joy," from Sam Allen; 6 p.m. Scripture: 1 John 1:1-4. Congregation Beth Israel, 1336 Hemlock St.: ""Foretelling the Birth of Moses," from professor Jed Wyrick; 10 a.m. Torah reading: "Shemot" (Exodus 1:1-6:1).

Spanish Atlanta
GHS senior receives national honor 
Gaffney Ledger - Jan 12 9:14 AM
ATLANTA - Brooke L. Montgomery of Gaffney has been selected for membership in the National Society of High School Scholars (NSHSS). The GHS senior is the daughter of Crystal M. Garner, Donald Garner and Gerald Little. She is the Senior Class secretary and a member of the Student Council Beta Club, Spanish Club and Tribe Talking Book Club.

Spanish Dishes
Main Course A column by Carol Tannehill: Lively new Cheddar’s dishes up generous portions 
Fort Wayne News-Sentinel - Jan 13 12:25 AM
Luckily, the wooden walls surrounding my comfy booth at the recently reopened Cheddar’s Casual Café are tall. They shielded me from the yawns, wails and rumbling tummies of the huddled masses yearning to eat finally.

Spanish Money
Latest: Valverde close; Landis pursued; Spanish courts; Manx Revolution; USAC collegiate scholarships 
Procycling - Jan 12 10:12 AM
12/01/2007 Alejandro Valverde should stay with his current team Caisse d'Epargne, but for how long? Also, the French anti-doping agency goes after Landis, Spanish courts in action, Isle of Man at Revolution, and USAC collegiate scholarships.

Spanish Soccer
Soccer star Beckham won't play with Madrid 
KESQ - 1 hour, 8 minutes ago
LOS ANGELES David Beckham may be playing in Los Angeles soon but for now he's benched in Madrid. The coach for Spanish club Real (RAY'-al) Madrid says the soccer megastar will practice but he won't play the rest of the season.

Spanish Rock
Beebe takes oath as governor 
The Morning News - Jan 13 1:04 AM
LITTLE ROCK -- Completing an unlikely journey from backwoods to Arkansas' highest political office, Mike Beebe was sworn in as Arkansas' 45th governor Tuesday, saying he envisions a state no longer burdened with a legacy of perpetual problems.

Spanish Goats
YEAH YEAH YEAH 
Anchorage Press - Jan 12 4:01 AM
Only a few weeks into 2007, an ambitious new CD from Spanish-Danish vocalist Christina Rosenvinge strikes me as an early pick as one of the most seductive albums of the year.

Spanish Dictionaries
Thousands Rebel Against Neoliberalism in Chiapas 
The Narco News Bulletin - 1 hour, 51 minutes ago
Oventic, Chiapas, MX. December 30, 2006: One day before the 13th anniversary of its armed uprising, the Zapatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN) welcomed followers from 30 countries, all adherents to the Sixth Declaration of the Lacandon Jungle, which Lt. Colonel Moisés, in name of the “Zezta Internazional,” called “an encounter of resistances and rebellions against global capitalism and ...

Spanish Wines
Fiesta of Spanish flavors 
The Daily Tribune - Jan 10 5:45 AM
Known as one of the most delicious and healthiest in the world, Spanish cuisine is also perhaps the most familiar to us, Filipinos. Over 200 years of colonization inevitably changed the way we eat, and we don’t mean just with spoon and fork.

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Spanish Beaches

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Spanish Beaches

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The Spanish Civil War officially ended on 1 April 1939, the day Francisco Franco announced the end of hostilities. The Republican regime had been defeated and Franco was now undisputed leader of Spain. He ruled Spain until he died on November 20, 1975.

Contents

  • 1 Genesis of the government during the Civil War (1936-1939)
  • 2 Franco's regime
  • 3 World War II years (1939-1945)
  • 4 Isolation (1945-1953)
  • 5 The End of Isolation (1953-1957)
  • 6 The Desarrollo, the Spanish Miracle (1957-1973)
  • 7 Franco's last years (1973-1975)
  • 8 References
  • 9 See also
  • 10 External links

Genesis of the government during the Civil War (1936-1939)

The Nationalist senior generals held an informal meeting in September 1936, where they elected Francisco Franco as leader of the Nationalists, with the rank of Generalísimo (sometimes written in English as Generalissimo, after the Fascist Italian fashion). He was originally supposed to be only commander-in-chief, but after some discussion became head of state as well with nearly unlimited and absolute powers.

This provisional government ruled over the territories controlled by the Nationalists during the Civil War. Its main political action during the war was the consolidation of the heterogeneous political forces that joined the rebelion into a single party, the Falange Española Tradicionalista y de las JONS. During and after the war, the Nationalist government harshly repressed Republican militants and sympathizers, as retaliation for the equally harsh repression of clergy and Nationalist militants on the opposite side. Killings were widespread on both sides during the whole war.

Flag of the Spanish State during the Franco era

The retaliation continued after the war, allegedly to punish war crimes committed under the Republican government, under a process called Causa General. Franco´s government executed, jailed, or subjected to forced labour thousands of republicans; thousands more exiled themselves mostly to France and Latin America. Some of those who fled to France joined the French Resistance; some, such as Lluís Companys, president of the Catalan Government, were caught up in the Nazi repression during World War II. Exiled to France in 1939, Companys was arrested and extradited to Spain in September 1940, and put to death after a military trial.

Franco's regime

Lacking any strong pollitical ideology, Franco initially sought support from what he designated as National syndicalism (nacionalsindicalismo) and the Roman Catholic Church (nacionalcatolicismo). The Falange, a fringe fascist inspired party during the Republic, soon transformed itself into the frame of reference in the Movimiento Nacional. Other parties and groups were forced to join in, transforming Falange into the Falange Española Tradicionalista y de las Juntas de Ofensiva Nacional-Sindicalista, or "Spanish Traditionalist Phalanx of the Assemblies of National-Syndicalist Offensive" (FET y de las JONS), becaming so heterogeneous as to barely qualify as a party at all. It was certainly not an ideological monolith like the Fascio di Combattimento (Fascist Party) or the ruling block of Portuguese Antonio Salazar.

Franco is often characterized as a fascist, and certainly had the consistent support of fascists in Spain and abroad; however, his lack of overt belligerency during World War II and—after the war ended—his alignment with the United States during the Cold War, both suggest that he was merely a reactionary who initially sought shelter in fascism because he lacked an original ideology with which to confront Communism, Socialism or Anarchism, three ideologies that were widespread in Spain and vigorously supported from abroad. His regime has also been described as a nationalist conservative even traditionalist rightist regime. The emphasis was on order and stability, rather than a definite political vision like fascism.

In 1940, the Vertical Syndicate was created. Following the ideas of José Antonio Primo de Rivera, this syndicate would end class struggle, as it grouped together workers and owners according to corporative principles. It was the only legal syndicate, and was under government control. Other syndicates and political parties were forbidden and strongly repressed.

All cultural activities were subject to censorship, and many were plainly forbidden on various, many times spurious, grounds (political or moral). In accordance with Franco's nationalist principles, only Spanish was recognized as official language of the country. Although millions of the country's citizens had also other native languages (Catalan, Basque and Galician being the most numerous minority languages). The use of these languages was discouraged, and most public uses were forbidden. This cultural policy was initially very strict, but relaxed with time, most notably after 1960. Still, even after 1960, all government, notarial, legal and commercial documents were drawn up exclusively in Spanish and any written in other languages were deemed null and void. (See Languages of Spain, Language politics in Francoist Spain.)

Although a self-proclaimed monarchist, Franco had no particular desire for a king, due to his strained relation with the legitimate heir of the Crown, Don Juan de Borbón y Battemberg. Therefore, he left the throne vacant, with himself as de facto regent. In 1947 Franco proclaimed Spain a monarchy, through the Ley de Sucesión en la Jefatura del Estado act, but did not designate a monarch. Instead, he set the basis for his succession. This gesture was largely done to appease monarchist factions within the Movimiento. He wore the uniform of a captain general (a rank traditionally reserved for the King), resided in the Pardo Palace, appropriated the kingly privilege of walking beneath a canopy, and his portrait appeared on most Spanish coins. Indeed, although his formal titles were Jefe del Estado (Head of State) and Generalísimo de los Ejércitos Españoles (Highest General of the Spanish Armed Forces), he was referred to as Caudillo de España por la gracia de Dios, (by the grace of God, the Leader of Spain) (by the grace of God is a technical, legal phrase which indicates sovereign dignity in absolute monarchies, and is only used by monarchs).

World War II years (1939-1945)

Main article: Spain in World War II

In September 1939, World War II broke out in Europe. Adolf Hitler met Franco in Hendaye, France (October 23, 1940), to discuss the Spanish entry in the war joining the Axis. Franco's demands (food, military equipment, Gibraltar, French North Africa, etc.) proved too much and no agreement was reached. Contributing to the disagreement was an ongoing dispute over German mining rights in Spain. Some historians argue that Franco made demands that he knew Hitler would not accede to in order to stay out of the war. Other historians argue that he simply had nothing to offer the Germans. After the collapse of France in June 1940, Spain adopted a pro-Axis non-belligerency stance (for example, he offered Spanish naval facilities to German ships) until returning to complete neutrality in 1943 when the tide of the war had turned decisively against Germany. Franco sent voluneer troops to fight "communism" joining the Axis armies on the Eastern Front against the Soviet Union. The unit name was the (División Azul, or Blue Division, after the Falange's party colour, whose members were known as 'blueshirts'). At the same time, Spanish diplomats in the Axis countries actively protected Jews and Spain itself became a safe haven for Jewish refugees, as Franco refused to implement anti-Semitic laws, as demanded by the Axis.

Isolation (1945-1953)

After the war, the Allies used Spain's tyes to the Axis powers to keep it from joining the United Nations. Franco´s government was seen, especially by Soviet countries but also by Great Britain, to be a remnant of the central European fascist regimes. Under the circumstances, a UN resolution condemning Franco´s government was unavoidable. The resolution encouraged countries to remove their ambassadors in Spain, and established the basis for measures against Spain if the government remained authoritarian. Only Portugal and a few Latin-American countries refused to comply with this advice.

The consequence of all of this was the establishment of an embargo against the Francoist regime in 1946 -including the closure of the French border- with very little success, as it boosted support for the regime. The isolation was represented by Franco´s regime as a modern version of the Black Legend, a machination of Freemasons against Catholic Spain, and helped to rally massive popular support for the regime like the massive demonstration in 1946.

In 1947, the president of Argentina, Juan Perón, ignored the UN embargo and sent his wife Eva Duarte de Perón with much needed food supplies. The Spaniards, and Franco himself, heartily welcomed Evita.

After World War II, the Spanish economy was still in disarray. Rationing cards were still used as late as 1952. War and economical isolation forced the regime tp move towards autarchy, a movement warmly welcomed by Falangists. The tenets of the economy were: reduction of imports, self-sufficiency, state-controlled production and commercialization of first order goods, state-funded industry and construction of infrastructure - heavily damaged during the Civil War- through the use of precarious means.

The End of Isolation (1953-1957)

Eisenhower and Franco in Spain in 1959

The increased tensions between America and the USSR in the 1950s, forced the American government to search for new allies in Europe. Franco was a proclaimed anti-Communist, which made him a very reliable key ally in the Cold War.

Isolation was finally broken in 1953 when President Dwight Eisenhower visited Spain, warmly embraced Franco, and also when the Spanish government signed the Concordato (Spanish for Concordat) agreement with the Vatican. Several treaties allowing opening of military bases in Spain were signed in 1953. The American government in return gave Spain economic aid, part of it as donation, part of it to be returned. This series of agreements between the US and Spain were known as the Pact of Madrid.

In 1955 Spanish wealth approached the pre-Civil War levels of 1935, leaving behind the disasters of the war and the struggle of isolation. Spain even joined the UN in 1955. Other Western European countries, including Italy, were from that point eager to restore good contacts with Francoist Spain.

The Desarrollo, the Spanish Miracle (1957-1973)

Main article: Spanish Miracle

The Spanish Miracle (Desarrollo) was the name given to the Spanish economic boom between 1959 and 1973 and it is the most remarkable phenomenon and the most important legacy left by Francoist Spain, as Spain largely surpassed the per capita income that differentiates developed from underdeveloped countries and induced the development of a dominant middle class which was instrumental to the future establishment of democracy.

The boom was bolstered by economic reforms promoted by the so-called technocrats, appointed by Franco, who put in place neo-liberal development policies from the IMF. The technocrats were a new breed of economists linked to Opus Dei, who replaced the old, prone to isolationism, Falangist guard.

The implementation of these policies took the form of development plans (planes de Desarrollo) and it was largely a success: Spain enjoyed the second highest growth rate in the world, just after Japan, and became the ninth largest economy in the world, just after Canada. Spain joined the industrialized world, leaving behind the poverty and endemic underdevelopment it had experienced since the loss of the Spanish Empire at the beginning of the 19th century.

Albeit the economic growth produced noticeable improvements in Spanish living standards and the development of a middle class, Spain remained less economically advanced relative to the rest of Western Europe (with the exception of Portugal, Greece and Ireland). At the heyday of the Miracle, 1974, Spanish income per capita peaked at 79% of the Western European average, only to be reached again 25 years later, in 1999.

The recovery led to an increase in (often unplanned) building on the periphery of the main Spanish cities to accommodate the new class of industrial workers brought by rural exodus, much similar to the French banlieue.

The icon of the Desarrollo was the SEAT 600, the first car for many Spanish working class families, produced by the Spanish SEAT under FIAT licence.

Franco's last years (1973-1975)

The 1973 oil shock severely affected oil-dependent Spain, and brought the economic growth to a halt in 1975. This caused a new sprawl of strikes (nominally illegal at the time).

Franco's declining health gave more power to Admiral Luis Carrero Blanco, but he was assassinated by ETA in 1973. Carlos Arias Navarro took over as President of the Spanish Government, and tried to introduce some reforms to the decaying regime, but he struggled between the two factions of the regime, the bunker (far-right) and the aperturists who promoted transition to Democracy.

But there was no way back to the old regime: Spain was not the same as in post-Civil War times and the model for the now wealthy Spaniards was the prosperous Western Europe, not the impoverished post-war Falangist Spain. Wealthy West Germany became a role model with which Spaniards identified themselves, as West Germans increasingly went on vacations to the Spanish beaches. Besides this a considerable number of Spanish men had worked in Western Europe in the previous years as cheap labour forces, thereby encountering the economical growth and wealth of western Europeans.

The size of the Spanish army and police was significantly smaller than pre-war times and the important Roman Catholic clergy were at the time deeply transformed, and sometimes deeply worried, by the reforms of the Vatican Council II.

In 1974 Franco fell ill, and Juan Carlos took over as Head of State. Franco soon recovered, but one year later fell ill once again, and after a long agony, Franco died on November 20, 1975, at the age of 82—the same date as José Antonio Primo de Rivera, founder of the Falange. It is suspected that the doctors were ordered to keep him barely alive by artificial means until that symbolic date. The historian Ricardo de la Cierva says that on the 19th around 6 p.m. he was told that Franco had already died.

After Franco's death, the interim government took decision to bury him at Santa Cruz del Valle de los Caídos, a colossal memorial to all casualties during Spanish Civil War, although it was conceived by Franco and has a distinctly nationalist tone.

References

  • Payne, S. (1987). The Franco regime. 1st ed. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press.

See also

  • Yves Guerin Serac, founder of the French OAS latter engaged by Franco
  • Relations of Members of the United Nations with Spain
  • Condecoraciones otorgadas por Francisco Franco a Benito Mussolini y a Adolf Hitler

External links

  • Text of Franco's Fundamental Laws, the Spanish "Constitutions" under Franco. (Spanish)
Video
  • Documentary 52': When Franco died we were 30

Search Term: "Spain_under_Franco"

 

Brand It Like Beckham 

Time Magazine - Jan 12 7:07 AM
Here's a tale for our times.
The Daily Journal Local artists to show works at local banks through January 
Ukiah Daily Journal - Jan 12 8:57 AM
Artist who will be exhibiting their paintings at local banks through January 2007: Ginger O'Shea at Savings Bank of Mendocino County, 904 N. State St., Ukiah. Jane Covella at Savings Bank of Mendocino County, East Road, Redwood Valley.

Are the dead porpoises on Scottish beaches more evidence of global warming? 
The Scotsman - Jan 09 5:40 PM
HARBOUR porpoises are starving to death in the North Sea as a result of rising water temperatures, scientists have revealed.

Birds will tip you to kingfish action 
St. Petersburg Times - Jan 11 10:17 PM
The telltale sign for locating these schools is to look for diving pelicans.