Confederal militias

Confederal Militia
Milicias confederales de la CNT-FAI
Flag of the CNT-FAI
Active1934–1937
Disbanded1937
Country Spanish Republic
Allegiance CNT-FAI
BranchSpanish Republican Army
TypePeople's Militia
RoleHome defense
Size50,000
ColorsRed   and Black  
EngagementsRevolution of 1934
Spanish Civil War
Commanders
Durruti ColumnBuenaventura Durruti
South Ebro ColumnAntonio Ortiz Ramírez
Ascaso ColumnCristóbal Alvaldetrecu,
Gregorio Jover,
Domingo Ascaso
Harriers ColumnMiguel García Vivancos,
Juan García Oliver
Iron ColumnJosé Pellicer Gandía
Land and Freedom ColumnGerminal de Souza
Rosal ColumnFrancisco del Rosal Rico,
Cipriano Mera

The confederal militias were a movement of people's militia organized during the Spanish Civil War by the dominant organizations of anarchism in Spain: the National Confederation of Labor (CNT) and the Iberian Anarchist Federation (FAI).

These militias played an important role in the Revolution of 1934. They were not the only ones, since other militias belonging to other organizations, parties and trade unions also played a role in the revolution, such as those of POUM ("Workers' Party of Marxist Unification"), those of the Syndicalist Party (PS) and those of the General Union of Workers (UGT). After the coup d'état of July 1936, armed groups of civilian volunteers organized by the parties and trade unions formed in the areas where the uprising failed, joined the remains of the regular army units and state security forces that had remained loyal to the Republic.[1]

Volunteers in these militias declined to wear uniforms, give the military echelon a salute, and perform other formal military duties. The officers, elected, could quickly succeed one another at the head of a group and the men felt they had the right to discuss the orders and only apply them if they were in agreement.[2]

As the war progressed, the militias were progressively dissolved and assimilated into the Spanish Republican Army, in spite of many militiamen refusing the militarization.

  1. ^ All the numerical references come from the study of the civil guard Francisco Lacruz, author of The Uprising, the revolution and terror in Barcelona , Barcelona, 1943.
  2. ^ François Godicheau, The words of the Spanish Civil War , Presses Universitaires du Mirail, 2003, ISBN 978-2858166848, page 9.

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