The long-term causes of the Spanish Civil War - To what extent was the Spanish Civil War caused by long-term social divisions within Spanish society?
Economic and social problems 1900-31
Rural poverty
Urban poverty
Political instability
The collapse of the monarchy
The dictatorship of Primo de Rivera, September 1923 to January 1930
The end of the monarchy, April 1931
The short-term causes of the Spanish Civil War - To what extent should the Republican governments between 1931 and 1936 be blamed for the failure to prevent civil war?
The governments of the Second Spanish Republic 1931-1936
The left-wing government's reforms 1931-1933
Limitations of the reforms 1931-1933
Political reactions to the reforms 1931-1933
Opposition from the extreme left
Opposition from the conservative right
Right-wing Republican government, November 1933 to February 1936.
Reforms of the right-wing Republic 1933-1936
The Astruias Uprising, October 1934
The end of the right-wing government, January 1936
Popular Front government, February-July 1936
Reforms of the Popular Front government
Opposition from the conservative right
Opposition from the extreme left
The military uprising, July 1936
The course of the Spanish Civil War 1936-1949 - Why did the Republican government lose the Spanish Civil War?
July 1936: Republican and Nationalist Spain
The Nationalist advance to Madrid 1936
Nationalist advance on Madrid, August-October 1936
Fortress of Alcazar, September 1936
Battle for Madrid, October-December 1936
Madrid and northern Spain 1937
The Malaga Campaign, February 1937
Battle for Madrid, January-March 1937
The Guadalajara campaign, March 1937
The Vizcaya Campaign, March-June 1937
Guernica, April 1937
Nationalist Conquest of the north, May-October 1937
Republican divisions: Barcelona, May 1937
Brunete, July 1937
Teruel, December 1937 to January 1938
The war in 1938: The Nationalist advance into Catalonia
The Ebro Offensive, July-November 1938
The war in 1939: the fall of Barcelona and Madrid
Barcelona, February 1939
Madrid, February-March 1939
Managing the war
Military personnel
Militias
War Supplies
Domestic production of armaments
International supply of armaments
Non-Intervention Agreement
International assistance
Moral
Propaganda and Censorship
Rationing and food supplies
Reasons for Defeat and victory
The effects of the Spanish Civil War - To what extent was Spain fundamentally changed by the civil war?
The social impact of the war
Casualties and social divisions
Impact of the civil war on women
Women in Nationalist Spain
Women in Republican Spain
Economic Impact of the War
Destruction
Financial difficulties
Political impact of the war
Attention Students
Dear Students, I will be absent this Thursday and Friday due to a workshop out of country. Please read pages 88-109 answer this question (two page answer): To what extent was Spain fundamentally changed by the civil war?