Military Regions of Spain

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The military regions of the Spanish Armed Forces were a administrative subdivision that existed in Spain from the 18th century to the end of the 20th century. They constituted a territorial subdivision in terms of the allocation of human and material resources for defence purposes, and responded to a model (see es:Neutralidad_armada, Armed Neutrality).

Spanish Army[]

Spanish military regions were commanded by a captain general and the garrisons were made up of regiments, which were grouped into brigades and divisions, commanded by the respective generals. There were also auxiliary and non-combatant units (for example health, Quartermaster, etc.) and other combatant units not grouped into regiments and reporting directly to the captain general (for example, naval or air forces).

Origins[]

Military regions of Spain after the 1841 reforms.

In 1492, the Catholic Monarchs created the first captaincy general of Castile in the recently conquered Kingdom of Granada. This would later lead to the creation of the military regions. During the reign of Felipe V of Spain the old figure of Captain General, responsible for the royal army present in his jurisdiction, was revitalized.

The division of Spain into captaincies general dates from 1705, when they adjusted to the old kingdoms that constituted the Hispanic Monarchy. They were thirteen regions: , , , , , Catalonia, , , , , , and . In 1714 the was created from the .[1]

In 1898 the peninsular territory was reduced to seven new military regions, while at the same time that the General Command of , , and . In 1907 the captaincies general were restructured, receiving the name of military regions.

Second Republic[]

During the Second Spanish Republic, one of the military reforms of the politician and minister Manuel Azaña suppressed the military regions, creating instead the organic divisions commanded by a major general.[2]

Francoism[]

At the end of the Civil War, the Spanish (Francoist) Army numbered 1,020,500 men, in 60 Divisions.[3] During the first year of peace, Franco dramatically reduced the size of the Army to 250,000 in early 1940, with most soldiers two-year conscripts.[4]

After the establishment of the Franco dictatorship, through the Decree of 4 July 1939 of the Ministry of National Defence the administrative division of military regions and their scope were officially established.[5] The eight traditional Military Regions (Madrid, Sevilla, Valencia, Barcelona, Zaragoza, Burgos, Valladolid, La Coruña) were reestablished. In 1944 a ninth Military Region, with its headquarters in Granada, was created.[3]

Military regions of Spain after the 1944 reforms.
Military regions of Spain after the 1960 reforms.
Military Regions of Spain (1939–1984)
Region No. Coat of Arms Region Details
I Coat of Arms of the Former 1st Spanish Military Region (Until 1984).svg , captaincy general of Madrid.
II Coat of Arms of the Former 2nd Spanish Military Region (Until 1984).svg , captaincy general of Seville.
III Coat of Arms of the Former 3rd Spanish Military Region (Until 1984).svg III Military Region, captaincy general of Valencia.
IV Coat of Arms of the Former 4th Spanish Military Region (Until 1984).svg , captaincy general of Barcelona.
V Coat of Arms of the Former 5th Spanish Military Region (Until 1984).svg , Captaincy General of Zaragoza.
VI Coat of Arms of the Former 6th Spanish Military Region (Until 1984).svg , Captaincy General of Burgos.
VII Coat of Arms of the Former 7th Spanish Military Region (Until 1984).svg , Captaincy General of Valladolid.
VIII Coat of Arms of the Former 8th Spanish Military Region (Until 1984).svg VIII Military Region, Captaincy General of La Coruña.
IX Coat of Arms of the Former 9th Spanish Military Region.svg , Captaincy General of Granada.

The Ninth Military Region was not created in 1939. Due to the Allied landings in North Africa, Operation Torch, in November 1942, the creation of the was established to reorganize the forces in the area.[6] For this purpose, it was established as a segregation of the II Military Region and with General Captaincy in Granada, on 1 March 1944.[7]

Democracy[]

Military regions of Spain from 1984 onward.

After 1978, along with other extrapeninsular demarcations, the Spanish Army went from being divided from nine to six[8] and four military regions.[9] To this end, on 17 October 1984 the second (Seville) and ninth (Granada) were abolished, to constitute the , in application of the decree of restructuring of the territorial organization for the Army, which was approved that same year.[10]

References[]

  1. ^ Madrid/diacu /History/index.html Army: General Captaincy
  2. ^ Gaceta de Madrid núm. 168 of June 17, 1931
  3. ^ a b MUÑOZ BOLAÑOS, Roberto (2010). "La institución militar en la posguerra (1939–1945)". In Fernando Puell de la Vega y Sonia Alda Mejías (ed.). Los Ejércitos del franquismo. Madrid: IUGM-UNED. 2010. Pp. 15–55.
  4. ^ Bowen, Wayne H.; José E. Álvarez (2007). A Military History of Modern Spain. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 114. ISBN 978-0-275-99357-3. Archived from the original on 5 May 2016. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  5. ^ pdf Official State Gazette no. 186, of July 5, 1939
  6. ^ militar-espana-Fuerzas-Defensa-Opeiva-Territorio-dot.html The Forces of Operational Defense of the Territory (DOT)
  7. ^ /1959/04/22/053.html ACB Journal, p. 53 (Wednesday, April 22, 1959)
  8. ^ BOE-A-1984-17298 Royal Decree 1451/1984, of 1 August, which restructures the military organization of the national territory for the Army.
  9. ^ Royal Decree 1132/1997, of 11 July, which restructures the military organization of the national territory for the Army.
  10. ^ South / sup idas / second / ninth / elpepiesp / 19841018elpepinac_11 / Tes Created the South Military Region, and suppressed the second and the ninth. El País newspaper (18/10/1984)
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