Ministry of Information and Tourism

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Ministry of Information and Tourism
Ministerio de Información y Turismo
Coat of arms of Spain (1945–1977).svg
Agency overview
Formed20 July 1951
Dissolved5 July 1977
Superseding agency
TypeMinistry
JurisdictionGovernment of Spain

The Ministry of Information and Tourism (Spanish: Ministerio de Información y Turismo) was a ministerial department of the Government of Spain created in 1951 during the dictatorship of Francisco Franco to control information and the censorship to press and radio.[1][2] The ministry also assumed the management of Tourism, an important industry at that time when it had an important flowering. In historiography, some authors consider it as a simple Ministry of Propaganda.[3]

History[]

Background[]

The need to inform public opinion of the government's action had its beginnings in 1918 with the creation of the Ministry of Public Instruction and Fine Arts that had an Information Office. With the dictatorship of Primo de Rivera, two successive organizations are created; first the Bureau for Information and Press Censorship, during the Military Directory (1923), and the next one in the Civil Directory (1925) with the Cabinet for Information and Press Censorship. During the Second Republic, a Press Section is created in the General Secretariat of the President of the Republic (1932) and already during the Civil War, prime minister Largo Caballero created the Ministry of Propaganda that had an ephemeral life.

Department[]

The Department of Information and Tourism was created by a Decree-Law of 19 July 1951.[4] The ministry assumed the competences over media and entertainment —press, cinematography and theater and broadcasting— that until then were attributed to the Undersecretariat of Popular Education, whose head was Manuel Arburúa de la Miyar, while those of tourism had been attributed to the Directorate-General for Tourism, whose director-general had been, since its creation in 1938 and for fifteen years, Luis Bolín and that until then depended on the Ministry of Home Affairs.[5] Another of the bodies that came to depend on the ministry was the National Delegation of Press, Propaganda and Radio,[6] a body that was in charge of the media controlled by the Falange —such as the Movement Press Group or the Network of Broadcasters of the Movement—.

The ministry was abolished during the Spanish transition to democracy, assuming the Office of the Spokesperson the powers relating to information and the Ministry of Commerce those of tourism. The tourism powers are currently managed by the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Tourism.[7]

List of ministers[]

Image
Name
Start
End
Gabriel Arias-Salgado durante una visita a Berlín, en 1943.jpg Gabriel Arias-Salgado 18 July 1951 10 July 1962
Mr. Manuel Fraga Iribarne (Spaanse minister), Bestanddeelnr 914-8477 (cropped).jpg Manuel Fraga Iribarne 10 July 1962 29 October 1969
Coat of arms of Spain (1945–1977).svg Alfredo Sánchez Bella 29 October 1969 11 June 1973
Coat of arms of Spain (1945–1977).svg Fernando de Liñán y Zofio 11 June 1973 3 January 1974
(Cabanillas) Adolfo Suárez junto a Pío Cabanillas, ministro de Cultura, en una tasca de Orense durante la campaña de UCD en las elecciones generales de 1 de marzo de 1979 (cropped).jpeg Pío Cabanillas Gallas 3 January 1974 24 October 1974
Coat of arms of Spain (1945–1977).svg León Herrera Esteban 29 October 1974 12 December 1975
Coat of arms of Spain (1945–1977).svg Adolfo Martín-Gamero y González-Posada 12 December 1975 5 July 1976
Coat of arms of Spain (1945–1977).svg Andrés Reguera Guajardo 5 July 1976 4 July 1977

References[]

  1. ^ Edward Laprade, Douglas (2005). Censura y recepción de Hemingway en España. University of Valencia. p. 68.
  2. ^ "Decreto-ley de 19 de julio de 1951 por el que se reorganiza la Administración Central del Estado" (pdf). Boletín Oficial del Estado (in Spanish). Agencia Estatal Boletín Oficial del Estado (201): 3446. 20 July 1951. ISSN 0212-033X.
  3. ^ Cazorla-Sánchez, Antonio (2014). Franco: The Biography of the Myth. Routledge. p. 133. ASIN B0170LIEM2.
  4. ^ "Decree-Law of 19 July 1951 reorganizating the Central State Administration" (PDF). www.boe.es. 20 July 1951. Retrieved 9 September 2019.
  5. ^ "Principales protagonistas de la Guerra Civil Española, 1936-39". www.generalisimofranco.com. Retrieved 2019-09-09.
  6. ^ Juliá, Santos (2007). La España del siglo XX. Marcial Pons Historia. p. 621.
  7. ^ Bigné, Enrique; Font, Xavier; Andreu, Luisa (2000). Marketing de destinos turísticos: análisis y estrategias de desarrollo. Editorial ESIC. p. 103.
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