Siege of the Alcázar

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class="summary" colspan="2" style="background-color: #B0C4DE; text-align: center; vertical-align: middle;" | Siege of the Alcázar
colspan="2" style="background-color: #B0C4DE; text-align: center; vertical-align: middle;" | Part of the Spanish Civil War
colspan="2" style="text-align: center; font-size: 90%; border-bottom: 1px solid #aaa; line-height: 1.5em;" | File:Alcazar Toledo 2023.jpg
Alcázar of Toledo today (December 2006)
Date 21 July – 27 September 1936
Location Toledo, Spain
Result Fascist victory
colspan="2" style="background-color: #B0C4DE; text-align: center; vertical-align: middle;" | Belligerents
style="width:50%; border-right:1px dotted #aaa;" | Spanish Republic Fascist Spain
colspan="2" style="background-color: #B0C4DE; text-align: center; vertical-align: middle;" | Commanders and leaders
style="width:50%; border-right:1px dotted #aaa;" | Cándido Cabello José Moscardó Ituarte,
Pedro Romero Basart
colspan="2" style="background-color: #B0C4DE; text-align: center; vertical-align: middle;" | Strength
style="width:50%; border-right:1px dotted #aaa;" | 8,000 militia
2–3 tanks
1,028 regulars and militia
2 artillery pieces
colspan="2" style="background-color: #B0C4DE; text-align: center; vertical-align: middle;" | Casualties and losses
style="width:50%; border-right:1px dotted #aaa;" | High 48 to 65
438 wounded
22 missing

The Siege of the Alcázar (21 July 1936 – 27 September 1936) was a Fascist victory during the Spanish Civil War. Around 1,000 Fascists were besieged until relieved by around 8,000 leftist Republicans, supported by artillery and aircraft bombings. The battle had great moral and propaganda value, as discussed below.

Toledo was the spiritual capital of the Spanish Visigothic Kingdom, before the Muslim conquest. The Alcázar of Toledo is a stone fortification located in the highest part of Toledo. It became the residence of the Spanish monarchs during the Reconquista, later converted into a military academy. The Fascists saw the Alcázar as an important symbol. Losing the Alcázar to the Republicans would have been a serious blow to the Fascists' morale.

Apart from a small arms factory, Toledo was a city of no military value to either side; the Fascist forces there were isolated, badly equipped and in no condition to conduct offensive operations. Yet the Republicans —due to the increasingly symbolic value of the Alcázar as weeks went by— threw badly needed men, artillery and weapons (which could have been used to confront Franco's northern advance through western Spain) into the fortress capture.

The Republican government believed that since the garrison was only 40 miles (64 km) southwest of Madrid and would not be receiving any immediate help from the other Fascist forces that it would be an easy propaganda victory. The press was invited by the Republican government to witness the explosion of the mines and storming of the Alcázar on September 18, but it was not until September 29 that the press entered the Alcázar, this time by the invitation of the Fascists, turning the whole thing into a huge propaganda victory for the Fascists, undermining the Republican morale.

When Francisco Franco arrived to the Alcázar, he was greeted by the Commander Moscardó, who said: "No further news in the Alcázar, my General. I give it to you destroyed, but with its honor preserved".

History

The Spanish word "alcázar", of Arabic etymology, means "fortress". The Alcázar of Toledo was in 1936 a military academy for formation of Infantry officers of the Spanish Army. The city of Toledo, in central Spain, had been the capital of the Kingdom of Castille until the XVI century, when the seat of government was moved to Madrid, distant seventy Kilometres from Toledo. Although the Alcázar of Toledo has known a number of armed conflicts throughout centuries of existence of the current fortress (and of other fortresses previously located upon that hill, at least since Roman times), what is known in recent History as the Siege of the Alcázar was in 1936 a failed tentative by Spanish Republican forces of capturing the fortress, inside which a multitude of several hundreds of persons, composed of soldiers, police, anti-Republican political militias, members of the Catholic Church or of religious orders, and vast numbers of civilians (including women and children), had taken refuge and were defending themselves immediately at the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War (Cruzada de Liberación Nacional, 18th July 1936 to 1st April 1939). The defenders of the Alcázar of Toledo resisted repeated Republican assaults, which included massive waves of Republican Infantry and Red Militias, artillery shells, armoured vehicles, aircraft bombing, and underground mines, from 21st July to 27th September 1936.

The siege ended shortly after Generalísimo Francisco Franco Bahamonde, one of the top Commanders of the National (or Fascist) Army that had raised in arms against the Republican Government, took the decision of deviating towards Toledo one of his four advancing columns of the Army of Africa (composed of legionaries, regulars, and other warriors hardened in the Moroccan Wars), while the other three columns continued advancing over Madrid from the West (thus stabilising the War Front in "Puente de los Franceses", at just three Kilometres from the centre of the Republican capital). The column of the Army of Africa ordered to relieve the Alcázar, under command of General Varela, fought its way to Toledo, occupied the city, and relieved the garrison. The Commander of the Alcázar, Colonel Don José Moscardó e Ituarte (1878-1956), was promoted immediately to the rank of General and continued fighting for the remaining of the War, as did the other combatants who had endured the siege of sixty-eight days. All of them were likewise awarded honours or promoted. Although the decision of General Franco gave some more time for the Republicans to strengthen the defence of Madrid, it was well justified as a "Matter of Honour of the Spanish Army", in the words of Franco himself, and it certainly resulted in prestige for the Fascist Cause inside Spain and abroad (many international reporters covered the events from Madrid, in spite of strict censorship by the Republican Government).

The son of Colonel Moscardó, Don Luis Moscardó Guzmán, of almost seventeen years of age and a cadet at the Military Academy commanded by his father, was captured outside the Alcázar by Red Militias and used as a hostage. About ten hours (local time) on 23rd July 1936, in a communication by telephone with his father, the son declared his decision to confront death. When, after listening to the voice of his heroic son for the last time, the Commander of the Alcázar refused to surrender, then his son was taken to prison and killed a month later, together with other prisoners whose political or religious ideas were to the distaste of the Red Militias. Another son of Colonel Moscardó, Don José Moscardó Guzmán, of twenty-four years of age, was later captured in Madrid and also killed. Colonel Moscardó vowed vengeance against the Reds. A newspaper named "El Alcázar" was founded during the siege, printed on available paper sheets using a small manual machine. "El Alcázar" became the voice of the Spanish anti-Republican Crusade, continuing publication as a daily journal in Madrid (with better printing machines), for many years after the War. The fortress of the Alcázar of Toledo is now a museum open to the public, attracting thousands of visitors every year. It is located beside Plaza de Zocodover, in the old centre of the historical city of Toledo, partly surrounded by incredibly narrow, medieval streets.

The defenders desperately resisted furious and frequent attacks that came at any time, day or night, plus enormous privations. They were helped by the fact that the Republicans and their Militias were very disorganised. Water was initially available from a central tank in the yard of the Alcázar, until the besiegers found the water supply and interrupted it. From that point, the defenders rationed the water from the only tank, and tried to get a little more by catching rain water into all sorts of containers. Food was precariously obtained by risky nightly foraging expeditions into close city stores, whose location was known to the Toledans of the Alcázar, but which had been overlooked by the Madrilenian Republicans. The city had been partly evacuated, but the remaining inhabitants helped the defenders with water, food, and information on the location, strength and activities of Republican units. Many Toledans paid with their life for their support to the Alcázar, rigthly or wrongly suspected of being in contact with the defenders. Unión Radio announced from Madrid that the Alcázar had finally been taken, and "only a few survivors still continue a hopeless defence in the broken ruins". The radio report was completely false, for the Alcázar still resisted. A courageous volunteer offered to exit the Alcázar at night, in disguise, and try to contact the vanguard of the advancing National troops. This hero was never seen again, he probably was captured and killed. At any rate, the Republican broadcast was not believed at the Fascist Headquarters of General Franco, who well knew the obstinate and Numantine resistence of which his Spanish compatriots have always been capable.

The decision of Colonel Moscardó

Transcription of the telephone communication of 23rd July 1936.

MILITIAN LEADER CÁNDIDO CABELLO (Leader of Communist and Socialist Militias in Toledo)
-Son Ustedes responsables de los crímenes y de todo lo que está ocurriendo en Toledo, y le doy un plazo de diez minutos para que rinda el Alcázar, y de no hacerlo fusilaré a su hijo Luis que le tengo aquí a mi lado.
(You are responsible for the crimes and for everything that is happening in Toledo, and I give a limit of ten minutes for the surrender of the Alcázar, and if You do not do it I shall shoot Your son Luis who is here at my side)

COLONEL MOSCARDÓ
-Lo creo.
(I believe it)

MILITIAN LEADER CÁNDIDO CABELLO
-Y para que vea que es verdad, ahora se pone al aparato.
(And for showing that this is true, right now he will speak at the telephone)

LUIS MOSCARDÓ GUZMÁN
-¡ Papá !
(Father !)

COLONEL MOSCARDÓ
-¿ Qué hay, hijo mío ?
(What is it, my son ?)

LUIS MOSCARDÓ GUZMÁN
-Nada, que dicen que me van a fusilar si el Alcázar no se rindiere, pero no te preocupes por mí.
(Nothing, just that they say that they will shoot me if the Alcázar do not surrender, but do not worry because of me)

COLONEL MOSCARDÓ
-Si fuere cierto, encomienda tu alma a Dios, da un viva a Cristo Rey y a España, y serás un héroe que muere por ella. ¡ Adios, hijo mío, un beso muy fuerte !
(If that be true, send thy soul to God, shout a cry to Christ the King and to Spain, and thou wilt be a hero who has died for his country. Farewell, my son, a very strong kiss !)

LUIS MOSCARDÓ GUZMÁN
- ¡ Adiós, papá, un beso muy fuerte !
(Farewell, father, a very strong kiss !)

MILITIAN LEADER CÁNDIDO CABELLO
- ¿ Su decisión, Coronel ?
(Your decision, Colonel ?)

COLONEL MOSCARDÓ
-Puede ahorrarse el plazo que me ha dado y fusilar a mi hijo. El Alcázar jamás se rendirá.
(You may disconsider the time that You have offered me and shoot my son instead. The Alcázar will never surrender)

On 23rd August 1936 Luis Moscardó Guzmán was taken out of prison and shot by a firing squad in the outskirts of Toledo.

Filmography

  • Las ruinas del Alcázar, Spanish short documentary directed by Diego Tamayo in 1939.
http://www.imdb.com/tt0031882/
  • L'assedio dell'Alcázar (Sin novedad en el Alcázar), Italian-Spanish production directed by Augusto Genina in 1940. Cast: Fosco Giachetti, Mireille Balin, María Denis, Rafael Calvo.
http://www.imdb.com/tt0032225/
  • El Alcázar no se rinde (El santuario no se rinde), Spanish production directed by Arturo Ruiz Castillo in 1949, written by José María Amado and Alfonso Nieva. Cast: María Luisa Abad, Mariano Alcón, Valeriano Andrés, Rafael Bardem.
http://www.imdb.com/tt0041844/


cs:Obléhání Alcázaru