It was 4pm in the Spanish city of Guernica. It was another day in that Spanish civil war that seemed to not have an end. Suddenly, the noise of airplanes approaching from the north, hopefully only war planes crossing the city on their way to another place, but then, it started: The first bombs hit the ground without the possibility of hiding anywhere. Fire, fear, dust, explosions everywhere, people screaming and running everywhere, trying to avoid the unavoidable: death.
This is what the northern Spanish city of Guernica in the province of Vizcaya experienced on April 26, 1937. A city that in only a few minutes went from being of one of the most important industrial cities in Spain at that time, to the first city destroyed by a large-scale aviation bombing in history. This is the story of a city, plenty of life, and economic and demographic expansion opportunities, that went from being known for its work opportunities in the mining, arms, and steel industries, to the best example of what the Spanish Civil War brought to the country: destruction, pain, and death.1
It was April 26, 1937. After General Francisco Franco’s consent, at 3:30pm, the bombing took place. It was not the first time that the Nationalist side of the war (under the orders of General Franco) used the bombing of cities as a destruction strategy, trying to weaken the Republican side. The big difference between the bombing of Guernica and the previous ones in places like Madrid, Durango, Malaga, or Almeria, was that these earlier bombing raids were merely practice runs for this bigger, more lethal one on Guernica. As we know today, Guernica was the place where the first massive aerial bombing took place, all this at the hands of European Fascists. At the time of the bombing, Franco and the Nationalists were decided to destroy the opposition in the north, and subdue the Republican-held cities around Madrid, in order to leave the capital without help from any other part of the country.2
The Spanish Civil War started in 1936 with the uprising of important military generals (one of whom was Franco) in the Spanish north-African colonies. Their goal was to carry out a quick military coup and replace the Republican government with a military one. Generals Franco, Mola, Sanjurjo, and others thought that the majority of the country would follow them and that their plan would easily succeed; but they were wrong. What really happened was the division of the country into two sides: the Nationalists, or rebel side; and the Republicans. The result of this was a three-year-long civil war, which ended with the victory of the Nationalist side, but it also took thousands of lives and burned Spain to ashes, leaving the country as one of the poorest in Europe until the second half of the twentieth century. Franco did not win the war easily. His first idea, after the failed military coup, was to take Madrid after taking important cities in the south, like Malaga or Toledo, thus ending the war by taking of the capital. But the Republican side defended itself with strength, forcing the Nationalist side to take the long way; fighting the Republican side all over the country. They started winning battles in the south and then in the north of the capital, and they finally arrived at Madrid, and defeated it, on April 1, 1939.3
The Spanish Civil War’s primarily characteristic was the repression and killing of the defeated on both sides of the war. To the huge death toll, it must be added the brutality, the massive imprisonment, and the government shootings and murdering of the defeated during the post-war years. All this constructed a repression based on fear, use of force, and oppression of basic human rights, which set the basis for the almost forty-year long-lasting dictatorship of General Franco (1939-1975).4
An intense silence covered the entire city of Guernica, when at 3:30pm three military planes flew over the city; it was the silence before the storm. Those planes ended up being planes from the German and Italian Air Force. When the bombing started, everyone was on their own; everyone tried to do whatever they could to survive that hell. But as usually happens in war, the only thing that normal civilians can do in this moment is pray, and almost always this does not help either. Those who managed to survive are the voices that tell us today how Guernica looked when the bombing ended. People like Luis Ortiz Alfau, a Basque Republican who survived not only the bombing, but also the entire war and several stays in different concentrations camps. He told how after the city had burned in flames, he and the rest of the survivors had to pick up the dead and wounded, many of them friends and family, in a scenery of blood, fire, destruction, and death, like they had never seen before.5
After the bombing, the people of Guernica were on they own. They were no longer living in a place under Republican protection, but now under the control of the enemy, who sooner or later would come and finish the job if needed. Hundreds of people, like the citizens of Guernica, had to flee their homes to France, or other Republican places in Spain, or to other parts of the world. Some of them would later get caught by the Nazis in France or by their enemies in Spain. In both cases, they would end up in concentration camps. The number of victims from this tragic day: hundreds of civilians dead (approximately 1600) in a couple of hours, at least the same number of wounded, and an entire city destroyed.6
It may sound rare to hear that the bombing of Guernica was carried out by German and Italian forces, rather than by Franco’s military. But it can be said that the Spanish Civil War reached, without a doubt, international concerns, drawing in foreign parties into the conflict. The reason for the participation of German and Italian military forces was the growing alliances and relationships that were being built among the major Fascist states in Europe during the 1930s, particularly among Mussolini, Hitler, and Franco. When the Spanish Civil War was reaching its climax, WWII had not started yet, but the threat of a second World War was imminent. As Franco asked for help from its Fascist allies, Germany’s and Italy’s leaders did not lose the opportunity of testing out their military forces. That is exactly why it is said that Guernica (and other bombed cities) was the playground were Germany and Italy tried out their “new toys.” This was especially the case with Germany and its Condor aviation. It used Guernica as a testing ground, becoming the prototype for Hitler’s idea of Blitzkrieg, which was later carried out on Poland in 1939. Not only did the Nationalist side reach international concerns. The Republicans received help from Stalin’s USSR and from Mexico. Furthermore, thousands of anti-fascist volunteers from this and other countries that supported the Republicans but decided to not intervene, joined the Republican cause, known as the “International Brigades.” This kind of “international war” was what led to such a long-lasting Civil War in Spain, where not only two different sides were fighting each other, but where the entire world was seeing how the fight between Fascism and the rest of the world had just started.7
The events that happened in Guernica on that April 26, were later memorialized by the famous Spanish painter Pablo Picasso in one of his most important paintings, “Guernica.” One look at this painting is enough to understand how terrible both the bombings of Guernica were and how terrible the whole Civil War was. In fact, Picasso not only wanted to represent Guernica, but also all the pain, suffering, destruction and death that the Spanish Civil War left behind for so many years. The figures that can be seen on the painting seem more like ghosts than people, and that is exactly what Picasso wanted to represent; the spirits of so many people killed massively and so hard to accept for those who survived. One big message for Spain surrounds this painting: never forget what happened between 1936-1939 and the years that followed, in order to never repeat it, leaving the ghosts in the past.8
Wars are always terrible, but the fact that civil wars confront people of the same country is always more painful for that country; people switch from being friends to start killing each other, neighbors start accusing each other, families break up and even fight and kill other family members… The Spanish Civil War was the representation of all this: profound hate for the other side, cold-blooded killings, people killing people whom they had known for their entire lives, and, for many, the worst part was that all that did not end when the War ended. For many years, the losers (the Republicans) were chased and killed, and those who were not killed were imprisoned and lived for many years in inhumane conditions. The result of the War was a 36 year long dictatorship of General Franco, one of the longest dictatorships of human history. Francisco Franco died in his bed in 1975, which clearly shows that the repression and politics of fear carried out by Franco’s government, left Spain as a country destroyed by itself, buried under its own ashes, and unable to fight for their liberty and rights; Spain lived under Franco’s rule for too many years.
I would like to thank Dr. Necia Wolff for her help in the early stages of this project, particularly in helping me with the approach to take in my research, and in the research of sources. I am also indebted to Daniela Durán for her assistance during the Article Project Proposal process. Finally, I am most grateful to Dr. Bradford Whitener for his assistance in the editing phase of the project and for his encouragement to help me to see the importance of this project for how it could be helpful and useful to others, and especially to me.
- Ian Patterson, Guernica And Total War (Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 2007), 40-42. ↵
- History In Dispute, 2005, s.v. “Guernica: Was The Raid On Guernica In 1937 By The Condor Legion An Early Case Of Terror Bombing?,” by Kenneth Estes and Daniel Kowalsky. ↵
- Encyclopedia of the Age of War and Reconstruction, 2006, s.v. “Guernica. Europe Since 1914,” by John Merriman and Jay Winter. ↵
- Encyclopedia of the Age of War and Reconstruction, 2006, s.v. “Guernica. Europe Since 1914,” by John Merriman and Jay Winter. ↵
- Phil Davison, “Luis Ortega Alfa, witness to Guernica atrocities, dies at 102,” The Washington Post, March 23, 2019, https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A579842389/OVIC?u=txshracd2556&sid=OVIC&xid=a0513411. ↵
- Military Man, “The Spanish Civil War- Episode 2: Prelude to Tragedy,” Youtube, July 23, 2014, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lu5f9hp0IP4. ↵
- William Burton, “Guernica, 1937,” History Ireland 25, no. 4 (2017): 42-43, https://www.jstor.org/stable/90014572. ↵
- Polyxeni Potter, “Pablo Picasso (1881-1973). Guernica (1937). Oil on canvas, 350 cm x782 cm. (Cover Story),” Emerging infectious diseases 9, no. 6 (June 2003): 760+, https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A103563823/OVIC?u=txshracd2556&sid=OVIC&xid=3c95e3c7. ↵
34 comments
Eric Grant
Great article. I first found out about the bombing of Guernica because of Picasso’s painting but I did not know the details of the bombing nor the civil war. What I found interesting was that the germans (Hitler) used Guernica as a model for his strategy of Blitzkrieg, which was later utilized in Poland.
Alexis Lopez
This was an informative and heartbreaking article to read. I didn’t know of these events that had taken place in Guernica, honestly, I had never even heard of this place until I read the article. The fact that this city was bombed, and nobody came to help the people of Guernica is what infuriated me. It was interesting to read about this tragedy inspiring Picasso’s work and even after that it is still not talked about or mentioned in history which is sad. Overall, I really enjoyed reading this article and learning about Guernica.
Erin Vento
This was a really well written and educational piece on the events of Guernica. Like most people here, I was only really familiar with the painting, but not with the actual story of what happened or the events that lead to it. It’s especially devastating to think about how countries decided to bomb an entire city in order to test run weapons.
Shriji Lalji
This is very descriptive articles of the horrors of war. Even more so civil was as mentioned is devastating due to the people of the same country turning on each other and killing. It is also very interesting to see how art is intertwined with culture. I had not previously learned about this Spanish Civil war so this article really conveyed how devastating war can get.
Jourdan Carrera
The Spanish civil war is a conflict in which I am not very familiar with and one in which I have not taken much time to study thought my time in studying history. However this article goes to show how awful and brutal the acts committed on both sides were and how war always, no matter where and when it is fought, affects the everyday common people the most. The Spanish civil war is no different.
Jakob Trevino
This heartbreaking story of peoples relief at just planes passing over to bombings is devastating, I have never heard of Guernica before, but after the author had descriptively informed me about these horrific events, I feel like I can mourn with the people who were there that day.
Nadia Manitzas
This article is definitely heartbreaking. We are blessed to live in a country where we are free and don’t have to live in fear of our military. To know that a military leader would harm his own people and have them live in fear is a very coward move. These people were fearing for their lives and being killed by their own people while Franco was living his evil life. The authors hook was phenomenal, he made sure to include that death was the big picture of the article when Guernica was under the rule of Francisco Franco. Overall, I learned something new that was happening around the 1930s-1940s. This was a very well written article!
Donte Joseph
This was a very interesting and informative article to read and learn from. I had not heard of the events that transpired in the city of Guernica, but after reading this article, I am saddened to hear about it. The detail that was used allowed to understand how bad the situation really was. This article really showed how war can and used to be a very destructive and devastating event.
Alexandria Wicker
I really enjoyed reading this article. I found it so interesting and captivating. I personally have never known the inspiration behind his paintings was such a tragic event. I find it crazy the way that the French and German’s used Spain to test out their military forces. Overall I really enjoyed reading this article, it really brought light onto things that most people do not really know about.
Aleea Costilla
This was an interesting reading that helped explain the events that inspired Picasso’s “Guernica,” a piece I was familiar with prior. It was devastating to read about the sorrow the people of Guernica endured during a time of war. It also contained a lot of facts that I had not known such as the practice bombing raids. Very informative article!