This article is about the Catalan state proclaimed in 1934. For similar terms, see Catalan Republic.
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In this solemn hour, in the name of the people and the Parliament, the Government over which I preside assumes all the faculties of power in Catalonia, proclaims the Catalan State of the Spanish Federal Republic, and in establishing and fortifying relations with the leaders of the general protest against Fascism, invites them to establish in Catalonia the provisional Government of the Republic, which will find in our Catalan people the most generous impulse of fraternity in the common desire to erect a free and magnificent federal republic.[2]
The attempt was quickly aborted by the Spanish government: General Domènec Batet, chief of the IV Organic Division of the Spanish Army stationed in Catalonia, crushed the uprising.[3] Companys had telephoned Batet asking for his support before the proclamation, but he remained loyal to the Spanish government and gained some time demanding a written request. While Companys wrote the request, Batet prepared the local Army, Civil Guard, and Assault Guards to respond to the imminent proclamation. The Catalan State collapsed as Batet's men quickly gained control of the Palau de la Generalitat de Catalunya, cutting off Companys and his government from the Mossos d'Esquadra and militiamen under their control before they could receive orders.
Aftermath
In the failed rebellion, 46 people died: 38 civilians and 8 soldiers.[4] Companys and virtually all members of his government were arrested and imprisoned. More than 3,000 people were imprisoned, most of them in the Uruguay steamer, and placed under the jurisdiction of the councils of war. Manuel Azaña was also arrested, who happened to be in Barcelona to attend the funerals of the former minister of his cabinet, Jaime Carner. The soldiers who had taken part of the insurrection, the commander Enric Pérez Farràs and the captains Escofet and Ricart, were condemned to death. Their sentence was commuted to life imprisonment by Spanish President Niceto Alcalá-Zamora, in spite of the protests of both the CEDA and the Republican Liberal Democrat Party of Melquiades Álvarez, who demanded a strong hand.[5] The President and the Government of the Generalitat were tried by the Constitutional Guarantees Tribunal and were sentenced for military rebellion to thirty years in prison, which was carried out by some in the Cartagena prison and others in the Puerto de Santa María. On 23 February 1935, the Mayor of Barcelona and the detained councilors were provisionally released.[6] The government of Lerroux unleashed "a harsh repressive wave with the closure of political and trade union centers, the suppression of newspapers, the removal of municipalities and thousands of detainees, without having had a direct action on the facts", which showed "a punitive will often arbitrary and with vengeance components of class or ideological".[7]
Catalonia's Statute of Autonomy was suspended indefinitely by a law passed on 14 December at the proposal of the Government (CEDA demanded the repeal of the Statute) and the Generalitat of Catalonia was replaced by a Council of the Generalitat appointed by the Government and presided by a Governor General of Catalonia (the first was Colonel Francisco Jiménez Arenas, who acted as "accidental president" of the Generalitat since 7 October, and who in January 1935 was replaced by Manuel Portela Valladares). In April 1935, when the state of war was lifted, Portela was replaced by the radical Joan Pich i Pon, and some of the powers of the Generalitat were returned to him, but not those of Public Order.[6] The Catalan League participated in that government, "which confirmed its image as an accomplice of the enemies of autonomy and alienated middle class sectors from it, although at the same time, since the end of October, it denounced the central government for taking advantage of the situation created to suppress or reduce the autonomous faculties, maintaining that "a people should not be punished for the mistakes of their rulers". In the name of the Catalan League, the vice-president of the Catalan parliament, A. Martínez Domingo, challenged before the Guarantees Court the law of 2 January 1935, which emptied the Generalitat of its contents".[7]
The controverisal Crop Contracts Law was annulled by the Spanish government, and almost 3,000 eviction lawsuits of rabassaires and sharecroppers were processed. The left-wing Catalan nationalist newspapers were suspended.[6]
Following the victory of the left-wing Popular Front in the 1936 general election, the Statute of Autonomy was reintroduced with Companys and his government pardoned and reinstated in their functions.[8]
^"Separatists' Rising: Bloodshed in Barcelona". The Times. 8 October 1934. p. 14.
^Finestres, Jordi; López, Manel (2014). "Entre la revolució i l'estelada". Sàpiens (in Catalan). Barcelona: 31–32. ISSN1695-2014.
^Casanova, Julián (2007). República y Guerra Civil. Vol. 8 de la Historia de España, dirigida por Josep Fontana y Ramón Villares (in Spanish). Barcelona: Crítica/Marcial Pons. p. 129. ISBN978-84-8432-878-0.
^ abcTermes, Josep (1999). De la Revolució de Setembre a la fi de la Guerra Civil (1868–1939). Vol. 6 de la Història de Catalunya dirigida per Pierre Vilar (in Catalan). Barcelona: Edicions 62. p. 381. ISBN84-297-4510-6.
^ abDe la Granja, José Luis; Beramendi, Justo; Anguera, Pere (2001). La España de los nacionalismos y las autonomías. Madrid: Síntesis. pp. 134–135. ISBN84-7738-918-7.