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A New International History of the Spanish Civil War
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1997
Year
FrenchColonialismNationalismNew International HistorySocial SciencesDiplomacySpanish Cultural StudiesPostwar RepressionGerman Economic AgreementInternational PoliticsLanguage StudiesTransatlantic RelationCivil ConflictNon-intervention CommitteeInternational RelationsGerman Economic PenetrationEuropean IssueWar CrimeSpanish PoliticsFascism In EuropeSpanishPolitical Science
Preface - Prologue - Background - Hitler and Mussolini, The Rhineland and Abyssinia - The Communist Bogey - Paris - Blum and Spain - London - Gibralter: Blum in London - Paris Changes its Mind - Germany - Bernhardt Sees Hitler - Operation 'Magic Fire' - Rome - Paris - Non-Intervention Agreed - Moscow - Lisbon - Conclusions to Part One - Limited Value of the Non-Intervention Agreement - Early Meetings of the Non-Intervention Committee - The British Labour Party and the TUC - Italian Intervention Worries Britain - The Russians Arrive - At the Non-Intervention Committee - The Condor Legion - Italy and Germany Recognise Franco - Italy Sends Troops to Franco - German Economic Agreement with Franco - Eden Reacts to Italian Reinforcements - The League, Morocco and Mexico - The United States - The Naval Patrol - War in the North - The Blockade of Bilbao - Guernica - The Catholic Church and the Spanish War - The Vatican - End of Part Two - After Guadaljara - The Deutschland and the Leipzig Incidents, the end of the Naval Patrol - The Spanish Revolution Crushed - Progress at Geneva and in the Withdrawal ofVolunteers - Tervel - The Collapse of Spring 1938 - German Economic Penetration - The New Government Searches Everywhere for Support - The Czech Crisis - At the End - Aftermath - Major Actors - References - Bibliographical Note - Bibliography - Map - Index