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Battle of Bilbao
Part of the Spanish Civil War (1937)
Part of the Spanish Civil War (1937)
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| conflict | Battle of Bilbao |
| partof | the Spanish Civil War |
| image | Frente del Norte - Spanish Civil War (March-Sept 1937).svg |
| image_size | 300 |
| caption | The Northern Front. Bilbao is on the right of the red area. |
| date | 12–19 June 1937 |
| place | Biscay, Northern Spain |
| territory | Nationalists capture Biscay from Republicans |
| result | Nationalist victory |
| combatant1 | Spanish Republic |
| Basque Country Basque Army | |
| combatant2 | Nationalist Spain |
| Fascist Italy (1922–1943) CTV | |
| Nazi Germany Condor Legion | |
| commander1 | Spanish Republic Mariano Gámir Ulíbarri |
| Spanish Republic Juan Cueto Ibáñez | |
| Spanish Republic Pablo Belderráin | |
| Spanish Republic Joseph Putz | |
| Spanish Republic Nino Nanetti | |
| Basque Country José Antonio Aguirre | |
| Basque Country Alberto Montaud | |
| commander2 | Nationalist Spain Fidel Dávila Arrondo |
| Nationalist Spain José Solchaga Zala | |
| Nationalist Spain Rafael García Valiño | |
| Nationalist Spain Juan Bautista Sánchez | |
| Nazi Germany Wolfram Freiherr von Richthofen | |
| strength1 | 50,000 troops and militia |
| strength2 | 60,000 Nationalist troops |
| 15,000 Italian troops | |
| casualties1 | 14,000 killed, wounded, or captured |
| casualties2 | Nationalist Spain: Unknown |
| Italy: 105 dead | |
| 427 wounded | |
| 3 missing |
Basque Country Basque Army
Fascist Italy (1922–1943) CTV
Nazi Germany Condor Legion
Spanish Republic Juan Cueto Ibáñez
Spanish Republic Pablo Belderráin
Spanish Republic Joseph Putz
Spanish Republic Nino Nanetti
Basque Country José Antonio Aguirre
Basque Country Alberto Montaud
Nationalist Spain José Solchaga Zala
Nationalist Spain Rafael García Valiño
Nationalist Spain Juan Bautista Sánchez
Nazi Germany Wolfram Freiherr von Richthofen
15,000 Italian troops
Italy: 105 dead
427 wounded
3 missing
The Battle of Bilbao, part of the War in the North in the Spanish Civil War, saw the Nationalist Army capture Bilbao and the rest of the Basque Country that was still being held by the Spanish Republic.
Background
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Bilbao was the capital of the autonomous Basque area, which had been established by the Spanish Republic after the war began to reward Basque nationalist support of the Republic. The Basque people in Spain generally inhabit four provinces: Navarre, Álava, Gipuzkoa and Biscay. The Basque nationalists were dominant in the last two provinces. Navarre and Álava had rallied to the rising against the Republic.
The Spanish Nationalist troops gained Gipuzkoa early in the war with the fall of Irún in August and San Sebastián on 13 September 1936, isolating the Basque Country and the zone held by the Northern Republicans from the French border. On 31 March, the Nationalists, led by the General Emilio Mola, launched an offensive against Biscay Province. The Basque troops had to retire, and by June, the Nationalists had reached the outskirts of Bilbao.
Battle
By 11 June 1937. the Basque forces had fallen back to the city of Bilbao, which was defended by a series of rushed fortifications called the "Bilbao's Iron Ring". It was poorly designed for defence. It was quite an antiquated concept, akin to First World War fortifications, and so was vulnerable to modern warfare and weapons, such as aircraft and artillery. Also, only 30,000 troops defended it although it had been conceived to be defended by 70,000. Therefore. the Iron Ring was rather easily overcome by Nationalist forces.
The ring was breached by an infantry assault supported by heavy air and artillery bombardment (150 guns and 70 bombers). On 12 June, the Spanish Republican Army launched a diversionary attack against Huesca to stop the Nationalist offensive, but the Nationalist troops continued their advance. On the night of 13 June, the defenders evacuated most of the civilian population from the city. On 18 June, General Ulibarri withdrew his remaining troops from Bilbao, and the Nationalists occupied the city on the following day. The city's bridges had been destroyed to hinder the attackers, but the city remained mostly intact.
References
References
- Martínez Bande, 'The War', pp. 219-229
- Jackson, Gabriel. (1965). "The Spanish Republic and the Civil War, 1931–1939".
- Thomas, Hugh. (2001). "The Spanish Civil War". Modern Library.
- Gabriel Jackson, pp. 380–384.
- {{in lang. (August 2025)
- {{in lang. es Imanol Villa: [http://www.elcorreo.com/vizcaya/prensa/20070211/vizcaya/cinturon-hierro_20070211.html «El Cinturón de Hierro»], ''El Correo'', 2007-02-11.
- Beevor, Antony. (2006). "The Battle for Spain. The Spanish Civil War, 1936–1939". Penguin Books.
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