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Directorate-General for Security (Spain)
The Directorate-General for Security (Spanish: Dirección General de Seguridad, DGS) was a Spanish agency under the Ministry of the Interior responsible for public order policy throughout Spain.
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Emblem of the General Police Corps (1942).
The Directorate-General for Security (Spanish: Dirección General de Seguridad, DGS) was a Spanish agency under the Ministry of the Interior responsible for public order policy throughout Spain.
First created in March 1858 as Directorate-General for Security and Public Order, it was dissolved in October that year. It was re-established in 1886 as Directorate-General for Security and suppressed in 1888. Finally, the agency was re-established once more in 1912, lasting until the Spanish transition to democracy.
The agency was briefly renamed the Directorate-General for Public Order between 1921 and 1923, when it regained its original name. After the Spanish Civil War, the agency increased its role in controlling public order during Franco's dictatorship, becoming one of the main instruments of Francoist repression. It was abolished in 1979 when the current Directorate-General of the Police took over its functions.
On March 24, 1858, a General Directorate of Security and Public Order was created, with Manuel Ruiz del Cerro appointed to the position. However, this body had a very short existence, and was dissolved in October of that year. In 1886, a General Directorate of Security was re-established under the Ministry of the Interior to centralize all existing police services and security forces. Marshal Antonio Dabán y Ramírez de Arellano was appointed as its first Director General of Security . The agency was abolished in July 1888, but was re-established at the end of 1912. From then on, the new agency became an important instrument of government public order policies.
Between June 1921 and November 1923 the organization was called "General Directorate of Public Order", later recovering its original name.
After the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, the DGS (Directorate General of Security) came under Republican control, but proved powerless to control the extrajudicial killings , secret prisons , and other "uncontrolled acts" that became commonplace in the early months. In those days of July, the Director of Security, Alonso Mallol, was horrified by the situation and was unable to effectively curb it.
Following the end of the Civil War and the establishment of the Francoist dictatorship, the latter profoundly reorganized the DGS, concentrating numerous services under its direct control and thereby increasing its power. The policy of the victorious side was far from national reconciliation and was based entirely on the vision of victory over the vanquished . The new Law for State Security further emphasized this new character of the DGS. ]
José Ungría Jiménez was appointed the new director general immediately after the end of the war, and José Finat y Escrivá de Romaní succeeded him. In fact, Escrivá de Romaní would become known for his extremely harsh repression and even invited Heinrich Himmler to visit Madrid, with the idea of establishing police collaboration with the Gestapo.
From 1941, the DGS was entrusted with the task of monitoring public morality and compliance with the rules imposed based on directives on conduct and dress drawn up by the Catholic Church . During the summer period especially, the DGS reported on these instructions (the use of "indecent bathing garments" was prohibited, requiring coverage of the chest and back, and the mandatory use of skirts for women and sports trousers for men) and imposed fines "on those who did not observe behavior in accordance with the required morality."
Its headquarters, which at this time was located in the Royal Post Office in the Puerta del Sol (Madrid), became notorious as a torture center, with well-known cases such as those of the communist leader Julián Grimau, President Companys, and the socialist leader Tomás Centeno , the latter of whom died under mysterious circumstances in the offices of the Directorate General. The period of Carlos Arias Navarro as Director General, under the ministry of Camilo Alonso Vega, was particularly marked by repression. The General Police Corps also had offices in the Puerta del Sol, including those of the Political-Social Brigade
On September 13, 1974, the armed organization ETA-V Assembly carried out the so-called Calle del Correo bombing by planting a powerful bomb in the nearby Rolando cafeteria. The target was the numerous police officers who frequented the establishment, but of the thirteen people killed by the explosion, only one was a police officer. ETA never dared to claim responsibility for the attack.
Following Franco's death and the beginning of the Spanish transition to democracy, in 1978 the DGS was reorganized to adapt it to the realities of the time. In 1979 the agency was abolished, becoming the current Directorate-General of the Police.
| Period | Start | Ending | Name | Game |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reign of Alfonso XIII | ||||
| (1902-1931) | November 27, 1912 | December 5, 1916 | Ramón Méndez Alanís | |
| January 5, 1916 | April 18, 1919 | Manuel de la Barrera y Caro | Military | |
| April 18, 1919 | April 20, 1921 | Fernando de Torres Almunia | ||
| April 20, 1921 | December 8, 1922 | Millán Millán de Priego y Bedmar | ||
| December 8, 1922 | September 27, 1923 | Carlos Blanco Pérez | Military | |
| September 27, 1923 | January 29, 1924 | Miguel Arlegui Bayonés | Military | |
| February 6, 1924 | April 12, 1925 | José González Hernández | Military | |
| April 12, 1925 | February 13, 1930 | Pedro Bazán Esteban | Military | |
| February 13, 1930 | April 15, 1931 | Emilio Mola | Military | |
| Second Republic | ||||
| (1931-1939) | April 15, 1931 | May 14, 1931 | Carlos Blanco Pérez | Military |
| May 14, 1931 | December 18, 1931 | Angel Galarza Gago | PRRS | |
| December 18, 1931 | March 4, 1932 | Ricardo Herráiz Esteve | ||
| March 4, 1932 | March 6, 1933 | Arturo Menéndez López | Military | |
| March 6, 1933 | September 14, 1933 | Manuel Andrés Casaus | AR | |
| September 14, 1933 | June 1, 1935 | José Valdivia and Garci-Borrón | Military | |
| November 6, 1935 | December 19, 1935 | José Gardoqui Urdanibia | Military | |
| December 19, 1935 | February 22, 1936 | Vicente Santiago Hodsson | Military | |
| February 22, 1936 | July 31, 1936 | José Alonso Mallol | GO | |
| July 31, 1936 | December 31, 1936 | Manuel Muñoz Martínez | GO | |
| December 31, 1936 | May 20, 1937 | Wenceslao Carrillo Alonso | PSOE | |
| May 28, 1937 | July 18, 1937 | Antonio Ortega Gutiérrez | Military | |
| October 15, 1937 | April 1, 1938 | Carlos de Juan Rodríguez | PSOE | |
| April 1, 1938 | April 10, 1938 | Paulino Gómez Saiz | PSOE | |
| April 10, 1938 | April 17, 1938 | Juan Ruiz Olazarán | PSOE | |
| April 17, 1938 | March 13, 1939 | Eduardo Cuevas de la Peña | Military | |
| March 13, 1939 | March 29, 1939 | Vicente Girauta Linares | PSOE | |
| Francoist Dictatorship | ||||
| (1939-1975) | January 5, 1939 | September 26, 1939 | José Ungría Jiménez | Military |
| September 26, 1939 | May 10, 1941 | José Finat and Escrivá de Romaní | FET y de las JONS | |
| May 10, 1941 | June 30, 1942 | Gerardo Caballero Olabézar | Military | |
| June 30, 1942 | July 27, 1951 | Francisco Rodríguez Martínez | Military | |
| July 27, 1951 | June 25, 1957 | Rafael Hierro Martínez | Military | |
| June 25, 1957 | February 5, 1965 | Carlos Arias Navarro | FET y de las JONS | |
| February 9, 1965 | November 1, 1965 | Mariano Tortosa Sobejano | Military | |
| November 20, 1965 | February 1, 1974 | Eduardo Blanco Rodríguez | Military | |
| February 1, 1974 | December 12, 1975 | Francisco Dueñas Gavilán | Military | |
| Reign of Juan Carlos I | ||||
| (from 1975) | December 12, 1975 | July 23, 1976 | Victor Castro Sanmartin | military |
| July 23, 1976 | December 23, 1976 | Emilio Rodríguez Román | FET y de las JONS | |
| December 23, 1976 | May 10, 1979 | Mariano Nicolás García | FET and the JONS |
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Gerardo Caballero
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Thomas, Hugh (1976). La Guerra Civil Española. París: Ruedo Ibérico. ISBN 84-253-2767-9.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: publisher location (link)
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