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{{Short description|1936 action in the Spanish Civil War}}
{{fixbunching|beg}}
{{Infobox Military Conflict
{{Infobox military conflict
|conflict=Siege of Gijón
| conflict = Siege of Gijón
| image = Alvarez Laviada.jpg
|image=
| image_size = 200px
|caption=
| caption = Monument to the fallen at Simancas barracks
|partof=the [[Spanish Civil War]]
| partof = the [[Spanish Civil War]]
|date=July 19 - August 16, 1936
| date = 19 July – 16 August 1936
|place=[[Gijón]], [[Asturias]], [[Spain]]
| place = [[Gijón]], [[Asturias]], [[Spain]]
|result=Republican victory
| result = Republican victory
|combatant1={{flag|Spanish Republic}}
| combatant1 = {{flagicon|Spain|1931}} [[Second Spanish Republic|Spanish Republic]]<br>{{flagicon image|Red_star.svg}} [[Antifascist Worker and Peasant Militias]]
|combatant2=[[File:Bandera_del_bando_nacional_1936-1938.svg|22px|border]] [[Spain under Franco|Nationalist Spain]]
| combatant2 = {{flagicon|Nationalist Spain|1936}} [[Nationalist faction (Spanish Civil War)|Nationalist Spain]]
|commander1=[[Manuel Otero]]
| commander1 = {{flagicon|Spain|1931}} Maj. [[José Gállego Aragüés]]<br>{{flagicon image|Red_star.svg}} Manuel Otero
|commander2=[[Antonio Pinilla Barcelón|Antonio Pinilla]]
| commander2 = {{flagicon|Nationalist Spain|1936}} Col. [[Antonio Pinilla Barcelón|Antonio Pinilla]]{{KIA}}
|strength1=Unknown
| strength1 = unknown
|strength2=180 regulars and militia
| strength2 = 600 regulars & militia<br>1 battleship<br>1 destroyer
|casualties1=Unknown
| casualties1 = Unknown
|casualties2=180 dead or wounded
| casualties2 = 600 killed
|}}
{{Campaignbox Spanish Civil War}}
| campaignbox = {{Campaignbox Spanish Civil War}}
}}
{{fixbunching|end}}


The '''siege of Gijón''' ({{lang-es|Sitio de Gijón}}) was a battle that occurred in [[Gijón]], [[Asturias]] during the [[Spanish Civil War]] between 19 July and 16 August 1936. It was one of the first actions of the war.
The '''Siege of Gijón''', one of the first actions in the [[Spanish Civil War]], saw [[Anarchism in Spain|Anarchist]] militia defeat a small [[Spain under Franco|Nationalist]] garrison in [[Gijón]], between July 19 and August 16, 1936. The militia - nominally fighting in defense of the [[Second Spanish Republic|Republic]] - laid siege to the Simancas [[Barracks]] in the city of [[Gijón]]. These were defended by about 180 [[Spanish Army|soldiers]] and ''[[Guardia Civil (Spain)|Guardia Civil]]'' officers who had risen in support of [[Francisco Franco|General Franco's]] rebellion and seized the post for the Nationalists. The battle was remarkable for its viciousness and the stubbornness of the besieged.<ref>Thomas, ''The Spanish Civil War'', p. 328.</ref>

A small [[garrison]] of [[Spanish Republican Army]] soldiers and ''[[Guardia Civil (Spain)|Guardia Civil]]'' officers led by Antonio Pinilla joined the [[Nationalist faction (Spanish Civil War)|Nationalist]] rebels after the [[Spanish coup of July 1936]] two days earlier. The [[Antifascist Worker and Peasant Militias]], armed mostly with [[dynamite]], besieged the garrison in support of the [[Second Spanish Republic|Republicans]]. Pinilla refused to surrender despite threats and starvation, holding off the Republican forces for just over a month until the defenders were killed in a large militia assault.

The siege in Gijón was remarkable for its viciousness and the stubbornness of the besieged.<ref>Thomas, ''The Spanish Civil War'', p. 328.</ref>


==Background==
==Background==
The Nationalist uprising of July 1936 fared poorly in [[Asturias]], a province overwhelmingly hostile to Franco and controlled almost from the outset of the war by a curious but effective council of state officials, [[technician]]s, and [[mining|mine workers]]. [[Confederación Nacional del Trabajo|CNT]] and [[Unión General de Trabajadores|UGT]] membership in Asturias totalled around 70,000, forming the backbone of a disciplined militia.
The [[Nationalist faction (Spanish Civil War)|Nationalist]] uprising of July 1936 fared poorly in [[Asturias]], a province that was overwhelmingly in support of the [[Second Spanish Republic|Republicans]] due to the strong presence of the [[mining]] industry. Asturias was controlled almost from the outset of the war by a curious but effective council of Republican state officials, [[technician]]s, and mine workers. Membership of the left-wing [[Confederación Nacional del Trabajo|CNT]] and [[Unión General de Trabajadores|UGT]] trade unions in Asturias totalled around 70,000, forming the backbone of a disciplined [[militia]] at the disposal of the Republicans.


Against such opposition the [[military governor]] of Gijón, [[Colonel]] [[Antonio Pinilla Barcelón|Antonio Pinilla]], dared not to declare his loyalty to Franco. Very few were fooled, and by late July his outpost was surrounded and cut off from [[Emilio Mola|General Emilio Mola's]] [[Army of the North]] by several hundred miles of enemy territory. Also, from the lonely [[Atlantic Ocean|Atlantic]], vain support was offered by the Nationalist cruiser ''[[Almirante Cervera]]'', whose guns could have been used against the Anarchists but offered no real hope of relief.
The Simancas Mountain Infantry Regiment No. 40 of the [[Spanish Republican Army]], led by Colonel Antonio Pinilla Barcelón, was located at the Simancas barracks in [[Gijón]]. Pinilla, the [[military governor]] of the city, joined in the rebellion but did not openly declare his loyalty to the Nationalists due to the unfavourable situation in Asturias. Very few were fooled though, and the small [[garrison]] of around 600 men soon caught the attention of the Republicans. By late July, the Gijón garrison found itself surrounded and cut off from the [[Army of the North]] of [[Emilio Mola]] by several hundred miles of enemy territory. The Nationalist cruiser ''[[Spanish cruiser Almirante Cervera|Almirante Cervera]]'' could have supported the rebel troops with her 6-inch main guns from the sea, but this offered no real hope of relief. An [[anarchist]] militia of the [[Antifascist Worker and Peasant Militias]] mostly composed of mine workers tied to the trade unions laid [[siege]] to the Simancas barracks in a nominal defense of the Republic.


==The siege==
==Siege==
The battle for Gijón was marked by Pinilla's unwavering resistance and lack of weapons of the attackers. The Republicans could not concentrate their full numbers on the [[Siege of Oviedo|siege in Oviedo]] against the Nationalists until they secured Gijón's fall. Accordingly, their attacks were unrelenting against the Gijón garrison which, unlike in Oviedo, did not benefit from the element of surprise. The Republicans were able to prepare and arm some loyalists beforehand, allowing them to besiege Pinilla's men with greater success than Oviedo. The militia of mine workers had few [[small arms]] but had access to large quantities of [[dynamite]]. The Nationalists had some advantage as they were able to easily repel waves of attacks from 22 to 24 July, causing heavy casualities for the Republicans. Anarchists at the concurrent [[siege of the Alcázar]] in [[Toledo, Spain|Toledo]] had captured Pinilla's son and threatened to [[execution|execute]] him if the defenders refused to surrender. Pinilla, like his counterpart [[José Moscardó Ituarte]] in Toledo, was unmoved.<ref>Thomas, p. 327.</ref> The militia dug an underground tunnel beneath the barracks, but the rebels discovered it and were able to fend them off.
<!-- Deleted image removed: [[Image:Almirante Cervera (cruiser).jpg|thumb|The Nationalist cruiser ''Almirante Cervera'' did not assist the siege.]] -->
The battle for Gijón was marked by Pinilla's unwavering resistance and by the almost total lack of weapons - excepting [[dynamite]] - of the attackers. Until they secured Gijón's fall the Republicans could not concentrate their full numbers in their siege against the Nationalists in [[Oviedo]]; accordingly, their attacks were unrelenting.


The defenders soon ran out of water and went mad with thirst. Pinilla refused to give in, believing, from the distorted reports of Nationalist [[propaganda]], that relief was imminent. As at the concurrent [[Siege of the Alcázar]] in [[Toledo, Spain|Toledo]], the Anarchists abducted Pinilla's son and threatened to slay him if the defenders refused to surrender. Like his counterpart [[José Moscardó Ituarte]], Pinilla was unmoved.<ref>Thomas, p. 327. </ref>
By August, fortunes were turning against Pinilla and his men as the Simancas barracks was not designed for a prolonged siege. It had been damaged by a month of dynamite attacks and [[Spanish Republican Air Force|Republican Air Force]] bombing raids, and the defenders soon ran out of water and food. However, Pinilla refused to give in, believing from the distorted reports of Nationalist [[propaganda]] that relief was imminent. In mid-August, the militia stormed the barracks (hurling dynamite as they charged) causing the garrison's exhausted defence to crumble. Pinilla, rather than surrender, sent a [[radio]] message to the ''Almirante Cervera'' ordering it to open fire on his position, which was obeyed. The last defenders of Simancas barracks died in the flames, the bombardment, or were executed by the Republicans.


==Aftermath==
In mid-August the miners stormed the barracks, hurling dynamite as they charged. The barracks burned and the Nationalist defense crumbled. Rather than surrender, Pinilla sent a [[radio]] message to the ''Almirante Cervera'', ordering it to open fire on his position, but the cruiser didn't react, fearing a trick from the revolutionaries to bomb their own troops.{{Fact|date=March 2008}} The defenders were eventually killed by the Anarchists.
The entire Nationalist garrison in Gijón of around 600 men was wiped out in the siege, which had lasted just over a month. The Republicans were able to concentrate their efforts back to Oviedo. However, the events in Gijón had relieved pressure on the rebel garrison in Oviedo, a distraction which allowed it to hold out for longer. On 18 October, Nationalist troops from [[Galicia (Spain)|Galicia]] entered Oviedo and were able to break the siege there. Gijón proved to be a Republican stronghold and their last bastion on the [[Cantabrian Sea]] until the city was taken by the Nationalists a year later on 21 October 1937.

== See also ==

* [[List of Spanish Republican military equipment of the Spanish Civil War]]
* [[List of Spanish Nationalist military equipment of the Spanish Civil War]]


==Notes==
==Notes==
{{Reflist}}
<div class="references-small"><references/></div>


==References==
==References==
* {{cite book | title = The Spanish Civil War | author = [[Hugh Thomas]] | year = 2001 | publisher = Modern Library | isbn = 0375755152 }}
* {{cite book | title = The Spanish Civil War | author = Hugh Thomas | author-link = Hugh Thomas (writer) | year = 2001 | publisher = Modern Library | isbn = 0-375-75515-2 | url-access = registration | url = https://archive.org/details/spanishcivilwar00thom_0 }}

{{coord missing|Spain}}


{{Coord|43.5333|N|5.7000|W|source:wikidata|display=title}}
[[Category:Battles of the Spanish Civil War|Gijón]]
[[Category:Sieges involving Spain|Gijón]]
[[Category:Conflicts in 1936|Gijón]]
[[Category:History of Asturias]]


{{DEFAULTSORT:Siege of Gijon}}
[[ca:Setge de Gijón]]
[[Category:Battles of the Spanish Civil War|Gijon]]
[[de:Belagerung von Gijón]]
[[Category:History of Asturias|Gijon]]
[[es:Sitio de Gijón]]
[[Category:Sieges involving Spain|Gijon]]
[[fr:Siège de Gijón]]
[[Category:Conflicts in 1936|Gijon]]
[[it:Assedio di Gijón]]
[[Category:1936 in Spain]]
[[ru:Осада Хихона]]
[[Category:July 1936 events]]
[[Category:August 1936 events]]

Latest revision as of 20:36, 8 August 2024

Siege of Gijón
Part of the Spanish Civil War

Monument to the fallen at Simancas barracks
Date19 July – 16 August 1936
Location
Result Republican victory
Belligerents
Spain Spanish Republic
Antifascist Worker and Peasant Militias
Francoist Spain Nationalist Spain
Commanders and leaders
Spain Maj. José Gállego Aragüés
Manuel Otero
Francoist Spain Col. Antonio Pinilla 
Strength
unknown 600 regulars & militia
1 battleship
1 destroyer
Casualties and losses
Unknown 600 killed

The siege of Gijón (Spanish: Sitio de Gijón) was a battle that occurred in Gijón, Asturias during the Spanish Civil War between 19 July and 16 August 1936. It was one of the first actions of the war.

A small garrison of Spanish Republican Army soldiers and Guardia Civil officers led by Antonio Pinilla joined the Nationalist rebels after the Spanish coup of July 1936 two days earlier. The Antifascist Worker and Peasant Militias, armed mostly with dynamite, besieged the garrison in support of the Republicans. Pinilla refused to surrender despite threats and starvation, holding off the Republican forces for just over a month until the defenders were killed in a large militia assault.

The siege in Gijón was remarkable for its viciousness and the stubbornness of the besieged.[1]

Background

[edit]

The Nationalist uprising of July 1936 fared poorly in Asturias, a province that was overwhelmingly in support of the Republicans due to the strong presence of the mining industry. Asturias was controlled almost from the outset of the war by a curious but effective council of Republican state officials, technicians, and mine workers. Membership of the left-wing CNT and UGT trade unions in Asturias totalled around 70,000, forming the backbone of a disciplined militia at the disposal of the Republicans.

The Simancas Mountain Infantry Regiment No. 40 of the Spanish Republican Army, led by Colonel Antonio Pinilla Barcelón, was located at the Simancas barracks in Gijón. Pinilla, the military governor of the city, joined in the rebellion but did not openly declare his loyalty to the Nationalists due to the unfavourable situation in Asturias. Very few were fooled though, and the small garrison of around 600 men soon caught the attention of the Republicans. By late July, the Gijón garrison found itself surrounded and cut off from the Army of the North of Emilio Mola by several hundred miles of enemy territory. The Nationalist cruiser Almirante Cervera could have supported the rebel troops with her 6-inch main guns from the sea, but this offered no real hope of relief. An anarchist militia of the Antifascist Worker and Peasant Militias – mostly composed of mine workers tied to the trade unions – laid siege to the Simancas barracks in a nominal defense of the Republic.

Siege

[edit]

The battle for Gijón was marked by Pinilla's unwavering resistance and lack of weapons of the attackers. The Republicans could not concentrate their full numbers on the siege in Oviedo against the Nationalists until they secured Gijón's fall. Accordingly, their attacks were unrelenting against the Gijón garrison which, unlike in Oviedo, did not benefit from the element of surprise. The Republicans were able to prepare and arm some loyalists beforehand, allowing them to besiege Pinilla's men with greater success than Oviedo. The militia of mine workers had few small arms but had access to large quantities of dynamite. The Nationalists had some advantage as they were able to easily repel waves of attacks from 22 to 24 July, causing heavy casualities for the Republicans. Anarchists at the concurrent siege of the Alcázar in Toledo had captured Pinilla's son and threatened to execute him if the defenders refused to surrender. Pinilla, like his counterpart José Moscardó Ituarte in Toledo, was unmoved.[2] The militia dug an underground tunnel beneath the barracks, but the rebels discovered it and were able to fend them off.

By August, fortunes were turning against Pinilla and his men as the Simancas barracks was not designed for a prolonged siege. It had been damaged by a month of dynamite attacks and Republican Air Force bombing raids, and the defenders soon ran out of water and food. However, Pinilla refused to give in, believing from the distorted reports of Nationalist propaganda that relief was imminent. In mid-August, the militia stormed the barracks (hurling dynamite as they charged) causing the garrison's exhausted defence to crumble. Pinilla, rather than surrender, sent a radio message to the Almirante Cervera ordering it to open fire on his position, which was obeyed. The last defenders of Simancas barracks died in the flames, the bombardment, or were executed by the Republicans.

Aftermath

[edit]

The entire Nationalist garrison in Gijón of around 600 men was wiped out in the siege, which had lasted just over a month. The Republicans were able to concentrate their efforts back to Oviedo. However, the events in Gijón had relieved pressure on the rebel garrison in Oviedo, a distraction which allowed it to hold out for longer. On 18 October, Nationalist troops from Galicia entered Oviedo and were able to break the siege there. Gijón proved to be a Republican stronghold and their last bastion on the Cantabrian Sea until the city was taken by the Nationalists a year later on 21 October 1937.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Thomas, The Spanish Civil War, p. 328.
  2. ^ Thomas, p. 327.

References

[edit]
  • Hugh Thomas (2001). The Spanish Civil War. Modern Library. ISBN 0-375-75515-2.

43°32′00″N 5°42′00″W / 43.5333°N 5.7000°W / 43.5333; -5.7000