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International Brigades

The International Brigades (Spanish: Brigadas Internacionales) were soldiers set up by the Communist International to assist the Popular Front government of the Second Spanish Republic during the Spanish Civil War. The organization existed for two years, from 1936 until 1938. It is estimated that during the entire war, between 40,000 and 59,000 members served in the International Brigades, including some 10,000 who died in combat. Beyond the Spanish Civil War, "International Brigades" is also sometimes used interchangeably with the term foreign legion in reference to military units comprising foreigners who volunteer to fight in the military of another state, often in times of war.[1]

For the militia force run by The Other Russia of E. V. Limonov, see Interbrigades.

The headquarters of the brigade was located at the Gran Hotel,[2] Albacete, Castilla-La Mancha. They participated in the battles of Madrid, Jarama, Guadalajara, Brunete, Belchite, Teruel, Aragon and the Ebro. Most of these ended in defeat. For the last year of its existence, the International Brigades were integrated into the Spanish Republican Army as part of the Spanish Foreign Legion. The organisation was dissolved on 23 September 1938 by Spanish Prime Minister Juan Negrín in a vain attempt to get more support from the liberal democracies on the Non-Intervention Committee.


The International Brigades were strongly supported by the Comintern and represented the Soviet Union's commitment to assisting the Spanish Republic (with arms, logistics, military advisers and the NKVD), just as Portugal, Fascist Italy, and Nazi Germany were assisting the opposing Nationalist insurgency.[3] The largest number of volunteers came from France (where the French Communist Party had many members) and communist exiles from Italy and Germany. Many Jews were part of the brigades, being particularly numerous within the volunteers coming from the United States, Poland, France, England and Argentina.[4]


Republican volunteers who were opposed to Stalinism did not join the Brigades but instead enlisted in the separate Popular Front, the POUM (formed from Trotskyist, Bukharinist, and other anti-Stalinist groups, which did not separate Spaniards and foreign volunteers),[5] or anarcho-syndicalist groups such as the Durruti Column, the IWA, and the CNT.

Abraham Lincoln Battalion

Connolly Column

– predominantly Polish.

Mickiewicz Battalion

Battalion – predominantly French and Belgian.

André Marty

– mainly British but with many from Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Cyprus and other Commonwealth countries.

British Battalion

Checo-Balcánico Battalion – and Balkan.

Czechoslovakian

Commune de Paris Battalion – predominantly French.

Deba Blagoiev Battalion – predominantly Bulgarian, later merged into the Đaković Battalion.

Greek, Yugoslav, Bulgarian, Czechoslovakian, Hungarian and Romanian (named after Georgi Dimitrov).

Dimitrov Battalion

Battalion – Yugoslav, Bulgarian, anarchist, named for former Yugoslav Communist Party secretary Djuro Đaković.

Đuro Đaković

– mostly Polish and Hungarian, also Czechoslovak, Ukrainian, Bulgarian and Palestinian Jews.

Dabrowski Battalion

Edgar André Battalion – mostly German, also Austrian, Yugoslav, Bulgarian, Albanian, Romanian, Danish, Swedish, Norwegian and .

Dutch

Español Battalion – Mexican, Cuban, , Chilean, Argentine and Bolivian.

Puerto Rican

Figlio Battalion – mostly Italian; later merged with the .

Garibaldi Battalion

– raised as the Italoespañol Battalion and renamed. Mostly Italian and Spanish but contained some Albanians.

Garibaldi Battalion

– the second U.S. battalion. Later merged with the Lincoln Battalion, to form the Lincoln-Washington Battalion.

George Washington Battalion

Hans Beimler Battalion – mostly German; later merged with the .

Thälmann Battalion

– predominantly French.

Henri Barbusse Battalion

– predominantly French.

Henri Vuilleman Battalion

Italian Column (Matteotti Battalion) – predominantly Italian and the first international group to reach Spain.[82]

[81]

– French-speaking, later merged with the Henri Vuillemin Battalion.

Louise Michel Battalions

– the "Mac-Paps", predominantly Canadian.

Mackenzie–Papineau Battalion

Palafox Battalion

Naftali Botwin Company

Pierre Brachet Battalion – mostly French.

– mainly Hungarian, also Czechoslovaks, Ukrainians, Poles, Chinese, Mongolians and Palestinian Jews.

Rakosi Battalion

Nine Nations Battalion (also known as the Sans nons and Neuf Nationalités) – French, Belgian, Italian, German, Austrian, Dutch, Danish, and Polish.

Swiss

– French, Belgian, Moroccan, Algerian, Libyan, Syrian, Iranian, Iraqi, Egyptian, Chinese, Japanese, Indian, Filipino and Palestinian Jewish.

Sixth of February Battalion

Thälmann Battalion

Thomas Masaryk Battalion: mostly Czechoslovak.

Battalion – composed of 21 nationalities (Ukrainian, Polish, Czechoslovakian, Bulgarian, Yugoslavian, Turkish, Italian, German, Austrian, Finnish, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Belgian, French, Greek, Albanian, Dutch, Swiss, Lithuanian and Estonian).[83]

Chapaev

Vaillant-Couturier Battalion – French, Belgian, Czechoslovakian, Bulgarian, Swedish, Norwegian and Danish.

– American, British, Italian, Yugoslav and Bulgarian.

Veinte Battalion

Battalion – mostly Austrian.

Zwölfte Februar

Company De Zeven Provinciën – Dutch.

Symbolism and heraldry[edit]

The International Brigades were inheritors of a socialist aesthetic. The flags featured the colors of the Spanish Republic: red, yellow and purple, often along with socialist symbols (red flags, hammer and sickle, fist). The emblem of the brigades themselves was the three-pointed red star, which is often featured.

Foreign involvement in the Spanish Civil War

International Legion of Territorial Defense of Ukraine

International Freedom Battalion

IBMT the international brigade memorial trust

Abraham Lincoln Brigade Archives

Private Collection about German Exile and Spanish Civil War

Remembering the Sussex Brigaders