| Battle of Bilbao | |||||||||
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| Part of the Spanish Civil War | |||||||||
The Northern Front. Bilbao is on the right of the red area. |
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| Belligerents | |||||||||
| Strength | |||||||||
| 50,000 troops and militia | 60,000 Nationalist troops 15,000 Italian troops |
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| Casualties and losses | |||||||||
| Unknown | Nationalist Spain: Unknown Italy: 105 dead 427 wounded three missing |
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The Battle of Bilbao was part of the War in the North, during the Spanish Civil War where the Nationalist Army captured the city of Bilbao and the remaining parts of the Basque Country still held by the Republic.
Bilbao was the capital of the autonomous Basque area established by the Republic after the war began. This establishment was in payment for 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 latter two provinces. Navarre and Álava had rallied to the rising against the Republic.[1]
The Spanish Nationalists troops gained Gipuzkoa early in the war with the fall of Irún in August and San Sebastián, September 13, 1936.[2], isolating the Basque country and the Northern Republican held zone from the French frontier. On 31 March, the Nationalist, led by the General Mola, launched an offensive against the Biscay province. The Basque troops had to retire and by June the Nationalist reached the outskirts of Bilbao.
By June 11, 1937, the Basque forces had fallen back to the city of Bilbao, which was defended by a series of rushed fortifications called the "Iron Belt." The Iron Belt was poorly designed for defense[3] and the designer of the Belt, engineer Alejandro Goicoechea, defected to the Nationalists and brought them the plans of the defenses, so that they could strike at the weakest point.[4] 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 in order to stop the Nationalist offensive, but the Nationalist troops continued their advance. On the night of June 13 the defenders evacuated most of the civilian population from the city. On June 18 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.
Coordinates: 43°15′N 2°55′W / 43.25°N 2.917°W
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