Nationalist Army.
Franco
The Republican Army of North was formed by General Francisco Franco during the Spanish Civil War.
Spanish army General who led a group of officers to rebel against the Spanish republic
In 1936, General Franco of the Spanish army conspired to overthrow the Republican government of Spain. His rebellion led to the Spanish Civil War, which lasted until 1939, costing several hundreds of thousands lives. He won the Civil War with the help of Hitler's air force and then established a Fascist dictatorship which lasted until his death in 1975.
In 1936, General Francisco Franco started a revolution in Spain He (and other army officers) rebelled against the republican Spanish government, which had replaced the Spanish monarchy in 1931. Both Hitler and Mussolini provided military support to Franco. The Soviet Union, however, supported the republican government. The U.S. remained neutral, a position reinforced by the fact that the Neutrality Acts forbade the sale of munitions to either side in the Spanish Civil War. Franco prevailed in 1939.
Francisco Franco lost power of Spain because he died of a heart attack in 1975, while still in power. Francisco Franco was one of the youngest European Generals in the Spanish Army.
In 1936, General Franco of the Spanish army conspired to overthrow the Republican government of Spain. His rebellion led to the Spanish Civil War, which lasted until 1939, costing several hundreds of thousands lives. He won the Civil War with the help of Hitler's air force and then established a Fascist Dictatorship which lasted until his death in 1975.
General Francisco Franco (1897-1975), styled as Generalísimo, led the revolt against the Spanish Republic in the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939), and thereafter ruled Spain as military dictator (Caudillo) until his death in 1975.
Was between the Army after a failed coup attempt on the Republicans aided by the Soviet Union. The Nationalist Army under Franco was supported by Germany, Italy and Portugal.
francisco Pizarro
It was an internal affair sparked by a coup attempt by the Spanish Army (Nationalists) against the Republican government. The Nationalists under the command of Francisco Franco were supported by Germany, Italy and Portugal while the Republicans were backed by the Soviet Union, Mexico and various International Brigades.
Short answer: General Francisco Franco, who after victory became the leader of Spain, a position he essentially occupied until his death in 1975. Slightly longer answer: The Spanish Civil War began on July 17, 1936, in Spanish Morocco, when a group of army officers led by Francisco Franco staged a pronunciamiento, a military coup, against the government of the Second Spanish Republic, which had been in existence for only five years. The uprising quickly spread to Spain itself. The Nationalists, as the army rebels came to be known, had the support of a large proportion of the military, the Catholic hierarchy in Spain, and the land-owning aristocracy, all of whom were angry over various progressive reforms of the Republican government. The attempted coup failed, however, and the country fell into a civil war that lasted more than two and a half years and remains the bloodiest conflict Spain has ever known.