Republic of Galicia
Galician Republic República Galega | |||||||||
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1931 | |||||||||
Anthem: Os Pinos | |||||||||
Capital | Santiago de Compostela | ||||||||
Common languages | Galician | ||||||||
Leader | |||||||||
• 1931 | Alonso Ríos | ||||||||
Historical era | Interwar period | ||||||||
• Established | June 27 1931 | ||||||||
• Disestablished | June 28 1931 | ||||||||
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The Galician Republic (República Galega in Galician) was an ephemeral passage in the history of Galicia. It lasted only a few hours on 27 June 1931, a day ahead of the election to the Second Spanish Republic's Constitutional Assembly. On that date, left-nationalist leaders Pedro Campos Couceiro and Antón Alonso Ríos declared that full independence from Spain was the only way for Galicia to overcome its secular backwardness and to regain its national dignity. The temporary cancellation of railway construction connecting Zamora with Ourense was the immediate trigger of the events; however, the historic marginalization of the country – then overwhelmingly rural and Galician-speaking – was at the core of the movement, which negotiations between Spanish forces and the Galician instigators eventually defused. A number of leftist organizations and champions of Galician national sovereignty still celebrate the date.
See also
External links
- 79 anos despois, artigo aparecido no xornal Galicia Hoxe o 20 de xuño de 2010.
- 27 de xuño de 1931: Proclámase a República Galega, reportaxe aparecida no xornal dixital Vieiros o 22 de xuño de 2010.