November 22, 1975 – Juan Carlos becomes King of Spain following death of General Franco
On November 22, 1975, Juan Carlos became King of Spain after the death of General Francisco Franco two days earlier. Franco had ruled Spain as a dictator since emerging victorious in the Spanish Civil War in the late 1930s. As his health declined, Franco appointed Prince Juan Carlos as his successor in 1969, which was approved by the Spanish parliament on July22, 1969. Juan Carlos also temporarily took over as the country’s head of state during periods of Franco’s incapacity in 1974 and 1975.
Franco had hoped that Juan Carlos would continue the government’s
ultra-conservative and authoritarian policies. Instead, King Juan Carlos dismantled
Franco’s totalitarian regime and transitioned Spain into democracy and a parliamentary
monarchy which it is today.
Taken from Spanish Civil War – Wars of the 20th Century – Volume 3)
Aftermath Following
the war, General Franco established a right-wing, anti-communist dictatorial
government centered on the Falange Party.
Socialists, communists, and anarchists, were outlawed, as were
free-party politics. Political enemies
were killed or jailed; perhaps as many as 200,000 lost their lives in prison or
through executions. The political
autonomies of Basque and Catalonia
were voided. These regions’ culture,
language, and identity were suppressed, and a single Spanish national identity
was enforced.
After World War II ended, Spain
became politically and economically isolated from most of the international
community because of General Franco’s affiliation with the defeated fascist
regimes of Germany and Italy. Then with increasing tensions in the Cold War
between the United States
and Soviet Union, the U.S.
government became drawn to Spain’s
staunchly anti-communist stance and strategic location at the western end of
the Mediterranean Sea.
In September 1953, Spain
and the United States
entered into a defense agreement known as the Pact of Madrid, where the U.S. government infused large amounts of
military assistance to Spain’s
defense. As a result, Spain’s diplomatic isolation ended,
and the country was admitted to the United Nations in 1955.
Its economy devastated by the civil war, Spain experienced phenomenal
economic growth during the period from 1959 to 1974 (known as the “Spanish
Miracle”) when the government passed reforms that opened up the financial and
investment sectors. Spain’s totalitarian regime ended
with General Franco’s death in 1975; thereafter, the country transitioned to a
democratic parliamentary monarchy which it is today.