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2nd Mixed Brigade
Segunda Brigada Mixta
Bandera de la II República Española
Military flag of the Popular Army
Active 1936–1939
Country Flag of Spain 1931 1939 Spain
Branch Spanish Republican Army
Type Mixed Brigade
Role Home Defence
Size Four battalions:
The 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th
Part of 7th Division (1936 - 1937)
10th Division (1937 - 1938)
64th Division (1938 - 1939)
Garrison/HQ Madrid
Engagements Spanish Civil War
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Jesús Martínez de Aragón
Mola de Cantavieja

View of the Cantavieja sector, a mountainous area where the 2nd MB suffered such heavy casualties that it had to retreat in order to be rebuilt.

The Second Mixed Brigade (Spanish language: 2ª Brigada Mixta ),[1][2] was a mixed brigade of the Spanish Republican Army in the Spanish Civil War. It was formed in October 1936 as a result of the reorganization of the Spanish Republican Armed forces.

The mouthpiece of the 2nd Mixed Brigade were the "Nuevo Horizonte" and "Victoria" newspapers.[2]

History[]

The Second Mixed Brigade was established on 13 October 1936 in Ciudad Real with Extremaduran militias and railroad workers as well as standard troops that had been previously garrisoned in Madrid. It was placed under the 7th Division of the II Army Corps. The command of the unit was entrusted to Major Jesús Martínez de Aragón and its commissar was Felipe Gómez Hernando.[1]

On 15 November the Second Mixed Brigade set out by railway towards Madrid. It arrived at Huerta in two separate groups and continued on foot until reaching the area between Ocaña and Noblejas onward to the first line of fire. On 17 November it was sent by General Miaja as a reserve unit at the front of the Ciudad Universitaria where it had to face the feared Regulares African troops.[3] Made up of a machine-gun company and three infantry companies, the 2 mixed brigade covered repeatedly the vanguard of the sector between the southern wall of the Casa de Campo and the Puerta del Ángel. In the Ciudad Universitaria battle the 2nd mixed brigade suffered so many losses that it had to be withdrawn in March 1937 in order to be regrouped.

After the regrouping it became part of the 10th Division of the I Army Corps. From 9 to 14 April the brigade was sent to an attack against the Cerro Garabitas that did not achieve any positive result but caused multiple casualties, among them the death of its commander Jesús Martínez de Aragón. He was replaced by Militia Major José Gallego Pérez, formerly of the Military Engineering Corps, who led one of the battalions. Owing to the many losses the brigade had to be reassebled again.[1]

The 2nd Mixed Brigade took part in the Battle of Brunete, where on 7 July it secured Villanueva del Pardillo, maneuvering between the Aulencia and Guadarrama Rivers. The following day it took part in the storming of the Villafranca Castle, after which it went to relieve troops of the 31st Division in the Villanueva de la Cañada sector. Following the scant success of the unit at the Battle of Brunete Commander José Gallego was replaced by Militia Major Ignacio Esnaola Iraola and the 2nd Brigade returned to the frontline of the Defence of Madrid in the Monte Panarra sector where it remained, almost without interruption until spring 1938.

After the rebel armies eastward thrust reached the coastal town of Vinaròs and broke the Spanish Republican territory in two, the 2nd Mixed Brigade was sent to the Eastern Front. Its aim was to cut across the Maestrazgo ranges in order to try to hinder the progress of General Aranda's troops. By 22 April it covered the sector Vilafranca-Cantavieja-La Iglesuela del Cid, where its troops were decimated by the rebels. Following the heavy losses the 2nd Mixed Brigade had suffered in the harsh mountain area, it was again rebuilt and sent to a defensive position in the Eastern Front (Frente de Levante) until the end of the year.[1]

In the first half of January 1939 the brigade was integrated in the 64th Division of the XVII Army Corps and was sent west to the Sierra Morena in the Hinojosa del Duque-Valsequillo sector of the Extremaduran front line. The unit's renewed command structure consisted of Militia Major Carlos Cornejo as commander, Infantry Captain Joaquín Segado Sánchez as Chief of Staff and Antonio Jiménez Soler, a member of the Communist Party of Spain (PCE) as commissar. Its mission was to obstruct the enemy encirclement of the loyalist troops who were trapped in the Valsequillo pocket.

Once in the combat area the 2nd Mixed Brigade attacked the rebel armies in Sierra Trapera and in Mocitas-Mataborrachas in the border area between Extremadura and Andalusia.[4] In the height of the battle it was sent towards the inner area of the pocket in order to cover the withdrawal of the trapped Republican units. In these combat actions the Second Mixed Brigade had to bear so many losses that its size had to be reduced to two battalions for the second time in its history. Subsequently the brigade was gathered in Santa Eufemia, Andalusia, in order to recover and eventually to be re-established, but by then it was the last month of the war and its final fate is unknown, although it seems that it returned to the Eastern Front.[1][2]

Commmanders[]

  • Commmanders in Chief
    • Jesús Martínez de Aragón
    • José Gallego Pérez
    • Ignacio Esnaola Iraola
    • Carlos Cornejo
  • Commissars
    • Felipe Gómez Hernando
    • Antonio Jiménez Soler

See also[]

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 SBHAC - Brigadas Mixtas del Ejército Popular, 2ª Brigada Mixta
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Carlos Engel, Historia de las Brigadas Mixtas del E. P. de la República, 1999
  3. Jules Stewart, Madrid: The History, I. B. Tauris, 2013, ISBN 9781780762814
  4. Mataborrachas, España - Nombres Geográficos

External links[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at 2nd Mixed Brigade and the edit history here.
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