Francoism is best thought of as a compromise between the different right wing factions of the Spanish Nationalists of the civil war. You can pretty much split Francoism into two periods, early and late, based on when Spain entered into an alliance with the United States during the 50s. Early Francoism followed closely the fascist/falangism model of economics as well as rhetoric and aesthetics. Franco styled himself as the Caudillo (similar to how Mussolini called himself the Duce, and the Austrian painter called himself the Furher). Late Francoism saw the economics shift to a more libertarian model which saw Spain have the 2nd-biggest economic miracle after Japan. Franco also distanced himself somewhat from fascist style and rhetoric, and take on a more royalist image - he styled himself as regent of the Spanish throne for life and had his children marry into the Spanish and French royal families. What was consistent throughout Francoism was Catholic and Spanish nationalism, anti-separatism and regionalism (with the exception of the region of Navarre in north-east Spain who had autonomy as a concession to the Carlist faction), and anti-communism (though in practice only anti-communism in Spain and toward the Soviet Union as Franco admired Mao, Ho Chi Minh, and Fidel Castro). Spain was also very conservative, divorce and abortion amongst many other things were illegal.
@@Isidore_de_Sevilla It was confirmed to me by a Catalan nationalist It started to decline from 2005 In addition to the fact that in the past it was much more difficult to discover the secrets, in any rural Catalan town of the 50s there could be only one captain in the whole town, while he was sleeping or doing something, anyone could speak the language they wanted Also that today Spanish is so internationalized in Catalonia that you no longer need to speak Catalan, formerly back then you did anything in your town, where almost no one spoke Spanish, today any procedure has to be done with the Government of Spain, that almost never tends to you in Catalan
@@hispalismapping155 Ah fair enough. I think that was one of the things that the Carlists were solid on, I'd never want Catalonia to separate nor for their language and culture to disappear. Franco put the wrong king back on the throne :(
¡Viva Los gentes de España! 🇪🇸
Arriba España.Viva España 🇪🇸❤️👑
Epic
What are Francoist beliefs?I will like to know please.
Francoism is best thought of as a compromise between the different right wing factions of the Spanish Nationalists of the civil war. You can pretty much split Francoism into two periods, early and late, based on when Spain entered into an alliance with the United States during the 50s.
Early Francoism followed closely the fascist/falangism model of economics as well as rhetoric and aesthetics. Franco styled himself as the Caudillo (similar to how Mussolini called himself the Duce, and the Austrian painter called himself the Furher).
Late Francoism saw the economics shift to a more libertarian model which saw Spain have the 2nd-biggest economic miracle after Japan. Franco also distanced himself somewhat from fascist style and rhetoric, and take on a more royalist image - he styled himself as regent of the Spanish throne for life and had his children marry into the Spanish and French royal families.
What was consistent throughout Francoism was Catholic and Spanish nationalism, anti-separatism and regionalism (with the exception of the region of Navarre in north-east Spain who had autonomy as a concession to the Carlist faction), and anti-communism (though in practice only anti-communism in Spain and toward the Soviet Union as Franco admired Mao, Ho Chi Minh, and Fidel Castro). Spain was also very conservative, divorce and abortion amongst many other things were illegal.
@@Isidore_de_Sevilla Fun fact: During Francoism people talked more Catalan than now
@@hispalismapping155 Now that I didn't know. Why is that do you think?
@@Isidore_de_Sevilla It was confirmed to me by a Catalan nationalist
It started to decline from 2005
In addition to the fact that in the past it was much more difficult to discover the secrets, in any rural Catalan town of the 50s there could be only one captain in the whole town, while he was sleeping or doing something, anyone could speak the language they wanted
Also that today Spanish is so internationalized in Catalonia that you no longer need to speak Catalan, formerly back then you did anything in your town, where almost no one spoke Spanish, today any procedure has to be done with the Government of Spain, that almost never tends to you in Catalan
@@hispalismapping155 Ah fair enough. I think that was one of the things that the Carlists were solid on, I'd never want Catalonia to separate nor for their language and culture to disappear. Franco put the wrong king back on the throne :(