Sagardía Ramos was born in the Aragonese capital of Zaragoza, in a Basque–Navarre family. He joined the Spanish Army from a young age and in 1921 he rose to the rank of colonel. After the proclamation of the Second Spanish Republic in 1931, he accepted the military reform of Manuel Azaña (Azaña Law) and retired from the Army.
In August and September 1937, Sagardía Ramos took part in the War in the North and participated in the Battle of Santander, at the head of the so-called "Sagardía Column"; the unit exercised a harsh repression against the civilians and soldiers of the Republican faction, including numerous extrajudicial killings.[3] After the War in the North ended, the "Sagardía Column" was reorganized as the 62nd Division of the Navarre Army Corps[es],[1] at the head of which he took part in the Aragon Offensive. In April 1938, Sagardía's troops were deployed in the Battle of the Segre, in which they hardly encountered any resistance.[4] But in the face of casualties suffered by his column after a Republican attack, he said:
I will shoot ten Catalans for every dead man in my guard."[5]
In May 1938, several extrajudicial killings took place that ravaged the Catalan comarca of Pallars Sobirà and resulted in 67 people shot,[4] good part of them women, elderly and children.[6] In January 1939, Sagardía Ramos participated in the Catalonia Offensive. A few weeks later he participated in the so-called "final offensive" of the war, and on 30 March he entered Alcalá de Henares at the head of his unit.[7]
Post-war career
Sagardía Ramos (second from left) and Himmler (third from right) visiting a checa in Barcelona, 23 October 1940.