Carlos Martínez de Campos y Serrano

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Born
Carlos Ignacio Martínez de Campos y Serrano

(1887-10-06)6 October 1887
Died20 May 1975(1975-05-20) (aged 87)
Buried 40°32′12″N 3°47′11″W / 40.53667°N 3.78639°W / 40.53667; -3.78639

Carlos Martínez de Campos y Serrano

Born
Carlos Ignacio Martínez de Campos y Serrano

(1887-10-06)6 October 1887
Died20 May 1975(1975-05-20) (aged 87)
Buried 40°32′12″N 3°47′11″W / 40.53667°N 3.78639°W / 40.53667; -3.78639
Allegiance Nationalist Spain
Branch Spanish Army
RankLieutenant general
ConflictsMelilla War
Rif War
Spanish Civil War
AwardsSee awards section
Other workChief of the Central General Staff of the Army (1940–1941)
Member of the Royal Spanish Academy (1950–1975)
Member of the Royal Academy of History (1960–1975)
Chief of the Central General Staff of the Spanish Army
In office
1940–1941
CaudilloFrancisco Franco
Minister of the ArmyJosé Enrique Varela
Preceded byFidel Dávila Arrondo
Succeeded byCarlos Asensio Cabanillas
Member of the Royal Spanish Academy
In office
29 January 1950  20 May 1975
Preceded byMiguel Artigas Ferrando [es]
Succeeded byManuel de Terán Álvarez [es]
Member of the Royal Academy of History
In office
1 December 1960  20 May 1975
Preceded byAlfredo Kindelán
Succeeded byAntonio Blanco Freijeiro

Carlos Ignacio Martínez de Campos y Serrano, 3rd Duke of la Torre (6 October 1887 – 20 May 1975) was a Spanish military officer, historian and academic.

Born on 6 October 1887 in Paris,[1][2] he was the son of Concepción Serrano —daughter of General Francisco Serrano— and José María Martínez de Campos.[3] He fought in the Melilla War in 1909; later he was stationed as a military attaché in Japan and China.[4] Between 1921 and 1924 he fought in the Rif War.[5] He remained as military attaché of the Spanish embassy in Italy from 1924 to 1931, assuming additional responsibilities in Greece, Bulgaria, Turkey and Albania from his post in Rome starting in 1929.[5] In September 1931 he would return to Spain.[6]

Martínez de Campos, who joined the Nationalist faction during the Spanish Civil War,[7] would be promoted to brigadier general, holding the position of Chief of the Central General Staff of the Spanish Army from 1940 to 1941[2] and, in 1943, to major general.[8] According to Gonzalo Menéndez-Pidal, Martínez Campos freed the writer Pío Baroja from a probable execution in the town of Santesteban, at the beginning of the Civil War.[9] He was one of the personalities mentioned in the January 1941 order that named the members of the so-called Council of the Hispanidad.[10] In 1943 he was the head of the military commission that negotiated with Nazi Germany the purchase of armaments through the Bär Program [es].[11]

Martínez de Campos, who took possession of his status as a member of the Royal Spanish Academy on 29 January 1950,[12] was the tutor of Juan Carlos de Borbón between 1955 and 1960.[13] In 1951 he was promoted to lieutenant general.[14] He was placed in reserve by decree in 1957.[15] He joined the Royal Academy of History as a full member on 1 December 1960, although he had been a corresponding member since 1923.[16] He was also a member of the Juan de la Cierva Board of Trustees of the CSIC.[2]

View of the tomb.

He died in Madrid on 20 May 1975.[17]

Awards

Works

References

Bibliography

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