Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Catholic intellectuals and transnational anti-communism: Pax Romana, from the Spanish civil war to the post-1945 world order

Richards, Michael

Catholic intellectuals and transnational anti-communism: Pax Romana, from the Spanish civil war to the post-1945 world order Thumbnail


Authors

Profile image of Michael Richards

Michael Richards Michael.Richards@uwe.ac.uk
Associate Professor in Contemporary European History



Abstract

This article analyses the conditions and ideas motivating cross-border connectivity among young Roman Catholic intellectuals during the trans-war era of the 1930s and 1940s. It examines Pax Romana, the Swiss-based international association of Catholic students and graduates, as it navigated between fascism and resistance in the aftermath of the Spanish Civil War and during the global conflict of 1939–45. The organisation was headed successively by two young activists from Spain, Joaquín Ruiz-Giménez, a legal scholar from Madrid who fought for Franco, and Ramon Sugranyes de Franch, a Catalan literary specialist who went into exile in 1936. Comparison of their parallel careers forms the central narrative cord of the article, illuminating the complex relationship of national to global Catholic fractures between conservative nation-statists and political and social pluralists. The Pax Romana congress held in Spain in 1946 was pivotal in accounting for the transnational legacy of that country’s civil war. The wartime ‘humanist’ critique of Franco’s ‘crusade’ made by key Catholic public thinkers was both disseminated and challenged and its relevance to Europe’s future assessed. Ruiz-Giménez, as its president, used the organisation from Spain to legitimate the country’s regime, aided by sympathetic foreign nation-statists. Sugranyes, in contrast, gravitated in the early 1940s to Fribourg in Switzerland, Pax Romana’s headquarters—via Geneva, Paris and southern France—encountering and allying with progressive Catholic exiles from Italy and Spain and French anti-fascist resisters. Although taking different routes, both men ultimately transcended their nationally rooted religious and political assumptions through dialogue across boundaries.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Mar 13, 2023
Online Publication Date Sep 21, 2023
Publication Date Oct 1, 2023
Deposit Date Mar 15, 2023
Publicly Available Date Sep 22, 2023
Journal English Historical Review
Print ISSN 0013-8266
Electronic ISSN 1477-4534
Publisher Oxford University Press (OUP)
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 138
Issue 594-595
Pages 1337-1362
DOI https://doi.org/10.1093/ehr/cead151
Keywords History
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/10553895

Files





You might also like



Downloadable Citations