Barranco de Viznar: Unearthing Lorca’s Legacy and the Spanish Civil War Tragedy

They work in silence over a hole in the ground, on their knees, lying flat on their stomachs to access the dig. On a table nearby are some bones, skulls too. The harsh sun has bleached the surrounding terrain but there is a little shade in the nearby wooded area and under the gazebo tented area in which they work.

The Barranco de Viznar has been declared a Place of Historical Memory in Granada, Spain, and as a life-long student of the Spanish Civil War, standing in this sloping, wooded area of about 10,000 square meters on a sharp curve of the road between Alfacar and Viznar, just has to be one of the best moment of 2024 for me.

We know where the bodies are

Imagine being given the opportunity to visit the site where the exhumation of thousands of young men assassinated by Franco’s troops during the Spanish civil war is taking place. Between September and November 1936, at the start of the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939), it is reckoned that at least 173 people were killed here and thrown into mass graves. Even earlier, in July and August, just after the coup d’état that triggered the war, there had been other assassinations, including that of the poet Federico García Lorca, but no record was left of them.

Imagine how overwhelming it was , as a lover of Lorca’s poetry and plays, to be given the privilege of visiting the place where his assassination is presumed to have taken place in the opening days of that terrible conflict, and to talk with those involved in the ‘dig’.

In Lorca’s Footsteps in Granada

That is what happened when my friend Kathleen and I visited Granada recently to renew our acquaintance with a city that had charmed us both decades ago. We found it virtually unchanged, still intensely Spanish, catering mainly to Spanish visitors and still with the best tapas bars in Spain, but giving nods to a more modern vibe with the addition of Gin bars!

Our idea was to walk In the Footsteps of Federico Garcia Lorca, guided by the Ian Gibson book of the same name, and it was while we were doing this that we had a serendipitous encounter with a Granada local who shared our enthusiasm and who invited us to visit the dig in Viznar.

The Barranco de Viznar and its secrets

The Barranco de Víznar is a ravine in the province of Granada, Spain, where a team of researchers made up of archaeologists, geophysicists, anthropologists, forensic experts and historians led by Francisco Carrión Méndez, a Senior Lecturer in Prehistory and Archaeology at the University of Granada has been searching for the bodies of the those assassinated during the Spanish Civil War, and searching for one in particular, the poet and playwright, Federico Garcia Lorca, one of the first to be killed.

How Many Assassinations

No one knows exactly how many were assassinated in the Spanish Civil War but it is estimated that it was more than 500,000, thousands of whom were massacred in the Province of Granada, some, including Lorca, even before Franco’s military coup.

In the area of Viznar, to date, they have located 16 mass graves and recovered 124 bodies. In one mass grave they found the bodies of 10 people with gunshot wounds to the head and their hands tied behind their backs.

The area of Barranco de Víznar was replanted with a thick forest of pine trees which has covered up the graves left after the mass executions committed by platoons of assault guards, part of the ferocious repression that followed the uprising.

How is the Dig Funded

The project is funded by the state and the regional government and is being conducted under the 1922  Democratic Memory Law which was enacted following the coming to power of the government of Pedro Sánchez. However, there are fears that this could be in jeopardy and the excavation stopped under a new government.

Some scenes of the Barranco, above. Throughout the woods are dotted tents where the archaeologists and forensic scientists are working, in difficult terrain and extreme heat.

One of the volunteers told me it usually takes four to six weeks to complete an exhumation, to excavate the personal effects and log, photograph and do the paperwork. Fortunately, the soil in the ravine of Víznar has managed to preserve the bones remarkably well, helpful in identifying the age and sex of the victims, as well as the injuries and the type of violence to which they were subjected. The DNA results can take a long time to come in but when the families are re-united with a family member, it is a great moment.

Each tree could be a Memorial

When a family is linked with a body from one of the mass graves via the DNA their permission is requested for a photograph of the victim to be displayed on a tree. Most families agree and it was an emotional moment to wander amongst the trees, see the photographs and read the names and occupations – some academics, a bullfighter but mostly ordinary citizens, killed because of their sympathies with the legally elected Republican government.

Among the bones of those discovered is a former Rector of the University of Granada, Salvador Vila (above) who was brought from Salamanca to Granada and shot on October 22nd 1936. His wife, Gerda Leimdörfer, daughter of the editor-in-chief of Berlin’s leading Jewish newspaper, the Berliner Zeitung am Mittag, was spared thanks to the mediation of Manuel de Falla, the Spanish composer, who obtained a pardon in exchange for her conversion from Judaism to Catholicism.

The burial area is accessed over uneven terrain and a paved dirt path has been laid by the City Council of Víznar that after a detour, leads to the main grave which is surrounded by a stone gallery filled with small metal plaques bearing the names and circumstances of those killed, placed there by Historical Memory Associations and the heirs of those shot.

The Death of Lorca

Lorca was spending time in the home of family friends, the Rosales, on Angulo Street, on 17th August 1936, when he was arrested and taken just 300 metres away to the Civil Government building, at that time a centre of terror: from there he was quickly transferred to Alfacar and Víznar, two small towns located only ten kilometres away where Franco’s rebel army had created a centre for the extermination of left-wing sympathizers. He was assassinated not only because of his beliefs and his ideology, but because he was homosexual.

Memorial to Lorca

All Were Lorca memorial stone

Within the area there is a simple stone with the legend “All were Lorca. 18-08-2002″ and each year, on August 19, a poetry event takes place here beginning at midnight and lasting until the early hours of the morning. This celebration of Lorca’s poetry originally started as a clandestine event during the last years of the dictatorship and was the first open-air commemoration of Lorca’s assassination.

The road to Al

To date, Lorca’s body has not been discovered but hope remains high that one day it will be among those exhumed.

Postscript:

The project in the ravine, which is in its fourth and final phase, is now funded by the state and the regional government and is being conducted under the new Democratic Memory Law passed in 2022. It is not certain that this will continue if a more right-wing government should be installed in Madrid.

Essential Reading

For the politics of Spain during the Civil War and since, anything by Peter Preston is to be recommended.

Ian Gibson: Federico García Lorca:  A Life (Faber & Faber)

Ian Gibson:  The Assassination of Federico García Lorca (Penguin)

Ian Gibson:  Lorca’s  Granada (Faber & Faber):  This is a great guide book to Granada as it takes you on ten routes, step by step from his birthplace to the site of his execution outside the city via the poets best-loved places in Granada.

Granada Tourist Board – Patronato Provincial de Turismo de Granada
Cárcel Baja, 3. 18001 Granada
Tel: +34 958 24 71 27
www.turgranada.es<http://www.turgranada.es/>

Comments

16 responses to “Barranco de Viznar: Unearthing Lorca’s Legacy and the Spanish Civil War Tragedy”

  1. Anabel @ The Glasgow Gallivanter Avatar

    I just left a long comment and it disappeared! Maybe in spam? Apologies if not, Anabel.

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    1. Anabel @ The Glasgow Gallivanter Avatar

      Oh brilliant, it has now appeared!

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      1.  Avatar
        Anonymous

        As you say, anothe off-night for WP and it won’t let me ‘Like’ any comments either!

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      2. Anabel @ The Glasgow Gallivanter Avatar

        And I had to sign in 3 times last night. Even though I was signed in.

        Liked by 1 person

  2. Anabel @ The Glasgow Gallivanter Avatar

    What an experience, it must have been very moving. I think it’s really important to keep projects like this going and not sweep the consequences of war under the carpet, or under the ground as it were here. Though God knows they are more than evident enough at the moment, I despair.

    Just read about your eye procedures, which made me shudder. Best of luck! Hope they go well and do a lot of good.

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    1.  Avatar
      Anonymous

      Thanks Anabel, I agree with all you say, especially in the matter of the Spanish Civil War which was the nursery for Hitler and Mussolini to practice in while we stood aside refusing to help.

      Yes the eye procedures are not pleasant but if they help me to see a bit better, I have to go through with them. Actually, the scraping off of the calcium won’t improve the vision but it will relieve the intense pain I have sometimes. I’ve had to cut down on my reading, my computer work and my TV watching although I never did a lo of the latter, but I’ve gained an awful lot of useless knowledge from listening to the radio for hours. Now if only I could remember half of it I’d be an asset in a quiz show!

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      1. Anabel @ The Glasgow Gallivanter Avatar

        You are anonymous but I know you are Mari! WordPress having an off-night again I see.

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  3. Toonsarah Avatar

    What an amazing opportunity for you to visit this dig, and I imagine all the more special because it was unplanned and unexpected. It just shows the value in engaging with people you meet on your travels, you never know what might happen as a result. The photos of those exhumed really bring the reality of their deaths to the fore, very moving.

    Oh, and good to see you posting again, it’s been a while!

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    1.  Avatar
      Anonymous

      Thanks, Sarah. It was really something to visit that site. I wish I’d been able to take better pictures but the terrain was very uneven and I’m rather unsteady on my legs these days (along with failing eyesight life can be a pain sometimes!) so I was a bit wobbly, leaning on my walking-stick while trying to take pictures. Nevertheless, I have good memories of a very special day.

      I hope to get back to blogging now that the summer visitors have more or less all gone, but I have eye injections next week and then a procedure to scrape off calcium deposits on my eyes next month which doesn’t exactly fill me with joy. Still, watch this space! Nice talking to you again.

      By the way, the family wedding I’m going to this weekend is taking place in the Brunel Museum in London, ceremony in the tunnel under the Thames. Another special experience.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Toonsarah Avatar

        Well that’s a really interesting and special place for a wedding ceremony 🙂 I’ve been to the museum a couple of times but never yet in the tunnel. It’s only open to the public a few times a year.

        Good luck with those eye procedures, I hope they go well and have the desired results. Always a pleasure to chat with you 🙂

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  4. bushboy Avatar

    What a massive undertaking.
    I found this “How is the Did Funded” typo?
    Hope It’s ok to mention Mari

    Liked by 1 person

    1.  Avatar
      Anonymous

      Of course it’s OK to mention my typo. I wish all readers were as diligent as you. No matter how careful I am, all too often I find a typo months after a piece has been posted, usually because someone has pointed it out to me. I do miss my husband for that, he was so good at picking up typos.

      My return to blogging is with a somewhat heavy subject but it took over my trip to Granada and I’ve almost forgotten the other parts of what was a lovely trip to a lovely part of Spain.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. bushboy Avatar

        I enjoyed my short stay in Granada.
        Glad you are OK with pointing out the typo

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  5. restlessjo Avatar

    So that’s what you were up to, Mari! What a grizzly, awful job they have! I’ve never understood much about the Spanish Civil War. So many atrocities committed. What is it about human nature? We like to think we live in more enlightened times but if your beliefs don’t fit, you can still suffer the consequences. I’m glad you found a project that resonated with you.

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    1.  Avatar
      Anonymous

      Thanks, Jo. It’s taken me a long time to get down to it as I’ve had a lot of visitors this year (last two left at the weekend). I can’t do as much as I once could but refuse to accept it so consequently overdo it and get very tired.

      As for the awful job they have, yes, but it’s something from which they derive great satisfaction and as one described it to me, they feel they are putting the truth back into Spanish history. My degree was in History but I concentrated on War History and the horrors have always fascinated me. What that makes me I don’t know. Maybe I need therapy?

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