Urigüen López de Sandaliano, NataliaVerlag, BöhlauWeimar, Wien Köln2024-07-292024-07-292020-01-20Franco’s repression of Spanish Christian Democracy: the “Munich Conspiracy”, en Historisch-politische Mitteilungen: Archiv für christlich-demokratische Politik (Böhlau Verlag), pp. 245-256, 2020978-3-412-51845-5; e-ISBN: 978-3-412-51847-9https://doi.org/10.7788/9783412518479.245https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14468/23137In June 1962, 118 Spanish opposition politicians, including numerous Christian democrats, met in Munich at the Congress of the European Movement. They were members of various political currents who had arrived both from Spain and from exile, and who had come together to agree on common demands. The meeting thus marked the beginning of a new chapter in the history of the opposition to Franco’s dictatorship. Franco’s regime reacted harshly: it viewed the Christian democratic opposition as a threat due to its appeal to Catholicism, a basis which the regime claimed for itself.eninfo:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess55 Historia::5504 Historia por épocas::5504.02 Historia contemporáneaFranco’s repression of Spanish Christian Democracy: the “Munich Conspiracy”capítulo de libro