
New Books in History Foster Chamberlin, "Uncivil Guard: Policing, Military Culture, and the Coming of the Spanish Civil War" (Louisiana State UP, 2025)
Mar 15, 2026
Foster Chamberlin, assistant teaching professor and historian of Spanish history and author of Uncivil Guard. He traces the Civil Guard’s militarized origins and cult of honor. Short cases reveal how local policing escalated national violence. The conversation ends with reflections on militarization, policing culture, and future research.
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Civil Guard Origins Shaped By Military Honor
- The Civil Guard is a gendarmerie with a military structure policing mainly rural Spain, founded in 1844 to give the central state disciplined reach across the country.
- Its founder, the Duke de Alamada, institutionalized honor, barrack isolation, and military discipline that distanced guards from locals and shaped later repression.
Organizational Culture Explains Extreme Violence
- Organizational culture — unwritten assumptions like honor, solidarity, and military training — explains why the Civil Guard was unusually violent during the Second Republic.
- Regulations even authorized violence for injuries to honor, making respect enforcement a permitted motive for force.
Castelblanco Killing Sparked National Honor Outrage
- In Castelblanco (Dec 31, 1931) four Civil Guards enforcing private-property rules entered a first-ever strike, were seized by townspeople, and beaten to death.
- Director General José Sanjurjo framed the killings as an insult to Guard honor, fueling national controversy rather than reform.

