Rafael Gambra Ciudad

Rafael Gambra Ciudad
Born Rafael Gambra Ciudad
1920
Madrid, Spain
Died 2004
Madrid, Spain
Nationality Spanish
Ethnicity Spanish
Occupation scholar
Known for philosopher, theorist
Political party CT
Religion Roman Catholicism

Rafael Gambra Ciudad (1920-2004) was a Spanish philosopher, a secondary education official, a Carlist politician and a soldier. In philosophy he is considered key representative of late Traditionalism; his works fall also into theory of state and politics. He is best known as author of books focusing on secularisation of Western European culture in the consumer society era. As a politician he is acknowledged as a theorist rather than as an active protagonist, though after 2001 he briefly headed one of the Carlist branches.

Family and youth

Gran Peña building, Madrid

Rafael's paternal ancestors for generations have been related to Valle del Roncal; until today Casa Gambra and Casa Sanz are iconic mansions of the area.[1] The Gambras made their name fighting the French in 1809.[2] Rafael’s grandfather, Pedro Francisco Gambra Barrena (died 1930),[3] married descendant to a distinguished Carlist military Sanz family;[4] himself he rose to high positions in Ministry of Economy.[5] His son and Rafael’s father, Eduardo Gambra Sanz (1882-1964),[6] became an architect.[7] Key Gambra’s works are offices of Sociedad Gran Peña along the Gran Via[8] and refurbishment of Palacio del Marqués de Miraflores,[9] marked by attempt to re-capture the splendor of historical Spanish architecture.[10] In 1915[11] he married Rafaela Ciudad Villalón (died 1947),[12] born in Seville[13] though raised in Madrid.[14] She came from a distinguished family of civil servants; her father José Ciudad Aurioles[15] in the early 20th century was a Cortes deputy,[16] until the early 1920s a longtime senator,[17] and in 1917-1923 served as President of Tribunal Supremo.[18] The couple had only one child.[19]

Born and raised in Madrid, Rafael spent much of his childhood in Valle de Roncal and later cherished his Navarrese heritage; in historiography he is referred to as a navarro rather than as a madrileño, sometimes dubbed "maestro navarro", "arquetipo navarro", "buen navarro" or "vasco-navarro roncalés".[20] He was brought up in profoundly Catholic ambience;[21] politically his father sympathized with Carlism[22] and his mother, though coming from a Liberal family, also displayed a conservative penchant.[23] He was first educated at the Madrid Marianist Colegio del Pilar; already during his schoolboy years he was attracted to letters and read books while his colleagues played football;[24] during his early adolescent years he was engaged in Asociación Católica Nacional de Propagandistas.[25]

Valle de Roncal, view from upper part of the Belagua section

In July 1936 the Gambras were spending their summer holidays in Roncal, where they were caught by the military coup.[26] As a 16-year-old Rafael volunteered to the Requeté unit of Tercio de Abárzurza,[27] in few days time taking positions at Alto de León pass[28] and attempting to break through Sierra de Guadarrama.[29] José Ulíbarri, the Catholic parish priest from Úgar and temporary commander of the unit, remained Gambra's friend and sort of mentor for life.[30] He spent the next 2 years at the stationary frontline in the Sierra, until in July 1938 he left to attend alférez provisional training.[31] In February 1939 he was seconded to Tercio del Alcázar,[32] commanding a platoon in the 4. Infantry Company.[33] Having reached Lliria at the moment of Nationalist victory,[34] he was decorated with many military awards.[35]

Rafael Gambra was married to María del Carmen Gutiérrez Sánchez (1921-1984), translator, scholar[36] and as Miguel Arazuri author of fairly popular novels.[37] She was also the founder and manager of Fundación Stella, an independent radio venture.[38] The couple had three children.[39] Of their two sons, Andrés Gambra Gutierrez is professor of medieval history[40] and the university official,[41] while José Miguel Gambra Gutierrez is scholar in philosophy,[42] both in Madrid. The two are active Traditionalists,[43] the latter leading the sixtinos Carlists since 2010.[44]

Scholarship

In 1939 Gambra enrolled at faculty of letters and philosophy at Universidad Central.[45] Influenced by Manuel García Morente and Salvador Minguijón Adrián,[46] he graduated in 1942.[47] One year later he entered Cuerpo de Catedráticos Numerarios de Institutos Nacionales de Enseñanza Media.[48] Promoted to Inspector Nacional de Enseñanzas Medias,[49] in 1945 Gambra obtained his PhD laurels as Doctor en Filosofía, his thesis dedicated to post-Hegelian approach to historiographic methodology.[50] The work, promoted by Juan Zaragüeta y Bengoechea, boiled down to highly critical review centred on Marx and Feuerbach[51] and was published in 1946.[52]

Already in the early 1940s Gambra assumed teaching at the Madrid Academia Vazquez de Mella, a semi-official Carlist educational and cultural enterprise; he was giving lectures on Traditionalist theory of philosophy, state and politics.[53] In 1943 he moved to Pamplona, where he was employed by Instituto Príncipe de Viana,[54] a cultural outpost of Carlism managed by the provincial authorities. During the next 12 years Gambra served in the Institute as profesor of philosophy,[55] in the early 1950s apparently hoping to join a would-be Universidad del País Vasco-Navarro, a high-education establishment advocated at the time.[56] However, when Universidad de Navarra materialized as a private Opus Dei enterprise in 1952, Gambra did not enlist; he rejected also an opportunity to pursue research and possibly scholarship in England.[57] In the mid-1950s he returned to the capital,[58] engaged in governmental attempt to re-shape the secondary education structures.[59] He assumed teaching in newly created "centros modelos de segunda ensañanza", first in Instituto Cervantes and in the mid-1960s moving to Instituto Nacional de Enseñanza Media Lope de Vega,[60] becoming its vicedirector later on.[61] As education official he was anxious to prevent "erosión de la espiritualidad", and in the early 1960s he opposed technocratic changes, proposed and eventually introduced in education.[62] He co-operated also with Universidad Complutense, particularly with the associated San Pablo CEU college, run by ACdP. Gambra continued collaborating with CEU from the mid-1960s to 1994,[63] also after San Pablo had formally separated from Complutense and became an independent university.[64]

Apart from professional engagements, Gambra continued his teaching career also with a number of semi-scholarly institutions. Until the early 1960s Gambra was giving lectures at Ateneo de Madrid, at that time led by Florentino Pérez Embid,[65] and Instituto de Cultura Hispánica, an establishment created by Francoist authorities to cultivate the Latin American link.[66] In the press referred to as "catedrático",[67] he was active in once-off conferences, also beyond Madrid,[68] and in periodical Catholic cultural-scientific initiatives, like Conversaciones Intelectuales de El Paular[69] or sessions organized by Hermandad Sacerdotal.[70] In the mid-1960s he commenced engagement in Madrid-based Centro de Estudios Históricos y Políticos General Zumalacárregui, a think-tank set up to disseminate Traditionalist thought and counter progressist designs on Carlism. In the late 1960s he stood as a recognized authority, at least within the Traditionalist realm.[71] He continued giving lectures in the 1980s,[72] as late as 1989[73] and 1992.[74] In 1998 he celebrated 50 years of teaching.[75]

Thought

In terms of general inspiration Gambra is broadly defined as fitting within the Platonic tradition[76] but indebted mostly to St. Thomas and occasionally referred to as member of the neo-scholastic school.[77] His views on Christianity were influenced by Gustave Thibon,[78] Etienne Gilson, Romano Guardini and partially Max Scheler.[79] He is also often referred to as embracing philosophic threads of Albert Camus and other French existentialists,[80] while in theory of politics and state following Alexis de Tocqueville, Karl von Vogelsang[81] and especially Juan Vázquez de Mella.

The principal thread of Gambra's thought is repudiation of rationalism-based civilization[82] and promotion of a Traditionalist outlook. Human life is understood as commitment to divine order[83] and human identity as spanned between own self and community belonging.[84] A man is perceived primarily as a social – not autonomous[85] – being, expressed mostly by his role in society; similarly, life is about contributing to common good, incompatible with individualism or liberalism.[86] The society itself is governed by nature, animality and rationality, though religion as a transcendent factor is indispensable element of social equation.[87] Such a polity is best expressed as a "society of duties", united by common purpose and religious inspiration.[88] As he believed a public organization not based on accepted orthodoxy can never be stable, leading to mere co-existence rather than community,[89] Gambra advocated public embracement of the doctrine[90] with respect for privately held heterodoxy.[91]

Marcel Lefebvre C.S.Sp.,[92] picture from 1981

According to Gambra social self of a human is best expressed by tradition, viewed as accumulated and irreversible evolution that provides a principle governing historical societies[93] and incompatible with revolutionary patterns of change.[94] In case of Spain the tradition is embodied in hereditary monarchy as opposed to elective heads of state,[95] federative structure[96] as opposed to unitary nation states,[97] organic representation[98] as opposed to corruption-prone and individual-centred parliamentarian democracy,[99] Catholic orthodoxy as opposed to secular or neutral regime[100] and generally withdrawn admin structures as opposed to modern, omnipotent state.[101] Politically the guardian of such a tradition[102] was Carlism,[103] not merely political grouping or romantic sentiment but rather the very essence of Spanish self.[104]

Recurring thread of Gambra’s thought, by some considered its key component,[105] was confronting modern format of religiosity. He held Maritain and Teilhard de Chardin responsible for undermining Christianity[106] and turning it into a "new humanist religion",[107] admitting defeat in 150-year-old struggle[108] against secular Revolution.[109] Fiercely critical of Vaticanum II[110] he considered Dignitatis humanae incompatible with tradition,[111] the innovative effort of Vatican producing demolition of Christianity[112] and reduction of Catholic integrity to mere "Christian inspiration".[113] Indeed he is often referred to as an Integrist.[114] Faced with progressist stance of the Church, Gambra started assuming anti-clerical positions from the far-right perspective.[115] He often combined his critique with onslaught on European idea, considered an euphemism denoting a militant, anti-Christian ideology,[116] and opposed its implementation in Spain.[117] He was not that much anti-democratic as rather opposing deification of democracy,[118] and especially the central if not exclusive position it claimed within public space.[119]

Works

Romería, Spain

Most popular Gambra's works were textbooks in history of philosophy: Historia sencilla de la filosofía (1961) and Curso elemental de filosofía (1962); tailored for the beginners, they were reprinted in countless editions and served as immensely popular introductions to philosophy for generations of Spanish students[120] until the early 21st century.[121] The first edition of Curso was nominally co-authored by Gustavo Bueno; in the subsequent re-runs the publisher dropped Bueno, who after the fall of Francoism claimed that the result of his own labor had been merely re-edited by Gambra.[122] In 1970 these works were supplemented by La filosofía católica en el siglo XX.[123]

Gambra’s view on theory of society and state was laid out in three works: his PhD dissertation La interpretación materialista de la historia (1946), La monarquía social y representativa en el pensamiento tradicional (1954)[124] and Eso que llaman estado (1958).[125] La monarquía, together with almost simultaneously published similar work of Elías de Tejada,[126] became a cornerstone of Traditionalist theoretical vision, with Eso que llaman was widely discussed in the press of the era;[127] both earned Gambra prestigious standing in scholarly discourse.

The works which made most impact among the wide public were 4 books focusing on contemporary culture: La unidad religiosa y el derrotismo católico (1965),[128] El silencio de dios (1967),[129] Tradición o mimetismo (1976)[130] and El lenguaje y los mitos (1983).[131] The first two centred on secularization of Western polities; they confronted Christian-Democratic vision[132] and Vatican II alike,[133] explored roots of perceived cultural decline, tried to re-define tradition versus progress[134] and strove to demonstrate how multifold advances of the last centuries have given man a false sense of mastery.[135] Tradición turned dramatically out of tune with the transición spirit, withdrawn by the editor and distributed by the author himself.[136] Finally, El lenguaje deconstructed modern communication; its objective was to prove that the progressist tide manipulated the language and turned it from means of communication into means of promoting cultural revolution.[137]

shopping mall, Spain

Apart from translations,[138] booklets,[139] compilations[140] and single though some of them original historical attempts,[141] most of 775 titles in digitalized version of Gambra’s writings, released in 2002, are contributions to reviews and daily press.[142] Since the 1940s Gambra was moderately engaged[143] in Calvo Serrer directed Arbor.[144] Later he switched to La Ciudad Católica, turned into Verbo, unofficial review of the Spanish Integrists,[145] contributing also to other Catholic titles like Tradición Católica or conservative ones like Ateneo. He supplied a number of Carlist reviews and bulletins:[146] Siempre p'alante, La Santa Causa, Montejurra and Azada y Asta, gradually eradicated from the last two by their progressist management.[147] Through many decades he was key author of El Pensamiento Navarro.[148] During late Francoism and afterwards he collaborated with El Alcázar and Fuerza Nueva. In the 1990s and later he appeared in nationwide press mostly as author of letters to the editor;[149] his last item identified is from 2003.[150] In the 1950s he engaged in private Carlist ventures Editorial Cálamo[151] and Ediciones Montejurra.[152]

Carlist: confronting Franco

Released from the Carlist Requeté unit, during academic years in Madrid Gambra engaged in the Traditionalist Academia Vázquez de Mella.[153] In the increasingly fragmented realm of post-war Carlism, headed by vacillating and hardly contactable[154] regent Don Javier, he seemed leaning towards a candidature of Dom Duarte Nuño; the two had an amicable interview in 1941,[155] but the young Gambra stayed within the limits of loyalty to the regent[156] and eventually abandoned his pro-Braganza penchant,[157] converted to supporter of the Borbón-Parmas.[158] Having moved to Navarre in 1943 he assisted the French monarchists from fleeing the Nazi terror across the Pyrenees into Spain.[159] In the late 1940s he gained weight within Navarrese Carlism; in the early 1950s he was already listed among "dirigentes locales"[160] who "tenían en el país vasconavarro una indudable influencia";[161] in 1953 he formally entered Junta Provincial.[162]

Since emergence of pro-Francoist Carloctavista branch in the mid-1940s Gambra was increasingly anxious about protracted regency of Don Javier.[163] Uncompromising towards another collaborative branch, the Rodeznistas,[164] in the early 1950s he concluded that Don Javier should reinvigorate the movement by terminating the regency and declaring his own claim to the throne. When this eventually happened in 1952, Gambra was co-author[165] of Acto de Barcelona, a proclamation issued by the pretender and viewed also as major re-definition of the Carlist dynastical reading.[166] Books on Traditionalist monarchy established his firm position as a recognized party theorist. In 1954 he entered sub-commission of culture within Comisión de Cultura y Propaganda of the Carlist executive, Junta Nacional.[167]

When discussing the mid-1950s some authors count him among the immovilistas, non-collaborative followers of Manuel Fal,[168] while others scholars suggest he charged Fal with lack of intransigence and together other Navarros like the Baleztena brothers he opposed him from even more anti-Francoist positions.[169] Once Carlism changed its strategy towards cautious rapprochement, Gambra stuck to his guns and lambasted the official collaborationist path of the new leader, José María Valiente.[170]

Uneasy about continuous vacillation of Don Javier, Gambra was cautiously supportive of inviting his son Don Carlos Hugo into the Spanish politics; he first met him in 1955[171] and though perplexed by unfamiliarity of the francophone prince with the Spanish affairs,[172] it was Gambra who introduced him at the 1957 Carlist gathering at Montejurra.[173] In the late 1950s Gambra appreciated his energetic style and focus on dynastic loyalty; he also liked young personalities from Don Carlos Hugo’s entourage, especially Ramón Massó, a former Gambra’s disciple from Academia Vázquez de Mella. Appreciating him as a young Catalan easily communicating with the crowd,[174] at the turn of the decades Gambra collaborated with Massó and others;[175] he did not realize that they exploited Mellist and federalist threads[176] but considered him a rotten reactionary[177] and approached his teaching highly selectively.[178] It was only in the early 1960s that Gambra realized the Hugocarlistas tried to outsmart the Traditionalists; having failed to prevent their increased presence in the party structures, around 1963 Gambra dissociated himself from Javierismo to launch an openly confrontational bid.

Carlist: confronting Progress

In 1963 Gambra co-founded Centro de Estudios Históricos y Políticos General Zumalacárregui;[179] though affiliated with Movimiento Nacional,[180] it was intended as a think-tank disseminating Traditionalism and countering progressist vision of the Hugocarlistas.[181] Apart from publications and minor events,[182] its activity climaxed in two Congresos de Estudios Tradicionalistas, staged in 1964 and 1968.[183] As supporters of Don Carlos Hugo were gaining momentum,[184] Gambra was leaning towards rapprochement among all Carlist branches separated from the party during the last 20 years: Rodeznistas, Carloctavistas, Sivattistas and the recently expulsed politicians like José Luis Zamanillo or Francisco Elías de Tejada.[185] Parking dynastical issues,[186] they were supposed to be united by loyalty to Traditionalist principles and opposition to socialist penchant.[187] The plan did not work out until the early 1970s, it is until emergence of ephemeral structure styled as ex-Requeté organization.[188]

Gambra’s efforts of the time were mostly about further refinement of Traditionalist thought in specialized reviews and conferences;[189] they climaxed in ¿Qué es el carlismo? (1971), concise lecture of the doctrine co-authored with de Tejada and Puy Muñoz. Also in the mid-1970s he was very engaged in propaganda war with the Hugocarlistas. The latter lambasted his accord with "ultra-fascist line" of El Pensamiento Navarro[190] and his "posición ultramontana";[191] Gambra mobilized Traditionalists to challenge progressist grip on Carlism and prior to the 1976 Montejurra gathering, which effectively produced fatal casualties, called for "asistencia masiva de los verdaderos tradicionalistas, que alcallará gestos y voces, ‘declaraciones’ y ‘manifiestos’, sencillamente inadmisibles, intolerables".[192]

During final years of Francoism and during transición Gambra, always opposed to Falangism and Francoism,[193] neared the post-Francoist búnker[194] when confronting the change;[195] voicing against the 1978 constitution,[196] he sided with Blas Piñar’s Fuerza Nueva until the party was dissolved in 1982.[197] Embittered by ongoing change he tried to confront it in newspapers;[198] he compared the setting of late transición to that of mid-1930s, when Spain was struggling infected with deadly political viruses.[199] He remained on the sidelines of politics; when mushrooming Traditionalist grouplets united in Comunión Tradicionalista Carlista in 1986 Gambra focused rather on youth Carlist organizations,[200] his spotlight on cultural heritage and education.[201] His objective was to promote Traditionalist values in the increasingly secular, modern consumer Spanish society.

Don Sixto, 1999

In the late 1980s and the early 1990s Gambra was considered supreme authority on theory of Traditionalism.[202] This was acknowledged during homage celebrations organized in 1998,[203] though formal recognition came 3 years later. In 2001 Don Sixto, the younger son of Don Javier styled as Abanderado de la Tradición (though falling short either of claiming the throne or even claiming the Carlist regency) nominated Gambra chief of his Secretaría Política.[204] Not all the Traditionalists recognized Gambra's authority; the Carloctavistas and Comunión Tradicionalista Carlista - not admitting allegiance to any dynastical line - dissociated themselves from the nomination.[205] Assuming political leadership of the sixtinos Carlists, the 81-year-old considered his elevation another cross to bear, though as an octogenarian Gambra remained fairly active; his last public appearance took place during the Cerro de los Ángeles feast in 2002.[206]

Reception and legacy

Carlist standard

Gambra emerged as a notable Traditionalist theorist in the mid-1950s. In the late 1960s he was already a recognized authority within the movement and beyond,[207] with first homage sessions organized in 1968;[208] at that time his books on culture and Christianity earned him name also among wider national audience. With the commencing transición of the late 1970s his works went out of fashion up to the point of withdrawing them from bookstores.[209] Following the 1983 publication of El lenguaje y los mitos he started to disappear from public discourse, publishing either in specialized reviews or partisan press titles.[210] Within Traditionalism he grew to an iconic figure, honored by 1998 homage session[211] and a monograph by Miguel Ayuso, published the same year.[212] Though he gained a number of prizes, all of them were awarded by conservative institutions.[213] His 2004 death was noted by some though not all nationwide newspapers[214] and acknowledged by monographic issue of Anales de Fundación Francisco Elías de Tejada.[215]

Taxonomy of Gambra’s work is unclear. Today he is usually vaguely referred to as "thinker",[216] an application used also by the Spanish press during his lifetime, alternating with "publicista", "catedrático", "profesor" or "ensayista".[217] When it comes to detailed designation his work is usually classified as philosophy,[218] though some see it as part of historiography[219] or political science.[220] In general Spanish encyclopedias he usually merits very brief notes.[221] Some philosophy-dedicated dictionaries ignore him,[222] some just mention his name[223] and in few he is treated at length.[224] In some manuals he appears in entries dealing with Traditionalism, though featured as a secondary theorist who failed to provide original contribution and was rather a renovator[225] of earlier thought.[226] As a historian by some he is denied sound credentials, counted among pseudo-scientific "historiografia neotradicionalista",[227] others challenge this approach.[228] As education official he is considered opponent of modernising technocratic changes.[229] He is sometimes counted among members of "generación de 1948".[230]

Within Traditionalism Gambra remains one of the all-time greats. His opus is applauded as grand contribution,[231] a synthesis[232] and a holistic "cosmovisión católica y española",[233] though few authors consider his input an update rather than an original contribution.[234] Gambra’s followers see him as "pensador tradicionalista contemporáneo más importante",[235] "esencia del tradicionalismo"[236] or even "el más grande y el más fiel filósofo español de la segunda mitad del siglo XX",[237] himself and counter-revolution being one and the same thing.[238] However, also within the Traditionalist realm he found some of his concepts – especially his intransigence - challenged, like in case of a 2003 polemics with Alvaro d’Ors.[239] During the 2014 conference on Traditionalism[240] Gambra was dedicated one paper and featured prominently in a number of others; apart from that, both his sons acted as speakers.[241] In the 2015 synthesis of Traditionalist thought he is the second – after Elías de Tejada - most featured author.[242] Some of Gambra’s essay books are being re-published, especially El Silencio de Dios enjoyed a number of editions and was translated into French[243] and English.[244] A new book was released posthumously.[245]

See also

Footnotes

  1. compare Qué visitar section at the Ayuntamiento de Roncal web page, available here, or Roncal section at the vallederoncal tourist service, available here
  2. Rafael Gambra, El Valle de Roncal en la Guerra de la Independencia, [in:] Principe de Viana 20/76-77 (1959), pp. 187-215
  3. ABC 25.05.30, available here
  4. one author claims that Rafael’s paternal grandmother was daughter to "a Carlist general Sanz, who served Carlos VII", Manuel Santa Cruz [Alberto Ruiz de Galarreta], Rafael Gambra. un hombre cabal, [in:] Anales de la Fundación Francisco Elías de Tejada 2004 (10), p. 174. It is not clear which Sanz is meant; the best known one, Romualdo Cesareo Sanz Escartín, was born in 1844 and the birth dates hardly match. Another possible case is another Navarrese, Francisco Sanz Sanz (born 1817); the birth dates render it possible, though he fought in the First Carlist War and did not serve Carlos VII
  5. in the late 1870s he was jefe de administracion honorario employed in Dirección General de Propiedades y Derechos de Estado, see Guía Oficial de España 1879, p. 642, available here. In the late 1880s he served as administrador de contribuciones in the province of Madrid, see La Iberia 28.05.89, available here, becoming Delegado de Hacienda in Valladolid in 1896, see La Iberia 28.01.96, available here. In 1911 he rose to debt and budget administration in the ministry, Guía Oficial de España 1911, p. 514, available here
  6. ABC 11.08.64, available here
  7. Rafael Gambra, gran filósofo tradicionalista, [in:] Fundación Nacional Francisco Franco service, available here
  8. see drafts and sketches at europeana service, available here
  9. and the Omnia building at Plaza de Colón, Ignacio Hernando de Larramendi, Así se hizo Mapfre. Mi tiempo, Madrid 2000, ISBN 9788487863875, pp. 29-30
  10. Rafael Gambra, gran filósofo tradicionalista, [in:] Fundación Nacional Francisco Franco
  11. ABC 10.02.15, available here
  12. ABC 03.08.47, available here, some sources claim her name was Rafaela Ciudad Orioles, Hernando de Larramendi 2000, pp. 29-30
  13. Hernando de Larramendi 2000, pp. 29-30
  14. ABC 05.01.11, available here
  15. ABC 10.02.15, available here
  16. see the official Cortes service, available here
  17. see the official Senate service, available here
  18. Rafael Gambra, gran filósofo tradicionalista, [in:] Fundación Nacional Francisco Franco
  19. ABC 03.08.47, available here
  20. Boletín del Círculo Tradicionalista Carlista San Mateo 39 (1998), Rafael Gambra Ciudad 1920-2004, [in:] filosofia.org service, available here, José de Armas, In memoriam. Rafael Gambra. Fidelidad a los principios y lealtad a las personas Rafael Gambra en mi personal "Camino de Damasco", [in:] Anales de la Fundación Francisco Elías de Tejada 10 (2004), p.170
  21. compare his recollections Al Dios – y a la Iglesia – que alegraron mi juventud, [in:] El Pensamiento Navarro, issue from 1973, available here
  22. Rafael Gambra, gran filósofo tradicionalista, [in:] Fundación Nacional Francisco Franco
  23. ABC 05.01.11, available here
  24. Pablo Larraz Andía, Víctor Sierra-Sesumaga (eds.), Requetés. De las trincheras al olvidio, Madrid 2011, ISBN 9788499700465, p. 367
  25. Miguel Ayuso Torres, In memoriam. Rafael Gambra. Rafael Gambra en el pensamiento tradicional español, [in:] Anales de la Fundación Francisco Elías de Tejada 10 (2004), p. 163. When in his 50s Gambra appreciated the role of Acción Católica, though not that of CEDA, Tyre and Bloque Nacional, see Miguel Ayuso Torres, Koinos: el pensamiento politico de Rafael Gambra, Madrid 1998, ISBN 9788473440424, p. 33, Jacek Bartyzel, Nic bez Boga, nic wbrew tradycji, Radzymin 2015, ISBN 9788360748732, p. 105
  26. Onésimo Díaz Hernández, Rafael Calvo Serer y el grupo Arbor, Valencia 2011, ISBN 9788437087351, p. 43
  27. Santa Cruz 2004, p. 174
  28. Gambra’s own account of fightings on the Alto de León pass in the summer of 1936 ignores his own role, compare Rafal Gambra, 1936: El Alto de Leon, [in:] Siempre P'alante 1993, available here; for pro-Republican account of the same war episode see Mariano Maroto Garcia, El 18 de julio en Leganes (II), [in:] Ciudadanas y Ciadadanos por el cambio 31.07.11, available here
  29. Luis Hernando de Larramendi, In memoriam. Rafael Gambra. Los Gambra y los Larramendi: una mistad carlista, [in:] Anales de la Fundación Francisco Elías de Tejada 10 (2004), p. 172
  30. Santa Cruz 2004, p. 175
  31. Julio Aróstegui, Combatientes Requetés en la Guerra Civil española, 1936-1939, Madrid 2013, ISBN 9788499709758, p. 389
  32. a battalion composed mostly of the Castillians, for its operational history see Aróstegui 2013, p. 653-667
  33. Aróstegui 2013, p. 667
  34. Ajencia Patriótica de Noticias de Acción Juvenil Española 13.01.04
  35. Medalla de la Campaña 1936-1939, Cruz Roja del Mérito Militar, Cruz de Guerra and Medalla de Voluntarios de Navarra, Rafael Gambra, gran filósofo tradicionalista, [in:] Fundación Nacional Francisco Franco, Rafael Gambra Ciudad 1920-2004, [in:] filosofia.org
  36. she was profesor of history and geography at Instituto Ramiro de Maeztu in Madrid, Miguel Arazuri, [in:] BiblioRomance service, available here
  37. she authored some 30 novels, some of them forming part of a wider entity, see Miguel Arazuri, [in:] BiblioRomance service, available here
  38. Santa Cruz 2004, p. 176
  39. Larramendi 2004, p. 172, Rafael Gambra Ciudad 1920-2004, [in:] filosofia.org
  40. in UCM, UNED, Universidad Europea de Madrid, Colegio Universitario Domingo de Soto (Segovia), Universidad Francisco (Vitoria) and Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, see D. Andrés Gambra Gutierrez, [in:] Universidad Rey Juan Carlos service, available here; for some of his works see dialnet.unirioja service, available here
  41. secretario general and member of Consejo de Gobierno, D. Andrés Gambra Gutierrez, [in:] Universidad Rey Juan Carlos service, available here
  42. see Profesores del Departamento, [in:] Universidad Complutense, Departamento de Lógica y Filosófia de la Ciencia service, available here; for some of his works see dialnet.unirioja service, available here
  43. see e.g. Andrés Gambra, acting as official at Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, in public confronting marginalisation of Christianity and deification of progress, La Razón 15.02.11, available here
  44. see e.g. José Miguel Gambra, nuevo jefe de la Sec. Política de S.A.R. Don Sixto Enrique Bornón, [in:] Radio Cristianidad service 09.03.10, available here
  45. Rafael Gambra Ciudad 1920-2004, [in:] filosofia.org
  46. see Rafael Gambra, Aspectos del pensamiento de Salvador Minguijón, [in:] Revista international de sociologia 67 (1959), pp. 85-88
  47. Rafael Gambra, gran filósofo tradicionalista, [in:] Fundación Nacional Francisco Franco
  48. Ministerio de Educacion Nacional, Catedra 1960-1961. Prontuario del Profesor, Madrid 1960, p. 1021
  49. María Teresa López del Castillo, La inspección del bachillerato en España (1845-1984), Madrid 2000, ISBN 9788436241457, p. 314
  50. titled La interpretación materialista de la historia (una investigación social-histórica a la luz de la filosofía actual)
  51. see Sumarios y extractos de las Tesis Doctorales leídas desde 1940 a 1950 en las secciones de Filosofía y Pedagogía, Facultad de Filosofía y Letras, Universidad de Madrid, pp. 61-66
  52. Rafael Gambra Ciudad 1920-2004, [in:] filosofia.org
  53. Hernando de Larramendi 2000, pp. 59, 89-60, Larramendi 2004, p. 172
  54. Santa Cruz 2004, p. 175, Onésimo Díaz Hernández, Rafael Calvo Serer y el grupo Arbor, Valencia 2011, ISBN 9788437087351, p. 43
  55. Díaz Hernández 2011, p. 561
  56. Díaz Hernández 2011, p. 320
  57. Díaz Hernández 2011, p. 361
  58. Santa Cruz 2004, p. 175
  59. Gambra was highly critical of hitherto organization of the secondary education, writing: "lo peor de estos centros es su constitución misma, esto es, la forma como están concebidos y organizados. La estructura decimonónica, individualista y meramente oficial (...) el orden existente en un instituto es meramente reglamentario o externo; fundamentalmente, la mera sujeción a un horario de asistencia a clase (...) Los institutos se hallan montados sobre la sagrada independencia de cátedra (...) El claustro como entidad de gobierno, casi inexistente en la actualidad, no entiende tampoco de asuntos internos pedagógicos o educativo", quoted after Angel Lorente Lorente, Cincuenta años de regulación de las formas de coordinación docente en los institutos de educación secundaria, [in:] Guillermo Vicente y Guerrero, (ed.), Estudios sobre la historia de la Enseñanza Secundaria en Aragón, Zaragoza 2011, ISBN 9788499111759, pp. 402-403
  60. BOE 186 (1964), available here
  61. BOE 155 (1968), available here; later the institute was renamed to Instituto Naciónal de Bachillerato Lope de Vega, BOE 284 (1977), available here
  62. Gambra claimed that "erosión de valores", and "erosión de la espiritualidad" might impair development and adversely affect equality of opportunities. Proponents of technocratic changes, J. A. Pérez Rioja and A. Abad, gained the upper hand, giving rise to the reform period dubbed "segunda sisactía", Emilio Castillejo Cambra, Mito, legitimación y violencia simbólica en los manuales escolares de historia del franquismo (1936-1975), Madrid 2014, ISBN 9788436268645 pp. 170, 671
  63. exact nature of this collaboration is unclear. None of the sources consulted refers to Gambra as "academic"
  64. see cover info on Rafael Gambra, La Monarquia Social y Representativa en el pensamiento tradicional, Madrid 2011, ISBN 9788435800426
  65. ABC 30.11.55, available here, also ABC 18.12.59, available here
  66. ABC 17.11.66, available here, ABC 20.11.66, available here
  67. La Vanguardia 04.09.65, available here
  68. ABC 11.03.55, available here, Ateneo Barcelones. Memoria. Curso de 1959-1960, p. 5, available here
  69. ABC 13.05.61, available here
  70. ABC 25.09.61, available here
  71. honored by homage sessions, ABC 09.07.68, available here
  72. e.g. on organization of secondary education, see ABC 11.04.84, available here
  73. e.g. at Asociación Cultural Hispania, ABC 17.11.89, available here
  74. ABC 11.02.92, available here
  75. ABC 24.11.98, available here
  76. Bartyzel 2015, p. 143
  77. Gabriel de Armas, Rafael Gambra y la unidad católica de España (I), [in:] Verbo 39 (1965), p. 533, also Pedro Carlos González Cuevas, La crisis del tradicionalismo carlista, [in:] Pedro Carlos González Cuevas, Ana Martínez Arancón, Juan Olabarría Agra, Gabriel Plata Parga, Raquel Sánchez García, Javier Zamora Bonila (eds.), Historia del pensamiento político español. Del renacimiento a nuestros días, Madrid 2016, ISBN 9788436271041, page unavailable, see here
  78. González Cuevas 2016
  79. de Armas 1965, p. 533
  80. González Cuevas 2016
  81. Bartyzel 2015, p. 143
  82. Miguel Ayuso Torres, El tradicionalismo de Gambra, [in:] Razón española 89 (1998), p. 305
  83. Ayuso Torres 1998, p. 306
  84. de Armas 1965, p. 553, González Cuevas 2016
  85. Ayuso Torres 1998, pp. 309-310
  86. also, Sartre and St. Exupery, Ayuso Torres 1998, p. 306
  87. Ayuso Torres 1998, p. 307
  88. Ayuso Torres 1998, p. 307-8
  89. Ayuso Torres 1998, p. 308, Bartyzel 2015, p. 95
  90. Ayuso Torres 1998, p. 307. He opposed the 1967 Ley de la Libertad Religiosa as opening the gates to "penetración protestante y judaica", Juan Antonio Monroy, Un protestante en la España de Franco, Madrid 2015, ISBN 9781496404244, page unavailable, see here. He perceived it as bowing to invasion of progressism and Europeisation, coming from from Italy, France and the Vatican - Santa Cruz 2004, p. 176
  91. de Armas 1965, p. 553, Bartyzel 2015, p. 278
  92. for a sample of Gambra's highly sympathetic though not openly anti-Vatican rebellious views on Lefebvre see e.g. Algo más sobre Monseñor Lefebvre, [in:] La Nación 14.06.95, available here
  93. at times this concept was applied to unlikely cases like a family saga from Colorado, screened on Spanish TV in the early 1980s, see Carmelo López-Arias Montenegro, In memoriam. Rafael Gambra. Rafael Gambra y el sentido del tiempo, [in:] Anales de la Fundación Francisco Elías de Tejada 10 (2004), p. 168
  94. Juan B. Vallet de Goytisolo, In memoriam. Rafael Gambra. La luz que agradezco a Rafael Gambra, [in:] Anales de la Fundación Francisco Elías de Tejada 10 (2004), p. 180
  95. he viewed elective leadership of state as hostage to ideocracy, Bartyzel 2015, pp. 132-3
  96. Ayuso Torres 1998, pp. 310-311, Manuel Martorell Pérez, La continuidad ideológica del carlismo tras la Guerra Civil [PhD thesis in Historia Contemporanea, Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia], Valencia 2009, pp. 407-9, Bartyzel 2015, p. 127
  97. Bartyzel 2015, p. 139, González Cuevas 2016
  98. Ayuso Torres 1998, pp. 310-311
  99. Bartyzel 2015, p. 138
  100. Bartyzel 2015, p. 74
  101. Bartyzel 2015,, p. 140, Martorell Pérez 2009, p. 404
  102. according to another summary, for Gambra the essence of Traditionalism was: 1) society as community united by common orthodoxy, 2) family as basis; 3) corporative purpose-guided structure (jerarquización teleológica); 4) subsidiarity principle of all public power; 5) organic representation, Bartyzel 2015, p. 74
  103. Miguel Ayuso Torres, El carlismo y su signo (a los 175 años), [in:] Anales de la Fundación Francisco Elías de Tejada 14 (2008), p. 131
  104. Ayuso Torres 2008, p. 132
  105. González Cuevas 2016
  106. de Armas 1965, p. 555, Bartyzel 2015, p. 284
  107. see e.g. Rafael Gambra, Maritain y Teilhard de Chardin, [in:] Verbo 78-79 (1969), p. 781, referred after Bartyzel 2015, p. 285
  108. in case of Spain commencing in the 1821-1823 war, Ayuso Torres 1998, p. 311, Bartyzel 2015, p. 58
  109. Jordi Canal, El carlismo, Madrid 2000, ISBN 8420639478, p. 406; not to mention against Maurras, considered "tradicionalismo de izquierdas", González Cuevas 2016
  110. Ayuso Torres 2004, pp. 163-4, Santa Cruz 2004, p. 177; he later referred to the Council as Los heraldos del anticristo, see Boletin de Comunion Catolico-Monarquica 11-12 (1985), available here
  111. Bartyzel 2015, p. 289
  112. Francisco Javier Caspistegui Gorasurreta, El naufragio de las ortodoxias: el carlismo, 1962-1977, Pamplona 1997, ISBN 9788431315641, pp. 148-150
  113. López-Arias Montenegro 2004, pp. 167-8
  114. Martorell Pérez 2009, p. 475, Caspistegui Gorasurreta 1997, p. 155. Gambra has not rejected the authority of Vatican; disillusioned about Paul VI, he noted that in John Paul I's public statements he heard about discipline, a word long forgotten in Vatican, and about faith instead of social problems, see El Imparcial, available here. Cautiously optimistic prior to the 1982 John Paul II's visit to Spain - see e.g. Siempre p'alante from 1982, available here, he assumed a decisively skeptical stance in the late 1990s. He was anxious about ecumenical activity of the pope, see e.g. Fuerza Nueva 1997, available here or noted that while John Paul II in public hailed integrity of Italian state and spoke against separatism of right-wing Lega Nord, he has never supported Spanish territorial integrity and has never spoke against the left-wing Basque separatism, see Feurza Nueva 1996, available here
  115. e.g. in El Pensamiento Navarro he lambasted clergymen for systematically turning sermons into subversive political lectures, apparently with no reaction on part of official ecclesiastical euthorities, referred after Mediterráneo. Prensa y radio del Movimiento 23.03.75, available here. Gambra's views on cardenal Tarancon were extremely critical and he did not refrain from mocking the head of Spanish church in public, compare an article with already abusive title La ‘cana al aire’ del cardenal Tarancon, [in:] Fuerza Nueva 06.08.77, available here
  116. Bartyzel 2015, p. 89
  117. Santa Cruz 2004, pp. 175-6
  118. see e.g. his La democracia como religión, [in:] Roma 89 (1985), available here
  119. Bartyzel 2015, p. 207
  120. Ayuso 2004, p. 162
  121. Historia sencilla was published by Rialp, related to Opus Dei, Rafael Gambra Ciudad 1920-2004, [in:] filosofia.org; some counted him among opusdeistas, Gregorio Morán, El Maestro en el Erial: Ortega y Gasset y la Cultura Del Franquismo, Madrid 1998, ISBN 9788483100493, p. 125. Historia sencilla enjoyed 25 re-editions, while Curso elemental had 17 re-runs
  122. Rafael Gambra Ciudad 1920-2004, [in:] filosofia.org
  123. 186 pages, available online at funcacionspeiro service here
  124. 254 pages, available online at Fundación Larramendi service here
  125. 229 pages, available online at Fundación Larramendi service here
  126. and titled La monarquía tradicional, 1953
  127. see e.g. ABC 01.05.58, available here
  128. 190 pp, Rafael Gambra: La unidad religiosa y el derrotismo católico. Estudio sobre el principio religioso de las sociedades históricas y en particular sobre el Catolicismo en la nacionalidad española, Sevilla 1965, available online at Fundación Larramendi service here
  129. 202 pp, available online at Fundación Larramendi service here
  130. 320 pp, available online at Fundación Larramendi service here
  131. 247 pp, available online at Fundación Larramendi service here
  132. detailed discussion in de Armas 1965
  133. Ayuso 2004, p. 163-4, Santa Cruz 2004, p. 177
  134. Rafael Gambra Ciudad 1920-2004, [in:] filosofia.org
  135. Oskar Gruenwald, The promise of inter-disciplinary studies: re-imagining the university, [in:] Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies 26 (2014), pp. 2-4
  136. Santa Cruz 2004, p. 178, Goytisolo 2004, p. 179
  137. with particular attention paid to terms like "democracy", "equality", "evolution", "progress", "humanism", "human rights" etc, Ayuso Torres 1998, p. 305, Bartyzel 2015, p. 207. El lenguaje y los mitos provided a counter-reference to another book on public communication, issued few years ealier and having been a lecture of media manipulation, elevated to the status of art and science; the book was fathered by former Gambra’s disciple and Carlist collaborator turned his enemy, Ramón Masso, De la magia a la artesanía: el politing del cambio español (1980)
  138. Bertrand de Jouvenel, Du Pouvoir. Histoire naturelle de sa croissance (1956)
  139. e.g. Los tres lemas de la sociedad futura (1953)
  140. e.g. collection of his earlier essays La moral existencialista (1955)
  141. especially his Valle de roncal (1955, 71 pages) enjoyed a few re-editions, see online at Fundación Larramendi service here. Far less popular was a compilation La Cristianización de América (1992), available online at Fundación Larramendi service here. The work which attracted scholarly discussion was La primera guerra civil de España 1821-23 (1950), referred to as "catastrophic interpretation of Trienno Liberal as conflict between the peasants and the liberals", Ignacio Peiró Martín, Días de ayer de la historiografía española. La Guerra de Independencia y la „conversión liberal” de los historiadores en el franquismo, [in:] Pedro Rújula López, Jordi Canal i Morell (eds.), Guerra de ideas: política y cultura en la España de la Guerra de la Independencia, Madrid 2011, ISBN 9788492820641 p 458
  142. Larramendi 2004, p. 173
  143. Gambra published 6 articles in Arbor and is referred to as "colaborador ocasional", Díaz Hernández 2011, pp. 43, 351
  144. Sara Prades Plaza, España y su historia. La generación de 1948, Madrid 2014, ISBN 9788415444442
  145. Santa Cruz 2004, p. 177
  146. Ayuso 2004, p. 164
  147. Martorell Pérez 2009, p. 445, Caspistegui Gorasurreta 1997, p. 165
  148. Santa Cruz 2004, p. 175
  149. e.g. see his voice on veterans, ABC 08.06.92, available here, or on Pedro Almodovar, ABC 08.11.95, available here
  150. ABC 26.08.95, available here
  151. Larramendi 2004, p. 172; the publishing house was the first one in the Francoist Spain to refer to Picasso with respect, Martorell Pérez 2009, p. 446
  152. Bartyzel 2015, p. 263
  153. Martorell Pérez 2009, pp. 203-5
  154. first trapped in Vichy France and after mid-1944 detained by Gestapo in Dachau
  155. Francisco de las Heras y Borrero, Un pretendiente desconocido. Carlos de Habsburgo. El otro candidato de Franco, Madrid 2004, ISBN 8497725565, p. 41, Bartyzel 2015, p. 248
  156. see his 1940 correspondence, Caspistegui Gorasurreta 1997, p. 18
  157. Bartyzel 2015, p. 248
  158. especially following dynastic reading presented by Fernando Polo in his ¿Quién es el Rey?, Martorell Pérez 2009, p. 395
  159. Santa Cruz 2004, p. 175
  160. Martorell Pérez 2009, p. 344
  161. Javier Lavardin [José Antonio Parilla], Historia del ultimo pretendiente a la corona de España, Paris 1976, p. 15
  162. Mercedes Vázquez de Prada Tiffe, El papel del carlismo navarro en el inicio de la fragmentación definitiva de la comunión tradicionalista (1957-1960), [in:] Príncipe de Viana 72 (2011), p. 395
  163. Bartyzel 2015, pp. 248-9
  164. in the early 1950s he demanded that collaborative Carlists are made to stand clear what they are for, Vázquez de Prada Tiffe 2011, p. 395
  165. together with Francisco Elías de Tejada and Melchor Ferrer
  166. Mercedes Vázquez de Prada Tiffe, El nuevo rumbo político del carlismo hacia la colaboración con el régimen (1955-56), [in:] Hispania 69 (2009), p. 193, Bartyzel 2015, p. 251
  167. Robert Vallverdú i Martí, La metamorfosi del carlisme català: del "Déu, Pàtria i Rei" a l'Assamblea de Catalunya (1936-1975), Barcelona 2014, ISBN 9788498837261, p. 138
  168. Vázquez de Prada Tiffe 2009, p. 182
  169. Lavardin 1976, pp. 15, 18
  170. in his December 1957 letter to Valiente Gambra wrote: "La política de acercamiento al régimen (o de acogida de un supuesto llamamiento del Generalísmo), que Ud. siempra ha propugnado, producirá, a mi juicio, [...] los siguentes efectos: 1) resultados políticos nulos; 2) situación de ridículo general ante el país; 3) desaliento, división y aun violencias graves entre los Carlistas", quoted after Caspistegui Gorasurreta 1997, p. 293, see also Vallverdú i Martí 2014, p. 157
  171. Bartyzel 2015, p. 263
  172. Martorell Pérez 2009, p. 395, Lavardin 1976, p. 18, Bartyzel 2015, p. 265
  173. Martorell Pérez 2009, p. 416, Vázquez de Prada Tiffe 2011, p. 401, Lavardin 1976, p. 32
  174. "primero habla [in Montejurra 1956] un estudiante catalán, que tiene el acierto de coger enseguida la onda de la emoción popular y de hablar con frases breves y rotundas. El público entra de maravilla, aplaude, interrumpe, completa y redondea las frases del orador", quoted after Martorell Pérez 2009, p. 385
  175. Martorell Pérez 2009, p. 382
  176. "La obra de Gambra sirvió de base teórica para quienes prepararon, adoctrinaron y lanzaron políticamente al primogénito de los Borbón Parma, Carlos Hugo", Martorell Pérez 2009, pp. 361, 397-409
  177. according to them, "Estas treinta o cuarenta páginas [of Gambra’s work] sobran, no valen absolutamente nada", Martorell Pérez 2009, p. 412
  178. Martorell Pérez 2009, p. 479-80
  179. Vallverdú i Martí 2014, p. 230
  180. Jacek Bartyzel, Tradycjonalizm a dyktatura. Francisco Elías de Tejada y Spínola wobec frankizmu, [in:] Marek Maciejewski, Tomasz Scheffler (eds.), Studia nad Autorytaryzmem i Totalitaryzmem 36/2 (2014), p. 7
  181. Ayuso 2008, p. 20
  182. Centro issued also periodicals and organized so-called Jornadas Forales across the country, Bartyzel 2015, p. 265
  183. Ayuso 2008, p. 20, Bartyzel 2014
  184. starting mid-1960s the Javierista Montejurra feasts turned into massive public events, the largest in Spain save for official, religious or football gatherings. See the attendance numbers in Jeremy Macclancy, The Decline of Carlism, Reno 2000, ISBN 9780874173444, p. 275: initially attracting few thousand attendants, in the early 1960s they attracted over 50,000 and in the mid-1960s over 100,000
  185. Caspistegui Gorasurreta 1997, pp. 182-3
  186. Gambra was somewhat reluctant to oppenly challenge the aging Don Javier and tended to consider him incapacitated by Don Carlos Hugo, Ayuso 2004, p. 163
  187. Bartyzel 2015, p. 266
  188. in 1972, Caspistegui Gorasurreta 1997, pp. 231-2
  189. organized by Catholic, Carlist, conservative and finally post-Francoist groupings: Ciudad Católica, Jornadas por la Unidad Católica, Homenaje a Mella, Centro Zumalacárregui, Patronato de Fundación Elías de Tejada, Priorato de la Hermandad de San Pío X, Movimiento Católico Español, Fuerza Nueva
  190. Información Española 16.09.70, available here
  191. Información mensual 14 (1971), available here
  192. Por qué hay que reconquistar Montejurra, [in:] El Pensamiento Navarro 04.05.76, quoted after Caspistegui Gorasurreta 1997, pp. 343-4
  193. "Gambra fue filósofo y escritor tradicionalista, siempre partidario firme de la línea no colaboracionista" - Vázquez de Prada Tiffe 2009, p. 187. According to one scholar, Gambra was the only firmy anti-Francoist among the 4 key Traditionalist theorists of the era, as Elías de Tejada moved from enthusiastic supporter to opposition, d’Ors has always been sympathetic and Canals displayed increasingly pro-regime penchant, Bartyzel 2015, p. 252
  194. Ayuso 2004, p. 163
  195. starting the late 1960s Gambra criticised the regime for its increasingly liberal course, perceived as opening to laicism and inorganic democracy, see El Pensamiento Navarro 30.05.74, quoted after Caspistegui Gorasurreta 1997, p. 166. Following the fall of Francoism Gambra began to view the regime mostly in terms of etatism, bureaucracy, dirigisme and technocracy, with falangismo, sindicalismo, nacional-catolicismo etc merely ideological smokescreen cover-up, Bartyzel 2015, p. 261
  196. because the draft did not refer to God as supremr authority, Gambra with some 60 other pundits signed a letter calling to reject the project in a referendum, Bartyzel 2015, p. 294
  197. Rafael Gambra, gran filósofo tradicionalista, [in:] Fundación Nacional Francisco Franco
  198. e.g. he campaigned against legalising divorce, ABC 14.10.80, available here
  199. "hoy – en 1979 – nos encontramos ante un horizonte político tan sombrío como el que precidió el alzamiento de 1936", quoted after Canal 2000, p. 392
  200. indeed a number of young people admitted having been captured by his arguments, also on TV, see de Armas 2004, Víctor Ibáñez, Rafael Gambra y las Juventudes Tradicionalistas, [in:] Anales de la Fundación Francisco Elías de Tejada 2004 (10), pp. 164-166, López-Arias Montenegro 2004
  201. Ayuso 2004, pp. 164-6
  202. Rafael Gambra Ciudad 1920-2004, [in:] filosofia.org
  203. Santa Cruz 2004, p. 179
  204. Ayuso 2004, p. 165
  205. Rafael Gambra Ciudad 1920-2004, [in:] filosofia.org
  206. Ayuso 2004, p. 165
  207. e.g. he featured in Juan Rodríguez Ruiz, Traditionalism, [in:] Enciclopedia de la Cultura Española, Madrid 1968, vol. 5, pp. 456-459
  208. ABC 09.07.68, available here
  209. Santa Cruz 2004, p. 178, Goytisolo 2004, p. 179
  210. like Siempre p'alante or Fuerza Nueva
  211. Santa Cruz 2004, p. 179
  212. Miguel Ayuso Torres, Koinós: el pensamiento político de Rafael Gambra, Madrid 1998, ISBN 9788473440424
  213. Premio Patronato Olave (1949), Premio Vedruna (1965), Premio Víctor Pradera (1973), Premio de Fundación Oriol-Urquijo (1975), Premio Manuel Delgado Barreto (1996)
  214. e.g. ABC 14.01.04, available here; the Barcelona La Vanguardia did not acknowledge his death
  215. see online version available at Fundación Elias de Tejada service, available here
  216. "pensador", see e.g. Pedro Carlos González Cuevas, Tradicionalismo, [in:] Javier Fernández Sebastián (ed.), Diccionario político y social del siglo XX español, Madrid 2008, ISBN 9788420687698, p. 1172. Some authors almost explicitly admit difficulty in getting Gambra classified when they refer to him as "pensador tradicionalista en un sentido amplio", Edualdo Forment, El pensamiento cristiano, [in:] Manuel Garrido, Nelson R. Orringer, Luis M. Váldes, Margarita M. Váldes (eds.), El legado filosófico español e hispanoamericano del siglo XX, Madrid 2009, ISBN 9788437625973, p. 422, also "myśliciel" in Bartyzel 2015, p. 16
  217. see e.g. Francisco Vega Oncins (ed.), Gran Enciclopedia de España, vol. 9, Zaragoza 1993, ISBN 8487544096, p. 4389
  218. see e.g. Javier Castro-Villacañas, El fracaso de la monarquía, Madrid 2013, ISBN 9788408036678, p. 47, Robert A. Herrera, James Lehrberger, Melvin Eustace Bradford (eds.), Saints, sovereigns, and scholars: studies in honor of Frederick D. Wilhelmsen, Virginia 1993, ISBN 9780820419299, pp. xxi, Alexandra Wilhelmsen, La formación del pensamiento político del carlismo, 1810-1875, Madrid 1995, ISBN 9788487863318, p. 108, Danilo Castellano, Patrie Regioni Stati e il processo di unificazione europea, Roma 1999, ISBN 9788881148134, p. 108
  219. Canal 2000, p. 422
  220. González Cuevas 2011, González Cuevas 2016
  221. compare e.g. very brief entry in Oncins 1993, p. 4389; apart from basic facts from his biography, the note lists his major works but does not spare a single word on what his thought was all about
  222. see e.g. a 4-volume series of José Ferrater Mora, Diccionario de filosofía, vol. 2, Barcelona 2004, ISBN 8434405024
  223. Heleno Saña, Historia de la filosófia española, Madrid 2007, ISBN 9788496710986, p. 255; Gambra is mentioned in the chapter titled "Franco-falangismo y nacional-católicismo" as one of many authors whose principal aim was to provide "politico-philosophical coverage" to "Gloriosa Cruzada Nacional"; he is specified as belonging to "sector más especificamente católico"
  224. Forment 2009, pp. 422-424
  225. "básicamente una renovación de los supusestos de Vázquez de Mella", González Cuevas 2016
  226. "actualizar las teorías de Vázquez de Mella", González Cuevas 2008. p. 1171
  227. which demonstrated "scientific appearance based on erudition and sort of positivist illusion", Canal 2000, p. 422
  228. Alfonso Bullón de Mendoza, Jordi Canal, El Carlismo [review], [in:] Aportes 45 (2001), p. 155; wider discussion also in Alfonso Bullón de Mendoza, La parcialidad de los historiadores españoles, [in:] John Vincent, Introducción a la Historia para gente inteligente, Madrid 2013, ISBN 9788497391351, pp. 9-38
  229. Castillejo Cambra 2014, pp. 170, 671
  230. among Rafael Calvo Serer, Álvaro D’Ors, Francisco Elías de Tejada, Gonzalo Fernández de la Mora, Antonio Fontán, Hans Juretschke, Juan José López Ibor, Vicente Marrero, Vicente Palacio Atard, Florentino Pérez Embid, José Luis Pinillos and Jaume Vicens Vives, see Antoni Raja i Vich, El Problema de España bajo el primer franquismo, 1936-1956. El debate entre Pedro Laín Entralgo y Rafael Calvo Serer, [PhD thesis Universitat Pompeu Fabra], 2010, p. 16
  231. Ayuso 2004, p. 163
  232. Ayuso 2004, p. 162
  233. Santa Cruz 2004, p. 174
  234. Ibáñez 2004, p. 164
  235. Rafael Gambra. Tres crónicas, [in:] Anales de la Fundación Francisco Elías de Tejada 2004 (10), p. 159
  236. López-Arias Montenegro 2004, p. 167
  237. Rafael Gambra Ciudad 1920-2004, [in:] filosofia.org
  238. Santa Cruz 2004, p. 174
  239. Gambra replied to d’Ors in Quíen busca la destrucción del carlismo?, [in:] Boletín Carlista de Madrid, 70 (2003), referred after Bartyzel 2015, pp. 315-316, detailed discussion in Miguel Ayuso Torres, In memoriam. Álvaro D'Ors y el tradicionalismo (A propósito de una polémica final), [in:] Anales de la Fundación Francisco Elías de Tejada 10 (2004), pp. 183-197
  240. titled Maestros del tradicionalismo hispánico de la segunda mitad del siglo XX
  241. see the conference leaflet available here
  242. in Bartyzel 2015 Gambra is referred to 75 times
  243. Le Silence de Dieu, translated by Jacques Follon, Paris 2012, ISBN 9782360401161
  244. The Silence of God, translated by Rebecca Vitz Cherico, Wilmington 2014, ISBN 9781610170970
  245. El Exilio y el Reino. La comunidad de los hombres y sus enemigos, Madrid 2009, ISBN 9788493664268

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