Summary
The Civil War (1936–1939) and Franco’s dictatorship (1939–1977) in Spainwere characterized by mass violence and human rights violations. Hiding and destroying criminal evidence were systematic and intentional.Documentary sources were purged or destroyed, concentration campswere dismantled, and mass graves were eliminated or hidden. In recentdecades, archaeology has contributed to revealing the Franco regime’s repressive strategies. The focus on materiality, or the materiality turn, hasgreatly advanced the production of historical knowledge. Mass graves, concentration camps, labor camps, and prisons have been archaeologicallyinvestigated, producing new narratives surrounding contemporary Spanishhistory. Forensic archaeology has unearthed the traces of those who sometimes left no documents but left material evidence of their existence. Thisreview aims to contribute to the studies of mass violence that reveal thetechnologies of exclusion, disappearance, and erasure of specific political andgender-neglected groups of society under Franco’s repressive system.
Keywords
Forensic archaeology. Mass graves. Repression. History. Fascism. Francoism.