Eduardo López Ochoa
Eduardo López Ochoa | |
---|---|
Birth name | Eduardo López Ochoa y Portoundo |
Born | 31 January 1877 Barcelona, Kingdom of Spain |
Died | 19 August 1936 Madrid Spanish Republic | (aged 59)
Allegiance | Kingdom of Spain Spanish Republic |
Rank | Captain general |
Eduardo López Ochoa y Portoundo (31 January 1877 – 19 August 1936) was a Spanish general, Africanist, and prominent Freemason. He was known for most of his life as a traditional Republican, and conspired against the government of Miguel Primo de Rivera.
Biography
[edit]At the proclamation of the Second Spanish Republic in 1931, López Ochoa was designated capitán general of Catalonia by Francesc Macià. He led troops to crush the insurrection in Asturias in October 1934, after which the leader of the nascent Popular Front was jailed. The left felt betrayed, and began to regard López Ochoa as a rightist. His left-wing enemies nicknamed him "el verdugo de Asturias" ("the butcher of Asturias"). At the same time, those on the right distrusted him for his Freemasonry, for having entered negotiations with the Asturian miners, and for punishing soldiers guilty of violent excesses.[1] As a deterrent to further atrocities, López Ochoa had ordered the summary executions of six legionnaires and Moroccan colonial troops for raping, torturing, and murdering prisoners, some of whom had been hacked to death.[2]
At the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, López Ochoa was in a military hospital in Carabanchel and was awaiting trial, accused of responsibility for the deaths of 20 civilians at a barracks in Oviedo. Given the violence occurring throughout Madrid, the government attempted to move Ochoa from the hospital to a safer location but was twice prevented from doing so by large hostile crowds. A third attempt was made under the guise that Ochoa was already dead, but the ruse was exposed and the general was taken away. One account states that an anarchist dragged him from the coffin in which he was lying and shot him in the hospital garden. His head was severed and displayed with a sign reading "This is the butcher of Asturias."[1]
See also
[edit]Sources
[edit]- ^ a b Preston, Paul. The Spanish Holocaust: Inquisition and Extermination in Twentieth-Century Spain. Norton, 2012. p 266.
- ^ Preston, pp. 133–134
External links
[edit]
- 1877 births
- 1936 deaths
- Military personnel from Barcelona
- Spanish people of Basque descent
- Spanish generals
- Spanish military personnel of the Rif War
- Spanish people who died in prison custody
- People murdered in Spain
- Lynching deaths
- Deaths by firearm in Spain
- Spanish Freemasons
- Prisoners who died in Spanish detention