XVI Army Corps (Spain) explained

Unit Name:XVI Army Corps
Native Name:XVI Cuerpo de Ejército
Start Date:April 30, 1938
End Date:March 1939
Allegiance: Republican faction
Branch: Spanish Republican Army
Type:Infantry
Specialization:-->
Size:Corps
Garrison:Tarancón
Colours:-->
Colours Label:-->
Battles:Spanish Civil War
Notable Commanders:Miguel Palacios Martínez

The XVI Army Corps was a military formation of the Spanish Republican Army that fought in the Spanish Civil War. It had an outstanding performance in the Levante campaign.

History

It was originally created on August 6, 1937 from the old Asturian II Army Corps. The command fell to José Gállego Aragüés. It participated in the Battle of Santander, during which it suffered such losses that it was dissolved.

In April 1938, the XVI Army Corps was recreated again in the downtown area, with its headquarters in Tarancón. Miguel Palacios Martínez took over the command of the unit. He was soon sent to the Levante front, in support of the republican forces that resisted the nationalist offensive that was trying to take Valencia. The XVI Army Corps was located between the XIII and XIX corps, in the Teruel sector. At the beginning of July it faced a renewed offensive in the Teruel sector, suffering considerable casualties. At the climax of the Battle of Levante, the corps integrated the 39th, 48th and 52nd divisions; after the beginning of the Battle of the Ebro the Levante front stabilized. During the rest of the war, the XVI Corps did not intervene in any relevant military operation.

Command

Commanders
Commissars
Chiefs of Staff

Organization

Date Attached Army Integrated divisions Battlefront
August 6, 1937 Asturias-Santander
April 30, 1938 Reservation
July 4, 1938 Levante
August 1938 Levantine Army Levante

Bibliography