** TRANSLATOR’S ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

** Preface to the spanish edition

*** Note to the second spanish edition

* FIRST PART: The Rebel

** CHAPTER I. Between the cross and the hammer

** CHAPTER II. August 1917

** CHAPTER III. From Exile to Anarchism

** CHAPTER IV. Los justicieros

** CHAPTER V. Confronting government terror

** CHAPTER VI. Zaragoza, 1922

** CHAPTER VII. Los solidarios

** CHAPTER VIII. José Regueral and Cardinal Soldevila

** CHAPTER IX. Toward the Primo de Rivera dictatorship

** CHAPTER X. The Revolutionary Center of Paris

** CHAPTER XI. Guerrillas in Latin America

** CHAPTER XII. From Simón Radowitzky to Boris Wladimirovich

** CHAPTER XIII. Los Errantes in Buenos Aires in 1925

** CHAPTER XIV. Toward Paris: 1926

** CHAPTER XV. The plot against Alfonso XIII

** CHAPTER XVI. The International Anarchist Defense Committee

** CHAPTER XVII. The Anarcho-Communist Union and the Poincaré government

** CHAPTER XVIII. The anti-parliamentarianism of Louis Lecoin

** CHAPTER XIX. Emilienne, Berthe, and Nestor Makhno

** CHAPTER XX. Lyon, and in prison again

** CHAPTER XXI. Clandestine in Europe

** CHAPTER XXII. The fall of Primo de Rivera

** CHAPTER XXIII. The Murder of Fermín Galán

** CHAPTER XXIV. “Viva Macià! Death to Cambó!”

** CHAPTER XXV. The new government and its political program

* Second Part: The Militant

** CHAPTER I. April 14, 1931

** CHAPTER II. Before May 1: the Forces in Play

** CHAPTER III. May 1, 1931

** CHAPTER IV. The Nosotros group faces the CNT and the Republic

** CHAPTER V. The FAI and the CNT meet

** CHAPTER VI. The republic’s social policy and the CNT

** CHAPTER VII. In the middle of a storm without a compass

** CHAPTER VIII. Durruti and García Oliver respond to “The Thirty”

** CHAPTER IX. Two paradoxical processes: Alfonso XIII and the Gijón bank

** CHAPTER X. The insurrection in Alto Llobregat

** CHAPTER XI. The steamship Buenos Aires

** CHAPTER XII. Guinea — Fernando Poo – The Canaries

** CHAPTER XIII. Split in the CNT

** CHAPTER XIV. The insurrectional cycle

** CHAPTER XV. Prisoner in El Puerto de Santa María

** CHAPTER XVI. From electoral strike to insurrection

** CHAPTER XVII. Socialism, absent in december 1933

** CHAPTER XVIII. The general strike in Zaragoza

** CHAPTER XIX. A historic meeting between the CNT and Companys

** CHAPTER XX. From the damm boycott to the cells of the headquarters

** CHAPTER XXI. October 6 in Barcelona: against whom?

** CHAPTER XXII. The Asturian Commune

** CHAPTER XXIII. “Peace and order reign in Asturias”

** CHAPTER XXIV. “Banditry, no; collective expropriation, yes!”

** CHAPTER XXV. Toward the “Popular Front”

** CHAPTER XXVI. The CNT judges Durruti

** CHAPTER XXVII. February 16, 1936

** CHAPTER XXVIII. The Fourth Congress of the CNT

** CHAPTER XXIX. The long wait for July 19, 1936

* Third Part: The revolutionary, from july 19 to november 20, 1936

** CHAPTER I. Barcelona in flames [475]

** CHAPTER II. General Goded surrenders

** CHAPTER III. The death of Ascaso

** CHAPTER IV. July 20

** CHAPTER V. Lluís Companys confronts the CNT, and the CNT confronts itself

** CHAPTER VI. The Central Committee of Anti-Fascist Militias of Catalonia

** CHAPTER VII. The Durruti-García Oliver offensive

** CHAPTER VIII. The Durruti Column

** CHAPTER IX. “The clandestine revolution”

** CHAPTER X. Koltsov visits the Durruti Column

** CHAPTER XI. Largo Caballero, reconstructing the republican state

** CHAPTER XII. García Oliver, Largo Caballero, and the problem of Morocco

** CHAPTER XIII. Antonov Ovssenko and García Oliver

** CHAPTER XIV. The spanish gold road to Russia

** CHAPTER XV. The Libertarian Confederation of Aragón

** CHAPTER XVI. Stalin’s shadow over Spain

** CHAPTER XVII. “Viva Madrid without government!”

** CHAPTER XVIII. The crossing of the manzanares river

** CHAPTER XIX. The Durruti Column in Madrid

** CHAPTER XX. November 19, 1936

** CHAPTER XXI. Durruti kills Durruti

** CHAPTER XXII. Durruti’s funeral

* Fourth Part: The deaths of Durruti

** Introduction

** FIRST CHAPTER. The first versions

*** CIPRIANO MERA (NOVEMBER 18)

*** ANTONIO BONILLA (NOVEMBER 19)

*** JULIO GRAVES (DECLARATION TO ARIEL AT 5:00 PM)

*** CIPRIANO MERA

*** R. DIKNANIE KARMEN

*** THE DOCTORS’ CONTRADICTIONS

** CHAPTER II. Fact or fiction?

*** Mathieu Corman (militiaman in the Column’s International Group)

*** J.M.

*** JAUME MIRAVITLLES

*** PIERRE ROSLI

*** MIKHAIL KOLTSOV

*** DOMINIQUE DESANTI

*** HUGH THOMAS

*** PIERRE BROUÉ AND EMILE TÉMIME

*** THE REVIEWER FROM THE TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT

*** Albert Meltzer

*** JAMES JOLL

*** ANONYMOUS:

*** ANTONIA STERN’S VERSION

*** FATHER JESÚS ARNAL AND THE JOURNALIST MONTOTO

** CHAPTER III. Contradictions and fabrications in the presented versions

*** JAUME MIRAVITLLES’ FANTASTIC IMAGINATION

*** “SANTI,” DURRUTI’S MILITARY ADVISOR

*** THE ACCOUNT OF THE JOURNALIST FROM THE TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT

*** CORMAN AND ANONYMOUS

*** FATHER JESÚS ARNAL

** CHAPTER IV. Durruti’s second death, or his political assassination

** CHAPTER V. Conclusion

** APPENDIX. The jigsaw puzzle of the search for Durruti’s body[785]

*** ERASING HISTORY

*** THE CONFUSION OF THE MAUSOLEUMS

*** EMPTY TOMBS

*** WHERE ARE THEY?

*** A MYSTERY

** Afterword [786]

*** 1. Why a new edition

*** 2. From Diego Camacho to Abel Paz, passing through Ricardo Santany

*** 3. Anarcho-syndicalism in the history of the Second Republic and the 1936–1939 war