Talk:Art and culture in Francoist Spain

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"Internal and external exile" - confusing content?[edit]

1. The National Research Council, as the supreme organ of Spanish high culture, which represent the elements of the most prestigious university academics and technicians enjoying the highest rank in the country's cultural life. This reaches to the pre-eminent position in the social and public manifestations of the national culture and relations with the outside scientific world. 2. The Supreme Council has as its spiritual patron all the glorious company of San Isidoro, Archbishop of Seville, which represents the first time our history imperial Spanish culture. 3. The emblem shall, following and adapting the tradition luliana, an arbor scientiae, which represents a pomegranate, whose various branches in Latin, alludes to the scientific events that the Council grows. This emblem will appear on the medals and insignia of the Directors, the "ex libris" (frontispiece) of their magazines and publications and on the seal used in the official sanction of social relations —Order of March 8, 1940, Ministry of National Education - José Ibáñez Martín[3] The inscription, glorifying dictator Ferdinand Franco, was abolished in August 2010.[4] The disciplines or names that should appear in the branches of the tree are also considered controversial, because the tree itself (Iuliana) was already used as an emblem of the Board for Advanced Studies since 1907.[5] In the Francoist version, Franco took prominence over theology, from which other sciences are "slaves" according to the scholastic aphorism philosophia ancilla theologiae.[6] The frieze, and the magazine Arbor during the 1950s[7] use a logo without numbers in the branches, and this is the version in use today.

This text seems to be misplaced in the context of the section "Internal and external exile". It starts with a quote from the 1940 guiding principles of the CSIC (Spanish National Research Council) and also refers to the frieze which originally adorned the CSIS building. Maybe it should be moved to the article about the CSIC. The translation from the original Spanish quotation also needs looking at. --Zeisseng (talk) 12:19, 4 November 2012 (UTC)[reply]

I did the translation from the Spanish Wikipedia article, and my Spanish is admittedly pretty weak. I'll take another look at the original and see if I can straighten it out.OttawaAC (talk) 21:25, 4 November 2012 (UTC)[reply]

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