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115 Days Interpretation Centre

Corbera d’Ebre

Objects, audiovisuals and re-enactments help us understand and interpret the Battle of the Ebro.

Objects, audiovisuals and re-enactments help us understand and interpret the Battle of the Ebro.

The Battle of the Ebro Sites Memorial Consortium (COMEBE) was set up in April 2001 with the aim of establishing a network of historic sites to recover the memory and raise awareness of the events and places involved in the Battle of the Ebro, which took place between July and November 1938. The project combines interpretation centres and historic sites that have been made easier to visit and understand.

The 115 Days Interpretation Centre opened in July 2008 and since then has become the focal point for the heritage sites known collectively as the Battle of the Ebro Sites. Here visitors can learn about the causes and consequences of the hardest-fought and bloodiest battle of the Spanish Civil War. The events of the battle and its main protagonists are explained through original objects, audiovisuals and virtual recreations of the confrontation.

SPACES

<p>Boats, bridges and footbridges were used to cross the Ebro and begin the hardest-fought battle of the war.</p>
St James’ Eve
St James’ Eve
<p>Thousands of projectiles brought immense death and destruction to the Ebro battlefield.</p>
115 days of fighting
115 days of fighting
<p>Hundreds of thousands of people fled into exile to escape the Francoist repression.</p>
Re-crossing the Ebro
Re-crossing the Ebro
<p>The battle left a desolate panorama and a barely recognisable landscape.</p>
The marks of the conflict
The marks of the conflict

EXTENSIONS

INFORMATION

ADDRESS
FEES
TELEPHONE
WEBSITE
http://www.batallaebre.org
OPENING TIMES
EMAIL
info@batallaebre.org

MAP

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