¡Cu-Cut! incident

incident, also known as La Cuartelada, was an assault conducted by Spanish officers on the Catalan satirical magazine ¡Cu-Cut!

General Valeriano Weyler and the role of the Spanish Army in the painful defeat in Cuba were recurrent topics of the magazine.

At the conclusion of the dinner, a fight ensued between two groups of people of the opposing political parties that resulted in a few injured.

204, set to be published on 23 November 1905, depicted a satirical cartoon drawn by Joan Junceda captioned with a joke that referenced the confrontation between Catalanists and Lerrouxists and ridiculed the recent military defeats of the Spanish Army.

According to La Vanguardia, at 9:30 (WET) on 25 November, around 300 officers of the Barcelona garrison gathered in Royal Square, headed towards the ¡Cu-Cut!

That was at the Bagunyà press and library on Avinyó Street, where the children's magazine En Patufet and the newspaper La Veu de Catalunya were also edited.

Baguñà used Garba, an art and literature magazine edited by Joan Maragall, Víctor Català and Josep Pijoan to further ¡Cu-Cut!

[3] Although the assault led to the creation of Solidaritat Catalana, a political coalition in Catalonia, it ignited a feeling of solidarity with the attackers in the rest of Spain.

He was succeeded by Segismundo Moret, who suspended the constitutional guarantees in Barcelona and, along with the minister Álvaro de Figueroa y Torres, implemented the Law of Jurisdictions, which favoured the military.

The cartoon found in issue No. 204