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=== Spanish Civil War === {{See also|Battle of Seseña}} [[File:Spanish civil war molotov cocktail.png|thumb|right|Monarchists during the Spanish Civil War with fire bottle]] Improvised incendiary devices of this type were used in warfare for the first time in the [[Spanish Civil War]] between July 1936 and April 1939,<ref>{{cite book |last=Thomas |first=Hugh |author-link=Hugh Thomas (writer) |year=1994 |orig-date=1986 |title=The Spanish Civil War |location=New York |publisher=Simon & Schuster |page=468 |isbn=0-671-75876-4 |oclc=29184912}}</ref> before they became known as "Molotov cocktails". In 1936, General [[Francisco Franco]] ordered [[Francoist Spain|Spanish Nationalist forces]] to use the weapon against Soviet [[T-26]] tanks supporting the [[Second Spanish Republic|Spanish Republicans]] in a failed assault on the Nationalist stronghold of [[Seseña]], near [[Toledo, Spain|Toledo]], {{convert|40|km|mi|abbr=on}} south of [[Madrid]].<ref name="Trotter">{{cite book |last=Trotter |first=William |author-link=William R. Trotter |title=Frozen Hell: The Russo-Finnish Winter War of 1939–40 |publisher=[[Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill]], Marshall Kregel |year=1991 |isbn=978-0-945575-22-1 |chapter=History of the Molotov Cocktail |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060530031219/http://www.kevos4.com/Molotov_Cocktail.htm |archive-date=30 May 2006 |chapter-url=http://www.kevos4.com/Molotov_Cocktail.htm}}</ref> After that, both sides used simple petrol bombs set fire with toxic gas or petrol-soaked [[blanket]]s with some success. [[Tom Wintringham]], a veteran of the [[International Brigade]]s, later publicised his recommended method of using them: {{Blockquote|We made use of "petrol bombs" roughly as follows: take a 2lb glass jam jar. Fill with petrol. Take a heavy curtain, half a blanket, or some other heavy material. Wrap this over the mouth of the jar, tie it round the neck with string, leave the ends of the material hanging free. When you want to use it have somebody standing by with a light [i.e., a source of ignition]. Put a corner of the material down in front of you, turn the bottle over so that petrol soaks out round the mouth of the bottle and drips on to this corner of the material. Turn the bottle right way up again, hold it in your right hand, most of the blanket bunched beneath the bottle, with your left hand take the blanket near the corner that is wetted with petrol. Wait for your tank. When near enough, your pal [or comrade-in-arms] lights the petrol soaked corner of the blanket. Throw the bottle and blanket as soon as this corner is flaring. (You cannot throw it far.) See that it drops in front of the tank. The blanket should catch in the tracks or in a cog-wheel, or wind itself round an axle. The bottle will smash, but the petrol should soak the blanket well enough to make a really healthy fire which will burn the rubber wheels on which the tank track runs, set fire to the carburettor or frizzle the crew. Do not play with these things. They are highly dangerous.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Against Invasion – the lessons of Spain |journal=Picture Post |date=15 June 1940 |pages=9–24}}</ref>}}
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