… un des plus fidèles et des plus anciens champions de la Croix-Rouge …
“Le docteur Landa”, Bulletin International des Sociétés de la Croix-Rouge Footnote 1
IntroductionFootnote 2
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)Footnote 3 and the Institut de Droit International (IDI)Footnote 4 commemorated their respective 160th and 150th anniversaries in 2023. Only two men, Swiss lawyer Gustave Moynier (1826–1910) and Spanish military doctor Nicasio Landa (1830–91), were present in both of them since their foundation. Moynier was one of the five founding members of the International Committee for Relief to the Wounded (ICRW, from 1876 the ICRC) in Geneva in February 1863, in which he served as its longest-standing president for forty-six years (1864–1910). He was also one of the eleven founding members of the IDI in Ghent in 1873.Footnote 5 While many academic works have been written about Moynier,Footnote 6 Landa, who was known as “the Spanish Henri Dunant”,Footnote 7 is by contrast a hidden and largely forgotten historical figure in the mid- to late nineteenth-century origins of modern humanitarianism and international law, both in SpainFootnote 8 and even more so elsewhere.Footnote 9
Nicasio Landa was the Spanish delegate at the first Geneva International Conference (Geneva Conference) in October 1863. He very actively participated in the deliberations for the Conference and immediately set himself to serving the fulfilment of its purposes, becoming co-founder of the Spanish Red Cross in July 1864. Ten years later, Landa, who in 1867 had published El derecho de la guerra conforme a la moral (The Law of War in Accordance with Morality),Footnote 10 one of the very earliest works on modern international humanitarian law (IHL),Footnote 11 became the only original Spanish member of the IDI in 1873. Among the early works of the IDI was The Laws of War on Land,Footnote 12 also known as the Oxford Manual, to the drafting of which Landa directly contributed. Landa was a military doctor of medicine and surgery with extended experience in combating cholera and yellow fever epidemics in the civilian population, and in assisting wounded soldiers on battlefields in North Africa and Spain and in the Franco-Prussian war. He was also an early participant in the codification efforts at the interface between epidemic diseases and international law, being the rapporteur of the IDI's commission on “Measures in International Sanitary Policy”Footnote 13 and drafter of a project for an International Sanitary ConventionFootnote 14 in the early days of what (much later) came to be known as international health law.Footnote 15
The contemporary recrudescence of military conflicts and the gloomy shadow cast by the recent global pandemic, with its over 7 million “reported COVID-19 deaths”Footnote 16 globally, warrants a renewed effort to revisit the life and works of invisible or merely forgotten inspirational historical characters who were associated with the “emergence of professional fields of international law within distinct national contexts”.Footnote 17 This springs from a realization that the “history of individual people” is a necessary complement to both the “history of concepts and the history of events”Footnote 18 for a fuller and more nuanced picture of the historical development of international law and of the modern origins and evolution of international humanitarianism.Footnote 19
Two main factors account for why Dr Landa's seminal contributions to the modern foundations of IHL and international health law have remained overlooked in the global history of international law. First, the hegemony of English as science's contemporary universal language among international lawyers has been translated into a selective history of international law in which the spotlight is repeatedly put on household names while many notable characters in the history of international law, including women, have been cast to its spectral margins.Footnote 20 Second, in a field which, as Randall Lesaffer notes, did not “blossom into a significant sub-branch of legal history until the very end of the twentieth century”,Footnote 21 Landa's invisibility is compounded because he was not a lawyer. Historians of international law remain newcomers in the history of medicine, and particularly in the history of military medicine, in connection with the role that war surgeons, like Landa and Dr Louis Appia,Footnote 22 played in the birth of IHL.Footnote 23 Landa in particular, as we shall see, was among the earlier proponents of the extension of “neutral” status to wounded soldiers in all military conflicts and to those assisting wounded soldiers in civil wars, and also of the extension of the First Geneva Convention to civil wars. This seminal contribution in Dr Landa's case also extended to the foundations of international health law.Footnote 24
After this introductory section, the present article is divided into two main sections. The first section contextually examines the life and works of Landa, including his social milieu and formal education, and provides a general description of the main events in his professional career, his seminal works in the field of IHL (including his El derecho de la guerra conforme a la moral), and the institutions, notably including the ICRC, with which he worked until the outbreak of the Franco-Russian War. The second section focuses on Dr Landa's subsequent pioneering contributions to the drawing up and application of international law instruments in the framework of the IDI, paying special attention to his contribution to IHL and his groundbreaking codification efforts at the interface between epidemic diseases and international law. The conclusion highlights the seminal role that Landa played, despite not being a lawyer, in setting the course of the international humanitarian tradition in Europe, which has largely outlived the memory that international lawyers have of this hidden figure in the history of IHL.
Landa's presence at the creation of the ICRC and the Spanish Red Cross (1830–70)
Nicasio Landa y Alvarez de Carballo was born in Pamplona, the capital of the northern Spanish province of Navarre, on 11 October 1830. He was the son of Rufino Landa Albizu (1801–62), a highly reputed doctor who authored several medical works and served as the chair of anatomy in the short-lived Royal School of Medicine, Surgery and Pharmacy of Navarre (1829–38).Footnote 25 Soon after Landa's birth, Navarre, a traditionalist province, became one of the main epicentres of the three devastating dynastic Carlist Wars that took place in Spain and largely shaped Landa's vocation for a military medical career and his manifold contributions to humanitarian causes from early in his life.Footnote 26 Landa's father, despite siding with the liberals, was castigated for having attended wounded Carlist soldiers during the First Carlist War (1833–39).Footnote 27 This early example of Landa's father encapsulates what Antonio Cassesse described, with reference to the inception of the ICRC inspired by Henri Dunant's Un souvenir de Solferino (1862), as the “exclusively humanitarian spirit – the wounded and the sick had to be cared for, regardless of whether they were friends or foes”.Footnote 28 Almost four decades later, during the Third Carlist War (1872–76), the Battle of Oroquieta (1872) in Navarre marked the first intervention in a battlefield by the Spanish Red Cross. This intervention was led in the field by Landa himself, who had been the Spanish Red Cross's inspector-general since 1867.Footnote 29
Landa was educated in Pamplona (BA in philosophy, 1846) and then at the Central University of Madrid, where he obtained a BA (1850) and a licence (1854) in medicine and surgery. After his graduation, he spent several months attending victims of an epidemic of cholera (1854–55) in Navarre and was appointed as civil auxiliary doctor in a military regiment in recognition of his services. In October 1856, he obtained his MD in medicine and surgery in Madrid, with a dissertation on “Consideraciones acerca de la influencia de la civilización en la salud pública” (“Considerations on the Influence of Civilization on Public Health”),Footnote 30 and just a few months later, aged 26, he successfully passed the public examination to become an inspector in the Health Corps of the Spanish Army.Footnote 31 After some regimental appointments in Pamplona and Saragossa, Landa returned to Madrid, where he founded and directed the military health journal Memorial de Sanidad del Ejército y Armada (Health Journal of the Army and Navy)Footnote 32 and also wrote a booklet aimed at improving the nutrition of soldiers in the Spanish Army.Footnote 33 In late 1859, he volunteered to accompany the Spanish troops in the Hispano-Moroccan War (1859–60).Footnote 34
Triggered by local tribal skirmishes around the Spanish historical enclave of Ceuta in North Africa, the Hispano-Moroccan War, or the so-called “War of Tétouan”, was the first of several short Spanish military campaigns in Morocco that culminated in the more protracted Rif War in the early 1920s.Footnote 35 The Hispano-Moroccan War turned out to be a trying and largely disorganized eight-month colonial conflict, during which Landa intervened as war surgeon in multiple military clashes. He also served in a widespread epidemic of cholera, which became the main source (70%) of the approximately 7,000 wartime deaths among the Spanish Army,Footnote 36 and further became the “doctor in chief of the first hospital steam ship in the world”,Footnote 37 which was charged with transporting wounded soldiers to the Spanish mainland. The Treaty of Wad Ras in April 1860 forced economic reparations on Morocco and further minor land concessions to Spain in Ifni. These were expanded and consolidated in the Berlin Conference (1884–85), together with new concessions in Western Sahara and Equatorial Guinea in Central Africa.Footnote 38
Landa's commitment to the regulation of the means of war and to the amelioration of assistance to wounded soldiers and civilians was born from his early first-hand war experience as a military doctor during the Hispano-Moroccan War, after which he published a vivid account of his experiences of the conflict in La campaña de Marruecos: Memorias de un medico militar (The Campaign of Morocco: Memoirs of a Military Doctor).Footnote 39 Dedicated to the mothers of Spanish soldiers in the war, in this memoir Landa raised some of the humanitarian concerns he later developed in his work on IHL and international health law, including his criticisms of the use of excessively pernicious munitions, in particular the newer “cylindrical-conical projectile” used by the Spanish Army, which “destroys everything in its path”, compared to the older “spherical projectile” that already sufficiently served the purpose of “disarming or disabling the enemy”.Footnote 40 Landa also highlighted the many administrative and staff-related hurdles that often got in the way of good care of the wounded soldiersFootnote 41 and the deficiencies in the means of transporting injured and cholera-sick soldiers by sea.Footnote 42 After the war and a series of new regimental appointments in Madrid and Pamplona in 1861 and 1862,Footnote 43 Landa was again appointed to render his medical services during an epidemic of yellow fever in the Canary Islands in 1863, about which he published a new memoir that same year.Footnote 44
Aged 32 and by then a surgeon-captain, Landa was appointed, due to his distinguished service record surveyed above (and probably also due to his good knowledge of foreign languages, including French, English and German),Footnote 45 as the Spanish delegate to the Geneva Conference in October 1863. The minutes of the Conference show that Landa participated very actively in its deliberations, providing numerous detailed comments on the drafting of its articles.Footnote 46 Inspired by his first-hand experience that “the appearance of a battlefield is one of those paintings that you have to see to get a fair idea of it”,Footnote 47 he was a proponent of extending “neutral” status to those wounded in war,Footnote 48 a provision which was adopted in the second recommendation of the conference's resolutions.
Following the Geneva Conference, in which the establishment of “national relief societies for wounded soldiers” was proposed and the basis for their activities laid down, Landa, as M. S. G. Enrich recalled early on, “was charged by the Geneva Committee … to institute in Spain the relief society, a goal towards which he directed all his efforts from the moment he returned to his motherland”.Footnote 49 Back in Spain, after reporting back to the Spanish government in his role as representative of the Spanish Military Health Corps in the Geneva Conference,Footnote 50 Landa contacted the Order of Saint John of Jerusalem and a preparatory council was established in May 1864.Footnote 51 By Royal Decree on 6 July 1864, the Spanish Assembly of the International Committee for the Relief of the Wounded in War on Land and SeaFootnote 52 was established as a public utility foundation, just one day after Landa had already founded its first regional committee in Pamplona on 5 July. This variation in the official name of the Spanish committee, from “wounded soldiers”Footnote 53 (“blessés militaires”) to those “wounded in war” (“heridos en campaña”), potentially extended its scope of application to civilians (and, more broadly, to civil wars, as would in fact happen during the Third Carlist War (1872–76) just a few years later), while the explicit reference to both “sea and land” (“de mar y tierra”) specifically extended it to naval warfare with the consequence that, just a few years later, during the aforementioned military conflict, a naval vessel sailed for the first time under the flag of the Red Cross during the Battle of Cartagena in October 1873.Footnote 54 Soon afterwards, on 22 August 1864, Spain, which was represented during the diplomatic conference in Geneva (as required by diplomatic practice) by José Heriberto García de Quevedo, the Spanish Queen's resident minister to the Swiss Confederation, became the fifth State signatory to the First Geneva Convention.Footnote 55 As later noted by Max Huber, one of the ICRC's presidents from 1928 to 1944, the Convention, when it entered into force in 1865, extended “the protection of the individual into the structure and theory of public international law”.Footnote 56
After his initial remarkable contribution to the foundation stone of the modern laws of war, Landa devoted himself to serving the aims of the ICRW. In 1865, to meet one of the aims of the Geneva Conference, which included the “amelioration of assistance and evacuation devices”Footnote 57 for wounded soldiers among its purposes, Landa published El mandil de Socorro (The Relief Apron).Footnote 58 This document outlined the design of an original device to remove wounded soldiers from the battlefield which was adopted by the health corps of a number of armies. In the same vein, Landa published Transporte de heridos por vias ferreas y navegables (Transport of Injured Persons by Railway and Navigable Routes)Footnote 59 in 1866. In 1867 Landa attended the first International Conference of the Red Cross, held in Paris,Footnote 60 as a delegate of the Spanish National Society, and further published a long report on the Swiss military health corps.Footnote 61 In the same year, he also published his major work, El derecho de la guerra conforme a la moral,Footnote 62 which he later extended in its two further editions.Footnote 63
Landa's conception of the right to wage war in his book was a very restrictive one, as he considered that the only legitimate war was one based on the “natural law of self-defence”, exercised in accordance with “the manner in which the morality of individuals consents to [it]”, and that “the extension of this right should be always proportional to necessity”, with the resulting obligation that States are obliged to use the means that produce the “minimum harm compatible with [their] security”.Footnote 64 Furthermore, Landa echoed in his book the projects for perpetual peace of the Abbé de Saint-Pierre and Immanuel Kant around an “association of all nations”Footnote 65 as the only possible alternative to “the supreme and imperious law of necessity” (“la ley suprema e imperiosa de la necesidad”).Footnote 66 This was, in Landa's view, the ultimate cause and justification of war because of the lack of an international court or tribunal authorized to pass judgments and duly instituted to apply them and to use the power of its members against those opposing them.Footnote 67 Alongside his early echoing of the notion of the domestic analogy in international law, which underlies the (albeit always imperfect) attempt at transposition of the organs of the liberal State via the establishment of international organizations to the international plane, but similarly inspired by both Christian theology and, in particular, Kant's idea of a universal history with a cosmopolitan purpose,Footnote 68 it was Landa's view that
[i]f today nationalities are gathering together to form great kingdoms, tomorrow the races will merge into vast empires, and at last these too will be aggregated, in obedience to the great law of the unity of our species to build the unum ovile et unus pastor which is the goal towards which humanity is marching through time, its eternal coefficient. Then, yes; then, war will have finished its providential mission and that scourge will disappear from the world as the words “frontiers” and “foreigners” will be erased in all languages.Footnote 69
However, because Landa was well aware that such an envisioned utopia was, indeed, very far away in the future (“the next generation has little hope to reach its dawn”),Footnote 70 he suggested that “what can be done and therefore should be done” in the face of the phenomenon of war is
to hinder its action by any means, large or small, that can lead to that object, to wrap it in transparent nets, to put golden obstacles to make its movements more and more difficult: to impose on it advice that practice and time will make into sacred laws, such is the tactic to be followed.Footnote 71
Conceived against this background, and with such purpose, El derecho de la guerra conforme a la moral is divided into five books, with each (except for the fifth) in turn subdivided into five chapters. Book I, “Prolegomena on War”, consists of chapters entitled “Of War in General” (Chapter 1), “Justice in War” (Chapter 2), “Conduct of War” (Chapter 3), “The Beginning of War” (Chapter 4) and “The Enemy” (Chapter 5). Book II, “Duties towards the Peaceful Subjects of the Enemy”, contains chapters entitled “Right over the Life of the Population” (Chapter 1), “Right over the Freedom of the Population” (Chapter 2), “Right over the Property of the Population” (Chapter 3), “Of the Contribution to War” (Chapter 4) and “Of Property at Sea” (Chapter 5). Book III, under the title “Duties towards the Enemy”, contains chapters entitled “Right over the Life of the Enemy” (Chapter 1), “Means of Harming the Enemy” (Chapter 2), “Right over the Freedom of the Enemy” (Chapter 3), “Duties towards Injured Enemies” (Chapter 4) and “Rights over the Property of the Enemy” (Chapter 5). Book IV, “Duties towards Non-Enemy Aliens”, consists of chapters entitled “Duties towards Allies” (Chapter 1), “Of Neutrality” (Chapter 2), “Duties of the Neutral” (Chapter 3), “Rights of the Neutral” (Chapter 4) and “Of Armed Neutrality” (Chapter 5). To conclude, Book V, under the title “On the End of War”, examines aspects related to “Dealings with the Enemy” (Chapter 1), “Re-establishment of Peace” (Chapter 2) and “Annexations” (Chapter 3).Footnote 72
Although remaining faithful to its original structure, Landa expanded the book in its second edition in 1870 and considerably in its third augmented edition in 1877. The third edition included the addition of new paragraphs inspired by his new wartime experience during the Third Carlist War, and also referred to the 1863 Lieber Code,Footnote 73 to the French translationFootnote 74 of Johann Kaspar Bluntschli's Das moderne Kriegsrecht der civilisirten Staaten,Footnote 75 and to the Brussels Declaration (“Project for an International Declaration concerning the Laws and Customs of War”) of 1874.Footnote 76 Landa also included an appendix containing the declaration that the IDI had addressed to the belligerents in the Russian-Turkish War (1877–78). Together with the Lieber Code and Bluntschli's Das moderne Kriegsrecht der zivilisierten Staaten,Footnote 77 the publication of El derecho de la guerra conforme a la moral made it one of the earliest expositions on modern IHL in international legal history. Although Gustave Rolin-Jaequemyns published an early review of El derecho de la guerra,Footnote 78 because Landa never delivered on his promise to prepare a French edition of the book and it has never been translated, the book has remained almost completely unknown outside a very small, erudite circle in Spain.
Consequently, the book's influence should be measured by reference to other important early international law works in Spanish. These include Concepción Arenal's Ensayo sobre el derecho de gentes (1879), which has long been considered “the most original Spanish work in the field of international law published during the nineteenth century”.Footnote 79 This treatise by Arenal (1820–93), who was a celebrated humanitarian thinker, social reformer and pioneer of women's rights and feminism in Spain, owes much to Landa's book, to which she constantly refers in particular in its Chapter VIII on “Hostile Relations” (by far the longest of the chapters in her book).Footnote 80 Arenal was also one of Landa's most committed collaborators in the Spanish Red Cross. She served as secretary-general of its ladies’ section, which was established in 1869,Footnote 81 and later worked with wounded soldiers as director of a field dressing station for soldiers from both camps during the Third Carlist War.Footnote 82 Another sign of the deep influence of Landa's book in Spain can be gleaned from the Marqués de Olivart (1861–1928),Footnote 83 whose Tratado de derecho internacional público y privado is considered one the very first general treatments of both public and private international law in Spanish.Footnote 84 Elected to the IDI in 1888, de Olivart, who was the owner of an extensive library “that has long been regarded as the most complete collection of works relating to international law and diplomacy” worldwide in the early twentieth century,Footnote 85 highlighted that both Landa's early treatise on the laws of war and Tratado elemental de derecho internacional maritimo Footnote 86 by Ignacio de Negrín (1830–81) provided “the first foundations of a scientific renaissance” of international law studies in Spain in the late nineteenth century.Footnote 87 This “scientific renaissance” would, in turn, largely influence the works of Spain's first “professional” generation of international law academics.Footnote 88
Besides his written works on the theory and practice of military medicine and IHL, Landa's contributions during these years also extended to founding and directing the journal of the Spanish Red Cross. Following in the footsteps of the first issue of the Bulletin International des Sociétés de Secours aux Militaires Blessés (established in 1869 in Geneva),Footnote 89 Landa founded, funded, directed and became the main contributor to La Caridad en la Guerra (Charity in War)Footnote 90 in Pamplona in April 1870. This was published with the subtitle Anales de la Asociación Internacional de Socorro a los Heridos (Annals of the International Association of Relief to the Wounded) and the Latin motto “Hostes dum vulnerati fratres” (“Enemies when wounded become brothers”).Footnote 91 In the same year, the outbreak of the Franco-Russian War (1870–71) marked the first time that the ICRW had participated in an international conflict. The war was also the first time that the Spanish Red Cross had collected and (with the help of Landa, who volunteered to travel as its international delegate to visit war hospitals and assist wounded soldiers) distributed humanitarian aid in foreign countries.Footnote 92
Landa's contributions to the work of the Institut de Droit International on international humanitarian law and international health law (1871–91)
The Franco-Prussian war was a crucible from which, in view of both the lack of respect by the parties during the war for the 1864 Geneva ConventionFootnote 93 and the shortcomings of that convention, the IDI was founded in September 1873. Landa was the only Spaniard to receive an invitation to join its inaugural meeting in Ghent.Footnote 94 This invitation has been attributed to the publication of his El derecho a la guerra conforme a la moral in 1867, the second edition of which was published, as noted above, in 1870.Footnote 95 It probably also owes much to the fact that Landa's work on behalf of the Geneva Committee and the Spanish Red Cross had long been highly appreciated by Gustave Moynier, who became a paramount figure in the founding of the IDI. However, Landa's appointment to the military corps of the liberal army during the Third Carlist War and his position as inspector-general of the Red Cross (since 1867) did not allow him to attend its inaugural meeting in person. Therefore, although Landa was not among the IDI's so-called “founding members”, he remains one of the thirty-nine original members of the IDI and its first member of Spanish nationality.Footnote 96 In fact, just two months before the establishment of the IDI in July 1873, Landa had sent a detailed letter from Navarre to Moynier, which was then published in the Bulletin International des Sociétés de Secours aux Militaires Blessés in October 1873.Footnote 97 In the letter, Landa made reference to the first humanitarian intervention under the flag of the Spanish Red Cross during the battle of Oroquieta in 1872, which was also the first recorded intervention by the Red Cross in any civil war. The extension of the activities of the ICRW to civil wars was one of the long-term aspirations of Landa, who had published “La caridad en las guerras civiles” in Spanish in 1873, a text which also appeared translated into French in the Bulletin International des Sociétes de Secours aux Militaires Blessés in 1875.Footnote 98 If, as Eyal Benvenisti and Doreen Lustig have recalled, Landa was one of the earliest campaigners for the application of the First Geneva Convention to civil wars,Footnote 99 the participation of the Spanish Red Cross in the Third Carlist War provided, according to Moynier, “precedents of high value, which must be remembered in order to invoke them, if necessary, in similar circumstances”.Footnote 100
Landa's new wartime experiences only added to his acumen and commitment to humanitarian causes.Footnote 101 These and others informed his contributions to the IDI until his death in 1891. Besides taking part in the regular IDI activities,Footnote 102 Landa's manifold contributions to its early works included several “communications” or short reports in different areas ranging from “recent publications on international law in Spain” in the late 1870sFootnote 103 to a report on the incorporation of many new IHL concepts from the 1864 Geneva Convention, the Brussels Declaration and the Oxford Manual into the new Spanish military criminal code of 1884.Footnote 104 Landa had been a long-standing campaigner for reform of the Spanish military criminal code,Footnote 105 in particular regarding granting neutral status to anyone assisting rebel wounded soldiers in civil wars, an action criminalized in Spain since 1820 and under which Landa's own father, a doctor like him, had been castigated during the First Carlist War.Footnote 106 The inclusion of this reform in the Spanish Public Order Law of 1870, and then in the new military criminal code in 1884, which was unique at the time in comparative law terms, owes much to Landa's efforts.
Landa's work for the IDI also included contributions to different IDI commissions on the regulation of the laws and customs of war, among other subject areas. Equipped with extensive wartime experience, Landa was one of the drafters of the Manual on the Laws of War on Land in 1880, led by Gustave Moynier.Footnote 107 As a member of the commission on the regulation of laws and customs of war, Landa also contributed to “the international law of railways in the case of war”, which was later extended to also include the regulation of “telegraphs and telephones in the case of war”.Footnote 108 Furthermore, Landa collaborated with the commission which drew up the first regulation on the rights of aliens and political asylum,Footnote 109 and he also presented a project on the classification of crimes against the laws of war according to the Brussels Declaration in 1878.Footnote 110 In the latter, Landa typifies the corresponding crimes into six categories (“usurpation of functions”, “illegal exaction”, “abuse of authority”, ”armed robbery”, “murder” and “act of betrayal”), identifying a list of corresponding actions fitting each criminal type.Footnote 111
Landa's third area of contributions to the IDI as rapporteur on measures on international sanitary policy deserves separate attention. He examined the tension between public health, on the one hand, and commerce, on the other, regarding land and maritime quarantine.Footnote 112 This is a topic on which Landa drafted a “project for an international sanitary convention”, which he argued was “founded on the irrefutable basis of experimental science”.Footnote 113 In order to do this, Landa traced a parallel between the method used to draft the First Geneva Convention and the “system of international sanitary policy”, with the aim of identifying in the latter the “vexatious dispositions that modern science has recognized as ineffectual” and the “useless rigours a treaty could request States to renounce”.Footnote 114 On the basis of Landa's study of a number of bilateral international sanitary treaties, domestic laws on quarantine, and expert opinions and recommendations by international sanitary conferences and international medical congresses,Footnote 115 the draft international treaty that Landa proposed highlighted a need to ease the stringent conditions to which those “not showing indubitable symptoms of a contagious or epidemic disease” were subjected at borders between States while leaving a greater margin of appreciation to States regarding merchandise and storage buildings on the condition that adequate notice of these more severe measures was provided to international traders in advance.Footnote 116
If, indeed, as W. F. Bynum notes, “medical internationalism has in one sense only a rather short history and can be said to have emerged in the mid-late nineteenth century”,Footnote 117 Landa, who brought to bear his first-hand medical experience in combating cholera and yellow fever epidemics in both peacetime and wartime on his work on the interface between international law and sanitary policy regarding epidemic diseases, should be regarded as one of the very earliest medical legal internationalists. This is apparent in his argument that the mandate of the IDI could indeed include reliance on “scientific knowledge” as a means for the “triumph of the principles of justice and humanity” in relations among nations.Footnote 118 Although the IDI abandoned the project after Landa's death in 1891, a separate first international sanitary convention was approved and ratified by fourteen nations just one year later in Venice in 1892 with an exclusive focus on the spread of cholera,Footnote 119 “one of the classic regime's ‘big three’ infectious diseases”,Footnote 120 alongside plague and yellow fever. This was the first international treaty adopted as a result of the work of international sanitary conferences since the first one was held in Paris in 1851 (reflecting “the conclusion of major European States that the international spread of infectious diseases could no longer be handled as a matter only of national governance”Footnote 121), and it is widely recognized as the “origin point of international health law”.Footnote 122 Landa, whose expertise in the medical treatment of cholera began, as we have seen, at a very early age, had been attending some of the international sanitary conferences, like the one held in Rome in 1885, and reporting on them to the IDI.Footnote 123
Besides his contributions to the work of the IDI in the late 1870s and the 1880s, the very strenuous civil war in Navarre, in which Landa participated in his double capacity as military doctor and inspector-general of the Red Cross on many battlefields and even endured the siege of its capital city for several months, gave Landa many first-hand experiences to apply in his writing about improving military medicine,Footnote 124 including with different technical innovations.Footnote 125 Soon after the war, in 1878, Landa retired from the Spanish Military Health Corps with the equivalent rank of colonelFootnote 126 to devote himself to the practice of medicine, becoming director of the military hospital of Pamplona (1883–86) and then director of military health inspection for Navarre (1886–91).Footnote 127 During the 1880s, he continued making contributions to the improvement of military health corpsFootnote 128 and participating in international conferencesFootnote 129 including the Third International Conference of the Red Cross in 1884.Footnote 130 He also produced official reports on his visits to foreign academies of military health and on his attendance at international conferences.Footnote 131
Although Landa is still sporadically remembered in Spain for being a co-founder of the Spanish Red Cross and also the first Spanish member of the IDI,Footnote 132 he has remained a hidden figure in the history of IHL elsewhere. This has been the case despite the various references to him contained in the early years of the Annuaire de l'Institut de Droit International and the Bulletin International des Sociétés de Secours aux Militaires Blessés.Footnote 133 Some of these references are related to the fact that, as Enrich noted back in 1875, “we cannot write the history of the origins and development of the Spanish section [of the Sociétés de Secours aux Militaires Blessés] without encountering the name of Doctor Landa at every step”.Footnote 134
Landa also served as the corresponding member of the Royal Academies of Health and History in Spain and Archaeology in France, and was decorated multiple times both abroad and in his own country during his lifetime.Footnote 135 Besides his international legal humanitarian work, he also made various remarkable contributions to epidemiologyFootnote 136 and literatureFootnote 137 (including as author of the prologue to the first translation into Spanish of an anthology of the writings of Edgar Allan Poe in 1858Footnote 138), as well as to the folklore,Footnote 139 archaeologyFootnote 140 and historyFootnote 141 of Navarre. Besides his written works, the contributions of Dr Landa, who died of bronchopneumonia, aged 61, in Pamplona on 11 April 1891, also spanned the founding and direction of several journals,Footnote 142 the setting up of several charitable institutions in PamplonaFootnote 143 and even laying the foundations for Navarre's first psychiatric hospital.Footnote 144
Conclusions
This article has briefly revisited the life and works of a completely overlooked central figure of the early days of the professionalization of international law and the first steps of the ICRC and the IDI in the mid- to late nineteenth century. Nicknamed the “Spanish Henri Dunant”,Footnote 145 Landa's legacy includes solid contributions, as we have seen, to the practice and study of military health law and seminal ones to the foundations of modern IHL in particular, but also, albeit more tangentially, to those of international health law. Contrary to other historical international legal figures of the nineteenth century, whose life and works have been repeatedly historized, occasionally in hagiographical terms,Footnote 146 a combination of the dominance of English in international legal history and the fact that he was not a lawyer have largely left Landa in the margins of the annals of the history of international law, and even IHL. However, Landa's legacy in laying the foundations of international legal developments in the late nineteenth century and his historical representativeness in this context are sufficiently conclusive. Besides his avant-la-lettre contributions to IHL, which included, as we have seen, being one of earlier proponents of the extension of “neutral” status to wounded soldiers in both international and civil wars as well as to those assisting them in both cases, and being a champion of the application of the First Geneva Convention to civil wars, Landa's “human-centred” approach to international law was also apparent in his attempts to reduce the constraints imposed by epidemic quarantines on individuals.Footnote 147 However, perhaps the measure of why the figure of Dr Landa is finally worth rescuing from historical obscurity in an international legal discipline that has had far more than its fair share of armchair scholarship was best captured by Concepción Arenal in her Ensayo sobre el derecho de Gentes in 1879. In this rare book, which stands out as “the first treatise on international law in the modern sense ever published by a woman”,Footnote 148 Arenal characterized Nicasio Landa as “one of the most humane men who has ever walked the battlefields”.Footnote 149