• MANUEL LLORENTE

Updated Thursday, February 16, 2023-16:15

  • Share on Facebook

  • Share on Twitter

  • send by email

Comment

The period of the Habsburgs, that which

begins in 1516, the year of the proclamation of Carlos I as king, and goes up to 1700, the date of the death of Carlos II

, is undoubtedly the most splendor in the history of Spain, and of he deals with Alfredo Alvar Ezquerra in his essay

Austrias.

Empire, power and society

(The Sphere of Books).

The subtitle concretizes the intentions:

How Spain became the great global power

.

«It is the first time that an interpretation of the Spain of the Habsburgs has been made, focusing more on the social agents than on the historical evolution.

It is not a history of the Spain of the Habsburgs, but of the exercise of power

and its acceptance in the Spain of the Habsburgs”, says Alvar to La Lectura.

These are some axes of its governance.

THE CATHOLIC KINGS AS A FOUNDATION.

His stage was the basis of what would come, but this research professor at the CSIC History Institute clarifies that it is

difficult to distinguish the work of Isabel from that of Fernando

because "they were so intelligent that since the Segovia Christmas pacts of 1474-1475 supported each other, as they sought a common goal: to strengthen the Monarchy so that this power would redound to the good of its subjects.

The experience in Castile and Aragon of a weak Monarchy had had disastrous consequences that were known to them;

it was necessary

to tame the rebellious aristocracy

.

That plan was in place when the conquest of Granada ended, the decision was made to

expel the Jews

who did not want to convert,

Columbus appeared

with its lands seen or

Nebrija

endowing the Castilian language with a grammar, all in 1492».

LONGEVITY

The Empire lasted so long because “it was the most powerful and healthy economically, institutionally, and technically.

He knew how

to take advantage of the opportunities of the times

.

The armies were respected and envied, their diplomatic service was incredible, their university legal training was excellent.

The cultural diffusion through

the printing press

or the pulpits, or the royal visits, or the authority made visible in the royal delegates, were exemplary”.

CORRUPTION.

At that time when characters like Lázaro de Tormes or Guzmán de Alfarache mixed with high school graduates and doctors, «the corruption of Lerma and his associates was certainly a fact.

As there were judges who stood up to him.

Too bad that politically some wanted to remove them... to wear them.

Rodrigo de Calderón had his throat cut, Pedro Franqueza was tried for more than 400 crimes

and Lerma dressed in red so as not to die in the rope.

And he adds: "Don Quixote's (or Cervantes?) advice to Sancho is not the result of air, but of a cultural trunk of belonging."

DIPLOMATIC WORK

Alvar Ezquerra, an expert on the Golden Age, highlights this not-so-discussed exercise: «The diplomats of that time were individuals from all the territories of the Empire who served the interests of the king (of Spain).

And therefore they safeguarded both the interests of the king (of Spain) and his territories (of the Empire), because the kings were the sovereigns.

The diplomats

were the same Castilians as Aragonese, as Burgundians.

.. The king named them.

There were permanent embassies and special missions.

The capacity for international political pact was overwhelming.

A world of unique information.

The

reciprocity

was also enormous.

Diplomats maintained direct contact with the king and, where appropriate, with the Council of State, hence their correspondence is extremely rich.

LIVE IN PEACE

Why did the Peninsula live in peace from the 20s of the 16th century until the 1640s?

«In Spain, in the crowns of Castilla and Aragón, except for the uprisings of the Communities and the Germanías, or the alterations of the years of 1590,

nothing

happens

until 1640

.

Was there so much repression or so much conformity because a horizon was appreciated? ».

SOCIAL MOBILITY

Alvar emphasizes a certain social flexibility as one of the causes that propelled changes and was the seed for a new society.

In the book he documents "how ordinary people, thanks to their studies and other services to the king, were able to die in richer beds than in the cradles in which they were born and with more open existential horizons than those of their parents."

A "quantitative society" was imposed

, that of money, the one that arose from commerce and manufactures,

over the "qualitative" one

, the one that settled on the previous one, that of the privileged (nobility and clergy) and not privileged.

COMPOSITE OR AGGREGATE MONARCHY.

Another of the characteristics of the Hispanic Empire was to be a composite or aggregate Monarchy.

The king of Spain was also the king of Naples, Sardinia and Sicily;

lord of Milan and the Netherlands;

king of the Indies;

Lord of the squares of North Africa and, since the Union of Crowns, King of Portugal and its domains.

«Each and every one of those territories», writes Alvar Ezquerra,

«maintained their differences

with respect to the others.

Even his indifferences

.

But they never met

each other.

If there were uprisings it was against the bad government.

And he insists that if unity was maintained for so long it was because Spain was a «functional Empire: each territory performed a function for its own benefit and for the benefit of others.

American silver financed armies and other expenses.

Those armies, which were trained in Naples, defended everyone from outside attacks.

INQUISITION

The first Inquisitorial Tribunal of Castile was established in Seville in

1478

and

arose to prevent converted Jews from turning back

and Jews and Crypto-Jews from tempting neo-converts to do the same.

The Inquisition was born “to persecute the heresy of apostasy.

Then he joined the persecution of the Lutheran heresy and then another;

he was adapting to the times ».

Although its operation was repealed by the Cortes of Cádiz in 1812, it lasted until 1834. "When necessary, the Inquisition acted politically,

camouflaging civil issues as religious ones

. "

Austrias.

Empire power and society.

The Sphere of Books.

520 pages.

E29.90 Ebook: E12.99

SUNSET

There is not usually a cause that determines the collapse of an Empire, but after

the incorporation of Portugal (1581)

, the Spanish Monarchy was the common enemy that had to be sunk, and one of the triggers of the great crisis of 1640. It was confirmed in the Peace of Utrecht of 1714.

According to the criteria of The Trust Project

Know more