Spain (Spanish España), parliamentary
monarchy occupying 85 percent of the Iberian Peninsula in the southwestern
corner of Europe. Portugal and the British territory of Gibraltar occupy the
remainder of the peninsula. Spain’s territory also includes islands in the
Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea and two small enclaves on the coast of
Morocco. Madrid is the capital and largest city of Spain.
A large plateau rises in the heartland of Spain and
makes up much of the mainland. Mountains surround and crisscross the plateau,
and the city of Madrid stands at its center. The climate of the plateau is
harsh and arid, and most of Spain’s people live near the coasts or in a few
major river valleys.
Spain is cut off by the Pyrenees
mountains from all other countries of Europe except Portugal, and thus has had
a history notably different from those countries. In the 8th century
Arabic-speaking Muslims from North Africa, called Moors, conquered most of the
Iberian peninsula. During the Middle Ages Christian kingdoms of northern Spain
waged wars to reconquer the peninsula from the Moors.
After the Christian reconquest was completed,
Spain’s monarchs sent Christopher Columbus on the voyage in which he reached
the Americas in 1492. In the hundred years that followed, treasure from the Americas
helped make Spain the strongest power in Europe. Spanish soldiers and priests
explored and colonized the Americas from Mexico to Chile, spreading Spanish
culture and the Spanish language. Spain’s economy stagnated in the 17th
century, however, and its power waned. In the 20th century Spain was scarred by
the Spanish Civil War, between 1936 and 1939, and by a dictatorship that lasted
from 1939 to 1975. Afterward, Spain underwent a remarkably smooth transition to
democratic government.
In economic terms Spain was a late developer. Until
the 1960s nearly all of the country’s industry was confined to the northern
regions of Catalonia and the Basque Country. Since then Spain’s economy has
grown rapidly. The major contributions to this economic turnaround came from
light manufacturing industry—such as food products—and from service industries,
especially tourism. Millions of tourists visit Spain each year, attracted by
its sunny climate, beaches, and historic cities.
Spain also has a strong cultural and artistic
tradition. Historically, its main cultural contributions were to painting and
literature. More recently, while maintaining its presence in these two areas,
Spain has also produced major figures in the fields of filmmaking,
architecture, and music.
Spain is bordered on the north by the Bay of
Biscay, part of the Atlantic Ocean, and by the Pyrenees, which form its
frontier with France and the tiny country of Andorra. It is bounded by on the
east by the Mediterranean Sea; on the south by the Mediterranean Sea and the
Atlantic Ocean; and on the west by Portugal and the Atlantic Ocean. The Canary
Islands in the Atlantic Ocean and the Balearic Islands in the Mediterranean
also form part of Spain. In addition, Spain administers two cities in
Morocco—Ceuta and Melilla—as well as three island groups near Africa—Peñón de
Vélez de la Gomera and the Alhucemas and Chafarinas islands. The British
dependency of Gibraltar is situated at the southern extremity of Spain.
II
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LAND AND RESOURCES OF SPAIN
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Spain occupies about 85 percent of the Iberian
Peninsula. Its area, including the African and insular territories, is 505,990
sq km (195,364 sq mi), making Spain the second-largest country in western
Europe after France. Water borders about 88 percent of Spain’s periphery. Its
Mediterranean coast is 1,660 km (1,030 mi) long, and its Atlantic coast is 710
km (440 mi) long. The long, unbroken mountain chain of the Pyrenees, extending
435 km (270 mi) from the Bay of Biscay to the Mediterranean Sea, forms the border
with France on the north. In the extreme south the Strait of Gibraltar, less
than 13 km (8 mi) wide at its narrowest extent, separates Spain from Africa.
Spain is a mountainous country. In Europe, only
Switzerland has a higher average elevation. Spain’s extensive central plateau,
called the Meseta, has an average elevation of about 600 m (2,000 ft) and
slopes generally downward from north to south and from east to west. Various
mountain ranges, or sierras, cross this tableland. The two largest—the
Sierra de Guadarrama and the Sierra de Gredos—divide it into northern and
southern sections. Several more mountain ranges border the plateau: the
Cantabrian mountains along the northern coast, the Iberian chain to the east,
and the Sierra Morena to the south. The country’s two highest peaks, however,
lie elsewhere. The Mulhacén (3,477 m/11,407 ft) is in the Sierra Nevada in the
extreme south, and the Pico de Aneto (3,404 m/11,168 ft) is in the Pyrenees,
which form a continuous barrier along the French border to the north. Spain’s
highest mountain of all is the Pico de Teide (3,715 m/12,188 ft), an extinct
volcano on Tenerife Island in the Canary Islands. Between many of the mountains
are narrow valleys, drained by rapid rivers.
The two most important rivers in Spain are the Ebro
and the Guadalquivir. Their broad valleys bound the central plateau, the Ebro
to the northeast and the Guadalquivir to the south. The two rivers lie entirely
within Spain, and their mouths form the country’s only major deltas, the Ebro
on the Mediterranean and the Guadalquivir on the Atlantic. The Ebro and the
Guadalquivir are also Spain’s only navigable rivers. The Guadalquivir River,
flowing through a fertile plain in the south, is the deepest river in Spain and
the only one navigable for any extensive distance. Large ships can travel only
a short distance inland on the Ebro.
Other major rivers in Spain are the Duero (Douro),
Tajo (Tagus), and Guadiana. All three rivers rise on the plateau and flow
through Portugal before reaching the Atlantic. The first two, like most of the
country’s smaller streams and rivers, flow rapidly mostly along steep-sided
valleys. Spain also has some 2,400 lakes, the majority of them glacial in
origin. Almost all the lakes are very small. The largest is the Lago de
Sanabria close to the northern Portuguese border.
Spain’s mainland coastline extends for about 3,960 km
(2,460 mi). The Balearic Islands have a combined coastline of about 1,060 km
(620 mi), and the Canaries of about 1,160 km (720 mi). For most of its length
the mainland coast is rugged. The coastal strip adjoining it rarely exceeds 30
km (19 mi) in width, and in many areas the coastal plain is broken up by
mountains that descend directly to the sea. More extensive coastal lowlands
occur only around the Gulf of Valencia on the central Mediterranean and near
the mouth of the Guadalquivir on the southern Atlantic. Galicia, a region of
northwestern Spain, is distinctive for the numerous shallow inlets (rías)
that indent its coast. Galicia’s coast also offers a number of good harbors, in
particular Vigo and La Coruña. Good harbors elsewhere in Spain are rare; the
main exceptions are Bilbao, Santander, and Cádiz on the Atlantic, and Barcelona
on the Mediterranean.
A
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Climate
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The climate of Spain is generally marked by
extremes of temperature and low rainfall. The country’s rugged landscape
accentuates these features. The main exceptions to this harsh, arid climate
occur along the northern and northwestern coasts, which are damp and cool to
mild in temperature. The central plateau, by contrast, has summers so arid that
nearly all the streams dry up, the earth parches, and drought is common. Around
Madrid, at the middle of the plateau, winter cold is sufficient to freeze
streams, while summer temperatures in Seville to the south rise as high as 49°C
(120°F). The southern coast has a Mediterranean climate, with hot summers and
mild winters. For example, Málaga, on the southern coast, has an average winter
temperature of 14°C (57°F). The climate of the Canary Islands is subtropical.
Most of Spain receives less than 610 mm (24 in) of
precipitation per year, and Almería Province in the southeast boasts Europe’s
only genuine desert. The northern mountains get considerably more moisture.
B
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Natural Resources
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Spain has a number of mineral resources. The
largest known deposits are of iron ore, zinc, and lead. Spain also produces
significant quantities of copper and mercury. These deposits are mined mainly
in Huelva province in southwestern Spain, around Cartagena on the
Mediterranean, and at various points along the Bay of Biscay in the north.
Additionally, uranium is mined in the region of Extremadura, near the
Portuguese frontier, where pyrites, fluorspar, gypsum, tungsten, and potash
also occur.
Spain has only minor energy reserves. There
are small fields of petroleum and natural gas off the Biscay coast, with
additional offshore deposits of gas in the Cádiz area and of oil in Catalonia.
Coal mining takes place in the northwestern regions of Asturias and León, in
the Basque Country and around Teruel in Aragón. However, the poor quality of
the coal makes it economically worthless, and the industry is being shut down.
Much more important are the water resources of the Pyrenees, where a number of
rivers have been harnessed to provide hydroelectric power.
C
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Plants and Animals
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Only a small part of Spain is forested,
and forests are located mainly on mountain slopes, particularly in the
northwest. A common Spanish tree is the evergreen oak. Cork oak, from which the
bark may be stripped every ten years, is abundant, growing chiefly as second
growth on timbered land. Poplar trees are grown throughout the country, and the
cultivation of olive trees is a major agricultural activity. Other Spanish
trees include the elm, beech, and chestnut. Shrubs and herbs are the common
natural vegetation on the central plateau. Grapevines flourish in the arid
soil. Esparto grass, used for making paper and various fiber products, grows
abundantly in both the wild and cultivated state. On the Mediterranean coast
sugarcane, oranges, lemons, figs, almonds, and chestnuts are grown.
The Spanish fauna includes the wolf, lynx, wildcat,
fox, wild boar, wild goat, deer, and hare. Among the more famous domesticated
animals are the bulls bred near Seville and Salamanca for bullfighting, the
Spanish national sport. Birdlife is abundant, with varieties of birds of prey.
Insect life abounds. Mountain streams and lakes teem with fish such as barbel,
tench, and trout.
D
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Soils
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Although Spanish soils need careful irrigation and
cultivation, they are a rich and valuable resource. Semiarid chestnut-brown
soils cover the central plateau, and red Mediterranean soils cover the southern
area and the northeastern coastal region. A gray desert soil, often containing
salt, is found in the southeast. The forest of northern Spain has gray-brown
forest soils, and the forest in the Cantabrian Mountains has leached, infertile
soils.
E
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Environmental Issues
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Spain faces numerous environmental threats.
Deforestation and the erosion and river pollution that accompany it are major
concerns. Other problems include the encroachment of agriculture onto land designated
as protected, desertification in badly managed agricultural zones, and soil salinization
(contamination with salt) in irrigated regions. Increased use of nitrogen
fertilizers has added to the problem of nitrates in rivers.
In April 1998 a serious toxic waste spill
occurred as the result of a burst reservoir at an iron ore mine in southern
Spain. Attempts were made to divert the spillage from an important wetland area
toward the Guadalquivir River, which flows into the Atlantic Ocean. It was estimated
that the toxic mud from the spill threatened millions of birds and other
wildlife. The black toxic mud covered farms, fields, and orchards, causing
farmers to suffer enormous economic losses.
In November 2002 a single-hulled oil tanker,
the Prestige, ruptured and sank in a storm off the coast of Galicia in
northwestern Spain. The ship lost much of its cargo of 77.5 million liters
(20.5 million gallons) of fuel oil, spilling nearly twice the amount of oil
that was lost in the Exxon Valdez disaster in Alaska in 1989—the worst
oil spill in United States history. The oil coated the beaches of Galicia and
spread south to Portugal and north to the beaches of southwestern France. The
spill devastated fish stocks and destroyed hundreds of thousands of seabirds.
Estimates put the cost of cleanup and fishing sector losses at more than $9
billion over a decade.
Spain participates in an international convention on
wetlands, with 17 sites designated. Fourteen biosphere reserves have been set
aside under the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO) Man and the Biosphere Program. Spain has ratified
international environmental agreements concerning air pollution, biodiversity,
climate change, endangered species, environmental modification, hazardous
wastes, marine dumping, marine life, the ozone layer, ship pollution, tropical
timber, and whaling. Regionally, Spain has designated several protected areas
for wild birds as part of the European Wild Bird Directive and six protected
marine sites under the Mediterranean Action Plan.
III
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PEOPLE AND SOCIETY OF SPAIN
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The Spanish population is relatively homogeneous in its
racial and ethnic composition. Apart from the Basques, a small but ancient
group whose origin remains a mystery, the basic stock seems to have consisted
of Celtiberians. As their name suggests the Celtiberians were a mixture of
Celts and early inhabitants of the Iberian peninsula. They later intermingled
with successive waves of conquerors. First came the Romans, then various
Germanic tribes of whom the most important were the Visigoths, and finally the
Moors, themselves a mixture of North African and Arab elements.
However, Spain has experienced little immigration
since it became a nation within its current boundaries, around 1500. Indeed,
for much of this period, Spain had limited contact with the rest of the world.
Even though marked regional differences form a distinctive feature of the
country, they mainly reflect economic and political factors rather than ethnic
differences. The country’s gypsy community (gitanos) forms a notable
exception.
The estimated population of Spain for 2008 is
40,491,051, giving the country an overall density of 81 persons per sq km (210
per sq mi). Spain is increasingly urban, with 77 percent of the population in
towns and cities.
Spain’s population trends have been somewhat unusual as
a result of the country’s late economic development. As late as 1960 infant
mortality stood at 43 deaths per 1,000 births, a relatively high level usually
associated with the developing world. Thereafter, the rate declined rapidly and
is now lower than the infant mortality rate in the United States. The reduction
in infant mortality brought a dramatic increase in life expectancy, which is
now among the highest in the world for both males and females. It also resulted
in very rapid population growth during the 20 years after 1955.
Another abrupt demographic change occurred more
recently, halting the rapid growth rate. Although Spain’s birth rate remained
extremely high into the 1970s, it subsequently decreased. In 2008 it stood at
1.30 children per female, one of the lowest birth rates in the world. As
population growth slowed, the average age of Spain’s population increased. By
the early 2000s annual population growth had slowed to less than 1 percent, and
in 2008 it stood at 0.10 percent. If this trend continues, the number of
Spaniards was expected to start falling by 2020.
By European standards Spain has a low population
density. The great bulk of the population is concentrated in just a few areas:
along the coasts, in the Ebro and Guadalquivir valleys, and around Madrid. Far
fewer people live in the rest of the plateau that covers most of the country.
In addition, a large migration from rural areas to towns and cities took place
between 1960 and 1980. Today, large tracts of the country lie more or less
deserted. A small drift back to the land among better-off Spaniards, reacting
to overcrowding in the cities, has had no noticeable impact on the overall
picture.
A
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Principal Cities
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Spain’s capital and largest city is Madrid
(population, 2007, 3,132,463); it is also the capital of the autonomous (self-governing)
region comprising the city and its surroundings. Situated at the country’s
geographical heart, Madrid was long a purely administrative center, but since
the 1960s it has developed thriving industrial and service sectors. The second
largest city is Barcelona (1,595,110), Spain’s largest port and capital of the
Catalonia region. A traditional commercial center, Barcelona also has the
country’s oldest textile industry. In recent decades the city’s industrial and
service base has been greatly extended and diversified.
Valencia (797,654), capital of the Valencia region, is a
commercial center with a relatively diverse economy. Seville (699,145) is a
major tourist center and, as capital of the country’s most populous region,
Andalucía, is a major administrative center. Zaragoza (654,390), capital of
Aragón, grew rapidly in the late 20th century, thanks to its strategic location
in the Ebro Valley. Málaga (561,250) is the chief center of the country’s major
tourist area, the Costa del Sol. Bilbao (353,168) is both a busy port and the
Basque Country’s commercial and industrial capital.
B
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Religion
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Spain has long been associated with the Roman
Catholic Church. Following the country’s unification around 1500, Spain’s sizable
Jewish and Muslim communities were forced to choose between expulsion and
forcible conversion. Later, Protestantism had only a minimal impact in Spain.
Until 1978 Catholicism was Spain’s official religion, and it is still the
country’s dominant faith. Spanish monasteries and convents account for almost
two-thirds of the world’s closed Catholic communities, and Catholic references
abound in popular speech.
Although more than 90 percent of the population
identifies itself as Roman Catholic, only about 35 percent of Spaniards attend
church regularly. This percentage is falling, as many of the regular
churchgoers are old. At the same time, the Church retains a strong presence in
society. This is apparent in festivals (fiestas) that take place in
nearly every city, town, and village, and have a strongly religious flavor. The
Easter Week processions of Andalusia are especially notable. In addition, the
Church continues to be an important provider of social services; in particular,
it runs a considerable number of schools and hospitals.
The influence exercised by the Catholic lay organization
Opus Dei is another aspect of the church presence. The Opus, as it is commonly
known, was established in 1928 by Spanish priest José María Escrivá de
Balaguer, who was canonized (declared a saint) by Pope John Paul II in 2002
only 27 years after his death, an unusually short period. During the
dictatorship of Francisco Franco, Opus Dei acquired immense influence, not only
in politics but also in the business world. Rumors of its close connections
with the ruling, conservative People’s Party persist today.
C
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Language
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Spain’s official language is Spanish (español).
It is spoken by the vast majority of its people. Spanish has two major
dialects—Andalusian and Castilian—which differ in their pronunciation of
certain sounds. In a number of regions of Spain other languages are also
important. Catalan, a relative of Spanish and French, shares official status
with Spanish in Catalonia and the Balearic Islands. Since 1980 the regional
government of Catalonia has promoted the use of Catalan in public life and in
education. Such efforts have led to tensions with the sizable minority of
Catalonia’s residents who speak only Spanish.
Similar developments have occurred in Galicia, where the
Galician language is widely spoken. Since achieving recognition as an official
language in 1980, Galician has begun to blossom as a literary language, as
well. Galician is a member of the same language subfamily as Spanish, but it is
more closely related to Portuguese. Language controversies have also arisen in
Valencia, where many of the inhabitants speak what most experts regard as a
dialect of Catalan. For political reasons Valencian has been designated a
language in its own right, with official status.
The Basque language, by contrast, is not a member
of the Indo-European language family, to which the other languages of Spain
belong, and it appears to be unrelated to any known language. By the 1950s Basque
seemed close to extinction; it was used only in rural areas near the border
between France and Spain. Since that time, however, Basque has experienced a
considerable revival, thanks to the active support of Basque nationalists.
Their control over the Basque Country’s government assured that Basque received
equal official status with Spanish in that region.
D
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Education
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The golden age of Spanish education occurred
during the Middle Ages, when the Moors, Christians, and Jews established strong
interreligious centers of higher education in Córdoba, Granada, and Toledo. The
University of Salamanca (1218) served as a model for the universities of Latin
America from the 16th century on, thereby extending the international influence
of Spanish education. Thereafter, stagnation set in, however. In 1867 Spain
became one of the first countries to pass compulsory education legislation, but
the law was never enforced. Education remained the preserve of a small elite
into the second half of the 20th century, while Catholic belief in its most
conservative form heavily influenced teaching content and methods. The
dictatorship of Francisco Franco, from 1939 to 1975, reinforced these
characteristics. The government was forced to attempt some reforms in 1970, but
the effort proved largely unsuccessful because few funds were made available.
Only after Franco’s death in 1975, and the election
of a Socialist government seven years later, did real change come in education.
The last two decades of the 20th century saw a massive expansion of educational
facilities at all levels. Illiteracy, previously a significant problem, was
reduced to around 3.5 percent, while universal schooling from ages 6 to 16
finally became a reality. At the same time new issues emerged, in many cases
similar to those in other European countries. These issues include how to cope
with severe overcrowding of the universities, and how to design a secondary
school curriculum that is both attractive to, and relevant for, today’s teenagers.
Another important development was devolution (delegation of power) to
Spain’s newly autonomous (self-governing) regions. These autonomous regions
enjoy wide powers to regulate their own education systems, with the result that
significant differences in approach have emerged.
D1
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Preprimary, Primary, and Secondary Schools
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Spain’s school system was restructured in three levels
by a law passed in 1990 and implemented over the next 12 years. Preprimary
education is for children under the age of 6, primary education for those ages
6 to 11, and secondary education for those ages 12 to 16. At age 16 students
may choose either a vocational training course for one or two years, or a
two-year baccalaureate-style (bachillerato) course designed to
prepare them for higher education. Preprimary education was a major innovation
under the 1990 law. Previously, kindergarten or nursery facilities provided little
more than supervision. Preprimary education is voluntary and not necessarily
free. Primary and secondary education is free and compulsory for children
between the ages of 6 and 16. Prior to 1990 compulsory education extended only
to age 14, when many children from poorer families left school.
Today, education free of charge applies not only to
public schools but also to private schools that receive government funding.
Self-funding schools, most of which are run by the Catholic church, may charge
tuition. About one-third of Spain’s pupils at the primary and secondary levels
attend private schools. In the 2000 school year, Spain’s primary schools were
attended by 2.5 million pupils, and secondary schools (including bachillerato
and vocational courses) by 3.2 million.
D2
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Higher Education
|
Spanish institutions of higher education enrolled 1.8
million students in 2001–2002. The main providers of higher education are
Spain’s 60-some universities. In addition, many students attend schools
offering shorter university-level curricula in business and vocational
subjects. Others attend technical institutes, especially specialist engineering
colleges. The number of students enrolled in higher education in Spain has
increased enormously since 1980, and overcrowding has become a serious problem.
Most universities in Spain are public institutions.
Despite efforts to increase their independence, they are still controlled to a
large degree by government authorities. Today, these authorities are primarily
part of the regional governments. The oldest and most famous Spanish university
is the University of Salamanca, founded in 1218. Other well-known universities
of Spain include those of Madrid (1836), Barcelona (1450), Granada (1526), Seville
(1502), and Valencia (1510); the autonomous universities of Madrid and
Barcelona (both founded in 1968), which despite their name are public
institutions; and the technology-oriented polytechnic universities of Madrid,
Barcelona, and Valencia (all founded in 1971). Until the 1980s the only
nonstate universities were run by the Catholic Church. Since then a number of
other private institutions have been established, but the number of students
enrolled in these institutions remains small.
E
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Social Structure
|
Up to the 1960s Spain had a highly traditional
class structure that was dominated by agricultural workers: generally peasant
farmers in the north and landless farm laborers in the south. Both the
industrial working class and the middle class, which was employed mainly in
public service or commerce, were much smaller than those of other western
European countries. A tiny, often aristocratic, elite made up of large
landowners and a few industrialists held most of the wealth. Upward social mobility
was minimal and depended primarily on the acquisition of land.
Since the 1960s major change has occurred in
Spain’s social structure. The rapid decline in the importance of agriculture
decimated the rural workforce and destroyed the social significance of
landowning. Meanwhile, the industrial working class has grown. As elsewhere, it
has begun to merge with the lower reaches of the middle class, a greatly
expanded group employed in a vast array of semiskilled, nonmanual occupations.
Like industrial workers, this labor force is employed mostly by small firms or
government bodies. Only in Madrid, Barcelona, and a few other cities do
significant numbers work for large companies.
The upper levels of the middle class also have
grown considerably, with the increasing importance of managerial and
professional occupations. The most successful members of this group have become
part of an upper class now defined purely in money terms. This class is
composed of leading figures from the worlds of business and finance, as well as
a few sports stars, popular singers, and media celebrities, and the remnants of
the landed aristocracy.
F
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Way of Life
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Although the way of life in Spain has
undergone considerable change since the 1960s, it retains a number of traditional
and distinctive features. Perhaps the most dramatic change has occurred in the
status of women. Into the 1970s women remained legally tied to the home. Now
most younger Spanish women take up a career of some sort, and the number of
women in responsible positions is rising, though slowly. Relatively few young
women are willing, or able, to devote the long hours their mothers did to
household tasks. Yet despite the increase in working women and a rapid decline
in family size, the family has retained its central position in Spanish life.
According to polls, Spaniards regard the welfare of their family as by far
their highest priority, and they spend the greatest portion of their leisure
time within it.
Spaniards also have much more contact with their
neighbors than is usual in developed societies. This gregariousness is
encouraged by the fact that the great majority of Spaniards live in apartments,
usually as owner-occupiers. Around a fifth of families have a second home,
typically in the town or village of their origin, or at the coast. Car
ownership is rising toward the level common in western European countries. By
contemporary standards, however, Spaniards in general seem rather unconcerned
with material possessions, preferring to spend their money on social activities
such as eating out.
Food and drink play an important part in
Spanish life. Regional dishes remain a source of pride, and typically use local
ingredients, often vegetables, strongly flavored sausages of various types, or
fish. Spaniards in general eat an uncommonly large amount of seafood. In the
form of tapas (appetizers served with a premeal drink), regional dishes
are an essential element in informal socializing. At the same time, fast food
has made inroads into Spanish eating habits, meat consumption has grown
markedly, and beer has replaced wine as the country’s most popular alcoholic
drink. Little change, however, is apparent in the most distinctive feature of
Spanish meals: their timing. The preferred hour for lunch remains 3 pm, while evening meals rarely begin
before 9 and may go on past midnight.
Although socializing in its various forms dominates
Spaniards’ list of preferred leisure activities, sport is increasingly popular
among the young. The most popular spectator sport is soccer, followed at some
distance by basketball. Cycling, track-and-field events, and tennis also
attract considerable interest. Bullfighting is enjoying renewed popularity, but
only a minority of Spaniards follows it seriously and more than a few actively
oppose it. A more genuinely national Spanish field sport is hunting, mainly the
shooting of rabbits and game birds.
G
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Social Issues
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At the root of most major social issues in
Spain is the country’s unemployment problem, which since the 1970s has been the
worst in the developed world. Especially hard hit are women and, above all,
young people. Moreover, benefits for the unemployed are meager by European
standards. As a result unemployment is closely associated with poverty, which
remains relatively common in Spain. The lowest average income levels are found
in the rural western part of the country. But most of Spain’s poor live in
cities, where poverty is often related to other social problems including
homelessness and drug addiction (see Drug Dependence).
Social welfare experts believe that the use of illegal
drugs is widespread in Spain, especially among the unemployed. Drug use, in
turn, is linked to the country’s rate of HIV infection, the highest rate in
Europe, as well as to crime. Assaults, burglaries, and other offenses often
connected with drug abuse have become a major concern, although Spain’s crime
rate is low by international standards. However, crime in Spain has risen in
recent years and also changed in nature: Organized crime is now a significant
problem in Madrid and along the Mediterranean coast.
Severe understaffing of Spain’s police forces and social
services makes it hard to respond to these issues, although awareness campaigns
have helped slow down the spread of AIDS. Some regional governments have
attempted to reduce poverty by providing income support for the most destitute.
But the central government policy has primarily sought to attack the problems indirectly,
by continuing to reduce unemployment, an approach that has had only limited
success.
A new issue came to prominence in Spain
in the late 1990s and early 2000s: racism. Until then there was little evidence
of hostility toward foreigners in Spain, which has traditionally been a country
of emigrants rather than immigrants. Apart from the gypsy (see Roma)
community, which continues to encounter considerable prejudice, Spain’s
population was remarkably homogeneous (uniform) in its ethnic makeup.
That situation began to change with the arrival of considerable numbers of
immigrants, mainly from Morocco and other parts of North Africa, and from Latin
America. These immigrants suffer both at the hands of unscrupulous employers
and as the target of resentment from poor native Spaniards. In 2001 the
government introduced a restrictive and discriminatory Aliens Act, but that
policy was reversed when a Socialist government came to power in 2004 and
granted legal status to immigrants who were working.
IV
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CULTURE OF SPAIN
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The first great flowering of literature and the
arts in Spain coincided with the country’s brief dominance of Europe—and much
of the world—a period that lasted approximately from 1550 to 1650. In painting
this so-called Golden Age (Siglo de Oro) witnessed not only the genius
of El Greco and Diego Velázquez but also a string of lesser masters. In
literature its major figures included Miguel de Cervantes as well as a host of
other writers, several of whom were inspired by Catholic mysticism. In
architecture and philosophy the country also produced major works during the
Golden Age.
After the Golden Age a decline took place in
Spanish power and in its cultural life. A long period of stagnation was broken
only by a few individuals, notably the painter Francisco Goya, who worked in
the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Reaction to Spain’s stagnation came
primarily in the form of cultural expression, namely by the Generation of 1898
(see Spanish Literature). This literary movement represented the most
significant response to Spain’s disastrous loss in the Spanish-American War of
1898 and to what the writers viewed as Spain’s general backwardness. Among its
best-known members was the philosopher Miguel de Unamuno. At around the same
time, modernismo—a style similar to art nouveau—flourished in Catalonia.
Its leading advocate was the architect Antoni Gaudí. Spanish composers Isaac
Albéniz and Enrique Granados also achieved international recognition.
The first decades of the 20th century are
considered Spain’s Silver Age. In addition to the Generation of 1898 and Gaudí,
its representatives included Pablo Picasso, one of the greatest artists of the
20th century; surrealist painter Salvador Dalí; and surrealist filmmaker Luis
Buñuel. Among the greatest literary figures of the 1920s and 1930s were the
poets Federico García Lorca and Vicente Aleixandre. Aleixandre was later
awarded the Nobel Prize in literature.
This fertile cultural period abruptly ended with the
outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in 1936 and the subsequent dictatorship of
Francisco Franco. Censorship and a prevailing atmosphere of conservatism
stifled the arts for four decades. With the reestablishment of democracy after
1975 came an upsurge of creativity that continues to the present day. Varied in
its influences and styles, it encompasses fields in which Spain has
traditionally been prolific, such as literature and painting, as well as other
fields such as sculpture, film, music, and dance. Emblematic figures include
film director Pedro Almodóvar, sculptor Eduardo Chillida, architect and
engineer Santiago Calatrava, and operatic tenor Plácido Domingo.
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Literature
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During the Golden Age of Spanish literature, from
about 1550 to 1650, Spain produced novels, plays, and poetry of outstanding
quality and lasting influence. Cervantes wrote Don Quixote (1605), one
of the earliest and greatest novels, which changed the face of fiction.
Dramatists of the Golden Age included Lope de Vega, Pedro Calderón, and Tirso
de Molina. Spain experienced a renewed period of literary vitality in the late
19th and early 20th centuries. For more information, See Spanish
Literature.
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Art and Architecture
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Through the centuries some of the world’s greatest
painters have lived and worked in Spain. The first was Domenikos
Theotokopoulos, who was born on Crete and is better known as El Greco. His
portraits, most notably of saints, are characterized by eerily elongated
features and a dramatic use of light that also lends great power to his
landscapes. Among his best-known works are View of Toledo (about 1610,
Metropolitan Museum, New York) and The Burial of Count Orgaz (1586;
Church of Santo Tomé, Toledo, Spain).
The 17th-century painter Diego Velázquez was another
master in the use of light. His technical virtuosity places him among the most
influential painters of all time. Velázquez is best-known for the works he
painted at the Spanish royal court, such as Las Meninas (The Maids of
Honor, 1656, Prado, Madrid, Spain). However, he also produced many memorable
paintings of more humble subjects, such as The Waterseller of Seville
(Wellington Museum, London, England).
The painter Francisco Goya was best-known for his
realism and his portraiture, evident in his sometimes scathing portraits of the
Spanish royal family. Goya’s realism is most evident, however, in his
depictions of violence, such as The Third of May, 1808 (1814, Prado
Museum, Madrid), which shows Spanish civilians being shot by soldiers from the
armies of Napoleon I. As Goya became increasingly bitter and disillusioned
later in life, his themes became more grotesque, as in his etchings of war
scenes and paintings of mythological subjects such as Saturn Devouring One
of His Sons (1821-1823, Prado).
Pablo Picasso was probably the greatest figure of
modern art. His 1907 work Les Demoiselles d’Avignon (Museum of Modern
Art, New York) is considered to mark the birth of cubism. Although Picasso
spent most of his creative life outside Spain, he remained intensely Spanish.
His masterwork Guernica (1937), a massive canvas depicting the bombing
of the Basque town of Guernica during the Spanish Civil War, was bequeathed to
his homeland on his death and now hangs in the Centro de Arte Reina Sofía in
Madrid. The two other leading Spanish painters of the 20th century were
Salvador Dalí, whose surrealist images are widely reproduced, and Joan Miró,
whose style developed from surrealism into a uniquely playful form of
abstraction.
Historically, the most distinctively Spanish style of
architecture was the 16th-century plateresque. It is characterized by delicate
and elegant ornamentation on the exterior of buildings that echoed the work of
silversmiths. Modernism, which emerged around 1900, was essentially a Catalan
movement. Its emphasis on organic shapes and intricate patterns combined
features of art nouveau, a movement of that time, and Moorish architecture from
southern Spain that dated back to the Middle Ages. Modernism’s greatest
exponent in Spain was Antoni Gaudí, whose unfinished masterwork, Church of the
Sagrada Familia (Holy Family) in Barcelona, was finally nearing completion in
the early 2000s. Spanish architects who have more recently acquired
international standing include Ricardo Bofill and Santiago Calatrava.
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Theater and Film
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The classics of Spanish theater are products of the
Golden Age, between about 1550 and 1650, and are associated above all with the
dramatists Lope de Vega, Pedro Calderón, and Tirso de Molina. Not until the
1920s did Spain produce another playwright of similar stature: García Lorca.
His works, such as The House of Bernarda Alba and Yerma, combine
lyricism with the stark portrayal of personal tragedy. Lorca was also prominent
in efforts to bring theater to the rural masses.
Under the Franco dictatorship, censorship imposed
strict limits on theatrical creativity. Nonetheless, dramatists such as Antonio
Buero Vallejo were able to produce reflections on Spanish society and the
Franco regime. The removal of censorship after Franco’s death in 1975, along
with the creation of new regional governments, produced a surge in independent
and alternative theater, especially in Catalonia.
Motion pictures have enjoyed great popularity in
Spain since their beginning. One of Spain’s greatest film directors, Luis
Buñuel, made his greatest films outside Spain, which he left after the Spanish
Civil War. They include The Exterminating Angel (1962); Belle de jour
(1967); and The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie (1972). A number of
talented Spanish directors emerged in the late 20th century. Chief among them
was Pedro Almodóvar, whose dark take on the screwball comedy in Women on the
Verge of a Nervous Breakdown (1988) and Kika (1994) has brought him
international popularity.
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Music and Dance
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Spanish music has a long tradition as well as
a vitality and distinctiveness that reflect a blend of European and Arabic
influences. Yet Spain produced no major composers until the 20th century, perhaps
because the country’s most typical instrument remained the guitar. The first
Spanish composers to achieve international acclaim were Enrique Granados and
Isaac Albéniz, both of whom used popular and regional themes as the basis of
much of their music. They were followed by Manuel de Falla, whose work, while
also distinctively Spanish and relatively limited in quantity, displays a
capacity for successful innovation that marks him as Spain’s finest composer.
Similarly influenced by Spanish traditional music was Joaquín Rodrigo, who
composed a wide repertoire of ballet and orchestral works. His Concierto de
Aranjuez (1939) for guitar is one of the most widely played modern
classics. The two outstanding Spanish classical performers of the 20th century
were guitarist Andrés Segovia and cellist Pablo Casals.
Spain’s contribution to opera has been almost
exclusively on the performing side, but there it has been considerable. In
particular, soprano Montserrat Caballé and tenor Plácido Domingo have stood at
the very top of their profession for many years, while tenor José Carreras
ranks close behind. The country boasts its own form of light opera, known as zarzuela,
as well as a unique combination of guitar music, song, and dance known as
flamenco. Flamenco has a distinctive, half-broken rhythm, which in traditional
forms sticks to a limited number of patterns. In recent years, however, “new
flamenco” has been influenced by other styles such as jazz, blues, and salsa.
Guitarist Paco de Lucía, already a virtuoso in the traditional style, has been
at the forefront of these developments. At the same time, flamenco is a major
influence on contemporary Spanish popular music. See also Spanish Dance.
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Libraries and Museums
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The National Library in Madrid, founded in 1712 as
the Royal Library, is the largest in Spain. Rare books, maps, prints, and the
magnificent Sala de Cervantes, devoted to the writings of the great Spanish
novelist Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, are among the special collections of the
library. The Library of the Royal Palace (1760) in Madrid has many rare
editions from the 16th century as well as fine collections of manuscripts,
engravings, and music. One of the most complete libraries in Spain is the Complutense
University of Madrid Library, which was founded in 1341. The Escorial Library
near Madrid is known for its collection of rare books. The Archives and Library
of the Cathedral Chapter in Toledo is famous for its collection of manuscripts
from the 8th and 9th centuries and documents of the 11th century.
One of the world’s greatest art collections is
in the Museo del Prado in Madrid. The collection is particularly rich in works
by El Greco; by Spanish painters Velázquez, Francisco de Zurbarán, Bartolomé Esteban
Murillo, and Goya; by Italian painters Sandro Botticelli and Titian; by Flemish
painters Peter Paul Rubens and Hieronymus Bosch; and by Dutch painter
Rembrandt. The Centro de Arte Reina Sofía in Madrid is Spain’s national museum
of modern art, which opened in 1990. Its collection focuses on works by the
leading figures of 20th-century Spanish art, above all the painters Dalí, Miró,
and Picasso, whose masterwork Guernica is its greatest single
attraction. The Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum, which opened in 1992, contains one
of the world’s foremost private collections. It complements the collections of
the Prado and Reina Sofía and is especially strong in the areas of
impressionism and German expressionism. The best-known Spanish museum outside
Madrid is the Guggenheim in Bilbao, famous above all for its titanium-clad
design by American architect Frank Gehry. Another modern art museum, the
Instituto Valenciano de Arte Moderno, is located in Valencia. Dalí’s former
home is now a popular museum in the Catalan town of Figueres.
Spanish pottery, brocades, tapestries, and ivory
carvings are in the National Archaeological Museum in Madrid, which houses also
the most notable library on archaeology in the country. The National
Ethnological Museum in Madrid contains objects from former Spanish possessions,
including Equatorial Guinea, the Philippines, and Bolivia. Other museums in
Madrid include the Natural Science Museum and the National Museum of
Reproductions of Works of Art. Situated in Barcelona are the Maritime Museum
and the Archaeological Museum, which has a large collection of prehistoric,
Phoenician, Greek, Roman, and Visigothic art.
V
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ECONOMY OF SPAIN
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The Spanish economy has changed dramatically since
the 1950s. By the year 2000 Spain had the world’s seventh largest gross
domestic product (GDP), a measure of all the goods and services a country
produces. However, as late as the 1950s the United Nations classified Spain as
a developing country. Spain industrialized late, and only partially, so that
until the 1960s the country’s industry was confined almost entirely to the
metropolitan areas of Barcelona and Bilbao. With the exception of Madrid, which
remained primarily an administrative center, virtually all the rest of the
country lived from primary economic activities—mainly agriculture but also
fishing and mining.
When wider industrialization finally took place in
Spain, it did so under an authoritarian regime—an occurrence unique in the
Western world. As a result industrialization was based on special
circumstances, in particular the existence of a cowed labor force and massive
government protection against competition from imports. Many of Spain’s
industries belonged to the public sector. This approach produced a considerable
boom in the decade from 1962 to 1972. But it came to an abrupt halt with a jump
in petroleum prices in 1973 and the end of the Franco dictatorship two years
later. One consequence was that industry never came to dominate the Spanish
economy. No sooner had manufacturing overtaken agriculture in the early 1970s
than it, in turn, was surpassed by services.
Spain’s next major advance came in the 1980s. Entry
to the European Community in 1986, preceded by a program of industrial
restructuring (reconversión), led to a second period of rapid growth at
the end of the 1980s. This growth was fueled largely by public spending on
infrastructure and services, and by internal investment. Thereafter, Spain was
particularly hard hit by an economic slump in the early 1990s, but it also
recovered particularly strongly. In 1997, against most expectations, it
qualified for entry to European Economic and Monetary Union (EMU), the single
currency and single monetary authority in the European Union (EU).
Subsequently, Spain experienced a third boom, with economic growth rates among
the world’s highest. It weathered the economic downturn of the early 2000s
rather better than most European economies.
After 20 years of EU membership, Spain’s per
capita GDP reached nearly 90 percent of the European Union average. The gross
domestic product in 2006 was $1,224.7 billion. The national budget in 2006
included revenues of $332.5 billion and expenditures of $308.3 billion. The
economy today has become fairly typical of a developed country, dominated by
the service sector and with well under 10 percent of the workers employed in
agriculture. Spain’s participation in the global economy has also grown and by
the early 2000s came to include significant investment abroad, principally in
Latin America. Spain continues to depend on imported energy, and it has a
rather strictly regulated labor market with an accompanying high level of
unemployment.
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Labor
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In 2006 the Spanish labor force included 21.1
million people. The largest share of the workforce—65 percent—was employed in
service industries. Some 30 percent were employed in manufacturing, mining, and
construction; and 5 percent in agriculture, forestry, and fishing. Since 1980
the labor force has grown rapidly, mainly due to an increase in the numbers of
economically active women, who make up 41 percent of the labor market.
Women, like young people, are disproportionately
affected by unemployment, which has been a constant problem for Spain ever
since the 1970s. The rate peaked at 24 percent in 1994 and, despite falling
steadily since then, is among the highest in the EU, at 11 percent (2004). It
should be noted, however, that a significant proportion of those officially
recorded as jobless actually have employment of some sort in the so-called
shadow economy. Both the considerable size of the shadow economy and the
persistence and severity of unemployment are usually attributed to the
inflexible nature of Spain’s labor market. This inflexibility, in turn, is due
partly to the continuing existence of government regulations on hiring and
dismissals, and partly to the reluctance of most Spaniards to move to another
part of the country in search of jobs.
Compared to other European countries, Spain has
relatively few workers who belong to labor unions—about 10 percent. Yet labor
unions play a surprisingly prominent role in the country’s public life for
reasons that are partly historical. The unions acquired considerable moral
authority through their leading role in opposition to the Franco regime
(1939-1975). Subsequent democratic governments have sought their cooperation by
involving them in discussions and agreements on various aspects of economic
policy (concertación social).
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Agriculture, Forestry, and Fishing
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Although agriculture, forestry, and fishing contributed
almost 20 percent of Spain’s total GDP in 1960, they made up a mere 3.1 percent
in 2006. Yet agriculture retains considerable significance for Spain’s economy,
as a major employer over large areas of the country, as the basis for a range
of food processing industries, and as an important contributor to exports.
Spain’s leading crops are cereal grains, such as barley
and wheat; alfalfa; corn; sugar beets; olives; grapes; and tomatoes. In
addition, a range of other fruits and vegetables are grown in large quantities,
including potatoes, oranges, peaches, melons, apples, peppers, and onions.
Grapes are used to make wine, and olives, to make olive oil. Much of the cereal
and grass production is used as fodder for the country’s livestock.
Approximately one-fifth of agricultural production, by value, is exported.
The nature of agriculture varies across Spain.
Widespread farming, mainly of cereals and livestock, on unirrigated land
dominates much of the center of the country. Dairy farming is concentrated
along the northern coast, and olive plantations cover much of the south,
although they have diminished in importance since Spain joined the EU. Commercial
fruit and vegetable farming, on the other hand, has increased in importance,
especially along the Ebro valley in the north and, above all, on heavily
irrigated land along the southeastern and southern coasts, from Valencia round
to Cadiz. These crops now account for the bulk of agricultural exports.
Spain’s principal forestry resource is the cork oak, and
the country is one of the world’s largest cork producers. However, Spain’s
overall wood production is insufficient to cover the country’s lumber and wood-pulp
needs.
Spain has Europe’s largest fishing industry. Its
main centers are the Basque Country in the north and Galicia in the northwest.
Its total annual catch amounted to 1.1 million metric tons in 2005. Almost half
of the catch is exported. Distant fishing grounds now provide most of the
catch, those closer to home having been severely overfished. The principal
species landed are sardines, tuna, hake, mackerel, and anchovies, as well as
numerous varieties of shellfish, notably squid and mussels.
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Mining
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The mineral wealth of Spain is considerable. The
principal coal mines are in the northwest, near Oviedo; the chief iron-ore
deposits are in the same area, around Santander and Bilbao; large mercury
reserves are located in Almadén, in southwestern Spain; and copper and lead are
mined in Andalucía. In 2003 the production of the mining sector, in metric
tons, included hard and brown coal, 20.6 million; iron ore, 265,000; zinc,
70,000; copper, 5,000; and lead, 2,000. Spain also produced 5,600 kg (12,300
lb) of gold and 2 metric tons of silver. In addition, 2.4 million barrels of
petroleum were extracted.
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Manufacturing
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Spain’s manufacturing sector developed late and along
traditional lines. Until the 1980s heavy industries such as iron and steel
dominated manufacturing. Many of these industries were located in the northern
regions of Asturias and the Basque Country, both of which were badly hit when
these industries contracted. Since the 1980s lighter industries have grown up,
especially in and around Madrid and along the eastern coast. Today the largest
industrial sectors are those of food, drink, and tobacco; transportation
equipment; and chemicals and oil refining. Spain ranks among the world’s
leading producers of wine, olive oil, and automobiles, while other important
products are chemicals, refined petroleum, textiles, and clothing and footwear.
Catalonia, in the northeast, remains the country’s manufacturing heartland.
E
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Service Industries
|
Spain’s economy, like other Western economies today, is
dominated by the service sector, which accounts for 67 percent of GDP. From
1980 to 2000 Spain’s service sector grew by more than 80 percent. Its most
important components are wholesale and retail trade, public administration
(government), and tourism. Business services, including banking and financial
services, is the fastest-growing subsector of the service economy.
Wholesale and retail trade remains the largest
single service activity, and its nature is changing rapidly. The number of
smaller outlets is declining fast, while shopping malls and large self-service
stores proliferate.
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Energy
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Spain is poor in energy resources. It has
little oil or gas, and its coal reserves are of low quality. As a result it
imports over three-quarters of its energy requirements. Oil is by far the
largest source of energy. Fossil fuels generated 53 percent of Spain’s
electricity in 2003 and nuclear installations, 24 percent.
Environmental considerations have prompted efforts to develop
hydroelectric energy and other renewable energy sources, such as wind, solar,
and wave power. Hydroelectric facilities produced 16 percent of Spain’s
electricity in 2003. Spain is potentially rich in renewable sources and already
has the largest wind farm in Europe. Spain’s total output of electricity in
2003 was 247 billion kilowatt-hours.
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Currency and Banking
|
The monetary unit of Spain is the single
currency of the European Union (EU), the euro (0.80 euros equal U.S. $1;
2006 average). On January 1, 2002, euro-denominated coins and bills went into
circulation, and the peseta ceased to be legal tender. The European Central
Bank issues the currency.
The commercial banking system experienced considerable
consolidation and today is dominated by two of Europe’s largest banks, the
Santander Central Hispano (BSCH) and the Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria (BBVA).
Their nearest rivals are La Caixa and Cajamadrid. Despite many closures, the
number of bank branches per head of population remains high by international
standards. Spain has four stock exchanges, located in Madrid, Barcelona,
Bilbao, and Valencia. The Madrid exchange accounts for over 90 percent of
trading. Even it is relatively small, however, and plays only a secondary role
in the financing of Spanish business.
H
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Foreign Trade
|
In 2003, Spain imported goods valued at $210.9
billion and exported goods valued at $158.2 billion. With imports outpacing
exports, the country has a significant trade deficit. Revenues from tourism
help offset the balance of payments deficit. Spanish exports are dominated by
motor vehicles, with other important contributions coming from machinery, basic
metals, fruit and vegetables, food products, textiles, plastic goods, and
animal produce. The largest customer by far for Spanish imports is France.
Spain’s other principal buyers are Germany, Portugal, Italy, the United
Kingdom, the United States, the Netherlands, and Belgium. Spain’s imports are
heavily weighted towards capital goods—machinery of various sorts and
vehicles—and fuel, especially oil. Other significant categories are plastic and
metal products, chemicals and pharmaceuticals, textiles, and food. The leading
sources for imports are France and Germany, followed at some distance by Italy,
the United Kingdom, the United States, the Netherlands, Belgium, and China.
I
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Tourism
|
Spain was the world’s second most popular tourist
destination in the early 2000s, following France. It received 58.2 million
visitors in 2006. In addition, the majority of Spaniards take their vacations
in Spain. The climate, beaches, and historic cities of Spain are an attraction
for tourists, and tourism makes a significant contribution to the country’s
economy. Hotels, restaurants, and other tourist facilities also provide
employment for many people, at least in the tourist season. The $16.7 billion
tourists spent in 2006 helped make up for Spain’s considerable trade deficit.
Most foreign tourists come from within the EU, above all
from the United Kingdom and Germany. The main destinations continue to be the
long sandy beaches of the mainland Mediterranean coast—notably the Costa del
Sol in the south, the Costa Blanca in the southeast, and the Costa Brava in the
northeast—and the Balearic Islands and Canary Islands. However, Spain’s
historic cities also attract significant numbers of visitors, especially the
southern cities with a strong Moorish heritage, such as Granada and Córdoba.
The inland rural areas, many of which are remote and rugged by European
standards, have also begun to draw visitors.
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Transportation
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Of all the changes Spain has undergone since
the 1960s, the change in its road system may be the most sweeping of all. The
difference is not so much in the road network’s size—666,292 km (414,014 mi)—as
in its quality. As late as 1960 the quality of Spain’s roads was exceptionally
poor. By 2000 the country had about 11,000 km (6,900 mi) of expressways and
divided highways, while other main and secondary roads had also been greatly
improved. More three-quarters of all passenger journeys are made in cars; Spain
now has 455 passenger cars for every 1,000 inhabitants.
By contrast, Spain’s railways account for less than
6 percent of passenger journeys. This figure reflects the unattractiveness of
the country’s rail network, after decades of underinvestment. Of its 14,484 km
(9,000 mi) of track, almost all publicly owned and operated, little over a
quarter is double track. This is a significant factor in pushing up journey
times, because trains going in opposite directions cannot pass each other. In
addition, connections between the Spanish network and those in the rest of
Europe remain difficult, because Spanish tracks are of different width. One
positive point is the high-speed service between Madrid and Seville. Introduced
in 1992, this line was extended to Tarragona in 2006 and to Barcelona in 2008.
Spain’s leading ports are Barcelona and Bilbao. Its main
airports are at Madrid and Barcelona. Smaller airports at Malaga, Alicante, and
Palma de Mallorca cater to large numbers of holiday charter flights. The national
airline, Iberia, formerly government-owned, was privatized in 2001. Buses are
the most widely used form of public transport, outstripping rail by some
distance, for both long-distance and local urban services. Madrid and Barcelona
have extensive subway networks, and Bilbao has a smaller network.
K
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Communications
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Spain has 151 (2004) daily newspapers,
although circulation is only 100 newspapers per 1,000 people. The
largest-selling papers are the three nationwide dailies, all published in
Madrid: El País, generally regarded as Spain’s newspaper of record; ABC;
and El Mundo. Even these sell poorly outside the capital, with most
readers choosing regional, provincial, or even local dailies. The three largest
of these are the Barcelona-based El Periódico and La Vanguardia,
and El Correo, published in Bilbao. Virtually all papers appear in
Spanish. The only exception of any significance is the Catalan daily Avui.
The government exercises no direct control over the press, but it does own the
national press agency Efe, on which many daily newspapers rely heavily.
Until the 1980s Spain’s television channels were
run by the national broadcasting corporation RTVE, which is controlled by the
central government. During that decade, however, a number of stations run by
regional authorities began operation. Stations in Catalonia, the Basque
Country, Galicia, and Valencia all delivered part of their programming in their
respective regional languages. In 1990 privately owned cable channels began
operation. Virtually all homes in Spain have radio and television sets, and
Spaniards are enthusiastic listeners and viewers.
VI
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GOVERNMENT OF SPAIN
|
Spain is a relatively recent recruit to the ranks
of Western democracies. Until the 1930s the country remained under the control
of a small and mainly conservative upper class. The Second Republic, installed
in 1931, was genuinely democratic, but fell victim to the excesses of its own
supporters, the unfavorable international situation before World War II
(1939-1945), and the reactionary forces within Spain. In 1936 these right-wing
forces backed a military uprising that triggered a three-year civil war (see
Spanish Civil War). The conflict ended in 1939 with a victory for the
right-wing Nationalists (Nacionales) led by General Francisco Franco,
who ruled Spain as dictator up to his death in 1975.
After Franco’s death, political change came surprisingly
fast and smoothly. Spain held a general election in June 1977 and adopted a
new, unambiguously democratic constitution in December 1978. On February 23,
1981, the threat of a return to military rule was finally dispelled by the
resounding failure of an attempted coup. In October 1982 the Socialist Workers
Party won a landslide election victory. The peaceful acceptance of the
Socialist victory by all significant sectors of opinion confirmed that Spain’s
transition to democracy was a political reality. Today, Spain is a limited
monarchy with an influential parliament.
A
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Executive
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Spain’s head of state is a hereditary monarch whose
powers are purely symbolic. Real executive power lies with the head of
government, or prime minister (presidente del gobierno). Under the
constitution the prime minister is chosen by majority vote of the Congress of
Deputies (the lower house of parliament), and Congress’s decision is then
formally approved by the monarch. Once in office the prime minister appoints
the ministers who make up the cabinet. The prime minister can also dismiss the
cabinet ministers. Although the parliament can remove the prime minister only
if it agrees on a successor, the prime minister has the power to dissolve
parliament at any time during its four-year term.
B
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Legislature
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The Spanish parliament (Cortes) consists of two
houses: the Senate (upper house) and the Congress of Deputies (lower house).
The Congress of Deputies is the more powerful body and the scene of almost all
high-profile debates. There are 256 senators and 350 Congress deputies, all of
whom serve a four-year term, subject to the prime minister’s power to dismiss
them and call an early election. Forty-eight of the senators are chosen by
Spain’s regional parliaments, in rough proportion to regional size. The
remaining members of both houses are elected by direct vote. All Spaniards aged
18 and over are eligible to vote.
The main tasks of Spain’s parliament are to
scrutinize and approve legislation, and to control the executive, that is, call
it to account for its actions. However, most control mechanisms at its disposal
(for example, establishing committees of investigation) require a vote of the
parliamentary house concerned. Thus, if the party in power has a majority, it
can block an investigation. Parliament’s legislative role similarly has been
largely reduced to rubber-stamping executive proposals. As a result parliament
has suffered something of an identity crisis, especially severe in the case of
the Senate. The Senate can delay legislation but not block it.
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Political Parties
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Spanish politics is dominated by two parties: the
Popular Party (Partido Popular, or PP) and the Socialist Workers Party (Partido
Socialista Obrero Español, or PSOE). The conservative Popular Party
absorbed the Christian Democrats and the Liberal Party and has existed in its
present form since 1989. It enjoys strong support from the business community
and the younger urban population. The Socialist Workers Party, Spain’s oldest
party, provides the main opposition to the PP. The only other nationwide party
of significance is United Left (Izquierda Unida, or IU), which was set
up in 1986 as a broad alliance dominated by the Spanish Communist Party. IU
later suffered a series of crises and remains a minor player in the Spanish
party system.
Many small parties blossomed following Spain’s
return to democracy in the 1970s, but they have since faded away. The
exceptions are regional parties, which have grown in number and importance. The
largest of the regional parties are the Catalan Convergence and Union and the
Basque Nationalist Party. These two parties were set up in 1980 and remain the
chief representatives of long-established movements for regional self-rule. Both
are significant players at the national level, too. Nearly all of the country’s
17 regions have at least one party dedicated to advancing the region’s
interests.
D
|
Regional and Local Government
|
Spain comprises 50 provinces in 17 autonomous
regions: Andalucía, Aragón, Asturias, Balearic Islands, Basque Country (País
Vasco), Canary Islands, Cantabria, Castile-La Mancha, Castile-León, Catalonia,
Extremadura, Galicia, La Rioja, Madrid, Murcia, Navarra, and Valencia. The
regions have a degree of autonomy (self government) and control over
half of public spending in Spain. Each region has the right to legislate in
certain important fields such as education, health, and economic development,
although within a framework set by the national government. Under the 1978
constitution all the regions did not enjoy the same powers. This inequality was
later largely leveled off.
The 17 regions have nearly identical
government structures. Each has an executive branch, headed by a prime minister
chosen by the regional parliament. The members of regional parliaments are
directly elected by a partially proportional system similar to that used at the
national level. Similar arrangements exist in Spain’s two territories on the
Moroccan coast, Ceuta and Melilla, which have the status of autonomous cities.
Since 1979 Spain’s 50 provinces have had their own
executive councils. Members of these councils are elected indirectly by the municipal
(city or town) councils within the province. They are mainly responsible for
providing services in municipalities that are too small to take on such
functions.
The most genuinely local tier of government is made
up of the municipalities. There are more than 8,000 municipalities in Spain,
ranging from Madrid down to villages. Their governments are headed by a mayor.
The mayor is chosen by a directly elected council in all but the very smallest
municipalities. The functions of a municipality depend on its population, with
the largest cities having fairly widespread administrative responsibilities in
such areas as school provision, urban planning, and housing.
E
|
Judiciary
|
Spain’s judicial system is organized as a hierarchy
(in order of rank). The country’s Supreme Court stands at the top of the
hierarchy and acts as the final court of appeal. These appeals come in
particular from the high court (Audiencia Nacional), which was
established in 1977. It, too, is also essentially an appeals court, although it
also hears certain types of high-profile criminal cases—for example, cases
involving drug-trafficking. The next level down consists of the 17 regional
high courts. Lower courts are at the provincial and district level.
At all levels the judicial system is divided
into six different types of court. Two types concerned with civil cases
(non-criminal cases between individuals) and criminal cases, respectively. The
others are responsible for labor issues, disputes involving the administration
of government agencies, cases involving juveniles, and prison supervision. The
ministry of justice administers the court system.
A constitutional court stands apart from the judiciary
as a whole. Its task is to interpret the constitution. It does this in three
main ways: by resolving disputes between the central government and the regions
over the extent of their respective power; by checking new legislation for
compatibility with the constitution; and by responding to complaints of
unconstitutional treatment from individual citizens.
F
|
Health and Welfare
|
Spain has a health and welfare system
comparable to those in other western European countries. The basis for it is a
social security act passed in 1990. This law defines the circumstances
entitling citizens to benefits, such as old age, illness, widowhood,
unemployment, and disability. It also establishes a distinction between
contributory and non-contributory benefits. People with no other means of
support receive non-contributory benefits funded through taxation.
Contributions from employers and employees finance contributory benefits, and
entitlement to these benefits depends upon sufficient contributions having been
made. The most important contributory benefits are unemployment benefits and
pensions paid to older people, widows, and the disabled.
Healthcare is by far the most important
non-contributory benefit. It is delivered free of charge, with the exception of
medications, dental care, and psychiatric care. The Spanish National Health
Service was established by the 1986 General Health Act. Overall coordination is
the function of the National Health Service Agency, but the government has
transferred wide-ranging management responsibility to regional health services
run by the 17 regional governments. Spain’s health system has been criticized,
especially for long waiting lists at hospitals. However, it is a great deal
better than the system that existed in 1980.
Social services, such as nonmedical care of the elderly
and disabled, have been neglected. In the absence of programs from the national
government, the services are provided largely by regional and local
governments.
G
|
Defense
|
Spain maintains armed services equipped with modern
weapons. It has a professional army made up of volunteers. The system of
compulsory military service was abolished by a law passed in 1999. This law
also removed the last restrictions on women serving in the armed forces. In
2004 the country had an army of 95,600, a navy of 19,455, and an air force of
22,750. Under an agreement reached in 1953, the Spanish government has had
close defense ties with the United States, which maintains naval and air bases
in Spain. The country became a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) in 1982, and reaffirmed that alliance in a public referendum in 1986.
VII
|
HISTORY OF SPAIN
|
A
|
Overview
|
Spain began the 21st century as a wealthy,
urbanized, industrial, and democratic European country. Spain’s path to modernity
differed in many ways from other parts of Europe. Located at the far
southwestern corner of Europe and geographically isolated by steep mountains
and seas, Spain has often appeared distant from European cultural developments.
The Industrial Revolution, which began in Great Britain during the late 18th
century, spread slowly to Spain. In the 20th century the brutal Spanish Civil
War (1936-1939) and the ensuing dictatorship of Francisco Franco seemed to set
Spain apart from a prosperous, democratic, and modern Europe.
For much of its history, however, Spain has
been a historical crossroads. The Strait of Gibraltar, at the tip of Spain,
permits easy travel between Spain and Africa. Since prehistory peoples have
entered Spain from other parts of Europe and Africa. The Iberian Peninsula,
with its many seaports, made it easy for seafaring Mediterranean peoples to
land in search of natural resources. Spain’s earliest written history tells of
a long sequence of migrations and cultural mingling. Home to Iberians in
prehistory, Spain was colonized by Celtic and Phoenician settlers by the 8th
century bc. The name Spain (Hispania)
owes its origins to the Phoenicians, who called the Iberian Peninsula “Span,”
which meant hidden or remote land. Celtic and Phoenician settlers were followed
by Greeks and Carthaginians and then by Romans. It took Roman soldiers 200
years to conquer all of Spain, a process completed in the 1st century bc.
As a part of the Roman Empire, most of
Spain’s population became Christian and began to speak languages based on
Latin. Romans were followed by Germanic peoples who came overland from Europe
and entered Spain in the 5th century ad.
These ancient tribes included Vandals, who passed through and settled in
Africa, and Visigoths, who settled in Spain to build a kingdom. Persistent
conflict among Visigothic nobles weakened the monarchy, and in 711 Spain was
invaded again, this time by Muslims from Africa. For centuries the Muslim conquerors
would control much of the Iberian Peninsula. The high point of Islamic culture
in Spain occurred in the 10th century. Muslim rulers introduced new crops and
efficient irrigation systems, trading and commerce thrived, and mathematics,
medicine, and philosophy flourished.
Muslim power declined after 1000 as Christian kingdoms
in northern Spain, supplemented by migrants from Europe, gradually moved
southward to take control of the peninsula. That process was completed in 1492
with the Christian conquest of Granada, the last Muslim kingdom in Spain. The
most important Christian kingdoms were Castile, Aragón, and Portugal. Castile
emerged as the largest and strongest of these monarchies, and it was central to
the construction of the Catholic, Castilian-speaking society of medieval Spain.
By 1500 the migrations were over, but Spain
remained an important crossroads. Spain was well located for seaborne trade
between the Mediterranean and northern Europe. In the late 15th century
navigators in the service of Spain began to explore the Americas, and they
discovered great quantities of silver. American silver made Spain central to
Europe’s expanding world trade. At the same time, dynastic marriages and
diplomacy gave Spain control of a huge European empire. Spain’s American and
European empires lasted in various forms until the early 19th century, when
they largely disappeared in the wake of the French Revolution (1789-1799) and
the Napoleonic Wars (1799-1815).
Throughout the 19th century Spaniards fought and
argued about their government and the appropriate amount of popular
participation in politics. During this time, Spain gradually entered the
Industrial Revolution, and the expanding economy created new political forces.
Still, no single faction succeeded in commanding a political majority. Many
Spaniards looked to the army to bring order out of chaos, and it became another
powerful faction.
By the early 20th century Spain’s government
was democratic on paper but it was controlled by an oligarchy that refused to share
power. Political groups increasingly resorted to anarchy and violence, and in
1923 General Miguel Primo de Rivera became dictator. Primo de Rivera’s
dictatorship was followed by a remarkable experiment with democracy in the
1930s that was suppressed by the Spanish Civil War. The war cost Spain more
than 500,000 lives and resulted in the long dictatorship of Francisco Franco.
After Franco’s death in 1975, Spain began the rapid transition to the dynamic,
modern, and democratic European nation it is today.
B
|
Spain in Antiquity
|
B1
|
Early Peoples
|
People have occupied the Iberian Peninsula for
hundreds of thousands of years. Fossils of primitive humans unearthed in
northern Spain’s Atapuerca hills are at least 780,000 years old—some of the
oldest human remains ever discovered in Europe. Anatomically modern humans
probably appeared in Spain 30,000 to 40,000 years ago. A remarkable series of
paintings of bison, deer, and other animals, some dated at approximately 14,000
years old, adorn the deep cave at Altamira, in northern Spain. These graceful
depictions provide evidence of a sophisticated Paleolithic hunting culture.
About 1500 bc a North
African people called Iberians began to move northward, across the Strait of
Gibraltar. By 1000 bc the Iberians
were well established on the peninsula. The Iberians developed a system of
writing and built many towns. Another ancient people, the Basques, inhabited
the western Pyrenees and probably predated the arrival of the Iberians. About 700
bc a people known as Celts
migrated from France into northern Spain and imposed their Indo-European
language and culture on indigenous peoples. Iberians and Celts met in central
Spain and gradually merged into a people called the Celtiberians. These Celtiberians
first dominated the central plateau and the west, and then occupied the
peninsula’s eastern coast.
Regional differences among these sophisticated
prehistoric cultures foreshadowed distinctions that are still evident today.
The northern, central, and western areas were thinly populated, reliant on
grazing and livestock, and dominated by Celtic culture. The south was mostly
Iberian and dotted with towns. The Iberians and Celtiberians were expert
metalworkers. Many southern towns were mining centers that produced finely
crafted metal weapons and tools. Over time the metalworkers shifted from copper
to bronze and then to iron, all of which were mined in southern Spain.
Spain’s mineral riches drew Mediterranean trade from the
earliest times, and many Mediterranean peoples established colonies in the
southern and eastern parts of the Iberian Peninsula. According to legend, the
Phoenicians, a people from the eastern shores of the Mediterranean, sailed to
Spain as early as 1100 bc (see Phoenicia).
However, archaeological evidence suggests that Cádiz (ancient Gadir;
later Gades), Spain’s oldest Phoenician city, was founded in the 8th
century bc. Seafaring Greeks
established several colonies on the east coast by the 600s bc, including Ampurias (ancient Emporion)
and Sagunto (ancient Saguntum). The Greeks traded with the Celtiberians
and the Phoenicians. In the 500s bc
inhabitants of the powerful North African city of Carthage, originally a
Phoenician colony in modern Tunisia, entered southern Spain. The Carthaginians
supplanted their Phoenician predecessors and built several more colonies. In
228 bc Cartagena (ancient Carthago
Novo) was founded in southeastern Spain to serve as the capital of
Carthage’s Iberian domains. Archaeological evidence, including artifacts
reflecting a mixture of Carthaginian and Iberian culture, suggest that these
trading centers coexisted peacefully.
As Carthage’s influence in Mediterranean trade grew, a
rivalry developed between Carthage and Rome, another rising Mediterranean
power. In the First Punic War (264-241 bc)
Rome defeated Carthage and forced it to surrender Carthaginian possessions in
Sicily and to pay a large indemnity (see Punic Wars). After this costly
defeat, Carthage looked to the Iberian Peninsula to rebuild its trading empire.
The Carthaginian general Hamilcar Barca conquered southern and eastern Spain
from 237 to 228 bc and founded a
colony at Barcelona. In 219 bc
Barca’s son, the Carthaginian general Hannibal, seized the Greek colony of Saguntum,
violating an agreement with Rome regarding the limits of Carthage’s expansion
on the Iberian Peninsula. This precipitated the Second Punic War (218-201 bc), during which Hannibal used Spain as
the base for an invasion of modern Italy. By 206 bc the Romans had forced Carthage out of Spain.
B2
|
Roman Conquest
|
It took the Romans two centuries to gain
complete control of Spain. Rome fought several extended wars against the Celtiberians,
and its armies had to fight even longer to subdue the Celts and Basques in the
north. The Celtiberian capital of Numantia was not captured until 133 bc, after years of fierce resistance
against Roman assaults. When the Romans finally entered Numantia, the city’s
surviving citizens set fire to it and committed mass suicide. The northern
tribes did not submit to Rome until 19 bc.
Spain, like Rome’s other provinces, was governed
ineffectively in the early years of Roman rule. Provincial governors appointed
by Rome often used their positions for personal enrichment, glory, and to
advance their political careers. Corruption was rampant, and provincial
governors imposed arbitrary taxes and freely conscripted men for their armies.
The administration of Spain improved after the Roman
Republic gave way to the Roman Empire in 27 bc.
Rome divided Spain into three separately governed provinces: Lusitania (most of
modern Portugal) in the west, Baetica in the south, and Hispania Tarraconensis,
in the center, north, northwest, and eastern coast above Cartagena.
B2a
|
Romanization
|
The Romanization of Spain proceeded rapidly under
the Roman Empire. A code of law was established, and commerce flourished.
Roads, bridges, and aqueducts were constructed that still stand today. Port
cities carried on active trade in minerals, oil, wine, wheat, and other
products. The Romans improved the towns and built large villas (estates)
in the countryside that controlled significant numbers of peasant laborers and
slaves. The estates relied on agricultural and livestock production, a pattern
that persists to this day. The large villas existed alongside smaller farms,
some of which preceded Roman occupation. Other small holdings were granted to
Roman army veterans—a practice used by Rome to help colonize new lands. Latin
became the official language and many Spaniards became full Roman citizens.
Indigenous leaders achieved positions of influence and power in Roman Spain and
they helped govern the peninsula.
By the 1st century ad the region of Andalucía in southern Spain was heavily
Romanized and native languages had largely disappeared. Romanization did not
reach all parts of Spain, however, especially in the north. In the Basque
provinces, Latin never replaced the ancient Basque language, which is still
spoken.
B2b
|
Christianity
|
The Roman Empire officially legalized Christianity
under Emperor Constantine the Great in the early 4th century. Persecution of
Christians ended and the church won legal rights and financial support from
Rome. Although Christianity had first entered Spain in the 2nd century,
conversion proceeded slowly in some regions. Christian churches and monasteries
gradually appeared, but pagan religions continued for a long time, particularly
in northern areas defended by Roman army garrisons. Many soldiers belonged to
pagan cults, making it politically risky for Rome to push conversion too hard.
Christianity was well established in Spain by the 5th
century, but by then the Roman Empire was changing. Epidemics, crop failures,
and civil wars had divided the Roman Empire into two parts, the Eastern Roman
Empire and the Western Roman Empire. In the Western Roman Empire, which
controlled much of Spain, a power vacuum ensued. Civil administration in Spain
fell largely to Roman Catholic bishops, and they helped maintain order and
continuity with Roman traditions as Roman political authority broke down. About
the same time, nomadic peoples spread out across Europe in a series of mass
migrations. These migrations would eventually contribute to the collapse of the
Western Roman Empire in 476.
B3
|
Visigothic Spain
|
In 409 Germanic tribes migrating south crossed the
Pyrenees and swept into the Iberian Peninsula. The most important of these, the
Vandals, settled in central and southern Spain. Another group, the Suevi,
established a kingdom in northwestern Spain. Roman rule in Spain disintegrated
as Roman authority gave way to a mosaic of barbarian settlements. In an attempt
to stem the havoc brought by the invasions, Rome appealed to the Visigoths, who
had settled in parts of modern France (see Goths). Partly Romanized by
their contact with the Roman Empire during previous conquests, the Visigoths
brought their armies into Spain and soon became the dominant power. In 429 the
Visigoths forced the Vandals from the peninsula into North Africa. By 500
Visigoths controlled all of Spain except a strip in the south occupied by the
Eastern Roman Empire, also known as the Byzantine Empire.
As the Visigoths advanced into Spain, they
established a kingdom in southern France, with its capital at Toulouse. The
Visigothic kings ruled Spain from France, treating it as an occupied province
and sending royal counts and garrisons to the main towns. However, in 507
another Germanic group, the Franks, routed Visigothic forces in the decisive
Battle of Vouillé and drove the Visigoths from most of France. The Visigoths
then migrated deep into the Iberian Peninsula. They eventually established a
new capital at Toledo in central Spain.
The Visigoths were far outnumbered by their
subjects, and they ruled mainly through military occupation. The Visigoths
never developed a strong central bureaucracy to enforce royal authority.
Instead, they relied largely on the Roman Catholic Church, which had preserved
many of the old Roman administrative arrangements and retained significant
control over local government. Visigothic kings continued to depend on the
Church and the indigenous Hispano-Roman nobility to collect taxes, educate the
population, and administer justice.
The Visigothic monarchy was generally unstable and weak.
The monarchy adopted royal symbols and titles that imitated the Byzantine
court, but it lacked a stable system of succession. Because Visigothic nobles
traditionally elected their king from among their own ranks, dynastic struggles
for power frequently broke the peace. The high point of the Visigothic monarchy
came under King Leovigild (569-586) and his son Recared (586-601). They
expelled Byzantines from the south and pacified the peninsula. In the early 7th
century the Visigoths conquered the last remaining Byzantine strongholds in the
peninsula and established the first kingdom that included all of modern Spain
and Portugal.
At first the Visigoths were not well integrated
into the native Hispano-Roman population. Most of Spain was Roman Catholic. The
Visigoths followed Arianism, a form of Christianity that Catholics considered
heretical, and they had a different legal system. This led to strife between
Catholic and Arian religious leaders. However, the two societies gradually came
together. In 589 King Recared converted to Catholicism, which he adopted as the
monarchy’s official religion. The reign of King Recceswinth (649-672) saw the
completion of a single legal code for the entire kingdom, the Liber
Iudiciorum, published in 654. One of the Visigoths’ greatest achievements,
the code fused principles of Roman law with elements of Germanic customary law.
By 700 Visigothic Spain was a complex medieval
society that held an important place in Mediterranean learning and commerce.
While the achievements of the Visigothic monarchy never matched those of Rome,
it did succeed in unifying an area similar to that of modern Spain—a
considerable feat. Visigothic Spain was the largest unified region in the
Europe of its time, with a developed legal code, a church hierarchy, and a
rudimentary bureaucracy. Despite these accomplishments, the Visigoths were too
embroiled in internal struggles to mount an effective defense of the realm.
Muslim armies in North Africa posed the most
serious threat to Visigothic Spain. In the early 8th century Muslim forces
began conducting raids on Spain’s southern coast. North African Muslims
included Arabs, who had swept across the region from the Middle East in the 7th
century, and Berbers, the indigenous North African peoples conquered by the
Arabs (see Spread of Islam).
In 710 a battle for succession to the
Visigothic throne erupted following the death of King Witiza. Dynastic conflict
prevented the succession of Witiza’s son, and Roderick, duke of Baetica,
claimed the throne. In an effort to oust Roderick, Witiza’s family appealed to
Muslims in North Africa for help. The Muslims quickly agreed. In 711 a Muslim
army under the command of Berber general Tariq ibn-Ziyad crossed the Strait of
Gibraltar and invaded Spain. After defeating Roderick’s army at the Battle of
Guadalete in southern Spain, Muslim forces advanced swiftly into the rest of
Spain.
B4
|
Muslim Rule
|
By 719 Muslims controlled most of the Iberian
Peninsula. The Moors, as the Muslim conquerors came to be known, pushed
northward into France, where their advance was repelled near Poitiers by Frankish
leader Charles Martel in 732. The Moors then retreated south of the Pyrenees,
and for the next several centuries they dominated nearly all of Spain.
At first Islamic Spain, or al-Andalus, as it was
known, was ruled as part of the Province of North Africa, a division of the
caliphate of Damascus. At that time Damascus, in modern Syria, was the capital
of the Islamic world and the residence of the powerful Umayyad caliphs
(religious and secular leaders). The power of the caliphate in Spain was weak, however,
and governors (emirs) appointed by Damascus had little real authority.
In 750 the Abbasids deposed the Umayyad ruling family in Damascus and claimed
the caliphate.
Abd-ar-Rahman I, a member of the Umayyad family,
fled Syria and in 756 established an independent emirate at Córdoba in southern
Spain. His Iberian Umayyad dynasty centralized power and ruled al-Andalus for
almost 300 years. Córdoba reached its peak under Abd-ar-Rahman III, who
established the caliphate of Córdoba in 929. By then Córdoba was one of the
largest and most cosmopolitan cities in the Mediterranean world.
Over time ruling elites across Muslim Spain
challenged Córdoba, and other Muslim cities became independent. This trend
accelerated in 1036 with the death of the last Umayyad caliph. Spain fragmented
into a mosaic of small, independent Muslim kingdoms, known as taifas.
The most important of these were Córdoba, Seville, Granada, Toledo, Lisbon,
Zaragoza, Murcia, and Valencia.
B4a
|
Life in Muslim Spain
|
Spanish society became increasingly complex under Muslim
rule. This is partly because Islamic conquest did not involve the systematic
conversion of the conquered population to Islam. Islam restricted the ability
of Muslim rulers to tax other Muslims, making it financially advantageous for a
ruler to have non-Muslim subjects. At the same time, Christians and Jews were
recognized under Islam as “peoples of the book.” Christianity and Judaism
shared with Islam the tradition of the Old Testament, and Islam considered
Jesus Christ a major prophet. Thus, Christians and Jews were free to practice
their religion, but they had to pay a prescribed poll tax. Conversion to Islam
therefore proceeded slowly. In many areas Muslim rulers found it easier to rely
on the existing Christian network of local authority.
The Roman Catholic Church in Muslim Spain continued
to function, although it lost contact with religious reforms in Rome. Muslim
Spain came to include a growing number of Mozarabic Christians, people who
adopted Arabic language and culture and followed forms of religious service
different from those of Rome. In addition, Jews held prominent positions in
government, commerce, and the professions under Muslim rule.
The Muslim community in Spain was itself diverse and
beset by social tensions. From the beginning the Berber tribespeople of North
Africa clashed with the Arabs of Egypt and the Middle East. The Berbers, who
were comparatively recent converts to Islam, accounted for the largest share of
Moors in Spain and they resented the sophistication and aristocratic
pretensions of the Arab elite. Meanwhile, many Christians in Spain, including
Visigothic nobles, converted to Islam. Conversion was commonplace among
merchants, large landowners, and other local elites. Drawn into the politics of
Islamic power, many Christians found that conversion made it easier to maintain
their influence. Despite being Muslim, however, former Christians often faced
discrimination. These tensions led to struggles between the established Muslim
leadership and local lords from once Christian families.
Spain was wealthy and sophisticated under Islamic
rule. Mediterranean trade and cultural exchange flourished. Muslims imported a
rich intellectual tradition from the Middle East and North Africa, including
knowledge about mathematics, science, and philosophy, and they continued to
build upon it in Spain. Crops and farming techniques introduced by the Arabs,
including new irrigation practices, led to a remarkable expansion of
agriculture. In towns and cities the Muslims constructed magnificent mosques,
palaces, and other architectural monuments, many of which still stand today.
Outside the cities the mixture of large estates and small farms that existed in
Roman times remained largely intact, because Muslim leaders rarely dispossessed
landowners. The Muslim conquerors were relatively few in number and they
generally tried to maintain good relations with their subjects.
Roman, Jewish, and Muslim culture interacted in
complex ways. A large part of the population gradually adopted Arabic. Even
Jews and Christians often spoke Arabic, while Hebrew and Latin were frequently
written in Arabic script. These diverse traditions interchanged in ways that
gave Spanish culture—religion, literature, music, art and architecture, and
writing systems—a rich and distinctive heritage.
B4b
|
Christian Reconquest and the Decline of Muslim Power
|
The Muslim advance never succeeded in conquering
the entire Iberian Peninsula. A remnant of Christian rule survived in northern
Spain, even as Muslim power reached its zenith. In the early years of Muslim
rule the Christian states fought mainly among themselves. Also, as the Muslims
prospered, they lost the incentive for further conquest.
In 718 the Visigothic chieftain Pelayo, a survivor
of the Muslim victory at the Battle of Guadalete, founded the tiny kingdom of
Asturias in the mountains of northwestern Spain. In an encounter that is based
in part on legend, Pelayo’s forces defeated a Muslim army at the glen of
Covadonga. This small victory came to be seen as the first decisive action of
the Christian reconquest (reconquista), the campaign by Christians to
retake Spain from the Muslims.
The reconquest has long figured prominently in
stories about Spain’s modern national identity. As such, chroniclers have often
portrayed it as a heroic Christian crusade to expel the heretical Muslims
intruders. But these accounts oversimplify centuries of intermingling between
Christians and Muslims. They also exaggerate the coherence of the reconquest.
All told, more than 750 years of intermittent fighting and shifting alliances
would pass before the reconquest was complete.
By the late 9th century Christian rulers had
gained control of about one-third of the peninsula. Under the rule of Alfonso
III the kingdom of Asturias expanded greatly, reaching across much of the
northwest and as far south as the valley of the Douro (or Duero). The territorial
gains of Asturias came at the expense of Christian and Muslim rulers alike.
Several new Christian kingdoms began to emerge in the northeast, including
Navarre in the Pyrenees and, farther to the east, Aragón. Frankish rule also
extended into northern Spain and included several counties in Catalonia.
With the collapse of the caliphate in Córdoba
and fragmentation of Muslim Spain into small and independent kingdoms, Muslim
regions became increasingly vulnerable to Christian expansion. In the 10th and
11th centuries, Christian forces gradually moved south, bringing central Spain
under Christian rule.
The northwestern kingdom of Castile and León, which
included the former kingdom of Asturias, gained the greatest share of lands
reconquered from the Muslims. Castile and León captured the Muslim kingdom of
Toledo in 1085, annexed its lands, and pushed the frontier of Christian Spain
south beyond the Tagus River. The Muslim lands annexed by Castile and León
became known as New Castile. The capture of Toledo—the ancient capital of
Visigothic Spain—marked the first time a major city in Muslim Spain had fallen
to Christian forces, and it served to sharpen the religious aspect of the
Christian reconquest. In subsequent centuries this dimension of the conflict
would grow stronger.
Christian expansion was slowed at first by new Muslim
forces entering Spain. In the early 11th century, a large part of northwestern
Africa was under the control of the Almoravids, a fundamentalist Muslim
movement led by Yusuf ibn Tashfin, a Berber chieftain. The fall of Toledo
alarmed many Spanish Muslims and prompted several Muslim leaders to invite
Yusuf and the Almoravids to Spain. The Almoravids invaded Spain in 1086,
conquered numerous Muslim kingdoms, and pushed back the Christians. But the
advancing Muslims failed to retain control of the kingdom of Valencia, which
was captured by Spanish hero El Cid in 1094. El Cid became legendary as the one
Christian leader who defied the Almoravids. After El Cid’s death in 1099,
however, Valencia returned to Muslim control.
A second conservative Muslim movement from North Africa,
the Almohads, entered Spain and attacked the Almoravids. By the 1140s the
Almoravids’ power had disintegrated. Once again Muslim Spain became a mosaic of
small taifas. Over the next half century the Almohads established control in
Andalucía and recaptured much of New Castile. Christian kingdoms, however,
gradually learned to collaborate. In 1212 the Almohads suffered a disastrous
defeat at the hands of Christian forces in the Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa,
on the plains of Toledo. Muslim power collapsed, opening the heart of Andalucía
to Christian attack.
The Christian kingdoms of Castile and Aragón continued
to expand into Muslim territories, and by 1230 Christian armies had captured
most of Andalucía. Only the wealthy kingdom of Granada remained Muslim. Muslims
maintained control of Granada until 1492, when Castile, with the help of
Aragón, conquered the kingdom, ending centuries of Muslim rule in Spain.
C
|
The Late Medieval Period
|
After the mid-13th century Muslims no longer posed
a serious challenge to the Christian kingdoms, whose rulers began to establish
centralized political control. A period of dynastic struggles and civil wars
ensued. Castile and León (permanently joined in 1230) and Aragón emerged as the
most powerful kingdoms in Spain. By 1400 Castile and León had a large army and
navy and it controlled Spain’s Atlantic trade. Aragón, meanwhile, dominated the
western Mediterranean. By the 1460s its empire included the region of Aragón,
Catalonia, Valencia, Mallorca, Minorca, Sardinia, Sicily, and southern Italy.
Aragón’s influence also reached into northern Africa, especially Tunisia. The
kingdoms of Castile and Aragón each had its own interests, and each was
important in 15th-century Europe.
Medieval Christian Spain was organized around several
key institutions. Warfare preoccupied the Christian monarchs, and royal
institutions evolved to fight and pay for wars. The medieval monarchies
collected few taxes until after 1100. They maintained their authority and
ability to wage war through a combination of cash income from tolls and
commercial taxes, income from the king’s own estates, and the ability to grant jurisdictional
rights to nobles in return for military service. In a predominantly
agricultural economy, grants of jurisdictional rights over farming towns or
districts provided soldiers with a source of income; peasants working the land
paid rent and provided services to their masters.
As the economy became more complex, the crown
exacted more revenue in the form of taxes. Kings had little bureaucracy to
collect these taxes, so they signed contracts with nobles and town governments
to collect the taxes for them. As taxation increased, however, wealthy families
and representatives from the towns forced the monarchies to consult with them
in parliamentary assemblies known as cortes.
C1
|
Major Institutions
|
C1a
|
Parliamentary Assemblies
|
The development of parliamentary assemblies, or
cortes, served to check the power of the monarchs and royal officials. The
cortes in Castile were relatively weak compared to those that developed in
Aragón. The Castilian cortes originally had three houses, one each for clergy,
nobility, and the towns. However, after the monarchy stopped convening the
first two, the cortes consisted solely of representatives from the towns. The
Castilian monarch often deferred to the cortes, and needed its approval to
collect taxes, but assertions of royal power were largely unchallenged.
In Aragón the cortes had four houses, one each
for clergy, upper nobility, lower nobility, and the towns. Consent of the
Aragónese cortes was needed for all significant legislation; it could veto
royal initiatives and determine the royal succession. In addition, power in
Aragón was more decentralized than in Castile, which had a single royal
government. Each of Aragón’s provinces had its own cortes, and a general cortes
composed of all of the provincial assemblies occasionally convened. These
arrangements forced the monarch in Aragón to negotiate with more groups to get
what he wanted.
C1b
|
Aristocracy
|
A powerful aristocracy developed in medieval Spain. By
1400 a few great clans dominated the aristocracy in Castile. In the north,
aristocratic estates included jurisdictional rights that gave nobles control of
local offices and taxation. Much of the land, however, actually belonged to
peasants or the towns. In the south, however, Castilian kings gave large tracts
of lands taken during the reconquest to Christian military leaders. These land
grants are the origin of the latifundia, large estates owned by powerful
families. Lords of the estates hired day workers to herd the sheep and farm the
land. This created a system of debt peonage. Poor laborers who owed money to
landlords could not afford to move unless they paid up.
A landed aristocracy also emerged in Aragón, but
the power of Aragónese nobles was challenged by the wealthy merchant families
of Barcelona, who could block decisions that they disliked in the cortes.
Aragónese merchants were much less interested in the reconquest than the landed
nobility, who stood to gain additional lands and jurisdictional rights. For
merchants, the reconquest meant the disruption of profitable trade. In the
cortes, merchants generally opposed taxes on trade and preferred taxes on land
and agriculture; landed nobles generally favored the reverse.
C1c
|
Local Government
|
The exercise of royal power depended on the
cooperation of town governments. In exchange for the authority to manage local
affairs, towns collected many of the king’s taxes and implemented royal edicts.
Land grants issued by the monarchy, called propios, provided rents that
helped support local governments. Most landowners took part in town meetings
and elected the town councils. As towns grew in size and economic importance,
local government often became dominated by the local nobility. Some town
governments, however, remained independent of the nobility, and they helped the
king limit the power of the landed aristocracy.
C1d
|
Roman Catholic Church
|
The Roman Catholic Church exercised significant
power in medieval Spain. The church was important in two ways. First, it made
royal authority legitimate, through the doctrine of the divine right of kings.
People who did not accept Catholicism were suspected of disloyalty to the
monarchy. Second, it asserted spiritual jurisdiction over all Spaniards. As
both head of the Catholic Church and a foreign ruler, the pope could call upon
church members in Spain to undermine royal policy. The papacy, for instance, frequently
opposed royal actions that were perceived as conflicting with the church’s
interests in other countries, and it sought to prevent kings from diverting the
income of the church into the royal treasury. For these reasons, kings tried to
control the selection of bishops in their territory. The church also controlled
an immense amount of wealth, which it accumulated in the form of bequests when
people died. Wealth and papal political influence gave the church great power
that kings often sought to restrict.
The church consisted of several influential
organizations. The most important were the monasteries and the military
religious orders. Monasteries participated in the Christian reconquest, and
several bishops and abbots led armies. As the idea of a crusade grew in
popularity, the pope encouraged another religious institution in Spain, the
military orders. The most important of these included the orders of Santiago,
Calatrava, and Alcántara. Knights in the orders took religious vows to fight
the infidels, and they played a significant military role in the reconquest
between 1150 and 1250. The orders were granted tracts of land to support the
reconquest, and those who were admitted gained the status of nobles. Later, the
orders grew wealthy and lost their original purpose.
C1e
|
Economic Development
|
Spain’s medieval economy prospered. Agriculture
flourished, and farmers in central Spain raised wheat, grapes, olives, sheep,
and cattle. Most agricultural goods were consumed locally. The exception was
wool. As Europe’s economy grew, European demand for Spanish wool rapidly
expanded. By the 1200s regional organizations of sheep owners (mestas)
were established in Castile, and the monarchy chartered a national Council of
the Mesta. The council was granted a special court to resolve disputes with
farmers over damage caused to cultivated lands by grazing. In return for such
privileges, the Mesta agreed to pay taxes to the king on sheep migrating
through key mountain passes. It also became wealthy itself and frequently
loaned money to the monarchy.
The Black Death, an outbreak of bubonic plague
that swept across Europe in the mid-14th century, reduced farming and increased
livestock grazing in Spain. The plague decreased the population in Europe by as
much as one-third. Many farms were turned into pasture because it took fewer
people to herd sheep than to farm. Grazing also became more profitable than
farming because the smaller population needed less food, leading to a decline
in food prices. As a result, people had more income to spend on luxuries such
as wool cloth. The stronger market for wool reinforced the shift to grazing.
Commerce thrived in medieval Spain. Barcelona was
an important banking center by 1200 and Aragón dominated trade between Spain,
France, Italy, and North Africa. This trade included cloth, food, gold, slaves,
and ransomed prisoners. The Basque region became the largest source of iron in
Europe and developed several important industries, including shipbuilding,
fishing, and whaling.
D
|
The Making of a World Power
|
In 1469 Isabella of Castile (later Isabella
I), heiress to the Castilian throne, married her cousin, Ferdinand of Aragón
(later Ferdinand V). Isabella was declared queen of Castile and León in 1474,
and by 1476 Isabella had won control of the kingdom amidst a war of succession
for the crown. Ferdinand, who ruled Castile alongside Isabella, inherited
Aragón in 1479, and the two monarchs became joint rulers of both kingdoms. The
partnership between the rulers of the Iberian Peninsula’s most powerful
monarchies set in motion the developments that made Spain a great power. During
their rule, they established the Spanish Inquisition to enforce uniform
adherence to the Catholic faith. In 1492 Isabella and Ferdinand conquered
Granada, the last Muslim kingdom on the Iberian Peninsula, and expelled from
Spain Jews who would not convert to Christianity. That same year they sponsored
a voyage of Genoese navigator Christopher Columbus, who was seeking a westward
route to Asia. Columbus’s discoveries preceded a spectacular expansion into the
Americas that brought enormous wealth and control of vast new overseas
territories to Spain.
Ferdinand and Isabella greatly expanded Spain’s
influence on the continent by marrying their children to the heirs of other
European rulers. When their grandson, Charles, came to the throne as Charles I
of Spain, he inherited a vast amount of territory in Europe. In 1519, as
Charles V, he became emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, the largest Western
empire since the Roman Empire. Subsequent Spanish kings ruled vast European
domains and faced many foreign threats. They met these threats using wealth
from Spain’s huge American empire.
D1
|
Union of the Spanish Kingdoms
|
After their marriage, Ferdinand and Isabella succeeded
in combining Castile and Aragón into an effective political unit. But they were
less preoccupied with the task of unification than with stabilizing their
authority and building reliable political alliances at home. It was a union of
crowns, rather than of kingdoms. The two rulers ruled jointly, collaborating on
religious and foreign policies but retaining distinct parliamentary and
administrative institutions in each kingdom. Castile and Aragón also kept their
different outlooks toward the world. Castile was oriented to Africa and the
Atlantic Ocean, while Aragón, the smaller and poorer kingdom, looked toward
Italy and the western Mediterranean.
D2
|
Consolidation of Power
|
Above all, Ferdinand and Isabella sought to
establish law and order in their realms. For much of the 15th century Castile
and Aragón were convulsed by civil war. A unified crown and stronger monarchy
could help the rulers defend their lands from enemies, especially from
non-Christians. Under Ferdinand and Isabella, royal power emerged as the
greatest authority in the land. In Castile they reformed the judicial system
and weakened the upper nobility by limiting their access to the royal
administration. Both these steps laid the basis for royal absolutism. They also
developed an efficient bureaucracy by favoring the selection of
university-educated candidates as royal officials. This helped make Castile one
of the largest and most modern European states of its time. Royal power was
further enhanced with the conquest of Granada, the last Muslim stronghold on
the Iberian Peninsula, in 1492. This completed the Christian reconquest of
Spain.
D3
|
The Spanish Inquisition
|
For the Catholic Monarchs (Reyes Católicos)—a
title given to Ferdinand and Isabella by Pope Alexander VI for their religious
devotion—religious observation was central to achieving domestic peace. The
Spanish monarchs, like their European counterparts, were believed to rule as
trustees of God. This direct link to divine authority is what made rulers
legitimate in Europe. It also made non-Christians or heretics dangerous because
their rejection of Christianity implied that they did not accept the monarch’s
right to rule.
In 1478 Isabella established the Spanish
Inquisition under the leadership of Dominican monk Tomás de Torquemada. The
Spanish Inquisition was originally founded to ensure the sincerity of former
Jews and Muslims who had recently converted to Christianity, known as conversos
and Moriscos respectively. Insincere converts were suspected of
disloyalty and punished. As an institution that operated in both Castile and
Aragón, the Inquisition was an important source of unity in Spain. It brought
both monarchies closer to the Roman Catholic Church and it helped guarantee
that Spain would remain a profoundly Catholic country.
In its first decades the Inquisition tried and
punished thousands of people, including many conversos involved in
commerce and trade. People judged to be heretics were executed, often by
burning at the stake. In 1492 all unconverted Jews were ordered to leave Spain,
and many thousands emigrated to North Africa, the Ottoman Empire, and other
parts of Europe. In the early 17th century the Spanish inquisitors turned their
attention to Muslims. Between 1609 and 1614 more than 250,000 Spanish Muslims
were driven out of Spain. Later, the Spanish Inquisition sought to discipline
persons suspected of practicing Protestantism.
At the time, many Spaniards considered the
Inquisition a triumph for Roman Catholicism. However, the costs of the
Inquisition were high. Spain expelled many of its most economically important
citizens, depriving the crown of a source of much-needed tax revenue. The
church, with royal cooperation, also censored books, and students were
prohibited from studying abroad to prevent the importation of Protestant ideas
into Spain. These practices eventually cut Spain off from intellectual
developments in Europe and turned Spanish universities into academic
backwaters. This isolation made it more difficult for Spain to modernize in
later centuries. In addition, the urge to protect royal legitimacy, power, and
prestige led Spain to fight wars it could not win, at great cost to Spain’s
society and economy.
D4
|
The Spanish Empire
|
Spain rose from a partnership between two
Iberian kingdoms to the status of world power in a short time. The new strength
of Castile soon became evident to the world. The consolidation of a strong
government at home allowed Castilian monarchs to focus the crown’s resources on
overseas expansion. At the same time, a series of strategic alliances and
military initiatives permitted Spain to achieve dominance in Europe.
D4a
|
Conquest in the Americas
|
Christopher Columbus’s westward voyages aroused great
excitement in Spain, even if the results were at first disappointing. Castile
was determined to follow the lead of neighboring Portugal, whose mariners had
already traveled around the southern end of Africa and opened a sea route to
Asia. Although Columbus did not succeed in finding a westward route to Asia,
Castile annexed the islands he found in the West Indies upon his return from
his first voyage. The Castilians gradually settled colonies in the Caribbean,
beginning with Santo Domingo (in present-day Dominican Republic), and
established their first settlement in Cuba in 1509. Then Spain’s stunning
expansion in the Americas began.
Over the course of the next century generations
of adventurers and explorers, known as the conquistadors, traveled to
the Americas on behalf of the Spanish crown. Hernán Cortés destroyed the Aztec
Empire in Mexico, and Francisco Pizarro conquered the Inca Empire in Peru.
Explorers such as Vasco Núñez de Balboa, Ferdinand Magellan, and Hernando De
Soto were chartered by Spain. Spain eventually laid claim to all of Latin
America, except for Brazil, and also claimed the southern part of the United
States from Florida to California, as well as Jamaica and the Philippine
Islands.
At first the conquerors sent home gold and silver
accumulated by the Aztec and Inca empires. These riches were soon exhausted,
and little moveable wealth remained in the Americas that could bear the costs
of shipment to Europe and still be sold for a profit. The conquerors then
turned to the land and the labor of indigenous peoples to create wealth in ways
that were familiar in Spain. They imported Spanish crops and livestock and
attempted to build productive, largely self-contained, colonies.
Spain’s empire in the Americas entered a new phase
in the mid-16th century when extensive silver deposits were discovered, first
in Mexico and then in Bolivia. By 1560 large amounts of American silver were
flowing into the Spanish treasury annually. At the same time, European diseases
had decimated native peoples in the Americas. To keep the silver flowing,
Spanish colonizers forcibly moved shrinking numbers of indigenous peoples to
new towns where they could be put to work in the mines. As native peoples died,
Spain imported African slaves to work in its colonies. Spain also organized a
system of seaports and regular transatlantic fleets with naval protection to
control trade between Europe and the Americas. By the late 16th century American
silver accounted for one-fifth of Spain’s total budget. This silver allowed
Spain to build a huge structure of credit and to fight many wars. When Spain’s
monopoly on American silver broke down after 1630, Spanish power quickly
collapsed.
D4b
|
European Power
|
Spain’s expansion in Europe began even before the
new wealth from the Americas became available. Ferdinand’s brilliant use of
diplomacy and military power were central to Spain’s transformation into a
world power. Spain’s main opponent in Europe was France, both along the
frontiers that separated the two states and also in Italy, where Aragón’s
traditional interests were threatened by French efforts to dominate the
peninsula. Under Ferdinand, Spain succeeded in winning control of southern
Italy, all Navarre south of the Pyrenees, and farther north, the regions of
Cerdagne and Roussillon.
Ferdinand arranged strategic alliances with other royal
houses hostile to France. He married one daughter, Catherine of Aragón, to the
heir to the English throne, Henry VIII. He married another daughter, Joanna the
Mad, to a member of the Habsburg royal family, Philip of Burgundy (later King
Philip I of Castile).
Isabella’s death in 1504 greatly complicated the
process of Spanish expansion as Castile’s crown passed to Joanna, who was
mentally deranged. Ferdinand and Philip agreed that Joanna was incapable of
ruling. Ferdinand served as regent until Philip and Joanna returned from
Flanders, at which time Philip became king consort and regent. An alliance
between Philip and powerful Castilian nobles forced Ferdinand to withdraw from
Castile. In 1506, shortly after taking power, Philip died suddenly. A special
council recalled Ferdinand to Castile, although he was denied the full powers
of regency, including control over foreign affairs. Despite a contentious
aristocracy, Ferdinand eventually regained full control over Castile. Upon his
death in 1516, Ferdinand was succeeded by his grandson, Charles, son of Joanna
and Philip. As legal heir to both Castile and Aragón, Charles became the first
king of a united Spain.
D5
|
Charles V
|
With Ferdinand’s death, Charles inherited a vast amount
of territory. In addition to Spain—which he ruled as Charles I—and its
possessions in Italy and the Americas, he inherited the Low Countries (what are
now Belgium, The Netherlands, and Luxembourg) through his father. The accession
of Charles to the throne also made Spain the largest and most important domain
of the Habsburg family, which ruled the Holy Roman Empire. Habsburg kings would
rule Spain for nearly 200 years, until 1700. When his paternal grandfather,
Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I, died in 1519, Charles inherited Habsburg lands
in what are now Germany and Austria. Later that year Charles was elected Holy
Roman emperor as Charles V, making him the nominal ruler of Germany. Charles
emerged as the most powerful monarch in Europe.
Charles was just 16 years old when he became
king of Castile and Aragón. Reared in Flanders, Charles could not speak
Spanish, and he tried to rule Spain through foreign advisers. Charles quickly
provoked resentment among the Castilian nobility and towns by granting offices
to his followers and demanding new taxes. In 1519 this resentment exploded into
the comunero revolt, which began in Toledo and quickly spread to other
towns. The revolt was suppressed in 1521 with help from the nobility. To
alleviate the concerns of his Spanish subjects, Charles agreed to give court
positions to Castilians and he negotiated a system of tax payments that
satisfied the towns. These compromises proved durable, and Spain’s interior
remained peaceful for much of the next two centuries.
After a difficult start, Charles became a popular
monarch. Spain’s imperial accomplishments in Europe and the Americas were a
source of great pride. In addition, Castile grew increasingly prosperous under
Charles’s rule, benefiting from American mineral wealth as well as remarkable
growth in population, agricultural output, and manufacturing.
Charles brought Spain into many wars to defend his vast
collection of territories. During his reign, Spanish soldiers and wealth were
used to fight the Protestant Reformation sweeping northern Europe, the Ottoman
Empire in the western Mediterranean, and the French in Italy and the Rhineland.
The wars against France eventually made Spain a dominant power in northern as
well as southern Italy. However, Charles failed to halt the advance of the
Ottomans. Also of significance, he was unable to prevent the establishment of
Protestantism in Germany. Under the terms of the Peace of Augsburg in 1555,
German princes seeking autonomy won the right to choose between Lutheranism and
Catholicism for their subjects.
The political difficulties that the Reformation created
for Charles in much of Europe did not develop in Spain. The Spanish Catholic
Church was one of the least corrupt in Europe. Church reforms implemented by
the Spanish Inquisition had removed many of the abuses that infuriated Martin
Luther and other European religious reformers. As a result, Protestantism had
far less appeal in Spain than in much of Europe. Charles successfully promoted
additional reforms and prodded the papacy into summoning the Council of Trent,
which clarified Catholic beliefs and reformed the education of priests. At
about the same time a former Spanish soldier, Saint Ignatius of Loyola, founded
the Jesuits, a Catholic religious order. The Jesuits set about making converts
to Catholicism in Spain’s European possessions and in the Americas.
In 1556 Charles divided his empire, which had
proven so difficult to defend. He relinquished the greater part of his realms,
including the Spanish throne, to his son, Philip II. He also resigned as Holy
Roman emperor in favor of his brother, Ferdinand I, who inherited the Habsburg
lands in central Europe.
D6
|
Philip II
|
Spain reached the peak of its power during the rule
of Philip II. Philip’s reign began with a financial crisis and royal bankruptcy
as the new king consolidated the divided empire left by his father.
Domestically, Spain was stable, and unprecedented amounts of American silver
poured into Castile. Spain’s Golden Age of art and culture began under Philip,
and it would continue for a century. In foreign affairs Spain enjoyed some
successes. The Treaty of Cateau-Cambrésis in 1559 ended the exhausting wars
with France, and for the next four decades France was too divided by civil wars
and religious turmoil to challenge Spanish interests. However, Spain soon had
to confront a major rebellion in the Low Countries as well as the renewed
expansion of the Ottoman Empire in Mediterranean lands. Deeply religious,
Philip was committed to the eventual triumph of Roman Catholic rule in Europe.
However, much of Philip’s long reign was marked by failures that weakened the
Spanish empire. At his death in 1598 Philip left a nation with a declining
economy and a powerful, but precarious, international position.
D6a
|
Spain’s Golden Age
|
Spain’s intellectual life flourished throughout much of
the 16th and 17th centuries. Generous patronage by the crown, church, and
aristocracy stimulated creative work, and Spain earned world renown as a center
of learning, literature, and art. Several of Europe’s leading universities were
in Spain. The University of Salamanca in central Spain was at the forefront in
the new fields of economic and political theory. The University of Alcala,
founded by Isabella I, became a center of Renaissance scholarship on the Bible.
Experts in Greek, Hebrew, Arabic, and other languages created the Complutensian
Polyglot Bible, which compared the best versions of the Bible in several
languages.
Literature produced the incomparable Miguel de Cervantes
Saavedra. His novel, Don Quixote (Part I, 1605; Part II, 1615), a satire
of the outmoded values of the Spanish elite, is considered one of the great
books of Western literature. In drama the plays of Lope de Vega and Pedro
Calderón de la Barca y Henao were enormously popular and influenced many
European dramatists.
The era of Philip II witnessed perhaps
the greatest painters identified with Spain. El Greco, an immigrant from Crete,
produced paintings that emphasized religious themes. The emotional intensity of
El Greco’s work gave inspiration to the expressionist painters of the late 19th
and early 20th centuries (see Expressionism). The Spanish baroque artist
Diego Velázquez, who served as court painter for Philip IV, produced a
spectacular series of paintings. Velázquez was part of a remarkable school of
Spanish painting that also included Bartolomé Esteban Murillo, Francisco de
Zurbarán, and Claudio Coello. After 1665, patronage of art lost its direction
and for a time Spain produced few works with broader appeal.
D6b
|
International and Domestic Affairs
|
International affairs dominated Philip’s reign, and his
successes were notable. In the Battle of Lepanto (1571) Philip led the Holy
League, an alliance of Spain, Venice, Genoa, and the Papal States, to a
decisive naval victory over the Ottoman Empire. The battle was the first major
victory of Christian forces against the Ottoman Empire. Ten years later Philip
made himself king of Portugal, after overcoming rival claimants to the throne.
Because Portugal controlled territories in Asia, Africa, and Brazil, its union
with Spain put the Iberian Peninsula at the center of the largest and most
far-flung empire in the world.
Despite these successes, Philip’s troubles gradually
accumulated. Zealously religious, Philip was dedicated to defending his
Catholic empire against the advance of the Protestant Reformation. Philip’s
efforts to prevent the spread of Protestantism in the Low Countries proved
disastrous. His use of the Inquisition to persecute Protestants in The
Netherlands led to open revolt there in 1567. This conflict continued for more
than a half-century, draining Spanish resources. It also led to war with
England. Under Queen Elizabeth I, England was a Protestant power. England’s
foreign policy included unofficial support for the Dutch rebels and for English
mariners who raided Spain’s colonies and treasure fleets in the Americas. In
1588 Philip sent a huge naval fleet, the Spanish Armada, to conquer England and
reconvert it to Catholicism. However, the armada was defeated in the English
Channel, and many remaining ships were wrecked in a storm off the Hebrides. The
destruction of the armada reduced Spain’s ability to wage war abroad. Despite
this defeat, Spain was able to send another large fleet to Ireland in 1596 in
an ill-fated attempt to capture that country. The war between Spain and England
continued until 1604.
As Spain struggled with costly military operations
abroad, the nation’s domestic situation deteriorated. American treasure alone
could not support Spain’s wars. Philip was forced into bankruptcy three times.
Crippling taxation caused extreme poverty and brought Spaniards to the point of
revolt. Adding to the hardships, a series of epidemics swept Spain in the
1590s, greatly reducing the population. At the same time, Philip strengthened
the Spanish Inquisition to crush any threat of Protestantism being imported.
Intellectual life, in the midst of a great flowering, became narrower and less
open to new currents of thought.
E
|
Decline of Spanish Power
|
At the dawn of the 17th century Spain was
still considered a great power. It ruled a vast empire, its diplomatic and
military capabilities were widely respected, and Spanish cultural life
flourished. But throughout the 17th century Spain suffered from erratic
leadership, recurrent warfare with rivals, revolts in Spanish territories, and
a perpetually depressed economy. By the end the century, Spain’s power and
riches were drastically reduced and its culture was in decline.
E1
|
The Reign of Philip III
|
King Philip III, son of Philip II, was
religiously devout but cared little for politics. Philip devoted much of his
attention to court festivals and other amusements, and royal power largely fell
to his prime minister, Francisco de Sandoval, duke of Lerma. During Philip’s
reign (1598-1621), Spain curtailed foreign military campaigns and other
international ventures. Spain made peace with England in 1604, ending 16 years
of continuous war. In 1609 the Spanish and Dutch initiated a 12-year truce.
That same year, Lerma’s government expelled the last of the Moriscos (Christian
converts from Islam) from Spain. This policy deprived Spain of more than
250,000 of its most industrious inhabitants, leading to further population loss
and economic disruption.
Royal finances failed to improve under Philip. Defense
was costly, even in peacetime, and Philip spent large sums of money on palaces,
festivals, and hunting parties. Philip created an impressive baroque court in
Madrid and built the great Plaza Mayor, which long served as the city’s civic
and economic center.
The peace enjoyed under Philip abruptly ended with
the outbreak of the Thirty Years’ War (1618-1648), which began as a conflict
between Protestants and Catholics in Germany. Philip’s strong backing of Holy
Roman Emperor Ferdinand II and the German Catholic princes drew Spain into
another prolonged military conflict. Spain joined the struggle out of a desire
to help the Habsburgs retain power, advance the Catholic faith, and recover, if
possible, the Dutch provinces. Philip III died in 1621, but his policies were
continued under his son and successor, Philip IV.
E2
|
Spain Under Philip IV
|
During the reign of Philip IV (1621-1665),
Spain continued its economic and political decline. Like his father, Philip IV
was a weak leader. He preferred culture to politics and left the powers of the
monarchy to his prime minister, Gaspar de Guzmán, conde de Olivares.
Olivares, a gifted politician, sought to carry out
ambitious plans for government reform and to restore Spanish power abroad. He
resumed the conflict with the Dutch and continued Spanish involvement in the
Thirty Years’ War. At first, Spain met with military success, but the effort
could not be sustained at home. Olivares’s attempts to increase taxation and
conscription to support the military campaigns led to revolt. In 1640 the
province of Catalonia declared itself an independent republic, and for 19 years
the presence of French troops helped to maintain its autonomy from Spain. In
the same year Portugal also broke away from Spanish control.
With the home front in chaos, Spain began to
fail abroad. In 1643 Spain’s last army in the Low Countries was destroyed when
it invaded France during the final phase of the Thirty Years’ War. Olivares,
who was blamed for the disasters at home and abroad, was dismissed. However,
the wars and revolts his policies helped bring about haunted Spain for nearly
three decades. Catalonia was recovered in 1652, but Spain was forced to
recognize Dutch independence in 1648 with the signing of the Peace of
Westphalia, which ended the Thirty Years’ War. The southern portion of the
Spanish Netherlands, a region roughly corresponding to present-day Belgium and
Luxembourg, remained a Spanish domain. Spain returned the provinces of
Roussillon and Cerdagne to France in 1659 and accepted the independence of
Portugal in 1668. In 1655 an English naval force captured Jamaica, the first of
many colonies that Spain was to lose in the Western Hemisphere.
Declining shipments of American silver after 1630
weakened Spain further. The cost of Spanish military campaigns had caused the
Spanish monarchs to confiscate private silver from Spain’s American fleets.
They also used funds meant for the defense of Spain’s American trade for the
conflicts in Europe. As a result, fewer fleets came from America and they
brought less silver. This was disastrous for the war effort and Spain declared
bankruptcy in 1647 and again in 1652.
E3
|
The End of the Spanish Habsburgs
|
The long and inept reign of Charles II
(1665-1700), son of Philip IV, ended Habsburg rule of Spain. Mentally and
physically infirm, Charles never understood government. Charles’s advisers
involved Spain in a series of disastrous wars that caused Spain to lose much of
its remaining possessions in Europe. Internal strife characterized Spain at
home, with domestic policy dominated by competing noble families.
E3a
|
Bourbon Rule
|
Charles died in 1700 without an heir, bringing
to an end the male line of the Spanish Habsburgs. Charles willed his throne to
his grandnephew, Philip V, duke of Anjou. Philip was the grandson of the
powerful Bourbon king Louis XIV of France and the great-grandson of Philip III.
Much of Europe viewed the Bourbon family’s
acquisition of Spain’s still-vast territories with alarm. Philip’s accession to
the throne meant an enormous expansion in French power. Thus, many in Europe
favored Habsburg claims to the throne, as represented by the Archduke Charles,
younger son of Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I. England, The Netherlands, Austria,
Prussia, and several smaller countries formed a coalition against Louis XIV.
This resulted in the War of the Spanish Succession (1701-1714), fought mainly
in Germany, the Low Countries, Italy, and across Spain itself.
E3b
|
Loss of European Possessions
|
The war stripped Spain of its last European
possessions. Under the settlement reached in the Peace of Utrecht, Spain lost
Gibraltar, Milan, Naples, Sardinia, Sicily, Minorca, and the last of its
territories in the Spanish Netherlands. However, Spain’s American empire passed
intact to Philip, who became the first Bourbon ruler of Spain.
E4
|
The Early Spanish Bourbons
|
Spain’s early Bourbon kings—Philip V (1700-1746),
Ferdinand VI (1746-1759), and Charles III (1759-1788)—ruled more effectively
than their Habsburg predecessors. Under Bourbon rule, government administration
became more centralized and efficient and the economy gradually expanded. The
Bourbon kings also defended the empire both in Europe and overseas. They
successfully prevented further territorial losses and restored Spanish
influence in southern Italy.
E4a
|
Administrative and Economic Reforms
|
Administrative reforms carried out by the early Bourbons made
government more effective and reduced the privileges of the church and the
nobility. Many of these reforms were modeled on the French system of
government. Philip, schooled in the absolutism of Louis XIV, brought the
regions of Catalonia and Aragón under central control. In medieval times these
regions were independent states and they had retained a degree of autonomy.
The Bourbon rulers also lowered taxes, made efforts
to balance the budget, and built roads and other public works. They removed
obstacles to trade, reorganized commercial law, and gave financial incentives
to industry and agriculture. In addition, Spain’s navy was rebuilt and
expanded, local administration of the American colonies was reorganized, and
Spain’s commercial ties with the colonies were improved. Partly as a result of
these policies, the economy and population began to grow and the volume of
Spanish-American trade greatly increased.
E4b
|
International Relations
|
In foreign affairs, the early Bourbons regained
some of Spain’s former greatness. The Bourbon kings were generally allied with
France and hostile to Great Britain, Spain’s chief naval and colonial rival.
Spain joined France against Austria in the War of the Polish Succession
(1733-1735) and the War of the Austrian Succession (1740-1748). In 1762 Charles
III—convinced that Britain was the major threat to Spain’s American
empire—entered an alliance with France against Britain in the Seven Years’ War.
When Britain won, Spain lost Florida. However, in a secret treaty France
transferred the vast Louisiana Purchase in North America to Spain as
compensation for its support in the war. Spain and France allied again in 1779
to support the American Revolution against Great Britain, and in the 1783
Treaty of Paris Spain recovered Florida. The Spanish presence now extended over
much of the North American continent.
E4c
|
The Enlightenment
|
An abiding faith in the power of human reason
and a deep respect for humanity lay at the center of the 18th-century
intellectual movement known as the Age of Enlightenment. Spain was an active
participant in the Enlightenment, but the movement’s ideas were applied
selectively. The Enlightenment’s emphasis on the value of scientific learning,
rational economic organization, and free markets was well received. However,
many religiously devout Spaniards resisted anticlerical sentiments expressed in
Enlightenment thought. In addition, few Spaniards were concerned about
Enlightenment political principles—a belief in elections, parliamentary
government, and popular sovereignty—before the 19th century, when these liberal
ideas began to take hold in Spain.
During the 18th century the Spanish crown promoted
educational reforms and scientific inquiry. Spain’s government sponsored
scientific expeditions and constructed new museums and schools. Scientific and
medical societies were founded, including the Royal Observatory and the Royal
Botanical Garden. At the same time, modern ideas about urban planning became
widespread, and Spanish cities began to acquire the boulevards common elsewhere
in Europe.
Spain’s contributions to Enlightenment-era art were
significant. In opera the renowned Neapolitan castrato singer Farinelli
achieved his greatest success in Madrid. The Italian harpsichordist and
composer Domenico Scarlatti spent much of his life at the Spanish court, and
Spain produced such noted classical composers as Antoni Soler, Carlos Baguer,
and Juan Crisostomo de Arriaga. The first Bourbon kings favored French and
Italian court painters, but after 1750 Spanish painting came into its own. The
Academy of Fine Arts, founded in 1752, was unique in its time for admitting
women artists. Spanish painter Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes was a
dominant influence in this era. A court painter to Charles III and Charles IV,
Goya produced remarkable images of Spanish society, historical figures, and the
inhumanity of war.
E5
|
Effects of the French Revolution
|
A weak ruler, prey to intrigues and
corruption, Charles IV was dominated by his chief adviser, Manuel de Godoy. The
reign of Charles (1788-1808) coincided with the turbulent French Revolution
(1789-1799). The revolution caused extraordinary upheavals throughout Europe
and had particularly adverse effects in Spain.
Many European monarchies watched in horror as the French
Revolution unfolded, especially after the fall of the Bastille in Paris in
1789. Fearful that revolutionary ideas might spread to the peninsula, Spain’s
Bourbon monarchy introduced repressive policies, revived the Inquisition, and
ended plans for new domestic reforms. After revolutionary forces executed
French Bourbon king Louis XVI in 1793, Spain joined Britain and other European
powers in a war against France. The following year France invaded Spain and
ravaged its northern provinces, occupying Bilbao and San Sebastián. After
initial Spanish resistance, Godoy admitted defeat.
In 1796, as revolutionary fervor in France abated,
Godoy reversed course and formed an alliance with France against Britain. The
British navy proved superior to the French and Spanish fleets, however. For the
next decade, British blockades largely cut off Spain from its American
colonies. The economic consequences for Spain were disastrous, as Spanish
colonial trade shifted to Britain and the United States and Spain’s finances
deteriorated. Worse still, it soon became clear with the rise to power of
Napoleon Bonaparte in France that Spain was a junior partner in the alliance.
In 1800 Napoleon forced Spain to return the Louisiana Purchase to France. By
1805, after a joint Spanish-French fleet was destroyed by the British at the
Battle of Trafalgar, Spain had been reduced to little more than a French
puppet. Two years later, with Godoy’s consent, French troops marched across
Spain in a bid to conquer Portugal. On their way, French forces occupied army
garrisons in north and central Spain.
Resentment among the Spanish people grew, and they
turned against Godoy and Charles. Godoy was deposed and Charles was forced to
abdicate in favor of his son, Ferdinand VII. Napoleon, who had already decided
to assume direct control of Spain, used the unrest as an opportunity to invade
Spain. Napoleon ousted both Ferdinand and Charles and placed his brother,
Joseph Bonaparte, on the Spanish throne.
E6
|
War of Independence
|
Many Spaniards refused to recognize Joseph as king and
angrily opposed the French occupation. On May 2, 1808, a popular uprising drove
Joseph from Madrid. In the violent Peninsular War that followed, Spain, aided
by British troops, fought a war of independence from France. By 1810 French
forces had defeated the major Spanish armies and occupied most of the country. But
Spanish irregular fighters who employed guerrilla tactics—surprise attacks and
rapid retreats—continually harassed the French forces. Their efforts prevented
the French from routing British forces sent to protect Portugal or from
completely conquering Spain. Over time the French forces weakened, and British
troops under Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington, pushed into Spain from
the west. In 1813, after a series of bloody engagements, France was forced to
evacuate the peninsula. See also Napoleonic Wars.
E6a
|
Constitutional Reform
|
During the war, Spanish resistance leaders
attempted to establish a liberal government in Spain. From 1810 to 1813 they
convened a Spanish Cortes (national assembly) in Cádiz. The assembly proclaimed
a constitution for Spain in 1812. Advanced for its time, the Cádiz constitution
gave Spain a limited monarchy and a single-chamber parliament, curbed the power
of the nobility and the Catholic Church, suppressed the Spanish Inquisition,
and expanded protection of individual rights. Suffrage was tied to property
ownership, giving business interests a strong voice in the new parliament. The
constitution was a victory for liberalism in Spain. Thereafter, much of Spain’s
history involved struggles to make the constitution’s ideals effective.
E6b
|
Loss of American Colonies
|
As Spain struggled to gain its freedom from France,
revolutionary movements took hold in many of Spain’s American colonies. The
Spanish colonists had initially opposed French conquest in Spain. However, they
soon were demanding independence themselves, inspired by the revolt of American
colonists in the American Revolution, as well as by the ongoing rebellion in
Spain. Apart from their desire for political independence, the colonists wished
to break free of Spain’s imperial monopoly on American trade and to exchange
goods freely with all nations. By 1826 only Cuba, Puerto Rico, the Philippine
Islands, Guam, and several colonial settlements in northern Africa remained
under Spanish rule; the mainland colonies in the Americas had all gained their
freedom, and their resources were lost to Spain.
F
|
The Troubled Monarchy
|
F1
|
The Reign of Ferdinand VII
|
After Napoleon’s defeat in the Peninsular War, Ferdinand
VII returned to Spain in 1814 and was recognized as king. In an effort to
restore the absolute monarchy, Ferdinand promptly repealed the Cádiz
constitution. A harsh and vindictive ruler, Ferdinand sought to repress all
liberal elements in Spain.
In 1820 Ferdinand ordered Spanish troops sent to
Latin America to reclaim Spain’s former colonies. The troops, however, refused
to go. The mutiny quickly spread into a national revolt, the Revolution of 1820.
The revolution brought a liberal regime to power that forced Ferdinand to
restore the Cádiz constitution. But the liberals were unable to rule
effectively, and Spain remained politically divided. France, alarmed by the
attack on the monarchy in Spain, intervened in 1823. French troops toppled the
Spanish government and restored Ferdinand to absolute power. Leaders of the
liberal government were arrested or driven into exile, and Ferdinand’s
despotic, antiliberal rule lasted another decade.
F2
|
The First Carlist War
|
In 1831 Ferdinand named his infant daughter,
Isabella, to succeed him. Ferdinand’s brother, Don Carlos de Borbón, disputed
Isabella’s claim to the crown, arguing that a female’s succession was forbidden
by the Salic Law. Ferdinand responded by completing the repeal of the Salic Law
in Spain, a process initiated by his father, Charles IV. After Ferdinand died
in 1833, Isabella was declared queen, with her mother, Maria Christina, as
regent. A group of religious traditionalists and political reactionaries,
called Carlists, insisted that Don Carlos should inherit the throne. Isabella’s
succession was backed by the liberals, known as Christinos, who took their name
from Isabella’s mother. The dynastic split soon erupted in a civil war between
the Carlists and Christinos.
Carlist support came largely from the rural areas
of northern Spain, especially the Basque regions and Catalonia, where the
clergy’s influence was strong. Strongly Roman Catholic, the Carlist movement
was also fiercely protective of traditional laws, known as fueros, which
had long governed many aspects of life in the northern provinces. Spain’s more
developed regions opposed the Carlists, as did Britain, France, and Portugal,
all of which supported the Christinos. To preserve the liberals’ backing, Maria
Christina granted a royal charter in 1834 that took the form of a constitution
and granted a modest degree of political reform. The civil war thus pitted
supporters of a constitutional monarchy against advocates of absolutist rule,
represented by Don Carlos. After a long struggle, the Carlists were defeated in
1839. Don Carlos went into exile and Carlist forces were allowed to become part
of Spain’s regular army. Despite this defeat, Carlist sentiment remained a
potent political force in the Basque provinces.
Internal conflicts weakened the liberals, and their
victory over the Carlists came slowly. Moderate liberals upheld the privileges
of the crown and favored a narrow franchise based on wealth or education.
Progressive liberals, like the moderates, supported a constitutional monarchy,
but they wanted to expand the franchise and promote greater political
participation. To the left of the progressives were the radical democrats, who
demanded the establishment of a Spanish republic (a representative form of
government based on the concept of popular sovereignty).
In 1836 a series of popular uprisings in
southern Spain forced Maria Christina to reinstate the Cádiz constitution of
1812. One year later liberals accepted a moderate compromise, the constitution
of 1837. In 1840 a progressive revolt led by General Baldomero Espartero ousted
Maria Christina, who fled to France, and the Cortes made Espartero regent. But
Espartero’s merciless suppression of political opponents triggered an uprising
that drove him from power in 1843. Isabella, now 13 years old, was declared
legally of age following Espartero’s overthrow, and she assumed the crown as
Isabella II.
F3
|
Dissension and Crisis
|
F3a
|
Isabella II
|
Continued struggle between liberal factions marked the
turbulent rule of Isabella II (1833-1868). The moderates, favored by the court,
came largely from society’s wealthier ranks, while progressives were drawn
mainly from the middle classes. Moderates governed for much of Isabella’s
reign, which witnessed frequent rebellions, military risings, and cabinet
changes. Isabella’s absolutist tendencies and incompetent leadership eventually
alienated all major political factions.
F3b
|
Revolution of 1868
|
A popular uprising led by the military finally
deposed Isabella in the Revolution of 1868. A provisional government headed by
General Juan Prim assumed power after Isabella’s expulsion.
After the revolution, liberals who had conspired with
the military helped set up government committees, called juntas, in most
major towns. Military leaders, however, were determined to restore the
constitutional monarchy and to prevent moves toward republican democracy. With
the juntas largely in control of local government, Prim’s provisional
government was forced to concede some democratic demands. These demands
culminated in the constitution of 1869, which provided for a limited monarchy,
universal male suffrage, and freedom of the press and association.
The new constitution failed to quell political
unrest, however, and the provisional government vigorously crushed demands for
additional reforms. Prim, convinced that the constitutional monarchy would
restore political stability, order, and respect for traditional values, began
searching across Europe for an acceptable monarch for Spain.
F3c
|
Growing Instability
|
In 1870 Prim recruited Amadeo of Savoy, a duke from
Italy, who accepted the Spanish throne and was crowned Amadeus I. However, Prim
was assassinated on the day that Amadeus arrived in Madrid, and the
revolutionary coalition quickly collapsed. The new king proved unable to form a
stable government as opposition to the constitutional monarchy intensified on
the right and the left. The Carlists opposed the reign of Amadeus, and their
reactionary insurrection reemerged in northern Spain. At the same time, a
movement agitating for republican government gained ground. Events overseas
compounded Spain’s problems. In 1868 Cuba revolted against Spanish rule,
leading to a long and costly struggle (see Ten Years’ War). Amadeus
abdicated in 1873, beset by political and social conflict, popular hostility
against him, and the strain of the Cuban and Carlist insurrections.
F3d
|
The Republican Interlude
|
After Amadeus resigned the Spanish Cortes proclaimed the
First Spanish Republic—a short-lived democratic regime based on parliamentary
control of government. Supporters of the republic were deeply divided among
themselves, however, and political anarchy ensued. The constitution of the
First Republic called for a federal republic in which power was decentralized
to the provinces. When the government rejected demands for an immediate
declaration of federalism, radicals in Málaga, Alcoy, Cartagena, Seville, and
Barcelona, asserted self-government under left-wing leadership. At the same
time, Carlists opposed the regime and intensified their insurrection. Political
stability eluded the government, which had four presidents in its eight-month
existence. By late 1874 a group of Spanish generals had become convinced that
only a restoration of the Bourbon monarchy could put an end to domestic strife.
On Christmas Eve the army proclaimed Isabella’s oldest living son, Alfonso XII,
king of Spain, and the First Republic collapsed.
F4
|
Restoration of the Monarchy
|
The new regime was determined not to repeat
the errors of recent failed governments. Under Alfonso XII, the Spanish Cortes
drafted a constitution in 1876 that established a system of limited
parliamentary government and laid the basis for greater political stability.
The constitution introduced a two-house legislature and a cabinet, and it
restricted the powers of the crown. In addition, the constitution provided for
a two-party system designed to represent the interests of the propertied middle
and upper classes. Suffrage was confined to male property owners and taxpayers,
and the two major parties—the Conservatives and Liberals—shared the same basic
goals and assumptions. A contrived system of rotation, called the turno
pacífico (peaceful turnaround), allowed the parties to alternate in office
at regular intervals. To produce the desired rotation, elections were supervised
by the incoming government and in much of the country were rigged by political
bosses. The result was a closed political system controlled mainly by a rural
oligarchy of conservative property owners that resisted broader political
participation or social reform.
In 1885 Alfonso XII died without an heir, but
his wife, Queen Maria Christina, bore him a posthumous son. The son came of age
in 1902 and took the throne as Alfonso XIII. Until then, Maria Christina acted
as regent.
Under the turno pacífico system, Spain
enjoyed greater prosperity than it had known since the 18th century. The
government defeated the Carlist insurrection in 1876, and the Ten Years’ War
with Cuba came to an end in 1878. High tariffs protected Spanish agriculture
from foreign competition, and the Basque iron, steel, and manufacturing
industries boomed. Madrid and Barcelona grew rapidly and installed electrical
systems, telephones, electric trams, and other modern conveniences. It was also
an era of cultural flowering. Barcelona became a vibrant example of avant-garde
architecture, the impressionist painter Joaquín Sorolla achieved world renown,
and Spanish flamenco dancing became popular across Europe. In literature, Spain
produced one of its greatest authors, novelist and playwright Benito Pérez
Galdós.
Spain faced several difficult problems during the
late 19th century. Stable rule and economic progress led to the emergence of
new political forces that could not be contained by the existing political
system. Industrialists and merchants in the Basque regions and Catalonia
benefited from economic development, but they were largely excluded from
political power; many gave their support to regional autonomy movements. A
radicalized labor movement also began to develop, and political dissent emerged
among the middle classes. In 1890 universal male suffrage was restored.
Elections became more honest and representative in urban areas, but the rural
oligarchy still dominated the government. Then, in 1898, Spain lost most of its
remaining overseas colonial possessions in the devastating Spanish-American
War.
F4a
|
Spanish-American War
|
In 1895 another revolt began in Cuba, following
Spain’s failure to carry out reforms promised at the conclusion of the Ten
Years’ War. The United States sided with Cuba and in 1898 declared war on Spain
after the battleship USS Maine mysteriously exploded and sank in Havana
Harbor. In the fighting that ensued, Spain’s naval fleet was destroyed. Badly
defeated, Spain withdrew from Cuba and ceded Puerto Rico, Guam, and the
Philippine Islands to the United States.
The war marked the end of the Spanish Empire
in the Americas and shattered Spain’s lingering claims to great-power status.
The humiliation caused by the war led many young Spanish intellectuals to
ponder their country’s predicament. Known as the generation of 1898, these
intellectuals included important writers and critics such as Miguel de Unamuno
y Jugo, Pío Baroja y Nessi, Jacinto Benavente y Martínez, and Antonio Machado y
Ruíz (see Spanish Literature). They began a searching criticism of
Spanish institutions and initiated the Spanish cultural renaissance of the
early 20th century.
F4b
|
Domestic Upheaval
|
After the defeat of 1898, Spain’s parliamentary
monarchy lost stability amid growing dissidence throughout Spanish society.
Political groups increasingly resorted to violence. Republican movements
pressing for greater democracy reemerged and demanded constitutional reforms.
Support for anarchism took root among farm laborers in Andalucía and industrial
workers in Barcelona. A small, though durable, socialist movement appeared in
factories and mines in the Basque provinces and Asturias, and regionalist
sentiments in Catalonia grew into demands for autonomy. King Alfonso XIII,
favorably disposed to the military and authoritarian rule, intervened more
frequently to try to achieve stability. As a result, he was accused of meddling
and personal ambition, and the monarchy lost prestige.
Conflict also arose within the major political
parties. Reforms initiated by Conservative prime minister Antonio Maura, who
took office in 1907, attempted to resolve some of the sources of popular
dissent. He legalized strikes, reformed the judiciary, and attempted to
regulate rural rents and make elections fairer. However, Maura’s harsh
repression of anarchists alienated the left and drew strong criticism from the
Liberal Party, which had become allied with republican parties. In 1909 Spanish
troops were sent to Morocco to protect Spain’s possessions there. Maura
attempted to reinforce the military expedition with workers conscripted from
Barcelona, Spain’s most volatile city. This sparked bloody riots in Barcelona
that deepened class antagonisms. A Liberal ministry under José Canalejas y
Méndez replaced Maura, but its reform program was cut short when Canalejas was
assassinated by an anarchist in 1912. Throughout the next decade, political and
social strife increased, aggravated by World War I (1914-1918) and the economic
dislocation that followed.
F5
|
World War I
|
Despite many pressures to become involved, Spain
remained neutral during World War I. The conflict brought significant economic
benefits to Spain, as warring nations purchased large quantities of goods from
Spanish factories, mines, and farms. Improvements in infrastructure and rapid
industrialization in the early 20th century had enhanced Spain’s ability to
profit on the wartime trade. Much wealth had returned to Spain from its former
colonies after the defeat in 1898, and new investments in railroads,
hydroelectricity, and heavy industries greatly increased Spain’s industrial
production.
The war, however, made it difficult for Spain to
import goods, and inflation soon became rampant. At the same time, labor unrest
increased as workers demanded better wages and working conditions. In
Catalonia, regionalists agitated for home rule. Throughout Spain, republican
parties gathered force to demand reforms.
By 1917 labor unrest, strikes, and uprisings
dominated Spanish life. Amid these troubles, a Conservative government led by
Eduardo Dato triggered a new crisis when it attempted to reform the budget and
reduce the officer corps. In the summer of 1917 the officer corps, upset over
changes in pay and promotion, rebelled. They organized military juntas
to press their demands on the state and refused to obey orders. The government
backed down and withdrew the reforms. The military crisis was followed by labor
protests in Barcelona and other cities that degenerated into urban terrorism by
the anarcho-syndicalists (groups who opposed all forms of government and
advocated the control of all social and economic institutions by trade unions).
The army put down the protests with ferocity. The antagonism between
conservatives and the military on one side and left-wing social and political
forces on the other grew deeper and more entrenched.
The end of World War I brought Spain
severe economic distress. Wages fell and unemployment spread as Spain lost its wartime
customers. Violent strikes became common, and the government declared martial
law. A struggle for independence in the Spanish sector of Morocco—a
protectorate since the 1880s—aggravated the economic crisis. Ruinously
expensive, the Moroccan war became especially unpopular when Spanish forces
were badly defeated at the Battle of Anoual in 1921. In the next two years a
succession of Spanish governments collapsed and domestic violence escalated,
especially in Barcelona.
F6
|
Primo de Rivera’s Dictatorship
|
In September 1923 General Miguel Primo de Rivera,
Barcelona’s military governor, led a coup d’état that gave vent to widespread
disillusionment with the parliamentary regime. Rather than resisting, King
Alfonso XIII endorsed the coup and made Primo de Rivera head of the government.
The Cortes was dissolved, and a military directorate took charge. There were
few arrests and little police or army brutality, but political parties were
banned. Socialist trade unions continued to operate, however, and Primo de
Rivera insisted that his dictatorship was only a temporary measure. One of his
most popular achievements was the conclusion of the costly conflict in Morocco
in 1926.
In 1925 the military directorate was
abolished, and Primo de Rivera appointed a civilian government, which he led as
prime minister. The new government focused on economic development and launched
a broad program of public works. Major investments were made in roads and
railroads, schools and universities, and new irrigation works. Opposition to
Primo de Rivera’s administration grew in the late 1920s amid student protests,
regionalist discontent in Catalonia, and disaffection within the army. Primo de
Rivera became increasingly unpopular with the onset of the worldwide depression
in 1929. In 1930 Alfonso, with backing from the military, dismissed Primo de
Rivera.
Primo de Rivera’s dictatorship severely weakened
support for the crown. Even moderates and conservatives no longer
enthusiastically supported the monarchy because Alfonso had betrayed them by
accepting authoritarian rule. The socialist, anarcho-syndicalist, and Catalan
regionalist movements began to cooperate with the republicans, as did numerous
former monarchists and army officers.
Alfonso hoped to bring about a return to constitutional
government without threatening the monarchy. After a difficult year under a
temporary government headed by General Dámaso Berenguer, Alfonso agreed to call
municipal elections in April 1931. The elections gave overwhelming majorities
to republican candidates in most of Spain’s provincial capitals. Support for
the monarchy collapsed, and Alfonso—who refused to abdicate the crown—went into
exile. The second Spanish republic was proclaimed at once, and a provisional
government established under President Niceto Alcalá Zamora quickly arranged
parliamentary elections. In December 1931 the Cortes approved a new
constitution that was modern, democratic, and rigorously secular.
G
|
Republican Spain and the Dictatorship of Francisco Franco
|
G1
|
The Second Spanish Republic
|
The Second Republic came to power with remarkable
ease, ushered in by a great wave of popular enthusiasm. However, it soon became
clear that supporters of the republic had little in common. Some supporters
expected the government to be conservative; others pressed for radical change.
Political participation grew divisive and increasingly polarized.
G1a
|
Progressive Reforms
|
The republic initiated many far-reaching reforms during
its first two years. A coalition of republican parties and socialists, headed
by Prime Minister Manuel Azaña, gave the republic a progressive tone. Elections
became more democratic, and women gained the right to vote. Autonomy was
granted to Catalonia and the Basque provinces. The republic tried to improve
the condition of workers, make taxes more equitable, and divide the large
estates in southern Spain for redistribution to peasants. In addition, the
republic secularized education and legalized divorce.
G1b
|
Growing Divisions
|
The government’s ambitious reforms alienated many groups
that had at first accepted the Second Republic. At the same time, the deepening
worldwide depression in the 1930s reduced demand for Spanish exports and
increased poverty and social tensions. The program to break up the large
estates alienated landowners, but also lost the support of the peasantry
because it moved too slowly. Opposition to the government increased among Roman
Catholics who resented republican efforts to reduce the church’s authority.
Azaña’s coalition began to crumble in 1933 after the government tried to close
private Catholic schools.
In national elections in 1933 rightist and center-right
parties won a majority and forced the republican-socialist coalition from
power. The newly formed, conservative Spanish Confederation of Autonomous
Rights (Confederación Española de Derechas Autónomous, CEDA), led by
Catholic politician José María Gil Robles, became the largest party. CEDA
entered the government, and the new leadership began to overturn the religious
and social reforms of the previous government. Leftist groups bitterly resisted
these changes. At the same time, political forces on the far right called for
the overthrow of the Second Republic. These forces included monarchists and a
new party called the Falange (“phalanx”), founded by José Antonio Primo de
Rivera, son of the former dictator. The Falange promoted fascist political
ideas and supported a form of nationalist totalitarianism in Spain like that in
Fascist Italy under Benito Mussolini and Nazi Germany under Adolf Hitler.
Tensions exploded in October 1934 when a
socialist-led workers’ insurrection swept Asturias, and Catalonia proclaimed
its independence. Spanish troops crushed the Asturian revolt after two weeks of
savage fighting, and the separatist rising in Catalonia was suppressed. The
government rounded up and imprisoned thousands of leftists across Spain. This
repression encouraged many groups on the left to begin building alliances, and
the socialists under leader Francisco Largo Caballero began using revolutionary
rhetoric. The governing coalition, plagued by scandals, collapsed in late 1935,
and President Alcalá Zamora called new national elections.
G1c
|
The Popular Front
|
The elections in February 1936 pitted a rightist
bloc of conservatives against a new Popular Front coalition that included the
entire left. Less moderate than the previous leftist coalition, the Popular
Front included radical republicans, socialists, the small Spanish Communist
Party, and other groups. The Popular Front scored a narrow victory and took
control of the Cortes. The new government revived the progressive reform
program and granted amnesty to hundreds of political prisoners.
The Popular Front’s reforms and radical rhetoric
alarmed conservatives, many of whom feared a communist-inspired, leftist
revolution. A conspiracy to overthrow the government soon took shape under
General Emilio Mola and other prominent military leaders. Tension mounted as
street battles between rival groups, assassinations, and widespread strikes
paralyzed the nation. Peasants in the south began seizing the land and dividing
some of the large estates. By mid-1936, amid escalating factional strife, many
conspirators were ready to take action. The assassination on July 13 of
monarchist leader José Calvo Sotelo provided convenient justification for the
military rebellion.
G2
|
Civil War
|
On July 17, 1936, Spanish military forces
stationed in Morocco mutinied and proclaimed a revolution against Spain’s
elected government. The uprising marked the beginning of the Spanish Civil War.
Many troops based in Spain joined the insurrection. The rebels, or
Nationalists, soon found a strong leader in General Francisco Franco. They were
backed by conservative forces that included the Catholic Church, landowning
peasants, the Falange, and Carlist monarchists. Supporters of the government,
known as Republicans, included most workers, liberals, socialists, communists,
and Basque and Catalan separatists. Juan Negrin, a moderate socialist, led the
Republican cause for most of the war.
The Nationalists hoped to seize power quickly; they had
not foreseen a long, bloody conflict. At first the Nationalist forces made
great advances. The uprising succeeded in the provincial capitals of rural León
and Old Castile, including Burgos, Salamanca, and Ávila. Nationalist control
rapidly extended across most of western and southern Spain. However, Republicans
soon defeated the insurgents in Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, and several other
eastern and northern cities. A prolonged civil war ensued. Nationalist power
was strongest in rural Spain; Republicans held most major industrial and urban
areas. As the war continued, Nationalist control of agricultural areas led to
severe food shortages in many Republican strongholds.
Both Nationalists and Republicans received help from
abroad. Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany sent troops, arms, and airplanes to aid
the Nationalists. The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) furnished
military equipment and advisers to the Republicans. The Republicans also
received aid from the International Brigades, made up of idealistic volunteers
from Europe and the Americas. France, the United Kingdom, and the United States
remained neutral, despite concerns that Franco would establish a new military
dictatorship in Spain. Western democracies distrusted the Spanish government,
which had backed leftist reforms and came to power in a coalition that included
communists. The participation of the brigades, who were organized by
communists, seemed to offer further evidence that Spain’s government was
slipping toward Communism.
The Nationalist forces were more unified and better
equipped and trained than their Republican adversaries. They also benefited
from larger amounts of foreign assistance and an international blockade against
Spain that was enforced mainly against the Republican side. Franco quickly
secured military and political leadership of the Nationalists. In September
1936 he was named generalísimo (commander in chief) of the Nationalist
troops and el caudillo (the leader) of Nationalist Spain. In April 1937
he merged the Falange, monarchists, and other Nationalist groups into a single
party under his control, the Falange Española Tradicionalista y de las JONS, or
FET/JONS. The Republican ranks were more divided, hindered by internal
conflicts and ideological rivalries. Moderates wanted Republican forces to focus
on defeating the Nationalists and to postpone reform until after the war. Other
groups, including anarchists, left-wing socialists, and revolutionary Marxists,
wanted immediate revolution. In some areas revolutionaries asserted public
ownership over private property and turned farms and factories into communes.
This created economic chaos and led to armed conflicts between revolutionary
and antirevolutionary Republicans. Meanwhile, the Spanish Communist Party’s
influence over Republican strategy rapidly expanded because of its
organizational skills and its control of Soviet-supplied arms.
After failing to seize Madrid, Franco’s forces
launched a campaign in 1937 to conquer the Basque provinces, Asturias, and
other industrial regions of northern Spain. During this campaign the first
large-scale aerial bombing of civilians took place, including the infamous
German raid that destroyed the Basque town of Guernica. As the war continued, a
series of Nationalist offensives gradually brought the industrialized regions
of eastern Spain under rebel control. In March 1939 Nationalist troops finally
took Madrid after a long resistance. When Franco’s troops entered the starving
city, the remaining Republican forces were too divided and exhausted to
continue fighting. Madrid fell on March 28, and Franco proclaimed the
Nationalists’ triumph on April 1.
The civil war devastated Spain. An estimated
500,000 people died in the fighting and much of the country’s infrastructure
was destroyed. Between 250,000 and 500,000 political refugees left the country.
Spain’s short-lived experiment with democracy was replaced by an authoritarian
regime under Franco, who would rule Spain as dictator for the next 36 years.
G3
|
The Franco Dictatorship
|
Spain’s savage civil war was followed by an
unusually vindictive peace. Franco made no attempt at national reconciliation.
Fervently anti-communist, Franco characterized Republicans as anti-Spanish
“Reds,” a term that included anyone associated with the Second Republic. The
Franco government tracked people suspected of Republican sympathies and
persecuted them for decades. In the first four years after the war, the
government imprisoned hundreds of thousands of people and executed many
thousands of others.
The dictatorship’s main sources of political support
included the army, the Catholic Church, and the Falange, which became known as
the National Movement after 1945. The National Movement was the nation’s only
legal political organization, and Roman Catholicism became the official state
religion. The army provided the dictatorship with security, while the Catholic
Church and the National Movement gave Franco’s rule a measure of legitimacy.
The Cortes under Franco was reduced to an advisory body with little independent
power. Most seats in the Cortes were filled by appointment or indirect
election, and many members held positions in Franco’s administration.
Once in power, Franco revoked most of the
Republican-backed legislation that favored workers and peasants. Strikes were
forbidden, and the state required workers and business owners to join
syndicates controlled by the government. Franco endorsed rigid laws against
abortion and divorce, and he turned control of education over to the Catholic
Church. Committed to the ideal of a culturally uniform Spain, Franco suppressed
regionalist movements in Catalonia, the Basque provinces, and Galicia. Press
censorship and government surveillance of potential political leaders
restricted dissent across Spain.
G3a
|
World War II
|
Spain adopted a policy of neutrality during World
War II (1939-1945). Franco clearly favored the Axis Powers, especially Germany
and Italy, which had supported the Nationalists during the civil war, and he
openly sympathized with fascist ideas. However, Spanish industries were
inefficient and the transportation system was largely in ruins, making
mobilization for war difficult. Initially, Franco pledged to join the Axis war
effort in exchange for raw materials, railroad equipment, and weapons. However,
in 1940 German dictator Adolf Hitler rejected Franco’s conditions for Spanish
participation as too costly. Thus Spain spent most of the war as a pro-Axis
neutral; Franco permitted German ships and submarines to use Spanish ports and
sold raw materials to Germany. Franco also sent a division of troops to help
Germans fighting in the Soviet Union.
A cautious, pragmatic ruler, Franco shifted policy as
the Allied Powers began winning the war. By 1943 Franco had loosened ties with
Germany and moved toward greater neutrality. He also diminished the political
role of the Falange. Imprisonments dropped sharply, and executions gradually
tapered off. During the last phase of the war, Spain sold valuable raw
materials to the Allies. By that time, however, the Franco regime was
identified with the Axis, and Spain was considered a hostile power by the
victors of World War II.
G3b
|
Political and Economic Isolation
|
Spain emerged from the war politically and
economically isolated. In the immediate postwar period, many countries cut off
diplomatic relations with Spain. The United Nations (UN) and the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization (NATO) excluded Spain from membership. Franco, however, made
continued overtures to the West. In an effort to allay international criticism
of his rule, Franco declared Spain a monarchy in 1947 and announced that a king
would assume the throne after his death, incapacity, or retirement.
Domestically, Franco’s economic policies further isolated
Spain and led to a disastrous period of economic stagnation. During the 1940s
and much of the 1950s, Franco’s government pursued a policy of autarky
(economic self-sufficiency without foreign trade or investment). Franco believed
that Spain could achieve economic recovery and growth through rigorous state
regulation of the economy. However, Franco’s government made few investments to
rebuild the nation’s shattered infrastructure, and his policies effectively
deprived Spain of foreign investment. Agricultural output and industrial
production languished, wages plummeted, and the black market flourished. Raw
materials and food were rationed until the 1950s. Malnutrition and poor medical
care afflicted an entire generation of Spaniards.
G3c
|
The Reemergence of Spain
|
In the late 1940s Western powers began to
reevaluate their relations with the Franco regime. The Cold War pitting
communist against non-communist nations was underway, and some governments viewed
Franco as a potential anti-communist ally. After the outbreak of the Korean War
in June 1950, the United States began to recognize the strategic importance of
the Iberian Peninsula and resumed diplomatic relations with the Spanish
government. Spain soon received loans from U.S. banks. Under an agreement
concluded in 1953, the United States gave the Franco regime substantial
economic aid in exchange for access to several Spanish military and naval
bases. The UN admitted Spain as a member in 1955. Open hostility toward Spain
ended, and most nations resumed diplomatic relations with the Spanish
government.
By the early 1950s Spain’s poor economic
performance forced adjustments to Franco’s policy of isolationism. Franco
reorganized the government in 1951, lifted many of the government’s economic
controls, and increased public investment. Economic aid from the United States
supported these policies, and by 1952 agricultural and industrial production
had returned to pre-civil-war levels.
Throughout the 1950s Franco sought to preserve his
dictatorial rule, and he continued to suppress political dissent. However,
Franco’s efforts failed to contain the expanding political opposition. By the
mid-1950s, student agitation, sporadic labor strikes, and the emergence of a
reform wing within the Catholic Church increasingly challenged Franco’s
authoritarian hold on power. At the same time, Franco’s refusal to seriously
open the Spanish economy to foreign trade and investment contributed to an
escalating economic crisis. Rampant inflation, falling real wages, and growing
debt all seemed to underline the failure of the government’s economic policies.
These political and economic crises forced Franco
to accept a major cabinet reorganization in 1957 that increased labor and business
representation in government. Power over economic policy fell largely to
members of Opus Dei, a socially conservative Roman Catholic lay organization
that promoted economic reforms as a means of improving society. The new Opus
Dei ministers were competent economic planners and in 1959 they developed a
stabilization plan that provided a framework for economic growth. The plan
devalued Spain’s currency, opened the country to foreign investors, and
obtained more loans from the United States. It also encouraged tourism and
permitted Spanish workers to seek employment in other European countries. A
period of spectacular economic expansion ensued.
G3d
|
The Economic Miracle
|
Spain’s opening to the world unleashed
unprecedented social and economic change. During the 1960s, industrial
production boomed, and gross domestic product (GDP) rose by 40 percent. Foreign
currency poured into Spain as the tourism industry rapidly expanded and Spanish
workers abroad sent money to relatives back home. Impoverished agricultural
workers left the fields for better-paying jobs in the cities. At the same time,
mechanization of agriculture increased output and reduced costs of production.
A growing labor shortage pushed wages upward, and the middle class grew larger
and wealthier. Labor agitation also increased. Workers, dissatisfied with the
government-controlled labor syndicates, organized unofficial trade unions to
press for better pay, benefits, and working conditions.
Greater worker prosperity brought rapid social change. A
massive migration from the countryside to cities accelerated Spain’s transition
from a rural to an urban society. A large housing program sponsored by the
government eased the social costs of this transition. Secondary and university
education expanded, and illiteracy fell dramatically. These changes also drew
Spain closer to the rest of Western Europe; Spaniards became more secularized
and sophisticated as their exposure to new ideas and ways of life increased.
The great changes underway in Spain created a
society at odds with the aging Franco dictatorship. Many workers had lived and
worked in European democracies and were impatient with Franco’s repressive
labor policies. Confronted by a growing number of strikes and demonstrations,
the government moved erratically between compromise and arbitrary crackdowns.
Moreover, the Catholic Church, a fundamental source of support for the
government, had begun moving away from the regime. By the mid-1960s a new generation
of Spanish bishops, encouraged by the reforms of the Second Vatican Council,
grew increasingly sympathetic to popular demands for progressive social
policies and more political freedoms.
Despite continued repression by the dictatorship, a
small amount of political liberalization accompanied the great economic
expansion in the 1960s. In 1965 a new law recognized the right of workers to
strike for purely economic—not political—reasons, although walkouts remained
illegal. The Franco regime relaxed press censorship, to some extent, in 1966.
Another reform made the Cortes slightly more representative and increased its
powers. In 1969 Franco reaffirmed Spain’s formal status as a monarchy by naming
Juan Carlos de Borbón, grandson of Alfonso XIII, to be his successor as head of
state.
The gradual liberalization of Spain was also evident
abroad. Spain granted the West African colony of Spanish Guinea its
independence as Equatorial Guinea in 1968; seven years later Spain ceded
Spanish Sahara to Morocco and Mauritania. Still, with Franco in power many
European governments remained unfriendly toward Spain. The smaller democratic
countries of northwestern Europe remained strongly opposed to the Spanish
government’s membership in West European military and economic alliances.
Spain’s first application for membership in the European Economic Community
(EEC) was refused in 1964, although a limited associate relationship was
arranged.
G3e
|
Last Years of Franco’s Regime
|
Spain’s growing prosperity and moves toward greater
liberalization did not end social and political unrest. Many strikes occurred
in Spain during the late 1960s and the early 1970s. Students protested against
overcrowded facilities and government control. Catalan and Basque regionalists
again became politically active.
By far the most important regionalist conflict
arose in the Basque provinces. An extremist wing of Basque nationalism found
expression in the separatist group Euskadi Ta Askatasuna (ETA; Basque for
“Basque Homeland and Liberty”). In the 1960s the ETA launched terrorist attacks
against police and army units. The government responded with indiscriminate
repression, including arbitrary beatings and arrests of suspected Basque
nationalists. A vicious cycle of violence and counterviolence gripped the
Basque provinces from 1969 to 1975. In 1970 several ETA leaders were sentenced
to death in military trials held in the city of Burgos. Nations around the
world protested the trials. The Spanish government eventually backed down and commuted
the ETA death sentences.
As Franco aged his control over public affairs
diminished. In 1973 Franco created the post of prime minister and separated
executive functions from his role as head of state. He yielded the new post to
Admiral Luis Carrero Blanco, a longtime friend and supporter. Shortly after
taking power Carrero Blanco was assassinated in a spectacular explosion
engineered by the ETA. Carlos Arias Navarro, a moderate Francoist, succeeded
Carrero Blanco.
Carrero Blanco’s death was a severe blow to the regime.
Instead of reverting to massive repression, however, Arias announced further
liberalization measures. These included plans to permit the formation of
political associations, which had been forbidden since 1939. Arias’s
initiatives sparked a revolt by hard-line Francoists, who sought a return to a
strong dictatorship. For a brief period it seemed that they might succeed.
Conservatives sabotaged Arias’s attempted reforms and passed a law requiring
the death penalty for terrorists who killed police. In September 1975 five
Basque nationalists were executed, despite international protests and a plea
for clemency from the pope. The possibility of further moves to the right
diminished, however, when Franco died in November 1975. Arias continued as
prime minister, and Prince Juan Carlos de Borbón, whom Franco had designated as
his successor in 1969, became head of state as King Juan Carlos I.
H
|
The Restoration of Democracy
|
Franco’s death aroused fresh hopes for a democratic
Spain. The new king favored full democratization, but many powerful interests
opposed change. The modest reforms proposed by Arias under the dictatorship
were soon seen as inadequate by much of the population, including workers who
demanded legalization of independent labor unions. Hard-line Francoists viewed
the measures as too extreme. The deadlock was broken in July 1976 when Arias
resigned at the request of the king. Juan Carlos appointed Adolfo Suárez
González as the new prime minister.
A former minister under Franco, Suárez became chief
architect of Spain’s successful transition to democracy. Suárez convinced the
Cortes to pass the Political Reform Law, which the country overwhelmingly
approved by referendum in December 1976. The referendum established universal
suffrage and called for a bicameral legislature consisting of a popularly
elected lower house and an upper house composed of both elected and appointed
members. In February 1977 opposition political parties deemed to be democratic
were legalized. Despite strong objections from the military, Suárez even
legalized the Spanish Communist Party in April to ensure that the coming
elections would be regarded as legitimate. In the same month the National
Movement—the official state party under Franco—ceased to exist. As part of the
reform process, the unrepresentative Francoist Cortes literally voted itself
out of existence, a remarkable end to a long and often painful dictatorship.
H1
|
Parliamentary Democracy
|
In June 1977 Spain held its first democratic
elections to parliament since 1936. The elections reaffirmed Suárez’s centrist
policies. His newly formed coalition, the Union of the Democratic Center (UDC),
emerged as the strongest party, and claimed nearly half the seats in the lower
house of parliament. The Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party finished a close
second. Few seats went to extremist parties, either of the left or right.
Suárez governed through consensus, consulting all mainstream parties when formulating
national policies.
H2
|
The 1978 Constitution
|
The government’s first order of business was to draft a
new democratic constitution for Spain. In 1978 the parliament approved a
constitution, which easily won the endorsement of voters in a national
referendum. The constitution established a constitutional monarchy in Spain
with the king serving as head of state and symbol of national unity. It created
an independent judiciary and placed significant restrictions on two of Spain’s
most historically important institutions: the military and the Catholic Church.
Constitutional provisions affirmed civilian control over the military and
denied Catholicism the status of a state religion.
One of the most striking features of the
constitution was its recognition of limited autonomy for Spain’s historical
regions. Catalonia, the Basque Country, and Galicia were quickly granted home
rule and their languages were officially recognized. Provisions were made for
the extension of limited autonomy to more than a dozen other regions across the
country. Thus, the new constitution effectively reversed the movement toward
political centralization begun by Ferdinand and Isabella in the 15th century,
and Spain began to redefine itself as a nation of autonomous communities.
Despite formal constitutional guarantees of limited self-government, however,
regionalist demands for greater autonomy from the central government have
remained a difficult problem for Spain.
H3
|
Turbulent Transition
|
Spain’s young parliamentary democracy faced several
challenges. The nation’s economic growth had slowed by the mid-1970s, and
inflation and unemployment became increasingly severe throughout the decade. In
addition, the limited autonomy extended to the Basque Country failed to satisfy
Basque separatists, who resented being tied to Spain; terrorist activity by the
ETA intensified. At the same time, democratization produced unrest among
right-wing extremists. After the national elections in 1979, which returned
Suárez and his centrist coalition to power, rightist segments within the UDC
reasserted themselves. Suárez’s style of consensus politics broke down as the
UDC coalition dissolved into factions. Suárez resigned in January 1981 and was
succeeded by another UDC leader, Leopoldo Calvo Sotelo.
Conservative military officers opposed to rapid political and
social change seized the occasion of a change in prime ministers to attempt a
coup d’état. On February 23, 1981, armed civil guards led by Lieutenant-Colonel
Antonio Tejero invaded the Cortes in an effort to seize power. King Juan Carlos
played a key role in blocking the coup by convincing most Spanish military
units to remain loyal to the government. Calvo Sotelo resumed leadership of the
government. In 1982 Calvo Sotelo secured Spain’s membership in NATO.
Shortly before the 1982 national elections another
plot by right-wing extremists to stage a military coup was discovered. Four
military leaders were arrested and three were later imprisoned. News of the
plot helped swing the elections to the Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party, led by
Felipe González Márquez. The elections gave Spain its first socialist
government since the 1930s. The UCD was so badly defeated it went out of
existence almost immediately. The Democratic Coalition, an alliance of
conservative parties under the leadership of Manuel Fraga, took the place of
the UCD and became the official opposition.
H4
|
The Socialist Era
|
González and the Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party
governed Spain from 1982 to 1996. The socialists retained control of the
parliament in elections held in 1986, 1989, and 1993. However, the party’s
parliamentary majorities steadily diminished to the point where, after 1993, it
was forced to rule in a minority government.
Once in power it soon became clear that
González’s conception of socialism differed from that of his party’s left-wing
constituents, many of whom supported extensive nationalization of the economy.
González unveiled a pro-market economic development plan that included
privatization of state-owned industries and spending cuts to social welfare
programs. Efforts to deregulate the economy under González continued into the
1990s. The socialist government eliminated the monopolistic rights of many
state-owned companies, relaxed labor laws, and loosened restrictions on
establishing new companies.
For much of the 1980s Spain experienced a
major economic revival. Despite the booming economy, however, significant
social issues remained unresolved. By the late 1980s high inflation and chronic
unemployment had produced growing dissatisfaction among Spanish workers. Even
during the booming 1980s Spain was afflicted with major strikes, some of them
violent. The strikes included the participation of teachers, civil servants,
miners, farmers, transportation and health-care workers, factory employees, and
shipyard workers. A one-day general strike in 1988, the first since 1934,
paralyzed the nation and won the support of 8 million workers. González offered
several concessions to end the strike, including raising pensions and
increasing unemployment insurance.
Spain played an increasingly dynamic role in
European affairs during the 1980s and 1990s. In 1986 Spain joined the European
Community (now the European Union, or EU) as a full member. In the same year
Spanish voters approved a referendum to keep their country in the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). The referendum required Spain to remain
outside of NATO’s military command structure, prohibited the basing of nuclear
weapons in Spain, and reduced the number of United States troops in the
country. In 1992 the Summer Olympic Games were held in Barcelona, a world’s
fair commemorating the 500th anniversary of Columbus’s first voyage to the
Americas was held in Seville, and Spain ratified the Maastricht Treaty on
European Union.
By the early 1990s popular support for
González and his party had declined. Dissatisfaction with Socialist rule came
from a variety of sources, including a series of political and corruption
scandals that had tainted the government. Confidence in the socialist
government’s economic leadership fell in the early 1990s when a worldwide
recession gripped Spain and the economy sharply contracted. The downturn
worsened in 1993, as economic output plummeted and unemployment exceeded 20
percent.
Ethnic regionalism remained an important source of
social tension for the national government. Persistent terrorism by the Basque
separatist group ETA was blamed for hundreds of deaths between the late 1960s
and mid-1990s. The socialist government committed itself to strong
antiterrorist measures and arrested many ETA members. However, ETA cells
continued to explode bombs in public places and carry out high-profile
kidnappings. In 1988 the government was embarrassed by allegations of official
support for an illegal militia that had carried out assassinations of ETA
members in northern Spain and southern France in the 1980s. By the mid-1990s a
growing peace movement helped sway public opinion against the ETA’s violent
tactics, and the separatists lost political support.
The socialists, tarnished by scandals, high
unemployment, and growing internal divisions over the party’s centrist policies,
failed to gain an absolute majority in the 1993 elections. González began his
fourth term as prime minister with a minority government. To gain backing for
government policies, González was forced to seek support from the small Catalan
and Basque parties. The Catalan Convergence and Union Party (CiU), the larger
of the regionalist parties, used its new leverage to further Catalonia’s bid
for greater autonomy. In 1995, amid renewed accusations of government
complicity in the killing of Basque separatists, the CiU withdrew its support
from the embattled socialist government and forced new elections.
I
|
Recent Developments
|
In the March 1996 national elections the
center-right Popular Party, led by José María Aznar, defeated the socialists.
The Popular Party failed to gain an outright majority, however, and was forced
to form a coalition government with the Catalan nationalist CiU. In return for
the CiU’s support, Aznar conceded additional powers to Spain’s regional
governments. In November 1996 Spain agreed to full integration in NATO.
A chief priority for Aznar’s government was to
reduce Spain’s budget deficit to qualify the nation for the adoption of a
common European currency in 1999. Austerity measures introduced by the government,
including cuts in public investment and a freeze in public-sector pay, aroused
widespread opposition. Strikes and protests by civil servants, truck drivers,
and miners caused serious economic disruptions. Despite popular hostility,
however, the measures succeeded in helping Spain meet the EU’s criteria for
participation in the single currency.
Aznar’s government pursued a variety of free-market
policies, and by the late 1990s Spain’s economy had emerged as one of the
strongest in Europe. Aznar cautiously moved ahead with privatization of
state-owned industries and introduced labor law reforms to give businesses
greater flexibility over employment. Unemployment gradually declined, interest
rates fell, and business investment expanded. The Popular Party won a decisive
victory in the March 2000 elections and was able to establish a government
without coalition partners. Aznar campaigned on the issue of Spain’s impressive
economic growth during his tenure, and he pledged to continue his government’s
economic policies.
I1
|
Terrorist Attacks and the Defeat of the Popular Party
|
In March 2004 the worst terrorist attack in
Spain’s history killed 192 people and injured more than 1,500, as ten bombs
detonated on four commuter trains in Madrid during the morning rush hour on
March 11. The Aznar government almost immediately blamed ETA, the Basque
separatist group, and initially refused to consider any other terrorist groups.
Evidence, however, soon pointed to Muslim terrorists
linked to al-Qaeda, the group responsible for the September 11 terrorist
attacks in the United States. Two days after the bombings, Spanish authorities
arrested five men who were linked to a cell phone used as a detonator in a bomb
that failed to explode. One of the men was associated with an al-Qaeda leader
who had been arrested for his role in the September 11 attacks.
The Aznar government’s handling of the attack led to the
defeat of the Popular Party in parliamentary elections held on March 14.
Spanish voters, who had demonstrated in the millions in several major cities
the day following the attack, apparently believed the government was too quick
to blame the ETA for political reasons. The Popular Party had won popular support
for its crackdown on the ETA, but it had also drawn Spain into conflict with
Islamic extremists by supporting the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003.
When it became apparent that the terrorist attack
was probably the work of al-Qaeda, Spanish voters reportedly blamed the Popular
Party for making Spain the focus of Muslim extremists, who vowed political
retaliation for the Aznar government’s support of the administration of U.S.
president George W. Bush. Spain’s alliance with the United States during the Iraq
war was opposed by millions of Spaniards, who held mass demonstrations to
protest Spain’s involvement. Some polls showed that as many as 90 percent of
Spaniards were against the war. See also Terrorism; U.S.-Iraq War.
The parliamentary elections, which were held just four
days after the terrorist attacks, resulted in victory for the Socialist
Workers’ Party, which opposed Spain’s participation in the U.S. occupation of
Iraq. The Socialist upset was in part due to an unusually high voter turnout,
with many otherwise disaffected voters in their 20s and 30s deciding to go to
the polls in the final days of the election campaign. Socialist leader José
Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, who became Spain’s prime minister, had called for the
withdrawal of Spain’s 1,300 troops from Iraq and for closer ties with the rest
of Europe, especially France and Germany, both of which had opposed the
U.S.-led invasion. The Socialist Workers’ Party won 43 percent of the vote and
164 seats in the Chamber of Deputies. The Popular Party’s vote total fell to 38
percent and 148 seats. The Socialists formed a coalition government with
smaller parties to have a majority of 183 seats in the 350-member Congress of
Deputies.
Within a day of being sworn in, Zapatero
followed through on his campaign promise and began the process of withdrawing
Spain’s troops from Iraq. In his view the developing political situation in
Iraq was not likely to lead to the United Nations (UN) involvement necessary to
justify Spain’s continued participation. In April 2004 a Spanish judge
concluded there was no doubt that al-Qaeda was behind the Madrid bombings.
In July 2005 the lower house of the Spanish
parliament approved legislation legalizing same-sex marriages in the country.
The lower house was able to overrule the upper house, which had rejected the
controversial bill. The new law gave married same-sex couples the same rights
as married heterosexual couples, including the right to adopt children. The new
legislation was one of a series of reforms being introduced by Spain’s
Socialist government. Although Spain is an overwhelmingly Catholic country,
polls showed that between 55 percent and 65 percent of Spaniards support
same-sex marriage.
In March 2006 the ETA announced a permanent
cease-fire in their decades-long campaign of terrorism. The group pledged to
work within the political process to achieve its goal of Basque independence.
Spanish government officials were cautiously optimistic about the cease-fire,
the first permanent declaration in the ETA’s history. However, the ETA ended
its cease-fire in June 2007 and said it would resume its violent struggle. In
response Zapatero vowed to crack down on the group.
In June 2006 voters in Catalonia approved a
referendum backing a new self-government charter for the region. The charter
had earlier been approved by the national parliament. The referendum approval
made the new autonomy measure binding and final, and it went into effect on
July 1. Under the new charter, Catalonia obtains more control over collecting
tax revenues, setting immigration policy, making judicial appointments, and
maintaining its infrastructure, such as its highways and train services. The
charter requires residents to learn the Catalan language, and it acknowledges
that Catalonia considers itself a nation.
In the 2008 parliamentary elections, held amid a
downturn in the country’s economy, Spanish voters returned the Socialists to
power. The Socialist Workers’ Party won 169 seats in the Chamber of Deputies,
giving Zapatero a second term in office as head of a coalition government.