Bourbon Spain, 1700-1808

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Bibliographic Information

Bourbon Spain, 1700-1808

John Lynch

(A history of Spain)

Basil Blackwell, 1993, c1989

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Note

Bibliography: p. [422]-442

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This text describes the history of a crucial century for Spain, when statesmen had to innovate and people to adjust. Under Charles III the power of the state and the impulse to reform reached their peak, and his reign was viewed by posterity as a model of enlightened absolutism. John Lynch takes as his theme the interplay between new policy and changing conditions in Spain and its empire. Population growth increased the pressure on land and depressed rural living standards, at a time when rising grain prices brought landowners great profit. Lynch considers whether reformers had the will or the means to effect the structural changes needed in Spain, abolish privilege, liberalize land policy and redistribute resources. In doing so, he highlights the critical importance of Spain's American empire in the Bourbon programme. This book explores the limits of modernization and of the classical dilemma confronting Spanish government: how could it reform the existing system without subverting it?.

Table of Contents

  • The Hispanic world in 1700
  • the Bourbon succession in war and peace
  • the government of Philip V
  • Spain, Europe and America
  • time and transition
  • economy and society
  • Charles III - the limits of absolutism
  • the Bourbon state
  • Spain and America
  • Charles IV and the crisis of Bourbon Spain.

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