Spain, Europe, and the "Spanish miracle", 1700-1900

Bibliographic Information

Spain, Europe, and the "Spanish miracle", 1700-1900

David R. Ringrose

Cambridge University Press, 1996

  • : hardback
  • : paperback

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Note

Bibliography: p. 397-428

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

David Ringrose here re-examines the history of Spain in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. He challenges the pessimism of prevailing assumptions about Spanish history, and its conventional separation into pre- and post-Napoleonic eras. Spain, Europe, and the 'Spanish Miracle', 1700-1900 also questions the importance of the empire for Spain's own economy, suggesting instead that Spain evolved as part of Europe; indeed, some of the recently documented modernisation of the nineteenth century was already well under way in the eighteenth. In addition, the emergence of a governing elite closely tied to provincial society is placed in the context of traditional networks of patronage based upon close-knit family ties. Such a perspective makes the transitions of the 1930s and 1970s easier to explain. This important and challenging book will change our understanding of the history of modern Spain.

Table of Contents

  • Part I. The Problems of Perception: 1. Perceptions and perspectives
  • 2. Focusing the problem
  • 3. Glimpses of the Spanish economy
  • Part II. Peninsular Spain and a Changing World: 4. The Indies trade and a peninsular economy to 1763
  • 5. Indies trade and peninsular economy between 18th and 19th centuries: reform, crisis, adaptation
  • 6. Trade, economic expansion, European context
  • 7. From enlightenment to commodity: redefining resources
  • Part III. Alternative Responses to a Changing World: 8. The Mediterranean urban system: trade, hierarchy, trends
  • 9. Cantabrian Spain: from Guipuzcoa to Galicia
  • capital city, markets, and Castillian interior
  • 10. Towns and cities in Andalusia
  • Part IV. Networks, Provincial Elites and Central Authority: 11. A narrative context
  • 12. Basic institutions of political and economic life: family, town, office
  • 13. Office, state, and local elites, seventeenth-nineteenth centuries
  • 14. Conclusion: trends, events, perceptions.

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