A study of the re-emergence of Spain as a major power in Europe in the generation after the War of the Spanish Succession.Historiography has not been kind to Felipe V, the first Bourbon to reign in Spain, from 1700 to 1746. Called incapable, indolent and dominated by his second wife, Isabel de Farnesio, the truth is that under his scepter the Monarchy Hispánica was once again a dynamic and expansionist power, particularly in the Mediterranean theater, with campaigns in Italy and North Africa. The Spanish resurgence 1713-1748 affects the profound change that the establishment of the Bourbons meant with respect to the attitudes and practices of the Habsburgs, underlining the role that this monarch had in the greening of Spanish power from 171...
Previous studies on politics and history writing in early modern Europe have focused on how early mo...
It is widely held that the Spanish Habsburgs (c.1516–1700) had little interest in sea power and thus...
Thanks to a recent proliferation of international and multidisciplinary research groups, the Spanish...
A study of the re-emergence of Spain as a major power in Europe in the generation after the War of t...
Often dismissed as ineffective, indolent, and dominated by his second wife, Philip V of Spain (1700–...
The reign of Philip V of Spain (1700–46) remains one of the most neglected in the history of that co...
The War of the Spanish Succession began in 1701, when most of Europe allied to block the accession o...
In 1713, after two centuries of domination in Italy and the Netherlands, the Treaty of Utrecht sanc...
This thesis recovers Spain’s engagement with the Utrecht Enlightenment. Early eighteenth-century Spa...
This thesis explores the changes introduced in the Spanish system of viceregal rule, both in Peninsu...
The War of the Spanish Succession affected the entire continent of Europe directly or indirectly. Wi...
After the death of King Charles II of Spain, the battle for the succession between Philip of Bourbon...
As a result of a internal crisis, the Spanish Monarchy underwent a process of redefinition between t...
This study provides an explanation about the political change in 1814 Spain. Unlike from the Bourbon...
Previous studies on politics and history writing in early modern Europe have focused on how early mo...
It is widely held that the Spanish Habsburgs (c.1516–1700) had little interest in sea power and thus...
Thanks to a recent proliferation of international and multidisciplinary research groups, the Spanish...
A study of the re-emergence of Spain as a major power in Europe in the generation after the War of t...
Often dismissed as ineffective, indolent, and dominated by his second wife, Philip V of Spain (1700–...
The reign of Philip V of Spain (1700–46) remains one of the most neglected in the history of that co...
The War of the Spanish Succession began in 1701, when most of Europe allied to block the accession o...
In 1713, after two centuries of domination in Italy and the Netherlands, the Treaty of Utrecht sanc...
This thesis recovers Spain’s engagement with the Utrecht Enlightenment. Early eighteenth-century Spa...
This thesis explores the changes introduced in the Spanish system of viceregal rule, both in Peninsu...
The War of the Spanish Succession affected the entire continent of Europe directly or indirectly. Wi...
After the death of King Charles II of Spain, the battle for the succession between Philip of Bourbon...
As a result of a internal crisis, the Spanish Monarchy underwent a process of redefinition between t...
This study provides an explanation about the political change in 1814 Spain. Unlike from the Bourbon...
Previous studies on politics and history writing in early modern Europe have focused on how early mo...
It is widely held that the Spanish Habsburgs (c.1516–1700) had little interest in sea power and thus...
Thanks to a recent proliferation of international and multidisciplinary research groups, the Spanish...