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==King of Spain== {{Main|Provisional Government (1868â1871)}} {{Infobox former subdivision | native_name = Reino de España | common_name = Reign of Spain | government_type = [[Constitutional monarchy]] | year_start = 1871 | year_end = 1873 | image_flag = Flag of Spain (1785-1873 and 1875-1931).svg | flag_caption = [[Flag of Spain]] | image_coat = Escudo de España con Amadeo de Saboya.svg | capital = [[Madrid]] | anthem = [[Marcha Real]] | image_map = Imperio Español (1821-1898).png | image_map_caption = Spanish possessions around the world between 1821 and 1898. | native_name_lang = [[Spanish language|Castilian]] | motto = ''[[Plus Ultra]]'' (latin): Further beyond | event_start = Proclamation of Amadeo I | event_end = Abdication of Amadeo I | date_start = January 2 | date_end = February 10 | era = [[Contemporary history of Spain]] | conventional_long_name = | flag_p1 = Flag_of_the_First_Spanish_Republic.svg | flag_s1 = Flag_of_the_First_Spanish_Republic.svg | s1 = First Spanish Republic | p1 = Provisional Government (1868â1871) | legislature = [[Congress of Deputies|Cortes]] | deputy1 = Amadeo I of Spain | leader1 = Amadeo I of Spain | title_leader = [[King of Spain|King]] }} After the [[Glorious Revolution (Spain)|Glorious Revolution]] deposed [[Isabel II of Spain|Isabella II]] in September 1868, the new ''[[Cortes Generales|Cortes]]'' began the task of searching for a suitable liberal-leaning candidate from a new dynasty to replace her. Eventually the Duke of Aosta was taken into consideration. His father was a descendant of King [[Philip II of Spain]] through his daughter Infanta [[Catalina Micaela of Spain]] and her son [[Thomas Francis, Prince of Carignano]], while his mother was a descendant of King [[Charles III of Spain]] through his daughter Infanta [[Maria Luisa of Spain]]. The Savoyard prince was elected king as Amadeo I on 16 November 1870 and swore to uphold the [[Spanish Constitution of 1869|Constitution]] in Madrid on 2 January 1871. While the new king was on his way to Spain, General [[Juan Prim]], his chief supporter, was assassinated and Amadeo took the oath in the presence of Prim's corpse.<ref>Pio Zabala y Leera, ''España bajo los Borbones'', Biblioteca de Iniciacion Cultural, 1955 (5th edition), p. 421â425.</ref> This event deprived Amadeo I of indispensable support, particularly in the critical early days, and proved decisive considering that the progressive faction ultimately split between Prim's two successors, [[PrĂĄxedes Mateo Sagasta]] and [[Manuel Ruiz Zorrilla]].{{Sfn|LĂłpez-CordĂłn|1976|pp=40-41}} The new king entered Madrid on January 2, 1871, and that same day he swore allegiance to the [[Spanish Constitution of 1869|1869 Constitution]] before the Cortes.{{Sfn|Fontana|2007|p=367}} Later, he visited the Church of the {{Interlanguage link|Virgin of Atocha|es|Virgen de Atocha}}, where General Prim's funeral chapel had been set up- [[File:5 pesetas Amadeo I - 1871.png|thumb|left|250px|Amadeo as King of Spain on a coin from 1871.]] === First year === [[File:Amadeo_I,_rey_de_España.jpg|thumb|Amadeo I, King of Spain.]] ==== Government of General Serrano: The Failure of "Conciliation" ==== Following Prim's assassination, a âconciliationâ government formed at his deathbed request under [[Juan Bautista Topete|Admiral Topete]], soon transitioning to [[Francisco Serrano, 1st Duke of la Torre|General Serrano]], a [[Liberal Union (Spain)|Unionist]] who had served as regent from 1869 until Amadeo's arrival.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|p=147}} Amadeo proposed Serrano as President of the Council of Ministers to unify the monarchist-democratic coalition backing his throne. Serrano assembled a diverse cabinet: Progressives [[PrĂĄxedes Mateo Sagasta|Sagasta]] (Minister of the Interior) and [[Manuel Ruiz Zorrilla|Ruiz Zorrilla]] (Public Works), monarchist Democrat or â''{{Interlanguage link|Cimbrios|es|Cimbrios (polĂtica)}}''â [[Cristino Martos y BalbĂ|Cristino Martos]] (Justice), and Unionist [[Adelardo LĂłpez de Ayala y Herrera|Adelardo LĂłpez de Ayala]] (Overseas Territories). This mix aimed to bridge factions supporting the new dynasty.{{Sfn|Bahamonde|1996|pp=74-75}}{{Sfn|LĂłpez-CordĂłn|1976|p=41}} [[File:Virgen y mĂĄrtir.jpg|left|thumb|Caricature by [[Francisco Ortego]], ÂĄÂĄÂĄÂĄVirgen y mĂĄrtir!!!!, published in {{Interlanguage link|Gil Blas (Madrid)|es|Gil Blas}}, May 28, 1871, mocking the fate of the Constitution under Serrano's government.]] Serrano's administration, viewed by some as transitional, prioritized the [[1871 Spanish general election|first elections]] under Amadeo to secure a strong coalition majority. It enacted an electoral law reverting to district-based voting, abandoning the Progressivesâ provincial constituencies from 1869. This shift enabled the government to exert âmoral influenceâ in rural areas, ensuring a victory of 235 seatsâapproximately 130 Progressives, over 80 âborderlineâ or âAostistâ Unionists loyal to Amadeo, and about 20 monarchist Democrats. However, opposition forcesâ52 Republicans advocating a federal republic, 51 Carlists pushing traditional monarchy, and 18 [[Moderate Party (Spain)|Moderates]]âgained significant representation. Dissident Unionists under [[Antonio de los RĂos Rosas|RĂos Rosas]], backing the [[List of counts and dukes of Montpensier|Duke of Montpensier]], and [[Antonio CĂĄnovas del Castillo]], supporting Prince [[Alfonso XII|Alfonso of Bourbon]], secured 7 and 9 seats, respectively. This opposition's strength magnified the governing coalition's internal fragility.{{Sfn|LĂłpez-CordĂłn|1976|pp=41-42}}{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|p=152}} As Serrano's government and the Cortes tackled the Constitution's democratic principlesâsuch as establishing [[Jury|juries]], [[separation of church and state]], abolishing {{Interlanguage link|Quintos (Spain)|es|Quintos}} (military conscription), and addressing the [[Ten Yearsâ War|war]] and slavery in [[Cuba]]âtensions surfaced. Unionists and Sagasta's Progressives argued that crowning the Constitution with the [[Savoy]] dynasty required preserving order, while Ruiz Zorrilla's Progressives and Democrats insisted on immediate social, economic, and political reforms to consolidate the regime.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|p=153}} Sagasta, likely echoing Prim's vision, sought conciliation with Serrano's Unionists as a dynastic right (conservative party), positioning himself as leader of the dynastic left (liberal party) and opposing Carlists and Republicans outright. Conversely, Ruiz Zorrilla championed an alliance with Democrats (cimbrios) through a reformist agenda, aiming to integrate Republicans into the monarchy by proving their goals were achievable within it. Sagasta saw this as handing the regime to its enemies, rejecting collaboration with Republicans and distrusting Ruiz Zorrilla's loyalty, thus fracturing the coalition and dooming âconciliation.â{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=148-149}} ==== Opposition to the Monarchy of Amadeo I ==== [[File:Maria Vittoria dal Pozzo with her husband.jpg|left|thumb|King Amadeo and Queen [[Maria Vittoria dal Pozzo]].]] The high nobility and ecclesiastical hierarchy refused to recognize Amadeo's monarchy, viewing it as the embodiment of the 1868 Revolution that ended [[Isabella II]]âs reign, where they held privilege. They feared it would dismantle their status or pave the way for Republicans and âsocialistsâ opposing property and a confessional state. The nobility adopted a {{Interlanguage link|Casticism|es|Casticismo}} stance, claiming to defend âSpanish valuesâ against the âforeign king,â boycotting the court and snubbing Amadeo, openly loyal to the Bourbons. A notable incident, the â{{Interlanguage link|Rebellion of the Mantillas|es|RebeliĂłn de las Mantillas}},â described by Father [[Luis Coloma]] in {{Interlanguage link|Pequeñeces...|es|Pequeñeces...}}, saw aristocratic women parade in lace mantillas and fleur-de-lisâsymbols of [[Restoration (Spain)|Restoration]]âisolating Amadeo and Queen Maria Vittoria in a âcourt of furrile capes and shopkeepers,â as critics sneered.{{Sfn|Bahamonde|1996|pp=76-78}}{{Sfn|LĂłpez-CordĂłn|1976|pp=147-148}} The Church opposed Amadeo as the son of Italy's Victor Emmanuel II, who had stripped Pope Pius IX of the [[Papal States]], resisting [[Freedom of religion|religious freedom]] and measures toward [[Separation of church and state|church-state separation]]. Influenced by the [[Syllabus of Errors]], the hierarchy wielded significant sway over Catholic middle classes and rural parishes, amplifying rejection of the regime.{{Sfn|Bahamonde|1996|pp=76-78}}{{Sfn|LĂłpez-CordĂłn|1976|p=148}} Amadeo countered by ennobling industrial and financial bourgeois supporters, but defections grew, especially among those tied to Cuban slaveryâthreatened by radical abolition plansâand Catalan industrialists opposing the 1869 free trade system, which Radicals upheld.{{Sfn|Bahamonde|1996|p=78}}{{Sfn|LĂłpez-CordĂłn|1976|p=44}} [[File:La flaca agosto de 1869.JPG|thumb|290x290px|Caricature from {{Interlanguage link|La Flaca (magazine)|es|La Flaca (revista)}}, August 1869, showing [[NeocatĂłlicos|neo-Catholic]] {{Interlanguage link|CĂĄndido Nocedal|es|CĂĄndido Nocedal}} and Carlist [[Carlos de BorbĂłn y Austria-Este|Carlos VII]].]] The Carlists, thriving since 1868 beyond their Basque, Catalan, and Valencian strongholds, backed [[Carlos de BorbĂłn y Austria-Este|Carlos VII]], grandson of [[Infante Carlos MarĂa Isidro of Spain|Carlos MarĂa Isidro]], seeking a traditional monarchy. Their neo-Catholic wing, led by {{Interlanguage link|CĂĄndido Nocedal|es|CĂĄndido Nocedal}}, pursued a âlegal route,â allying with Republicans in 1871 elections to win 51 deputies and 21 senators. Amadeo's election irked them, though Nocedal restrained uprisings until September 1871.{{Sfn|Bahamonde|1996|p=78}}{{Sfn|LĂłpez-CordĂłn|1976|p=45}} Republicans, rejecting monarchy entirely, pushed for a [[Federation|Federal Republic]], inspired by France's [[Second French Empire|Second Empire]] fall. The [[Federal Democratic Republican Party|Federal Republican Party]] united diverse factionsâproperty defenders, âsocialists,â and federalists like [[Francesc Pi i Margall|Francisco Pi y Margall]] and [[NicolĂĄs SalmerĂłn y Alonso|NicolĂĄs SalmerĂłn]]âsplit between legalists open to Radical cooperation and insurrectionists favoring revolt.{{Sfn|Bahamonde|1996|pp=78-80}} ==== First Government of Ruiz Zorrilla: Division of the Progressives ==== [[File:Madrid - La premiĂšre revue passĂ©e Ă Madrid par le roi AmĂ©dĂ©e, en l'honneur du prince Humbert (D'aprĂšs le croquis de M. Urrabieta).jpg|thumb|Amadeo I reviewing troops in Madrid, September 1871, by [[Daniel Vierge]].]] On July 15, 1871, radical ministersâ[[Manuel Ruiz Zorrilla]], [[Cristino Martos y BalbĂ|Cristino Martos]], {{Interlanguage link|JosĂ© MarĂa BerĂĄnger|es|JosĂ© MarĂa BerĂĄnger}}, and [[Segismundo Moret|Moret]]âresigned from Serrano's âconciliationâ government, aiming to end its broad coalition and force a split between conservatives and radicals. King Amadeo I, still favoring unity, reluctantly appointed Ruiz Zorrilla as president on July 24, sidelining both Unionists and Sagasta's Progressives in their plan to sustain the coalition amid regime threats.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=162-168}} Ruiz Zorrilla sought to include [[PrĂĄxedes Mateo Sagasta|Sagasta]]âs faction, but Sagasta refused, arguing in Congress that an âexclusive partyâ policy endangered the monarchy.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|p=168}} Ruiz Zorrilla then formed a government of his Progressive faction and Democrats, taking the Interior portfolio himself. The cabinet included [[Eugenio Montero RĂos]] (Justice), General [[Fernando FernĂĄndez de CĂłrdova]] (War), [[Servando Ruiz-GĂłmez y GonzĂĄlez-Llanos|Servando Ruiz GĂłmez]] (Finance), {{Interlanguage link|Santiago Diego-Madrazo|es|Santiago Diego-Madrazo}} (Public Works), TomĂĄs MarĂa Mosquera (Overseas), and Vice-Admiral {{Interlanguage link|JosĂ© MarĂa BerĂĄnger|es|JosĂ© MarĂa BerĂĄnger}} (Navy). Martos declined the State Ministry. Presented to the Cortes on July 25, the government's mottoââliberty, morality, civilityââsignaled a reformist agenda.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=168-169}} Tensions escalated when Democrats maneuvered to replace [[Salustiano de OlĂłzaga y Almandoz|Salustiano OlĂłzaga]] as Congress president with their leader [[NicolĂĄs MarĂa Rivero]]. Sagasta's Progressives countered by nominating Sagasta, fearing Rivero's republican leanings. On October 1â2, Ruiz Zorrilla and Sagasta met to avert a Progressive split, but Ruiz Zorrilla rejected Sagasta's compromise candidate, prioritizing his radical-Democrat ({{Interlanguage link|Cimbrios|es|Cimbrios (polĂtica)}}) alliance over party unity. Sagasta warned, âYou stay with the cimbrios and break with your long-standing friends; the consequences will be dire.â On October 3, Sagasta defeated Rivero (123â113) for Congress president, a result Ruiz Zorrilla saw as a no-confidence vote, prompting his resignation.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=172-178}} Amadeo, returning from a popularity-boosting tour of eastern Spainâincluding a visit to General [[Baldomero Espartero|Espartero]] in Logroño, who pledged loyaltyârefused Ruiz Zorrilla's request to dissolve the Cortes, citing no constitutional basis or formal censure. Sagasta confirmed ongoing support for the July 25 program and urged the king to convince Ruiz Zorrilla to stay, highlighting the government's intact majority.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=179-183}} ==== Malcampo Government: The Failure of the Reunification of the Progressives ==== [[File:JosĂ© Malcampo, 3rd Marquis of San Rafael.jpg|thumb|[[JosĂ© Malcampo, 3rd Marquess of San Rafael|JosĂ© Malcampo]], president, October 5âDecember 21, 1871.]] With Ruiz Zorrilla unyielding, Amadeo offered the premiership to Espartero, who declined due to age, then to Sagasta, who suggested [[JosĂ© Malcampo, 3rd Marquess of San Rafael|JosĂ© Malcampo]]âa revolutionary naval officer from 1868âto avoid direct confrontation. Malcampo, appointed October 5, was a Progressive seen as non-reactionary due to his role alongside [[Juan Bautista Topete|Topete]] in the Glorious Revolution.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=179-183; 186}} His government, a bridge to Sagasta's eventual leadership on December 21, oversaw the [[Progressive Party (Spain)|Progressive Party]]âs irreparable split into Sagasta's conservative faction, aligned with the [[Liberal Union (Spain)|Liberal Union]], and Ruiz Zorrilla's âdemocratic progressiveâ or [[Radical Democratic Party (Spain)|Radical Party]], including Democrats (cimbrios) like Martos and Rivero.{{Sfn|Bahamonde|1996|pp=75-76}} Sagasta's faction pursued reunification on their âhistoricalâ program, prioritizing national sovereignty over individual rights, which the Cortes could regulate for order. Ruiz Zorrilla's group upheld the sanctity of rights, leaving excesses to courts. Malcampo's all-Progressive cabinetâexcluding Unionistsâretained Ruiz Zorrilla's July 25 program, signaling a transitional intent.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=196-199}} However, âZorrillistsâ declared Ruiz Zorrilla their âactive headâ (Espartero as âpassive headâ), betting on reforms to align the monarchy with the people and win Republican support. Sagasta's Progressives responded by forming their own party board on October 20, formalizing the divide. Reconciliation efforts by figures like [[Ăngel FernĂĄndez de los RĂos]] failed, with elders like OlĂłzaga and Espartero favoring Sagasta.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=184-199}} ==== Debate on Illegalizing the Spanish IWA ==== [[File:FRE-AIT.svg|thumb|Emblem of the Spanish [[International Workingmen's Association|IWA]].]] Malcampo sought to prove the monarchy's firmness by proposing to outlaw the [[Spanish Regional Federation of the IWA|Spanish IWA]], founded in 1870, amid fears sparked by the [[Paris Commune]] (MarchâMay 1871). Unionists, Sagasta's Progressives, and Carlists backed the ban, viewing the IWA as a threat, while Republicans opposed it, defending [[freedom of association]]. Ruiz Zorrilla's faction, torn between supporting rights and avoiding a âdisorderâ label, abstained, missing a chance for unity. On November 10, the Cortes voted 192â38 to ban the IWA, but the Supreme Court's prosecutor blocked enforcement, citing constitutional protections, allowing the IWA to persist.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=201-204}}{{Sfn|Fontana|2007|p=368}} ==== Vote of No Confidence and Municipal Elections ==== On November 13, Radicals moved a no-confidence vote against Malcampo, dubbed a âpirate ministryâ for alleged corruption, aiming to preempt elections. Carlists joined with a religious motion, but on November 17, Malcampo's 127 supporters (Sagasta's Progressives and Unionists) lost to 166 opposition votes (Radicals, Republicans, Carlists). Amadeo suspended the Cortes, avoiding resignation, citing the radical-anti-dynastic alliance as a scandal.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=204-212}} In the December 9 municipal elections, Radicals allied with Republicans, claiming 400 of 600 key municipalities against Malcampo's 200, though the government won 25 of 47 provincial capitals. High abstention (40â50%) muddied results, and Amadeo rejected Ruiz Zorrilla's bid for power.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=212-216}} End of Malcampo's Government Facing Cortes reopening, Malcampo resigned December 19, seeing no path to Progressive unity. Amadeo appointed Sagasta on December 21, honoring parliamentary norms as Congress president succeeded a resigning premier without constitutional breach.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=216-220}}{{Sfn|Bahamonde|1996|p=76}} === Second year === [[File:Don_carlos_de_borbĂłn_nypl.jpg|left|thumb|[[Carlos de BorbĂłn y Austria-Este|Carlos MarĂa de BorbĂłn y Austria-Este]], the [[Carlism|Carlist]] pretender to Carlos VII.]][[File:RuizZorrilla.png|thumb|[[Manuel Ruiz Zorrilla]].]] In 1872, persistent government crises worsened political and parliamentary stability, undermining Amadeo I's monarchy. Historian Ăngel Bahamonde observes, "If in 1871 there had been a succession of government crises, in 1872 the persistence of the same crises led to a progressive deterioration of political and parliamentary life," with dire consequences for the Savoy dynasty.{{Sfn|Bahamonde|1996|p=80}} ==== Sagasta's Government: The Constitutional Conservatives in Power ==== [[File:Praxedes sagasta.jpg|thumb|[[PrĂĄxedes Mateo Sagasta]].]] On December 21, 1871, [[PrĂĄxedes Mateo Sagasta]] formed a government, initially offering [[Manuel Ruiz Zorrilla]]âs Radicals four of eight cabinet postsâhalf the governmentâto unify Progressives. The Radicals declined, unwilling to abandon their alliance with Democrats ({{Interlanguage link|Cimbrios|es|Cimbrios (polĂtica)}}) or their âbenevolent pactâ with Republicans. At a meeting, Ruiz Zorrilla told Sagasta, âI am more than a progressive, I am a radical.â Sagasta then allied with General [[Francisco Serrano, 1st Duke of la Torre|Serrano]]âs [[Liberal Union (Spain)|Unionists]], who joined with one portfolioâ[[Juan Bautista Topete|Admiral Topete]] as Minister of Overseas Territories. Most posts went to âhistoricalâ Progressives: [[JosĂ© Malcampo, 3rd Marquess of San Rafael|JosĂ© Malcampo]] (War and Navy), [[Bonifacio de Blas y Muñoz|Bonifacio de Blas]] (Interior), and others like Santiago de Angulo, Francisco de Paula Angulo, and Alonso Colmenares.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=222-223; 226}} [[File:PreparĂĄndose para el dĂa 22, de Pellicer.jpg|left|thumb|Cartoon by [[Josep LluĂs Pellicer]], Preparing for the 22nd, {{Interlanguage link|Gil Blas (Madrid)|es|Gil Blas}}, January 14, 1872, showing [[Francesc Pi i Margall]] and Sagasta.]] On January 22, 1872, Sagasta presented his government to the Cortes, labeling it âprogressive-conservative.â He aimed to balance the [[Spanish Constitution of 1869|1869 Constitution]]âs rights with order, defending the monarchy as âthe essential foundation of public liberties.â He proposed a two-party system of âloyal and benevolentâ partiesâone more progressive, one less so, both liberal-conservative. The Cortes rejected it, but with more dynastic votes in favor, Amadeo granted Sagasta a dissolution decree for new elections to secure a majority. Radicals rallied with âRadicals defend yourselves!â and âGod save the country! God save the dynasty! God save freedom!â while Republicans declared, âThe King has broken with Parliament, today the Savoy dynasty ends.â{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=232-235}} Radicals blamed a palace camarillaâItalian advisers like Dragonetti and {{Interlanguage link|NicolĂĄs Ronchi|es|NicolĂĄs Ronchi}}, conservatives, and Queen Maria Vittoria's neo-Catholic alliesâfor blocking their power. On January 23, Ruiz Zorrilla criticized the king in the Cortes, invoking a âright to revoltâ against threatened freedoms. Radical newspapers turned on Amadeo, and leaders boycotted palace lunches (except [[Segismundo Moret|Moret]]). At a February 2 rally, [[JosĂ© Echegaray]] demanded the [[Royal Palace of Madrid|Palacio de Oriente]] âopen its windowsâ to freedom, while [[El Imparcial (1867â1933)|El Imparcial]] (February 22) likened Amadeo's rule to [[Isabella II]]âs, branding Sagasta's ministry âreactionary.â{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=285-287}} Radical [[Francisco SalmerĂłn]] wrote to his father in January 1872: âThe palace is not hostile, for the king delights in courtesans; and the queen in neo-politics. The infamous Sagasta is waging an implacable war against the Radicals... We go into the electoral struggle with the proof of defeat; then, in retreat, we shall witness the catastrophe.â ===== Birth of the Constitutional Party and the âNational Coalitionâ ===== [[File:A las urnas, de Pellicer.jpg|thumb|Caricature by [[Josep LluĂs Pellicer]], La coaliciĂłn nacional, {{Interlanguage link|Gil Blas (Madrid)|es|Gil Blas}}, March 10, 1872.]] Sagasta's Progressives and Unionists formed an electoral committee on January 22, issuing a manifesto summarizing the government's program. Unionists pushed for a single party, but Sagasta envisioned a âthird partyâ blending both sides to reunite Progressives. Amadeo intervened, tasking Unionist [[JosĂ© Luis Albareda y Sezde|JosĂ© Luis Albareda]] with drafting a plan for a Conservative Party to alternate with Radicals. Facing royal pressureâand after briefly resigningâSagasta relented. On February 21, 1872, the [[Constitutional Party (Spain)|Constitutional Party]] emerged, aiming to defend âLiberty, the Constitution of 1869, the dynasty of Amadeo I, and territorial integrity.â The reshuffled cabinet balanced four Progressives and three Unionists under Sagasta.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=237-244}} The Radicals, seeking to topple the government, expanded their December 1871 âNational Coalitionâ with Republicans to include Carlists and later [[Moderate Party (Spain)|Alfonsist Moderates]]. United by the goal of âdefeating the government, the fruit of immorality and lies,â they used patriotic slogans like âSpain for the Spaniards,â championed by Republican [[Emilio Castelar]]. The coalition agreed to field one candidate per districtâfavoring the strongest prior performerâto maximize votes.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=287-291}} ===== Elections of April 1872 ===== [[File:Laflaca caciquismo.jpg|thumb|Cartoon from La Carcajada, April 18, 1872, mocking Sagasta's electoral fraud.]] The [[April 1872 Spanish general election|April 2 elections]] delivered the Constitutionalists over 200 seats, with Unionists outnumbering Progressives, bolstering Serrano's influence. Victory came via âmoral influenceââelectoral manipulationâdespite Amadeo's plea for fairness, to which Sagasta replied, âas pure as they can be in Spain.â A circular to governors outlined tactics: buying votes, crowding polling stations with loyalists, and using police to suppress dissent.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=244-245}}{{Sfn|Nieto|2021|p=14}} The National Coalition secured nearly 150 seatsâRadicals 42, Republicans, Carlists, and Alfonsists combinedâamid high abstention and unrest in Carlist (Basque, Navarre) and Federalist (Mediterranean) regions. The Radicalsâ poor showing questioned Ruiz Zorrilla's leadership, pushing some toward abandoning legal means.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=245-246}}{{Sfn|Fontana|2007|p=369}} The elections finalized the [[Progressive Party (Spain)|Progressive Party]]âs split: Sagasta's faction merged with Unionists into the Constitutional Party, while Ruiz Zorrilla led the [[Radical Democratic Party (Spain)|Radical Party]] with Democrats (cimbrios), including [[Cristino Martos y BalbĂ|Cristino Martos]] and [[NicolĂĄs MarĂa Rivero]].{{Sfn|Bahamonde|1996|pp=75-76}} ==== Carlist Uprising ==== [[File:Don carlos de borbĂłn nypl.jpg|thumb|[[Carlos de BorbĂłn y Austria-Este|Carlos VII]], Carlist pretender.]] In the [[April 1872 Spanish general election|April 1872 elections]], Carlists dropped from 51 to 38 seats, empowering their insurrectionist faction over {{Interlanguage link|CĂĄndido Nocedal|es|CĂĄndido Nocedal}}âs neo-Catholic legalists. Their March 8 manifesto hinted at war: ânow to the ballot box, then to wherever God calls us.â{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|p=245}} On April 14, [[Carlos de BorbĂłn y Austria-Este|Carlos VII]] ordered elected deputies to boycott the Cortes and launched the [[Third Carlist War]], planned as a fallback if Nocedal's parliamentary strategy failed. Nocedal resigned immediately. In a manifesto, Carlos VII rallied Spaniards: âThe holy religion of our fathers is persecuted... anarchy triumphs, the treasury is plundered... If this continues, the poor will be left without bread and Spain without honour... For the sake of our God, our country, and your King, rise up, Spaniards!â [[File:Ouverture des CortĂšs, Madrid, a la fin du discours du Roi, les dĂ©putĂ©s poussent le cri «Mort aux carlistes», de Vierge.jpg|thumb|Deputies shout âDeath to the Carlists,â May 1872, [[Le Monde illustrĂ©|Le Monde IllustrĂ©]].]] On May 2, Carlos VII entered Spain via [[Bera, Navarre|Vera de Bidasoa]], proclaiming âDown with the foreigner and long live Spain!â Defeated at the {{Interlanguage link|Battle of Oroquieta|es|Batalla de Oroquieta}} on May 4, he fled to France. General [[Francisco Serrano, 1st Duke of la Torre|Serrano]], commanding the northern army, signed the {{Interlanguage link|Amorebieta Convention|es|Convenio de Amorebieta}} on May 24 with Biscay's Carlist deputies, ending Basque-Aragon fighting via amnesty and reinstating rebel officersâa move criticized as overly lenient by the military, Radicals, and Republicans.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=254-256}} Catalonia's Carlist activity persisted, with Carlos VII promising to restore Catalan fueros on June 16, until a new Basque-Aragon uprising in December 1872; the war outlasted Amadeo's reign, ending in 1876.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|p=256}}{{Sfn|LĂłpez-CordĂłn|1976|p=46}} ==== Fall of the Sagasta Government and the âLightningâ Government of Serrano: The End of the Conservative Project ==== [[File:Francisco-serrano.jpg|thumb|General [[Francisco Serrano, 1st Duke of la Torre|Serrano]].]] Sagasta's government faltered in May 1872 after a scandal over two million reales diverted from the Overseas to Interior Ministry, likely for electoral fraud via {{Interlanguage link|Lazarus of Bethany#Raising of Lazarus|lĂĄzaros|es|LĂĄzaros (elecciones)}}âvotes cast by the dead. Rumors also tied it to a hushed-up affair involving Amadeo or Serrano's circle, though corruption was the probable cause.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|p=248}}{{Sfn|Fontana|2007|p=369}} Sagasta's defenseâclaiming reserved payments to thwart conspiraciesârelied on forged documents, exposing illegalities. Denied a confidence vote by his majority, including Unionists more irked by the breach than the funds, Sagasta resigned on May 22.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|p=250}}{{Sfn|Fontana|2007|p=369}} On May 26, Amadeo appointed Serrano, then fighting Carlists, as president, assuming his coalition's Cortes majority held. Serrano's cabinet mixed three ex-Progressives and five ex-Unionists, including an [[Alfonsism|Alfonsist]] from [[Antonio CĂĄnovas del Castillo]]âs faction. [[Juan Bautista Topete|Admiral Topete]] presented it to Congress on May 27, as Serrano was delayed. Unexpectedly, [[Manuel Ruiz Zorrilla]] pledged âloyal, legal, and respectful opposition,â accepting constitutional monarchy rulesâa shift contested by Radicals like [[Cristino Martos y BalbĂ|Cristino Martos]], who rejected waiting years for power or aiding âreaction.â Unsupported, Ruiz Zorrilla resigned his seat on May 31 after meeting Amadeo for his birthday, retiring to his Soria estate, âLa Tablada,â unwilling to join an anti-dynastic or insurrectionary path. Radical press blamed the king and queen.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=292-297}} The {{Interlanguage link|Amorebieta Convention|es|Convenio de Amorebieta}} nearly toppled Serrano, with ministers opposing rebel officer reinstatement as a âdegradationâ of the army and government. Amadeo's backing and Cortes ratification (Republicans against, Radicals abstaining) saved it, and Serrano took office June 4.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=256-258}} Yet, Radicals under Martos and Republicans challenged Serrano's legitimacy, citing his Alfonsist inclusion, fueling pre-revolutionary rhetoric like âThe Revolution is dead! Long live the Revolution!â [[El Imparcial (1867â1933)|El Imparcial]]âs June 10 piece, âThe Madwoman of the Vatican,â subtly attacked Queen Maria Vittoria.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=298-300}}{{Sfn|Fontana|2007|pp=369-370}} On June 6, Radicals mobilized Madrid's {{Interlanguage link|Volunteers of Liberty|es|Voluntarios de la Libertad}} to protest in the [[Town square#Spanish-speaking countries|Plaza Mayor]]. Serrano quartered troops and, on June 11, sought a decree suspending constitutional guaranteesâapproved by the Cortesâto curb a looming Republican uprising, which Radicals seemed poised to join post-Ruiz Zorrilla. A planned June 16 rally under âThe [[Glorious Revolution (Spain)|September Revolution]] and the Freedom of the Motherlandâ omitted the dynasty, alarming Amadeo. Refusing to sign and risk civil conflict, he forced Serrano's resignation on June 12. Militia gathered that day dispersed upon hearing the news. Serrano, after less than 20 days, retired to Arjona, telling a French diplomat, âWe must get rid of that imbecile,â referring to Amadeo.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=262-263; 301-302}}{{Sfn|Fontana|2007|pp=369-370}} Jorge Vilches reflects: âThe king was almost completely isolated... with a strong anti-dynastic opposition, weak constitutional parties... political leaders unable to unite, and an unsupportive populace. By June 12, 1872, his situation was dire: Prim dead, Ruiz Zorrilla retired, Sagasta facing prosecution... two civil wars, and a Republican threat looming.â{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=263-264}} Constitutionalists, learning Ruiz Zorrilla would replace Serrano with a Cortes dissolution, decried an âunprecedented coup dâĂ©tat,â citing its unconstitutionality (four months hadn't passed since the last election) and the regime's instabilityâthree elections, multiple crises in 18 months. They petitioned Amadeo to reject it, promising support instead.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=267-268}} ==== Second Ruiz Zorrilla Government: Failure of the Radicals ==== [[File:RuizZorrilla.png|thumb|[[Manuel Ruiz Zorrilla]].]] Post-Serrano, Amadeo tapped General [[Fernando FernĂĄndez de CĂłrdova]] as interim president until Ruiz Zorrilla's return, calming radical press criticism. Up to 300 Radicals, led by [[NicolĂĄs MarĂa Rivero]], {{Interlanguage link|JosĂ© MarĂa BerĂĄnger|es|JosĂ© MarĂa BerĂĄnger}}, and [[Francisco SalmerĂłn]], visited âLa Tabladaâ to recall Ruiz Zorrilla, greeted by thousands in Madrid. He demanded an unconstitutional Cortes dissolution and electionsâless than four months since Aprilâpressuring Amadeo, who yielded, appearing partisan to Radicals. Jorge Vilches calls this a âcoup dâĂ©tatâ by Radicals forcing power via threats and constitutional breaches.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=304-306; 308}} Ruiz Zorrilla formed his June 13 government, taking the Interior Ministry, with ex-Democrats Martos (State) and Echegaray (Public Works), ex-Progressives {{Interlanguage link|Eduardo Gasset y Artime|es|Eduardo Gasset y Artime}} (Overseas), [[Servando Ruiz-GĂłmez y GonzĂĄlez-Llanos|Servando Ruiz GĂłmez]] (Finance), [[Eugenio Montero RĂos]] (Justice), and BerĂĄnger (Navy), plus FernĂĄndez de CĂłrdoba (War). Rivero was slated for Congress Speaker. A purge dismissed 40,000 civil servants for loyalists.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|p=306}}{{Sfn|Fontana|2007|p=370}} ===== Assassination Attempt Against the King on July 18 and Insults to the Crown ===== [[File:Tentativa regicida contra D. Amadeo en la calle del Arenal.jpg|left|thumb|Assassination attempt on Amadeo I, July 18, 1872, {{Interlanguage link|Calle del Arenal|es|Calle del Arenal}}.]] On July 18, Amadeo and Queen Maria Vittoria survived an assassination attempt on Madrid's {{Interlanguage link|Calle del Arenal|es|Calle del Arenal}}, intensifying his isolation as a Radical-dependent king. Warned via Martos and Governor Pedro Mata, Amadeo refused to alter his route; Mata's agents arrested Republican federalist attackers after they fired. [[Francesc Pi i Margall]] defended them in court. Public humiliations followed: carriage attacks on [[Calle de AlcalĂĄ]], mud-throwing on Cedaceros, insults near [[Parque del Buen Retiro, Madrid|El Retiro]], and aristocratic snubs like the âmantillasâ incident.{{Sfn|Bahamonde|1996|p=86}}{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=314-315}} ===== August 1872 Elections and Its Consequences ===== [[File:El entusiasmo, inmenso; la muchedumbre, indescriptible.jpg|thumb|Caricature of Amadeo I, {{Interlanguage link|Gil Blas (Madrid)|es|Gil Blas}}, August 4, 1872, by [[Josep LluĂs Pellicer]].]] The [[August 1872 Spanish general election|August 24 elections]] saw Radicals propose jury trials, abolishing [[Military Service (Spain)|conscription]] and {{Interlanguage link|MatrĂcula de mar|es|MatrĂcula de mar}}, church-state separation, public education, and militia strengthening to fulfill 1868 promises to the working classes.{{Sfn|Bahamonde|1996|pp=84-85}}{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|p=307}} The [[Constitutional Party (Spain)|Constitutional Party]] debated participationâopting in on July 5 to block a Republicâbut fielded few candidates amid defeatism, with Serrano refusing to run, weakening the dynasty's conservative pillar. Topete, Sagasta, and [[Antonio de los RĂos Rosas]] led instead.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=269-276}} Radicals won 274 seats, with 77 Republicans, 14 Constitutionalists, and 9 Moderates, aided by a Radical-Republican pact and over 50% abstention from boycotts and apathy.{{Sfn|Bahamonde|1996|p=86}}{{Sfn|LĂłpez-CordĂłn|1976|p=42}}{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|p=308}} Vilches notes the elections discredited the 1868 Revolution among conservatives, shifting the regime leftward via illegalities, sidelining Constitutionalists, and aligning Amadeo with Radicals, prompting Bourbon restoration talk for [[Alfonso XII]]. Montpensier's June 20 letter endorsed Alfonso as a progressive heir, gaining traction with CĂĄnovas's liberal Moderates.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=272-278}} ===== Abolition of Slavery Project in Puerto Rico ===== On September 15, Ruiz Zorrilla's reform program passed only the Criminal Procedure Law.{{Sfn|Bahamonde|1996|p=86}} The {{Interlanguage link|Abolition of slavery in Spain|es|AboliciĂłn de la esclavitud en España}} in Puerto Ricoâimmediate abolition, provincial regime, and split civil-military authorityâsplit the cabinet. Overseas Minister Gasset y Artime and Finance Minister Ruiz GĂłmez resigned, replaced by TomĂĄs MarĂa Mosquera, who presented it December 24, backed by Republicans and the [[Sociedad Abolicionista Española]]. Cuba's abolition was deferred due to Centro Hispano Ultramarino pressure. Conservatives feared destabilizing Puerto Rico and encouraging Cuban rebels, while Radicals saw it as a peace gesture. Opposition from the National League, including Serrano and CĂĄnovas, sought a conservative government to halt reforms without toppling the regime.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=278-282; 318-321}}{{Sfn|Bahamonde|1996|p=86}}{{Sfn|Fontana|2007|p=371}} ===== Halted Reforms and Division Among the Radicals ===== [[File:Madrid - La premiĂšre revue passĂ©e Ă Madrid par le roi AmĂ©dĂ©e, en l'honneur du prince Humbert (D'aprĂšs le croquis de M. Urrabieta).jpg|thumb|Amadeo I reviewing troops, September 1871, by [[Daniel Vierge]].]] Under [[Manuel Ruiz Zorrilla]]âs second government, ongoing conflictsâthe [[Third Carlist War]] and [[Cuban War of Independence|Cuban War]]âblocked his pledge to abolish military drafts. Announcing a new recruitment in late 1872 sparked riots in several cities, emboldening âintransigentâ federal Republicans to push their insurrectionary agenda. The most significant revolt erupted October 11 in [[Ferrol, Spain|Ferrol]], but it collapsed due to lack of local support and no nationwide echo. âBenevolentâ Republican leaders, like [[Francesc Pi i Margall]], condemned it in the Cortes on October 15 as a âtrue crimeâ given âfully guaranteedâ freedoms, deepening the party's split between legalists and insurrectionistsâa rift only the Republic's proclamation four months later averted from escalating further.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=315-317}}{{Sfn|LĂłpez-CordĂłn|1976|p=47}} The Carlist War intensified in December 1872, again delaying draft abolition. Republicans rejected Ruiz Zorrilla's policies, with minor Andalusian rebel groups forming, though less threatening than Carlists.{{Sfn|LĂłpez-CordĂłn|1976|pp=46-47}} Amid this turmoil, Ruiz Zorrilla tried mending ties with the [[Constitutional Party (Spain)|Constitutional Party]] by proposing ordinary courts, not the Senate, judge [[PrĂĄxedes Mateo Sagasta|Sagasta]] for the âtwo million reales scandal.â This backfired as democratic deputies, led by Congress Speaker [[NicolĂĄs MarĂa Rivero]], and ministers [[Cristino Martos y BalbĂ|Cristino Martos]] and [[JosĂ© Echegaray]], sided with Republicans to reject it. This internal rift bolstered âbenevolentâ Republicansâ strategy to lure ex-Democrats ({{Interlanguage link|Cimbrios|es|Cimbrios (polĂtica)}}) into a parliamentary majority to topple the monarchy.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=322-324}} === Abdication of Amadeo I and proclamation of the Republic === ==== Conflict Between Radicals and the King ==== [[File:Amadeo I, rey de España.jpg|thumb|Amadeo I.]] On January 29, 1873, radical extremists seized on a perceived royal slightâAmadeo delaying his newborn heir's baptism due to childbirth complications, leaving government officials waitingâas a pretext to challenge him. Rumors swirled of Amadeo dismissing Ruiz Zorrilla for a Constitutionalist government, fueled by his meeting with General [[Francisco Serrano, 1st Duke of la Torre|Serrano]] at the palace (Serrano declined after consulting his party). Radicals moved to declare the Cortes a permanent Convention, only halted by swift government action; the Chamber merely noted the prince's birth without fanfare. Amadeo told Ruiz Zorrilla he wouldn't âsuffer impositionsâ and was âprepared to act,â writing his father in early February of abdication thoughts, suspecting Ruiz Zorrilla colluded with Republicans against the dynasty.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=326-327}} A decisive clash emerged over artillery corps reorganization. In January, officers threatened mass resignation if General {{Interlanguage link|Baltasar Hidalgo de Quintana|es|Baltasar Hidalgo de Quintana}}âlinked to the 1866 {{Interlanguage link|Uprising at the San Gil barracks|es|SublevaciĂłn del cuartel de San Gil}} suppressionâremained Captain General of the Basque Country. The government and Cortes upheld civilian supremacy, affirming Hidalgo and reorganizing the corps, prompting officers to resign en masse.{{Sfn|Bahamonde|1996|p=88}} On February 6, these officers urged Amadeo to intervene, offering coup support to dissolve the Cortes and suspend guarantees. He refused but opposed the reorganization.{{Sfn|Bahamonde|1996|pp=88-89}} That day, Ruiz Zorrilla denied press reports of Hidalgo's appointment as [[Captain General of Catalonia]], but its confirmation next day convinced Amadeo of deceit. He pressed Ruiz Zorrilla on February 7 to delay the artillery issue and retain officers amid the Carlist War, but the Cortes approved their resignations and replacements by sergeants that evening, ratified by the Senate on February 8. Moderate [[Fernando CalderĂłn de la Barca, 1st Marquis of Reinosa|Fernando CalderĂłn Collantes]] warned it undermined royal prerogatives, a view Amadeo shared as officers surrendered weapons before he signed the decree.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=331-333}} Amadeo considered a Constitutionalist government and Cortes dissolution but feared civil war, lacking Radical-controlled Madrid garrison support despite backing from generals like [[Juan Bautista Topete|Topete]], Serrano, and [[JosĂ© Malcampo, 3rd Marquess of San Rafael|Malcampo]]. Topete offered Constitutionalist aid on February 7â8, but Amadeo refused bloodshed, signing the artillery decrees on February 8 after a Council of Ministers meeting. He proposed a reconciliation government with all 1870 supporters, warning of abdication otherwise. Ruiz Zorrilla's cabinet rejected it after three meetings. On February 9, Constitutionalists telegrammed Serrano in JaĂ©n to return; he arrived February 10, ready to defend the dynasty, but {{Interlanguage link|La Correspondencia de España|es|La Correspondencia de España}} announced Amadeo's abdication that day.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=333-339}} ==== Abdication ==== Amadeo signed the artillery decree on February 9 and abdicated February 10, 1873, notifying the Cortes on February 11: âFor over two years I have worn the Crown of Spain... Spain lives in constant struggle... all who aggravate the nation's suffering are Spaniards... Amid this clamor, it is impossible to find a remedy... I have sought it within the law, and not found it... No danger would compel me to lay down the crown if it were for Spain's good... I hold the firm conviction that my efforts would be futile... These are the reasons I return the crown... renouncing it for myself, my children, and my successors.â{{Sfn|Fontana|2007|p=371}}{{Sfn|LĂłpez-CordĂłn|1976|pp=135-136}} Only [[Juan Bautista Topete|Topete]], a key 1868 revolutionary turned loyalist, bid farewell to Amadeo and [[Maria Vittoria dal Pozzo]]. Jorge Vilches blames Ruiz Zorrilla's Radicals for distorting the Crown's role, undermining a loyal party system, and empowering anti-monarchists, though Sagasta's hesitation and Serrano's reluctance also contributed to the collapse.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=223; 335-336}} ==== Proclamation of the Republic ==== [[File:Estanislao Figueras.png|thumb|[[Estanislao Figueras]], first President of the [[First Spanish Republic]].]] On February 10, Madrid federalists demanded the Republic as news of abdication broke. Ruiz Zorrilla's cabinet split: Progressives favored a provisional government and consultation, aligning with Constitutionalists, while Democrats, led by Martos and Rivero, pushed for a Cortes Convention to declare the Republic, leveraging their majority with federalists. Ruiz Zorrilla sought a 24-hour session suspension, but Martos overruled him, declaring the Cortes sovereign post-abdication, with âno other possibility but the Republic.â The Cortes voted itself permanent, despite crowd pressure quelled by the [[National Militia (Spain)|National Militia]].{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=339-342}} On February 11, Republican threats of insurrection by 3 p.m. forced action. Martos, Rivero, and Senate President Figuerola convened both chambers as a National Assembly. After reading Amadeo's letter, Martos ceded government power to the Cortes, which, with 258 votes to 32, proclaimed the [[First Spanish Republic]]: âThe National Assembly assumes all powers and declares the Republic as the form of government...â{{Sfn|Fontana|2007|p=371}} That evening, [[Estanislao Figueras]] was elected President of the Executive Power, heading a Radical-Republican cabinet: Republicans [[Emilio Castelar]] (State), [[Francesc Pi i Margall]] (Interior), [[NicolĂĄs SalmerĂłn y Alonso|NicolĂĄs SalmerĂłn]] (Justice); Radicals [[JosĂ© Echegaray]] (Finance), [[Manuel Becerra BermĂșdez|Manuel Becerra]] (Public Works), [[Francisco SalmerĂłn]] (Overseas), General FernĂĄndez de CĂłrdoba (War), and Admiral BerĂĄnger (Navy). Martos became Assembly president with 222 votes to Rivero's 20.{{Sfn|Vilches|2001|pp=344-345; 365-366}}{{Sfn|LĂłpez-CordĂłn|1976|p=54}}
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