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1[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/coat_of_arms_of_spanish_monarchsvg.png]]
2[[caption-width-right:250:Arms of Felipe VI as King of Spain]]
3
4->''"For God, Spain and to make us rich!"''
5-->Quote attributed to the Conquistadores (actually a misquote of Creator/BernalDiazDelCastillo)[[labelnote:original quote]]"To serve God and His Majesty, and to bring light to those who were in darkness, and also because there were riches, that all men commonly come in search of."[[/labelnote]]
6
7This page is about post-[[UsefulNotes/SpanishReconquista Reconquista]] UsefulNotes/{{Spain}} and its colonial empire in general.
8----
9
10The Spanish Empire, often referred to as the Spanish Colonial Empire, was the first of the European empires that began to appear in the course of the Modern Age, it being one of the most important players of Europe for the remainder of the 16th, 17th, 18th and partially the 19th centuries.
11
12This multi-limbed behemoth of a state,[[note]]For most of its history, it was not a single, unified nation, but a conjunction of multiple different kingdoms and domains (Castile, Aragon, Naples, every portion of the Netherlands, Portugal...) simultaneously owned by the king. Unification only came in the 18th century.[[/note]] the originator of the nickname "the empire where the sun never sets" for his global reach, was the largest non-continuous empire in the world until its disintegration, and remains one of the biggest in history, even without counting a period when the Portuguese Empire was dynastically assimilated to it. Some consider it the first truly global empire for controlling significant amounts of densely populated land in all of the continents.[[note]]Technically, the Portuguese Empire was the first to control land in Europe, Africa, America, Asia and Oceania, but much of its territorial control was limited to small trade posts or coastal cities.[[/note]]
13
14Even after its disappearance, its cultural influence is still very much alive. Hispanic culture forms the basis of Latin America and part of the United States, while UsefulNotes/SpanishLanguage is the second most widely spoken native language in the world, and almost one hundred entries in the UNESCO World and Intangible Culture Heritage lists trace back their origin to the Spanish Empire. The massive amounts of racial intermarrying happened during the Spanish expansion in America (historically called ''mestizaje''), possibly unique in history for its scale and variety, also resulted in a relative majority of modern Latin Americans carrying at least some fraction of Spanish genetics, and to a lesser degree African and Italian genetics too.
15
16A common misconception is that of the very adjective of colonial, something that was spoken by the English, Dutch and French about the Spanish Empire in its overseas possessions and became internalized for the next centuries until today. The proper term of colony (which had changed its meaning from a neutral term to the derogative and negative conception of now) was never officially given to the territory in America, instead they were referred to as viceroyalties and kingdoms, essentially extensions from mainland rather than lands subjected to it, hence the need of Viceroys to administrate the territory. European territories of the empire, like Naples and later Portugal, were ruled by Viceroys the same exact way.
17
18The very term "Spanish Empire" is actually an exonym given by the English and French, which was, again, adopted only informally and very late into its history (for most of its tenure, the title of empire was reserved for the UsefulNotes/HolyRomanEmpire, which coincidentally was briefly co-ruled with Spain at one point). Its official term was the Kingdom of Spain, as referred in this article, although in recent times the alternate name of "Hispanic Monarchy" has become fashionable too on account on the role played by its Hispanic-American lands and subjects in its history.
19
20Historically, the Spanish Empire could be considered the public enemy of the Early Modern Age, having warred against almost every nation and culture in the world worthy to war against at the time. It was in pretty much unending conflicts against France, Britain, the Ottoman Empire, and ultimately itself, which expanded to Portugal and the Netherlands after those seceded from Spain, and then expanded further to Sweden and several German and Italian states during the various European Wars, not to mention Spain's own colonial battles, which included motley clashes against Chinese, Japanese, Southeast Asians and many American indigenous tribes. France eventually became an ally with the rise of the Spanish Bourbon dynasty, so the longest and most regarded archnemesis was ultimately UsefulNotes/TheBritishEmpire, which in its beginnings used to try and divest Spain of its American gold, and later expanded to multiple attempts to snatch land of their overseas territories.
21
22Despite this long RoguesGallery, the Spanish Empire was mostly capable to defend its various lands and colonies, balancing minimal territorial losses with steady expansions, but a mix of inner and outer troubles shattered it almost completely during the Napoleonic Wars, after which it lost the last remnants of its empire the next century.
23
24[[foldercontrol]]
25----
26[[folder:History]]
27Spain was an entity emerged at the last throes of the 15th century, when Isabel I of Castile and Fernando II of Aragon, belonging both to the House of Trastámara and later known as UsefulNotes/TheCatholicMonarchs, married and unified their kingdoms. Beforehand, the Iberian Peninsula had been a crisscross of kingdoms with the vague overarching goal to reunify the land as in the times of UsefulNotes/TheRomanEmpire, and this was the closest any of them was to get it. Isabel and Fernando also tried to get Portugal into the equation through the merging of their lines of succession, but the death of the young heir who would have inherited almost the totality of Hispania left Portugal as a perennial Iberian frenemy.
28
29The Catholic Monarchs reformed deeply their twin kingdoms in every possible stat and turned them into the next great Christian power, conquering the last Muslim strongholds in the peninsula and incidentally making Iberia the horizon of a new world when a certain UsefulNotes/ChristopherColumbus made a big discovery at the west. While the nascent Spanish Empire started expanding through America, so it did in Europe, conquering Sicily, Naples and several African port cities, often at the expense of their largest regional enemy, the knightly nation of France. Through cutting-edge military science and even shrewder political marriages with the rest of Europe, Castile and Aragon rose to hegemony and came to fill symbolically the niche left by the Byzantine Empire after the recent conquest of Constantinople to the hands of the Muslim Ottomans.
30
31A series of successional clashes, hard enough to almost break apart Castile and Aragon, changed all of this landscape by subsuming the House of Trastámara into the [[UsefulNotes/TheSoundOfMartialMusic House of Habsburg]], a regal and ambitious Germanic family that ruled the UsefulNotes/HolyRomanEmpire and had acted as northern allies up to the point. The Spanish Habsburg dynasty, inaugurated by the emperor king UsefulNotes/CharlesV, took the Catholic Monarchs' aspirations much farther, first desiring to make all of Europe an unified block against Islam, and failing this due to the project's sheer impossibility, trying to secure the rule of Catholicism against both Islam and the quickly spreading [[UsefulNotes/TheProtestantReformation Protestant Reformation]]. Those wars would consume voraciously the resources brought by the Spanish expansion in America, where the great Mesoamerican and Peruvian civilizations were assimilated through diplomacy, strategy and mass intermarrying.
32
33Despite its continuous state of war, the Spanish Empire entered an age of intellectual, literary, scientific and philosophical splendor known as Spanish Golden Age, which went to set much of the foundations over which UsefulNotes/TheEnlightenment would be later built. Highly humanistic laws were issued to bring the Amerindian indigenous and the ever-increasing mestizo population into this political and cultural sphere, achieving advances that would only resonate in the rest of Europe centuries later. Most of this, however, was all but erased from modern western pop culture through the continuous propaganda work of the empire's antagonists, resulting in the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Legend_(Spain) Spanish Black Legend]], a layer of historiography that still paints the Spanish Empire as a genocidal, backwards and bloodthirsty predecessor to Nazi Germany.
34
35The Habsburgs' Quixotic enterprises occupied the Spanish Empire for the 16th and 17th centuries, at one point assimilating the Portuguese Empire and finally unifying the Iberian Peninsula, only to lose it again when the excess of war and megalomaniac management caused multiple rebellions, with Portugal breaking away. Eventually, worn by two centuries of neverending war against the whole known world, the Spanish Empire dropped his momentum at the same time other European countries caught up, ultimately losing its hegemony and royal house to the France of UsefulNotes/LouisXIV. With the Habsburg dynasty dying off, the new French house of Bourbon arrived in Spain after a new war and started working to keep Spain afloat in the international landscape, although the family's proneness to both figurative and literal insanity brought unique problems.
36
37Through its sheer size, resources and military talent pool, the Spanish Empire managed to remain a top player in the Europe of the Enlightenment by investing in a policy of defensive neutrality, in a time where France, having proved to be an unstable ally, was losing the first place to an increasingly complicated checkboard. This changed with the arrival of UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte, who promptly submitted half of Europe. Spain picked the strongest side and begrudgingly joined him, but the country's inner political conflicts, caused by the despotic King UsefulNotes/FerdinandVII, convinced Napoleon of the need to hijack the Spanish Empire by force to be safer. The result was utter ruin for both sides, as Spain exploded in Napoleon's face, opening a war theater that accelerated his fall, but at the same time shattered from inside, creating a myriad of American countries molded by various loyalties and international interests.
38
39Reduced to second rate for good, Spain held onto Cuba, Puerto Rico, the Philippines and a set of islands until the very end of the 19th century, when they were taken by the United States, much to the depression of Spanish academics of the time (the popularly called Generation of '98). This was the point in which the Spanish Empire as a concept was finally buried.
40[[/folder]]
41
42----
43!!Royal dynasties
44
45[[folder:The House of Trastámara (1469–1555)]]
46¡The House of Trastámara
47!![[UsefulNotes/TheCatholicMonarchs Isabel I of Castile and Fernando II of Aragon]]
48[[quoteright:275:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ferdieandizzy_0.png]]
49->'''Lived:''' 22 April 1451 -- 26 November 1504 (Isabella); 10 March 1452 -- 23 January 1516 (Fernando)\
50'''Reigned:''' 11 December 1474 -- 26 November 1504 (Isabella, Castile); 15 January 1475 -- 26 November 1504 (Fernando, Castile); 20 January 1479 -- 23 January 1516 (Fernando, Aragon)\
51'''Parents:''' ''King'' John II of Castile and Isabella of Portugal (Isabella); ''King'' John II of Aragon and Navarre, and Juana Enríquez (Fernando)\
52'''Consorts:''' (1) Each other (1469–1504); (2 [for Fernando]) Germaine of Foix (1506–1516)\
53'''Nickname:''' ''la Católica'' ("[[UsefulNotes/TheCatholicMonarchs the Catholic]]")
54----
55
56[[FounderOfTheKingdom Unified the Peninsula]] (minus Portugal), undermined the power of aristocrats, renewed the army and put an end to both [[MedievalStasis the Reconquista and the Spanish Middle Ages]]. Also, they funded a certain UsefulNotes/ChristopherColumbus for an extravagant new route to the Indias.
57
58But…
59
60''Why were the Spanish and Portuguese the ones to first sail to the New World? Why not France, England, The Ottoman Empire, or even beyond that, Ming China or the Mughals?''[[note]]Technically, they weren't. Vikings certainly sailed to the New World before the Spanish. But the Spanish, shortly followed by the Portuguese, were the first ''to realize they'd found a new continent'' and not just some islands, and thus were the first to exploit the New World. As for non-European empires, the Ottomans were poorly positioned geographically to engage in exploration by sea. The Mughals were as well, though to a lesser extent. And Ming seagoing exploration was all focused in the opposite direction, toward the Indian Ocean.[[/note]]
61
62The reasons behind that are what is called amongst historians the Iberian Privilege: in the XIV century, a short cold snap of the European climate affected all of northern Europe, producing shortages of food and famine across those regions and overpopulation of the cities; then came the Black Death, which went from northern Italy across all of the trade network of Europe.
63
64You can guess what happened to the people of the North when plague came with famine.
65
66But the Iberian Peninsula, being in the Mediterranean and at the end of the land roads of trade, didn't suffer that much from the population crisis, instead, as the Reconquista continued, the Iberian kingdoms found themselves richer and with more land. With an undiminished population, their growth was secured. What's more, their position meant they were in permanent touch with the Mediterranean and Northern nautical techniques.
67
68Then came the 15th century, this century was marked with the infamous [[UsefulNotes/TheHundredYearsWar HundredYearsWar]] between the French and English that started the last century, the inner conflicts that had wracked the Holy Roman Empire, the rise of the Ottomans at the east and the beginning of the isolationist policy of China.
69
70By the latter half of the fifteenth century, the then Queen Isabella chose to marry King Fernando, which was reported to be a love match between the two, and with it, the crowns of the kingdom of Castile, largest in Hispania, and the kingdom of Aragon, joint with the kingdom of Naples. This union, while it suffered a rebellion, was able to finish the Reconquista once and for all, annexing the territory of Granada, today southern Spain.
71
72Due to their crushing of the opposition and their admirable coordination and teamwork, the Catholic Monarchs were able to wield a great amount power in practice, not just in title. Their general UsefulNotes/GonzaloFernandezDeCordoba, known as the "Great Captain", cemented their influence by the sword, setting the blueprint for the first early modern armies; Spain thus became a prime power that was strong economically, diplomatically and militarily.
73
74The monarchs chose good marriages for their children, deciding to marry their daughter, Juana, to Felipe "the Handsome", a noble of the House of Habsburg whose heritage included the territories once held by the duchy of Burgundy (from which the Spanish used their flags) and the Habsburg possessions. Another of their children was UsefulNotes/CatherineOfAragon, who was married off to Prince Arthur, eldest son of [[UsefulNotes/TheHouseOfTudor King Henry VII of England]]. When Arthur died, Catherine married Arthur's brother, who later ascended the English throne as UsefulNotes/HenryVIII… which didn't turn out so well.
75
76After the fall of Constantinople, the Catholic Kings financed the expedition of UsefulNotes/ChristopherColumbus, who was rejected by the Portuguese, to find land that would become a part of the crown and that which he would become a direct Viceroy. They later took this last part back when Columbus started enslaving the natives, which Isabella had specifically forbidden.
77
78!![[UsefulNotes/JoannaOfCastile Juana I of Castile]]
79[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/juan_de_flandes_003.jpg]]
80->'''Lived:''' 16 November 1479 – 12 April 1555\
81'''Reigned:''' 26 November 1504 – 12 April 1555 (Castile); 23 January 1516 – 12 April 1555 (Aragon)\
82'''Parents:''' ''King'' Ferdinand II of Aragon and ''Queen'' Isabella I of Castile\
83'''Consort:''' Felipe I of Castile\
84'''Nickname:''' ''la Loca'' ("the Mad")
85----
86Her reign saw the roots of an ill-fated alliance with England and the HRE, but is best remembered for her going [[LoveMakesYouCrazy apeshit crazy]] and getting imprisoned in a tower afterwards by her late husband, who is…
87
88!!Felipe I of Castile
89[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/juan_de_flandes___kunsthistorisches_museum_wien_gemaldegalerie___philipp_der_schone_1478_1506___gg_3872___kunsthistorisches_museum.jpg]]
90->'''Lived:''' 22 July 1478 – 25 September 1506\
91'''Reigned:''' 27 June 1506 – 25 September 1506\
92'''Parents:''' UsefulNotes/MaximilianI, ''Holy Roman Emperor'', and [[UsefulNotes/MaryDuchessOfBurgundy Mary,]] ''[[UsefulNotes/MaryDuchessOfBurgundy Duchess of Burgundy]]''\
93'''Consort:''' Joanna of Castile\
94'''Nicknames:''' ''the Handsome''; ''the Fair''
95----
96
97Brief as he was, and never getting to reign alone, is just remembered for being a jerk and totally disregarding the queen in his endless affairs. Also, much to the monarchs' dismay, he made a friendly turn to France, their traditional enemies, which made Fernando his ArchEnemy (Isabel died shortly after) and caused much turmoil.
98
99While he's classified as one of the Trastámara monarchs by marriage, Felipe was actually of the prestigious [[UsefulNotes/TheSoundOfMartialMusic Habsburg]] family, being the only son of Holy Roman Emperor UsefulNotes/MaximilianI. However, as Felipe predeceased his father, he never served as Emperor himself.
100
101After Felipe died, Fernando II made himself Castile's regent and, before dying, left the kingdom of Aragon and Naples as inheritance to the kingdom of Castile, thereby joining the two countries into a single power under a single person who would act as Juana's regent and later co-monarch and heir to the throne…
102[[/folder]]
103
104[[folder:The House of Habsburg (1516–1700)]]
105![[UsefulNotes/TheSoundOfMartialMusic The House of Habsburg]]
106!![[UsefulNotes/CharlesV Carlos I]]
107[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/kaarle_v.jpg]]
108->'''Lived:''' 24 February 1500 – 21 September 1558\
109'''Reigned:''' 14 March 1516 – 16 January 1556 (co-monarch with Juana I until 12 April 1555)\
110'''Parents:''' ''King'' Felipe I and ''Queen'' Juana I\
111'''Consort:''' Isabella of Portugal\
112'''Nickname:''' ''the Emperor''
113----
114
115That person was Juana and Felipe's son Charles, Archduke of Austria, and eventually the last Holy Roman Emperor to be crowned by the Pope himself. Having inherited Spain and its empire in the Americas through his mother and maternal grandparents and the Holy Roman Empire and its possessions through his paternal grandfather UsefulNotes/MaximilianI, Carlos I, alias Emperor Charles V, made for an unprecedentedly powerful monarch in European history.
116
117At the moment of his ascension, the Spanish conquistadores UsefulNotes/HernanCortez and UsefulNotes/FranciscoPizarro began to enter into the territories held by the Aztec Empire and the Inca Empire. They then took advantage of the fragmentary state of the two empires and managed, by turning the very native population against their overlords and playing AltarDiplomacy when necessary, to conquer most of modern México and Perú in [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheAztecEmpire two]] [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfTheIncaEmpire campaigns]].
118
119Charles arrived in Spain in 1517 without a grasp of the local culture, society or language, and faced quite a few rebellions for it, which he crushed promptly. He eventually adapted quite well and gained the support of the people, helped by his powerful presence and chameleonic charisma (he spoke many languages and was persuasive in all of them). Spaniards revered him as a sort of new Roman emperor, which was exactly what he wanted to be.
120
121Charles's ambition was to unify Europe against Islam like in the good old times, but failed because he was just about the only European ruler who actually wanted that (even the Popes were comfortable with the status quo). His biggest adversary was Francis I of France, the second most powerful person in Europe, whom Charles defeated many times without ever making him understand the necessity to join forces. At one point he had Francis captured in battle and let him out naively with the promise of teaming up as he wished, but Francis didn't fulfill it; the King of France would rather join the Ottomans.
122
123Protestants became an even bigger problem when Martin Luther nailed his theses under his nose, as like most Habsburgs, Charles was a devout Catholic, even although he sometimes came to the extent of waging war himself against the Catholic Church to enforce his ideals. Cue the beginning of the [[ForeverWar endless religious wars funded with the extensive resources of the Spanish Empire]]. To his credit, he eventually came to realize that the Protestants were there to stay, and [[KnowWhenToFoldEm let them be, conceding some religious freedoms to prevent future wars]], but it didn't work, and this attitude didn't stick with his descendants (nor with the Protestants').
124
125Towards the last part of his reign, he also became preoccupied with how to rule fairly his American subjects and whether the Spanish expansion had an ethical basis to begin with. The main intellectual school in Spain, the UsefulNotes/SchoolOfSalamanca, was called by him to solve the dilemma, resulting in laws of protection of the natives being further developed.
126
127He was an extremely hands-on kind of ruler, who spent all of his reign traveling throughout his territories and trying to solve his problems personally, which sometimes involved taking up weapons and leading armies himself. This took a toll on his physical and mental health: at the end of his life, completely burned out and tired of watching dreams shatter, he abdicated his (many) thrones to his son and brother and retired to a monastery in Cortés' and Pizarro's homeland.
128
129!![[UsefulNotes/PhilipII Felipe II]]
130[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/philipii.jpg]]
131->'''Lived:''' 21 May 1527 – 13 September 1598\
132'''Reigned:''' 16 January 1556 – 13 September 1598\
133'''Parents:''' ''King'' Carlos V, ''Holy Roman Emperor'', and Isabella of Portugal\
134'''Spouse:''' Maria Manuela of Portugal (1543–1545)\
135'''Consorts:''' (1) ''Queen'' [[UsefulNotes/MaryTudor Mary I of England]] (1554–1558); (2) Elisabeth of Valois (1559–1568); (3) Anna of Austria (1570–1580)\
136'''Nickname:''' ''el Prudente'' ("the Prudent")
137----
138
139[[SerialEscalation As the religious wars escalated into political wars]], Philip was married off to UsefulNotes/MaryTudor as a prince to attempt an alliance with England, but it [[AbhorrentAdmirer didn't]] [[DerailingLoveInterests end well]].
140
141After becoming king, Philip turned out to be even more of a Catholic zealot than his father, only without his diplomatic abilities. He entangled himself in multiple wars of various levels of avoidability against the Dutch, the English and the French, all while keeping the front against the Ottomans. In the process, he made Habsburg Spain a pariah state among Protestants and Catholics alike, resulting in the stigma of the Spanish Black Legend, and initiated a national decline whose effects similarly lasted centuries.
142
143He still won the UsefulNotes/ItalianWars, annexed the Portuguese Empire (forming what some academics call the Iberian Union), dealt a [[UsefulNotes/BattleOfLepanto massive naval blow]] to the Ottomans, was kind of a humanist who ruled fairly his overseas territories, and gave a big push to culture and science all around the Spanish Empire, thanks to which he is not completely remembered as a hack in Spain. Rather on the opposite, many Spaniards have recently romanticized him as a timeless symbol of the empire, as strongly as media from Protestant countries pictures him as an evil, ignorant tyrant.
144
145A deeply brainy individual, as well as a sort of amateur religious mystic, he had the biggest private library in Europe, practiced UsefulNotes/{{Alchemy}}, collected holy relics as his personal totems, and allegedly built his massive Escorial Palace to seal a {{hellgate}}, filling it with Catholic art (incidentally, all kings of Spain after him are buried there). Unlike his father, he never went to war personally and preferred to get the work done by people with the right talents, and he truly had an impressive cadre of those, including names like UsefulNotes/TheDukeOfAlba, UsefulNotes/AlvaroDeBazan and UsefulNotes/AlexanderFarnese -- all of whom he squeezed to death with his obsessive war efforts.
146
147The archipelago of the UsefulNotes/{{Philippines}} was named in his honor and [[UsefulNotes/SpanishConquestOfThePhilippines conquered]] during his reign, becoming a point of contact and trade with China and Japan. A grand plan to ally with the Japanese to conquer China and expand throughout Asia was considered, but in a rare moment of pacifism (and common sense), he discarded it.
148
149!![[UsefulNotes/PhilipIII Felipe III]]
150[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/philipiiispain.jpg]]
151->'''Lived:''' 14 April 1578 – 31 March 1621\
152'''Reigned:''' 13 September 1598 – 31 March 1621\
153'''Parents:''' ''King'' Felipe II and Anna of Austria\
154'''Consort:''' Margaret of Austria\
155'''Nickname:''' ''the Pious''
156----
157
158Not the son Felipe II would have desired. Being weak-willed, slow in decision-making and with little to no interest in governing affairs, he re-popularized the custom of the ''valido'', in which command was delegated in a (badly) handpicked minister while the king went around partying. Clearly had issues and was probably a ludomaniac.
159
160No large-scale wars were waged by Spain during most of his reign, giving birth to the term ''Pax Hispanica'', although the lack of a strong leadership caused some mess anyway. He also had some colourful diplomacy with Japan. Less nicely, he expelled ''moriscos'' or Christianized descendants of Muslims, which was sort of an overreaction against secret collaborators of the Ottomans that hid among them.
161
162In his final years he did some real effective ruling on his own, although too little and too late. He is generally considered a terrible if well-meant ruler.
163
164!![[UsefulNotes/PhilipIV Felipe IV]]
165[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/philip_iv_of_spain.jpg]]
166->'''Lived:''' 8 April 1605 – 17 September 1665\
167'''Reigned:''' 31 March 1621 – 17 September 1665\
168'''Parents:''' ''King'' Felipe III and Margaret of Austria\
169'''Consorts:''' (1) Elisabeth of France (1615–1644); (2) Mariana of Austria (1649–1665)\
170'''Nicknames:''' ''the Great''; ''el Rey Planeta'' ("the Planet King")
171----
172
173Highly cultured and ambitious, he saw himself as a reformer and dreamed of giving Spain back the status it had lost with his grandfather's wars and his father's mismanagement. For the better part of his reign, he was in a tremendously complicated relationship (no, they were both straight, so far as we know) with his own ''valido'' the Count Duke of Olivares, which historians still debate whether it was ultimately a good or a bad thing.
174
175Under Olivares' advice, he re-initiated several wars and tried to extend the war effort from Castile to the whole realm, which prompted rebellions in Portugal and Catalonia that led to the former's independence and the latter's [[FateWorseThanDeath annexation to France]]. Catalonia was re-taken, albeit cut to a size, but Portugal wasn't. As a result, and with the premature death of his military genius brother, UsefulNotes/CardinalInfanteFerdinand, Spain lost its eminent seat to the emergent France of UsefulNotes/LouisXIV, Philip's son-in-law.
176
177A king of many contrasts. He cultivated a stoic image for himself, although it backfired and gained him the derisive nickname ''el Rey Pasmado'' (roughly "the Stunned King"). He was also famous for being a lover of the arts, befriending writers and painters, and not any less of women, having about 40 lovers himself. He was also somehow a fervent Catholic, and towards the end of his life suffered a existential crisis for having failed in his life dreams.
178
179From his very day, historical opinions of his skill are all over the place. Some consider him a better-disguised ersatz of his father, while others view him as at least a decently competent ruler who just lived in circumstances way beyond his control. His courtiers seem to have considered him a great monarch that just lacked self-confidence and got very bad advice.
180
181!![[UsefulNotes/CharlesIIOfSpain Carlos II]]
182[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/carlos_ii_de_espana_por_juan_carreno_de_miranda_museo_del_prado.jpg]]
183->'''Lived:''' 6 November 1661 – 1 November 1700\
184'''Reigned:''' 17 September 1665 – 1 November 1700\
185'''Parents:''' ''King'' Felipe IV and Mariana of Austria\
186'''Consorts:''' (1) Marie Louise d'Orléans (1679–1689); (2) Maria Anna of Neuburg (1689–1700)\
187'''Nickname:''' ''el Hechizado'' ("the Bewitched")
188----
189
190Born with [[BodyHorror serious deformities]] both physically and maybe mentally, he was sterile and not very able to reign. Apparently, he was tragically aware of how much of a failure he was regarded as, to the point he believed himself to be cursed. Spain lost a few minor wars under him, although in turn he and his ministers managed to hold it all together and pull an impressive economical refloating, which gets often overlooked in history due to his, well, conditions.
191
192His death [[SuccessionCrisis caused a fracas]], as after much speculation and vacillation in the last years of his life, he tried to to leave his throne to Duke Philippe of Anjou, grandson of Carlos's half-sister Maria Theresa, who had married King UsefulNotes/LouisXIV of France. However, Archduke Charles of Austria (later Holy Roman Emperor Charles VI), a great-grandson of Felipe III, objected on grounds that Felipe IV's will stipulated that the Spanish throne would always stay in Habsburg hands, and tried to claim the throne as "Carlos III."
193
194These competing claims resulted in the UsefulNotes/WarOfTheSpanishSuccession, which was fought between Louis XIV's France and his allies on one side, and a multinational coalition led by Charles VI which included [[UsefulNotes/BritainVersusTheUK England and Scotland (later the newly formed United Kingdom)]], Portugal, the Netherlands, and Prussia on the other.
195[[/folder]]
196
197[[folder:The House of Bourbon (1700–1808)]]
198!The House of Bourbon
199!![[UsefulNotes/PhilipV Felipe V]]
200[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/felipe_v_de_espana_museo_del_prado.jpg]]
201%%[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/felipe_v_de_espana_rey_de.jpg]]
202->'''Lived:''' 19 December 1683 – 9 July 1746\
203'''Reigned:''' 1 November 1700 – 15 January 1724; 6 September 1724 – 9 July 1746\
204'''Parents:''' Louis, ''Grand Dauphin'' of France,[[note]]eldest son of UsefulNotes/LouisXIV[[/note]] and Maria Anna Victoria of Bavaria\
205'''Consorts:''' (1) Maria Luisa Gabriella of Savoy (1701–1714); (2) Elisabeth Farnese ​(1714–1746)\
206'''Nickname:''' ''el Animoso'' ("the Spirited")
207----
208
209The War of the Spanish Succession ended with the Peace of Utrecht, in which Philippe of Anjou was recognized as King of Spain, and Habsburg rule in Spain came to an end. But in exchange, Philippe forfeited his and his descendants' places in [[UsefulNotes/LetatCestMoi the French royal line of succession]], and his French relations likewise renounced any claims they had to the Spanish throne. Thus the Bourbons would rule both lands, but a union of the Spanish and French crowns would be off the table for good (the Bonapartes' attempts notwithstanding).
210
211And so [[ThisIsMyNameOnForeign Philippe, now King Felipe V]], arrived in a Spain ruined by the war. He hoped to revive the country and managed some effective reforms, but he was prone to manic depression and was not a terribly skilled ruler, so he tended to be steered around by either his ministers or his ambitious wife, Isabel de Farnesio, none of whom always had Spain's best interests in mind.
212
213At peace, he unified the various states of the empire in a single nation. But in doing so, he famously suppressed medieval rights in Aragon (namely, in Catalonia and Valencia) as punishment for siding with Charles IV and the Holy Roman Empire during the war, which started a long tradition of animosity between the Bourbons and those regions. The town of Xàtiva in Valencia, for instance, was besieged and burned by Felipe during the war and for a time renamed [[{{Egopolis}} San Felipe]], so to this day, his portrait hangs upside-down in a local museum.
214
215At war, Felipe was a bit of a LeeroyJenkins and had a rather mixed record, although one thing he had in his favor was the upgrade of the Spanish Armada, including commanders like the mythical UsefulNotes/BlasDeLezo and monumental privateers like Miguel Enríquez and Amaro Pargo, who rose to NGOSuperpower levels each. Against the will of most other countries, Spain managed to retake control of Naples and other lost Italian territories, even if it took time and effort.
216
217Either way, his mind collapsed earlier into his reign, and he went completely insane, in colourful and tragicomical ways. He seemed to recognize this, so in 1724, he abdicated to his seventeen-year-old son Luis, but Luis wound up dying within a few months (see below), and his second son, Fernando, was only ten years old, so a reluctant Felipe was restored to the throne for another twenty-two years of barely functional madness.
218
219He is generally considered a ineffectual, useless king who was simply handed a job way over his head and sanity. His reign was ultimately fruitful, as he expected before going bananas, but mostly thanks to his people rather than himself. His 45-year reign remains the longest of any Spanish monarch.
220
221!!Luis I
222[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/luis_i_prince_of_asturias_by_jean_ranc.jpg]]
223->'''Lived:''' 25 August 1707 – 31 August 1724\
224'''Reigned:''' 15 January 1724 – 31 August 1724\
225'''Parents:''' ''King'' Felipe V and Maria Luisa Gabriella of Savoy\
226'''Consort:''' Louise Élisabeth d'Orléans\
227'''Nicknames:''' ''the Beloved''; ''the Liberal''
228----
229
230You would be hard-pressed to find any reference to him in general history books, as he didn't last a year as a king, dying at the tender age of 17, and little is known about him personally. He seems to have been a pleasant, charming, but subdued fellow, and some have speculated he was bisexual.
231
232His queen Louise Élisabeth was much more memorable for being batshit insane, to the point a disturbed Luis arranged for her to be institutionalized. She later begged for his forgiveness and started behaving a bit better upon her return. When Luis fell ill with smallpox, she went out of her way to care for him. He still died, though.
233
234After his death, Felipe V annulled Louise's marriage due to her unpopularity and since his second son, Fernando, was only ten years old, he was forced to take the crown again, insane as he was.
235
236!![[UsefulNotes/FerdinandVI Fernando VI]]
237[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ferdinandvi.jpg]]
238->'''Lived:''' 23 September 1713 – 10 August 1759\
239'''Reigned:''' 9 July 1746 – 10 August 1759\
240'''Parents:''' ''King'' Felipe V and Maria Luisa Gabriella of Savoy\
241'''Consort:''' Barbara of Portugal\
242'''Nicknames:''' ''el Prudente'' ("the Prudent" or "the Learned"); ''el Justo'' ("the Just")
243----
244
245Not very often remembered, if at all. Didn't wage wars, nor alliances, nor anything. His reign was mostly domestic and peaceful, which, apart for being unusual for a European country of the time, doesn't grant many pages in history books. If not by his appearance in the ironically forgettable ''Film/PiratesOfTheCaribbeanOnStrangerTides'', it's doubtful anybody would know him in pop culture.
246
247Terribly depressive due to an imprisoned early life, he also died ([[OverlyLongGag guess what]]) completely insane when his beloved Portuguese wife passed away, but up to that point he was a mostly flawless ruler, as seen in his nickname. He was obsessed with making the Spanish Empire strong and modern, but neutral in other countries' wars, and for the most part succeeded.
248
249!![[UsefulNotes/CharlesIIIOfSpain Carlos III]]
250[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/portrait_of_king_charles_iii_of_spain_by_anton_raphael_mengs.jpg]]
251->'''Lived:''' 20 January 1716 – 14 December 1788\
252'''Reigned:''' 10 August 1759 – 14 December 1788\
253'''Parents:''' ''King'' Felipe V and Elisabeth Farnese\
254'''Consort:''' Maria Amalia of Saxony\
255'''Nicknames:''' ''the Enlightened''; ''el Mejor Alcalde de Madrid'' ("the Best Mayor of Madrid"); ''el Político'' ("the Politician")
256----
257
258Duke of Parma turned King of Naples turned King of Spain. Competent and spirited, as well as experienced thanks to his successive jobs, he continued his brother Ferdinand's work and revitalized the empire in the style of UsefulNotes/TheEnlightenment. He also followed his policy of defensive neutrality, if less so, and endured a couple of failed war enterprises he was forced to wage, although he managed to bounce back every time.
259
260Unlike most of his predecessors, Carlos was a soundly healthy, charismatic and peaceful fellow of many talents, if also ugly and a bit weird. Interestingly, several points of his life mirror those of Carlos I, such as his devotion to his wife (and grief over her death afterwards), his passage by different thrones, his initiative and political ability, his unusual looks, and his stints as a military leader whenever he needed it. And just as Carlos I is seen as the greatest of the Spanish Habsburgs, Carlos III is regarded as the greatest of the Spanish Bourbons.
261
262He commanded Philip V's re-conquest of Naples and made it a small but strong kingdom, and he's still well-regarded in the history of Italy because he respected their independence and didn't try to merge Naples into Spain again when he ascended to the Spanish throne (some Italians back then even called for him to keep conquering all of Italy from their various foreign rulers). As the King of Spain, although few Americans remember him, he was also a vital support of UsefulNotes/TheAmericanRevolution, if begrudgingly so given that he didn't want to set an example for his own viceroyalties.
263
264One his main interests was urban development, which led to him rebuilding most of UsefulNotes/{{Madrid}} into the neo-Classical style for which it is now known. He gained the nickname "The Construction Worker King" due to this and the tan he got from his love for hunting. Far from this image, though, he also aspired to be an EmperorScientist and favored several inventors and innovators. He also built much of current Spain in other ways, including its flag and anthem.
265
266Despite his great prestige and few flaws, or perhaps ''[[AccentuateTheNegative because]]'' of this, he doesn't have much presence in media. Spaniards from TheEighties might know him better due to a certain song of folk rock band Suburbano.
267
268!!Carlos IV
269[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/carlos_iv_de_rojo.jpg]]
270->'''Lived:''' 11 November 1748 – 20 January 1819\
271'''Reigned:''' 14 December 1788 – 19 March 1808\
272'''Parents:''' ''King'' Carlos III and Maria Amalia of Saxony\
273'''Consort:''' Maria Luisa of Parma\
274'''Nickname:''' ''el Cazador'' ("the Hunter")
275----
276
277A KindheartedSimpleton, as well as the second time a great king had a completely unworthy successor, he was more interested in [[IncrediblyLameFun clocks]] than politics. Too bad UsefulNotes/TheFrenchRevolution and, later, a certain UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte were knocking into the door while his own scheming son wanted his head on a spear (although at least he ended better than [[UsefulNotes/LouisXVI his French cousin]], who oddly enough was also [[StrangeMindsThinkAlike an amateur clockmaker]]).
278
279Possibly best remembered for authorizing UsefulNotes/TheBalmisExpedition, the first global medical campaign in history, to vaccinate all of his empire against smallpox.
280
281Under pressure from Napoleon, he abdicated in 1808, and the Spanish throne briefly went to his son, Fernando VII, but just a few months into Fernando's reign, Napoleon ousted him too, giving Spain to…
282[[/folder]]
283
284[[folder:The House of Bonaparte (1808–1813)]]
285!The House of Bonaparte
286!!José I
287[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/jose_bonaparte_rey_de_espana_2.jpg]]
288->'''Lived:''' 7 January 1768 – 28 July 1844\
289'''Reigned:''' 6 June 1808 – 11 December 1813\
290'''Parents:''' Carlo Maria di Buonaparte and Maria Letizia Ramolino\
291'''Consort:''' Marie Julie Clary\
292'''Nicknames:''' ''the Intruder''; ''Pepe Botella'' ("Joe Bottle")
293----
294
295Imposed by his brother, UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte. A relatively well-meaning ruler, he actually tried to liberalize the country in part, and tried to avoid becoming a PuppetKing for his brother. Unfortunately for him, José, or rather, Joseph Bonaparte, was disliked by just about everyone, from Spain's colonies in the western hemisphere (a number of which ''[[UsefulNotes/SpanishAmericanWarsOfIndependence declared independence]]'' so they wouldn't have him as king) to peninsular society. This widespread discontent exploded into a front of UsefulNotes/TheNapoleonicWars called the Peninsular War.
296
297Despite his efforts, Joseph himself had little say in the Peninsular War – while the French commanders fighting it were technically under his command, they really answered to Napoleon. Fending off the Spanish insurgents wound up siphoning French resources, which put France at a disadvantage by the time Napoleon's Russian campaign kicked off, which in turn led to the downfall of the whole first French Empire. Hence the Peninsular War also being called "the Spanish Ulcer."
298
299Went into history under the derisive nickname of Pepe Botella ("[[TheAlcoholic Joe Bottle]]"), although despite his problems holding onto Spain, he didn't really have a drinking problem. This reputation probably came from a royal decree liberalizing trade on alcoholic beverages, which, coupled with his unpopularity, caused many to assume he was a hard drinker himself.
300
301After a British/Spanish/Portuguese victory at Vitoria decisively won the Peninsular War, [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere Joseph abdicated in 1813 and fled back to France]], thus returning the Spanish throne to…
302[[/folder]]
303
304[[folder:First Restoration of the House of Bourbon (1813–1868)]]
305!First Restoration of the House of Bourbon
306!![[UsefulNotes/FerdinandVII Fernando VII]]
307[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/fernandovii.jpg]]
308->'''Lived:''' 14 October 1784 – 29 September 1833\
309'''Reigned:''' 19 March 1808 – 6 May 1808; 11 December 1813 – 29 September 1833\
310'''Parents:''' ''King'' Carlos IV and Maria Luisa of Parma\
311'''Spouse:''' Maria Antonia of Naples and Sicily (1802–1806)\
312'''Consorts:''' (1) Maria Isabel of Portugal (1816-1818); (2) Maria Josepha Amalia of Saxony (1819–1829); (3) Maria Christina of the Two Sicilies (1829–1833)\
313'''Nicknames:''' ''el Deseado'' ("the Desired"); ''el Rey Felón'' ("the Felon King")
314----
315
316Having been an icon of Spanish resistance during the Peninsular War, there was a sense of optimism in Spain as Fernando reclaimed his crown that the country would improve now that it was free of the Bonaparte yoke.
317
318[[FromBadToWorse They were to]] [[TheWrongfulHeirToTheThrone be disappointed]].
319
320Fernando promptly crushed the Spanish liberals, abolished the constitution his Spanish supporters approved on his absence, empowered Latin American revolutionaries by denying the overseas territories the seats on the parliament the aforementioned constitution granted them, stomped either intentional or unintentionally on all other solutions to the problem, inadvertently granted independence to the revolutionaries for good by upsetting the military intended to fight them and getting those to revolt against ''him'', and swore the previously abolished constitution when they managed to corner him only to secretly scheme with foreign authoritarian powers to crush them once and for all.
321
322After all of this, which brought the destruction of the Spanish Empire in all possible senses, followed ten years known as the [[NamesToRunAwayFromVeryFast "Ominous Decade"]].
323
324On his deathbed, he changed his last will so his three-year-old daughter could reign (a very liberal standpoint, for a king that fiercely clung to absolutist monarchy) instead of his even-more-authoritarian brother, Don Carlos. It's widely assumed that he did this out of pure spite toward his brother for having coveted the throne long before Ferdinand vacated it, which would be in keeping with [[ItsAllAboutMe his general pettiness]]. This gesture would result in supporters of Don Carlos becoming the Carlists and advocating for him and his descendants being placed on the throne (more on that later).
325
326By the end of Fernando's reign, the few remnants of Spain were falling apart, its prestige was in tatters, a civil war was brewing, and Spain (and arguably the Hispanosphere as a whole) never quite recovered from his reign. Not surprisingly, most consider Fernando VII to be Spain's worst king, if not the worst in western history.
327
328!!Isabella II
329[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/isabel_de_borbon_y_borbon_dos_sicilias.jpg]]
330->'''Lived:''' 10 October 1830 – 9 April 1904\
331'''Reigned:''' 29 September 1833 – 30 September 1868\
332'''Parents:''' ''King'' Fernando VII and Maria Christina of the Two Sicilies\
333'''Consort:''' Francisco de Asís, ''Duke of Cádiz''\
334'''Nicknames:''' ''la Reina Castiza'' ("the Traditional Queen"); ''la de los Tristes Destinos'' ("The Queen of Sad Fate")
335----
336
337Crowned as a child, Isabella was married to a gay man - who was also her double first cousin - that she had no sympathy for.
338
339Her reign was marked by a succession of civil wars known as the Carlist Wars, which were waged by the supporters of her father's brother, Infante Carlos. These wars forced her mother, and then herself, to rely on the liberals her father so fiercely hated to stand on the throne as [[SleazyPolitician sleazy politicians]] turned into the office - and, allegedly, her bed.
340
341It is commonly regarded that she started as an SpoiledBrat who didn't quite have a grasp on how to rule a country and relied - quite effectively - on the military as chancellors and advisers, as well as, well, military leaders against her enemies. [[BreakTheHaughty As she grew, she was stuck in a loveless marriage and got fat, and was taken advantage of by said]] [[SleazyPolitician sleazy politicians]] [[KickTheDog who saw her need for affection, sometimes through sex, as an opportunity to gain power and influence]], which gathered a general mockery from the population as her popularity decreased through - rightfully - perceived institutional corruption until she was finally kicked out of the throne by 1868, and fled to France.
342
343While in exile, Isabella was forced to renounce her dynastic rights in favour of her son, the future Alfonso XII. After Alfonso became king, she was allowed back into Spain, but was barred from spending much time in Madrid and spent much of the rest of her life in Paris.
344[[/folder]]
345
346[[folder:The House of Savoy (1870–1873)]]
347!The House of Savoy
348!!Amadeo I
349[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/amadeo_i_de_espana_cropped.jpg]]
350->'''Lived:''' 30 May 1845 – 18 January 1890\
351'''Reigned:''' 16 November 1870 – 11 February 1873\
352'''Parents:''' ''King'' Victor Emmanuel II of Italy and Adelaide of Austria\
353'''Consort:''' Maria Vittoria dal Pozzo (1867–1876)\
354'''Spouse:''' Maria Letizia Bonaparte[[note]]a great-niece of UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte and of José I[[/note]] (1888–1890)\
355'''Nicknames:''' ''the Knight-King''; ''the Elected''
356----
357
358After Isabella II was deposed, debate about who the king of Spain might be started a controversy which even bled [[UsefulNotes/FrancoPrussianWar into the international sphere with a war between France and Prussia]]. The Parliament eventually decided Amadeo, from the family that successfully had united Italy, would be a nice king due to the long history of dynastic unions between Italy and Spain. This option was strongly supported by prestigious general Juan Prim.
359
360Sadly, Prim was murdered shortly before Amadeo arrived to Spain, depriving Amadeo from much needed advice, and the new king was received with ''utter'' contempt. They mocked him endlessly, openly and in front of him (what with celebrating a parade for the new king and filling the front rows with the ugliest, oldest prostitutes they could find) when not blatantly ignoring him, belittling him as unmanly or just plain bullying him. This was partly based off the fact that the House of Savoy had kicked out the Bourbons who used to ruled over the Two Sicilies and Parma, which unified all Italy yet made him unpopular in previously Bourbonian realms. As a result, Amadeo had often escaped attempted assassinations more than once.
361
362With all this happening in just two years, he (not unreasonably) decided that Spain was ungovernable, and promptly [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere abdicated and fled back to Italy]]. Political chaos and instability ensued, not that this problem was absent before.
363[[/folder]]
364
365[[folder:Second Restoration of House Bourbon (1874–1931)]]
366!The Second Restoration of House Bourbon
367!!Alfonso XII
368[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/king_alfonso_xii_cropped.png]]
369->'''Lived:''' 28 November 1857 – 25 November 1885\
370'''Reigned:''' 29 December 1874 – 25 November 1885\
371'''Parents:''' Francisco de Asís, ''Duke of Cádiz'', and ''Queen'' Isabella II\
372'''Consorts:''' (1) María de las Mercedes of Orléans (1878–1878); (2) Maria Christina of Austria (1879–1885)\
373'''Nickname:''' ''el Pacificador'' ("the Peacemaker")
374----
375
376Once Spain had fallen into utter chaos, he arrived with a high popularity to boot, defeating the Carlist Pretender, the self-proclaimed "Carlos VII," in the Third Carlist War. He wound up taking the name Alfonso XII, with his regnal number alluding to eleven kings of Asturias, Léon, and Castile that had been named Alfonso before Spain was united (and thus not appearing in this list).
377
378His new regime was engineered by Antonio Cánovas del Castillo, who was a well known Anglophile and designed a parliamentary system akin to that of the United Kingdom -- with the exception that Cánovas expected little from the Spanish population and was doubtful they would be civilized enough to implement a full democracy without civil unrest arising. So he arranged with local hicks known as ''caciques'' for the falsification of election results so "elected governments" could be stable and predictable. The result was a manufactured two-party system, with Cánovas's Conservative Party and Práxedes Mateo Sagasta's Liberal Party taking turns in power every four years, while keeping undesirable factions (namely, PSOE, the Socialist Party) out of the system.
379
380Alfonso was well liked, but unfortunately fell ill with tuberculosis and died young from dysentery at 27, mere days before his birthday and with only two daughters. His wife was pregnant, and six months later, his posthumous son was born and became king as Alfonso XIII, with a long regency.
381
382!!Alfonso XIII
383[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/rey_alfonso_xiii_de_espana_by_kaulak.jpg]]
384->'''Lived:''' 17 May 1886 – 28 February 1941\
385'''Reigned:''' 17 May 1886 – 14 April 1931\
386'''Parents:''' ''King'' Alfonso XII and Maria Christina of Austria\
387'''Consort:''' Victoria Eugenie of Battenberg\
388'''Nickname:''' ''el Africano'' ("The African")[[note]]so named for his support for Spanish colonial presence in Africa[[/note]]
389----
390
391By the time the UsefulNotes/SpanishAmericanWar kicked off, Cánovas had been murdered the year before the conflict started and Sagasta took off every responsibility for the humiliating defeat, dying in 1903. Alfonso XII died prematurely and the young king was actually too young to rule over the crisis (as in, when Alfonso XII died, Alfonso XIII was ''still in his mother's womb'').
392
393As if this was not sad enough for him, the two-party system was steadily falling apart once their masterminds had passed on and their successors lacked both charisma and political skills to keep it. The impact the defeat against the United States had on the population further eroded the establishment. There was a bizarre plan to invade and annex Portugal, hoping to capitalize on Iberist movements that had emerged out of the sorry state of both countries, but it also fell through (the liberals only wanted to do it peacefully). [[FromBadToWorse And it only got worse from there]].
394
395At request of U.S. President UsefulNotes/TheodoreRoosevelt, Spain held an international summit between France, Germany, the United Kingdom and others in Algeciras, Andalusia in 1906 which actually prevented UsefulNotes/WorldWarI for the next 9 years.
396
397After that, Spain got interested in the colonisation of Northern and Southern Morocco, which was implemented with extreme prejudice (hence Alfonso's sobriquet, "the African"), and resulted in an unprecedented bloodshed.
398
399Crime skyrocketed, and benefits from commerce due to Spain's neutrality in UsefulNotes/WorldWarI didn't translate into a better living conditions for workers, which led to a bloodbath in Catalonia. Spain's North African adventures triggered a further crisis in 1921, when Manuel Silvestre led a large but poorly-equipped army into Morocco's Rif Mountains; they were massacred by Abd el-Krim's rebels at the Battle of Anual, initiating the Rif War.
400
401This combination of military disasters and economic hardship destabilized the Spanish government. Spanish governments lasted mere days, and the situation was so desperate that the King rallied the military in 1923, which led to a dictatorship that year under General Miguel Primo de Rivera, the same year a certain UsefulNotes/BenitoMussolini seized power in Italy.
402
403Primo de Rivera accomplished most of his stated goals by cutting crime, striking seriously Abd-el-Krim rebels in the Moroccan campaign, and patching social welfare issues, as well as implementing progressive measures that nobody remembers (such as putting women in political charges). He also tied an improbable EnemyMine with the top of the PSOE (Socialist Party) after those gave his dictatorship the benefit of doubt. However, in the process they made enemies of the CNT (anarcho-syndicalists), the PCE (Communist Party), and the whole of the elites in both Catalonia and the Basque Country, who turned to nationalism. And then, in 1929, TheGreatDepression finished him.
404
405Primo de Rivera was forced to resign, but his soiled reputation was dragging the crown's reputation down with it, and in 1931, an election gave a majority to left-leaning and republican parties, and Alfonso chose to leave the country in order to prevent a civil war from breaking out. [[UsefulNotes/SpanishCivilWar It didn't work]].
406
407The Second Spanish Republic was established, but [[UsefulNotes/TheFrancoRegime it didn't last either]].
408
409In his exile, the deposed Alfonso was involved in a few anti-republican plots that went nowhere. His two eldest sons renounced their places in the line of succession. In 1941, not long before his death in Rome, he himself relinquished his claim to the throne to his third son, Juan (more on that later).
410
411[[HeAlsoDid Also, Alfonso XIII commissioned and directed the first Spanish porn film]]. No, really.
412[[/folder]]
413
414[[folder:Third Restoration of House Bourbon (1975–)]]
415!The Third Restoration of House Bourbon
416!!Juan Carlos I
417[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/posado_tras_la_entrega_de_los_premios_fondena_2014_cropped.jpg]]
418->'''Born:''' 5 January 1938\
419'''Reigned:''' 22 November 1975 – 19 June 2014\
420'''Parents:''' ''Infante'' Juan, ''Count of Barcelona'', and ''Princess'' María de las Mercedes of Bourbon-Two Sicilies\
421'''Consort:''' Sophia of Greece and Denmark
422----
423
424In 1947, Franco had declared Spain was a kingdom again, but being as he didn't like any of the claimants (particularly Juan, the heir to Alfonso XIII's throne after his elder brothers renounced their rights, and whom he considered too liberal even though he tried to fight on the Nationalist side during the war), he held off his decision until he picked Juan's eldest son in 1969, considering him to be the perfect tool to continue his regime after his death.
425
426However, Juan Carlos was shrewd enough to know which side he should pick, and for a long time he had buttered Franco up, making him believe he would just allow things to keep on, all the while he planned for the restoration of democracy. Finally, in November 1975, Franco died (and, yes, he is [[Series/SaturdayNightLive still dead]]) and he was crowned as Juan Carlos I.
427
428Initially, he was not very popular, as he was still seen as pretty much Franco with a new face, and the leader of the Spanish Communist Party, Santiago Carrillo, famously claimed that he would be nicknamed "The Brief".
429
430Instead, with the support of newly-picked Prime Minister Adolfo Suárez, Juan Carlos managed to ensure the Francoist parliament would vote itself out of existence, all political parties were legalized (even the Communists, in a tricky moment where the military leadership nearly rose again) and eventually elections (the first in more than forty years) were called for Constitutional Courts. The Constitution was accepted in referendum by a majority of the Spanish people, and a new democratic system--specifically a parliamentary monarchy--was finally implemented.
431
432Then, in 1981, a group of Civil Guard men invaded the Congress during the voting on who should replace Suárez (who had recently resigned) as Prime Minister, with the intention of eventually restoring the dictatorship, while a general sent the tanks into the streets and tried to convince others to follow. Then the King appeared on national TV, wearing his uniform as Captain General of the Armies (the highest rank in the Spanish Army) and ordered the Armed Forces to support the democratic system. The coup was defeated soon, and Santiago Carrillo (yes, the same guy as before) was heard saying "God Save the King!"
433
434During the next years, he would be one of Spain's foremost representatives in foreign countries, while several Prime Ministers (after Adolfo Suárez came Leopoldo Calvo Sotelo (1981-82), Felipe González (1982-1996), José María Aznar (1996-2004), José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero (2004-2011), Mariano Rajoy (2011-2018) and Pedro Sánchez (2019-?)) held the reigns of the government. In 2007, during the Hispanoamerican (Spain, Portugal and the parts of America that were colonies of both) Conference, he had a most famous moment. While Zapatero was speaking, UsefulNotes/HugoChavez of Venezuela started to interrupt him, calling the previous Spanish Prime Minister, Aznar, a "fascist" and more. Fed-up, the King shouted at him "''¿Por qué no te callas?''" (''Why won't you shut up?'')[[note]]The fact that he used the informal ''te'' instead of the more formal ''se'' makes it sound like he was reprimanding a misbehaving child, especially to Latin American ears (European Spanish is much looser with the informal than Latin American Spanish).[[/note]], a sentence that gained instant MemeticMutation status.
435
436However, in the later years, his popularity started to take hit after hit: his eldest daughter Elena divorced, his younger daughter Cristina and her husband got involved in several scandals related to misappropriation of public funds, and, most infamously, he broke his hip while hunting elephants in Botswana with a mistress, which particularly angered Spanish people since they were in the middle of a very tough recession that had left hundreds of thousands of people without a job, and there he was, hunting elephants and doing stuff with a slew of mistresses. With his public image ruined, he came to be seen more through the lens of many negative memes, which often focused on his hedonism, absentmindedness, slurred speech, and a still persistent rumor that [[PlayingBothSides he was actually behind the 1981 coup attempt himself before opting out]].
437
438In the end, due in part to both these scandals and his advancing age, he decided to AbdicateTheThrone in 2014 and pass the crown to his only son, Felipe.
439
440''And then'', after a scandal involving him receiving kick-backs for aiding in the construction of a high-speed railway in Saudi Arabia, he decided to go into self-imposed exile over there in August 2020. Memes about him becoming a full-fledged Sheikh were born.
441
442!!Felipe VI
443[[quoteright:200:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/felipe_vi_in_new_york_city___2023_p061666_928871_cropped.jpg]]
444->'''Born:''' 30 January 1968\
445'''Reign:''' Since 19 June 2014 – \
446'''Parents:''' ''King'' Juan Carlos I and Sophia of Greece and Denmark\
447'''Consort:''' Letizia Ortiz Rocasolano\
448'''Heir:''' Leonor, ''Princess of Asturias''
449----
450
451The first King of Spain to be married to a commoner (journalist Letizia Ortiz), Felipe has worked hard to make sure he can restore the monarchy's popularity in the eyes of the people, pledging "a renewed monarchy for a new time," as well as cutting royal expenditures and making his assets public.
452
453Whether or not he's succeeding in his endeavours is a matter of debate. At the beginning of his reign, there were calls from some for a referendum to decide whether Spain should remain a constitutional monarchy or become a republic, but they were a minority and it has not come up since.
454
455As Prince of Asturias, Felipe was a member of the Spanish Olympic sailing team in the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona, in which he was also the flag-bearer for Spain.
456
457Being a much more subdued character than his father, almost to the point of coming across as unremarkable, many Spaniards aren't yet sure what to make of him. So far, Felipe's reign has been marked by his aforementioned efforts to improve the monarchy's image, his opposition to an independence referendum in Catalonia that was deemed illegal by Spanish authorities, and by the UsefulNotes/COVID19Pandemic, in which he tested positive, but recovered.
458[[/folder]]
459
460[[folder:The Line of Succession]]
461[[quoteright:171:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/leonor_princess_of_asturias_2020_cropped.jpg]]
462 [[caption-width-right:171:Leonor, Princess of Asturias]]
463Under the Spanish constitution, eligibility for the Spanish throne is limited to the "successors" of Juan Carlos I. Whether or not this includes dynasts other than Juan Carlos's direct descendants – like other descendants of Infante Juan or Alfonso XIII – isn't clear.
464
465Felipe VI's heir presumptive is his eldest daughter, Leonor, Princess of Asturias. In the event that she ascends the throne, she will be Spain's first queen regnant since her great-times-four-grandmother Isabella II in 1868.
466
467Spanish succession follows male-preference primogeniture, so [[HeirClubForMen sons of dynasts (and their descendants) come before daughters of dynasts (and]] ''[[HeirClubForMen their]]'' [[HeirClubForMen descendants) in the line of succession]]. Since the UK switched to absolute primogeniture in 2013, Spain and [[UsefulNotes/TheMonegasqueRoyalFamily Monaco]] are now the only monarchies to use male-preference primogeniture. As a result, Princess Leonor is currently the world's only female heir presumptive, meaning that in the event Felipe and Letizia give birth to a boy, she would be knocked down a place in the line of succession.
468
469Just before Leonor was born in 2005, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero's PSOE election manifesto called for a constitutional amendment to institute absolute primogeniture for Spanish sucession, with the other mainstream party, the People's Party, voicing its support for the proposal. The idea received more attention in 2006–2007, when then-Princess Letizia had a second pregnancy. But the resulting child, Infanta Sophia, wound up being another daughter, and Felipe and Letizia aren't getting any younger, so the question has become less urgent. As of January 2024, plans for such a constitutional amendment have advanced no further.
470
471On the subject of lines of succession, at points of its history (as mentioned under Isabella II), Spain had to contend with the traditionalist '''Carlists''', who believed that when Fernando VII died in 1833, the throne should have gone to his brother, Infante Carlos María Isidro and his descendants, instead of Isabella II and hers. Isabella II's unpopularity helped their cause, and the Carlists fought three wars to try and get it done, but they were never quite successful. The movement would last for so long that Carlists would play a role in the Franco regime – albeit a small one. These days, Carlism is a niche interest, and the movement [[WeAreStrugglingTogether suffers a bit from internal squabbles]] as now there are currently no less than ''four'' Carlist pretenders to the throne, based on differing interpretations of the Carlist claim (even Felipe VI has backing from a small group of Carlists – not that he's acknowledged it).
472[[/folder]]

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