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An Historical Review of the Spanish Revolution
Including Some Account of Religion, Manners, and Literature, in Spain
An 1822 account of the Spanish revolution against King Ferdinand VII, with a description of the Spanish people and culture.
Edward Blaquiere (Author)
9781108083287, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 19 February 2016
686 pages, 1 map
22 x 14 x 4 cm, 0.9 kg
Edward Blaquiere (1779–1832), an Irishman of Huguenot descent, joined the Royal Navy in 1794 and served, chiefly in the Mediterranean, throughout the Napoleonic wars. In 1820, influenced by Jeremy Bentham, he went on his behalf to Spain to observe the revolution there, and published this account in 1822. (Blaquiere was later involved in the Greek war of independence, and his accounts of two visits to Greece are also reissued in this series.) He arrived to find the country (still not recovered from the Napoleonic wars) in turmoil, with an ongoing struggle between the recently restored absolutist King Ferdinand VII and a liberal faction in the army. He combines his epistolary account of the beginning of the so-called 'liberal triennium' (three years of liberal rule from 1820) with a general view of the land, people and culture of Spain, in a series of sixteen letters and an extended postscript.
Preface
1. State of the capital
2. Delibration of the Cortes
3. Regency and Cortes of 1812
4. Violation of the royal promise
5. Royal orders in favour of the patriots
6. Afrancesados and liberales
7. Reign of terror
8. General treatment of the army
9. Alarm caused at court by Porlier's insurrection
10. Project of reinforcing Morillo
11. Repugnance of the soldiery to embark for South America
12. Religion
13. Religion (cont.)
14. Religious reform, manners and customs
15. Literature and learned men
Supplementary letter
Postscript
Appendix.
Subject Areas: British & Irish history [HBJD1]
