Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7fkt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T06:01:38.576Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Spanish Nationalism in the Struggle Against Napoleon

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2009

Extract

On the second of May in the year 1808, an event took place in Madrid which was to be of momentous consequence not only in the history of Spain but of revolutionary and Napoleonic France as well. As the last of the Spanish royalty departed from the capital for Bayonne and exile, outraged feelings gave way to an armed uprising against French rule. The revolt was speedily crushed by Murat's troops, but despite the grave restrictions imposed by his order of the day, Spain refused to be quieted. Juan Pérez Villamil, fiscal of the Supreme Council of War, issued a call to arms: “The country is in danger. Madrid is perishing, a victim of French perfidy. Spaniards, hasten to save her. May 2, 1808.” The response was immediate; irregular bands of troops sprang up, mob violence was visited upon those accused of being afrancesados (that is, pro-French), and many officials paid with their lives for their apathy in organizing the resistance. Everywhere was heard the cry of the patriots, “i Viva Fernando VII y mueran los franceses!” A few months later the regular Spanish armies were to administer to the troops of imperial France their first defeat. At last the principle of nationalism, so long a vital force in the success of the French revolution and Napoleon, had been turned against France.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Notre Dame 1958

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Rico, Juan y Amat, , Historia politica y parlementaria de España (Madrid, 1861) I, 144.Google Scholar

2 Soldevilla, Fernando, Las Cortes de Cádiz (Madrid, 1910), p. 31.Google Scholar

3 History of Spain (New York, 1949), p. 536.Google Scholar

4 Oeuvres complètes (Paris, 1820), XXXIII, 421Google Scholar (cited in Menéndez, Mercelino y Pelayo, , Historia de los heterodoxos españoles, 2nd rev. ed. (Madrid, 19111932), VI, 239Google Scholar

5 Letters Written during a Journey in Spain and Portugal (London, 1808), I, 209.Google Scholar

6 The best available accounts of education in late 18th century Spain are in Menéndez, y Pelayo, , op. cit., VI, 269 ffGoogle Scholar. and de la Fuente, Vicente, Historia de las universidades, colegios, y establecimientos de enseñanza en España (Madrid, 1889), IV, 154 ffGoogle Scholar. Both, it should be pointed out, are conservative.

7 Almagro, Melchor Fernández, Origines del régimen constitucional en España (Barcelona, 1928), pp. 3233Google Scholar. Abate José Marchena (1768–1821) was a philosopher-clergyman who, condemned by the Inquisition, eventually fled to revolutionary France and became a friend of Marat, whom he assisted in editing L'Ami du Peuple. He was imprisoned, and later released by Robespierre, served on the Committee of Public Safety, and eventually returned to Madrid as secretary to Murat.

8 Historia política y parlementaria de España, I, 123.Google Scholar

9 “La actual revolución de España, bosquejada en febrero del año 1810. Por D.F.M. de la R.” El Español, No. VII, 10 30, 1810, p. 35Google Scholar. (The author was presumably Don Francisco Martínez de la Rosa, a leading young poet, lawyer, and liberal, who assisted the expatriate ex-priest Blanco-White, José in editing El Español in London.)Google Scholar

10 Lafuente, Modesto, Historia general de España, 2nd ed. (Madrid, 1864), XIII, 439Google Scholar. The population figure seems exaggerated; the census of 1797 put it at 10,534,985.

11 Bécker, Jerónimo, La reforma constitutional en España (Madrid, 1923), p. 14.Google Scholar

12 Information on the Principal Events in the Government of Spain from the Commencement of the Insurrection in 1808 to the Dissolution of the Ordinary Cortes in 1814. Tr. by Walton, Wm. in Pamphleteer, Vol. XVII (London, 1814), 5.Google Scholar

13 Spain, Junta Suprema Central, Manifesto de la nación española a la Europa (Sevilla, 1809)Google Scholar. Interesting is its warning to Tsar Alexander that Napoleon would not be content until he had invaded Russia and driven the Tsar and his forces back into Tartary.

14 “Exposición del Consejo de Regencia de España e Indias a las Cortes generales y extraordinarias del Reino sobre sus operaciones gubernativas en la época de su mando, 1 octobre de 1810,” p. 45Google Scholar. (Document No. 20 appended to Quadrado, Francisco de Paula y de Roo, , Elogio histórico del Excmo. Sr. D. Antonio de Escaño, Madrid, 1852.)Google Scholar

18 Op. cit., 6.

16 Op. cit., I, 176–177.

17 History of the Peninsular War (London, 1832), III, 79.Google Scholar

18 “Discurso de un español a los diputados de Cortes,” dated 09 14, 1810Google Scholar, in El Observador, 09 26, 1810Google Scholar. From Castro, Adolfo y Rossi, , Cortes de Cádiz (Madrid, 1913), I, 138145.Google Scholar

19 (Sevilla, 1809).

20 de Toreno, Conde, Historia del levantamiento, revolución, e independencia de España, 4 vols. (Madrid, 1835), III, 314315.Google Scholar

21 Spain, Cortes, Colección de los decretos y ordenes de las Cortes (Cádiz, 1813), I, 1.Google Scholar

22 This was made quite evident when the Cortes, on the proposal of the Mexican deputy Mejía, assumed the style of “Majesty,” leaving the Regency to be called simply “Highness.”

23 Vélez, Rafael, Apologia del Altar y del Trono, o Historia de las reformas hechas en España en tiempo de las llamadas Cortes; e impugnación de algunas doctrinas publicadas en la constitución, diarios, y otros escritos contra la religión y el estado, 2 vols. (Madrid, 1825), II, 62.Google Scholar

24 No. XVI, July 30, 1811; III, 282–283.

25 Op. cit., II, 65–71.

26 Quoted in Castro, y Rossi, , op. cit., I, 152.Google Scholar

27 Vida literaria, quoted in Comenge, Rafael, Antología de las Cortes, 2 vols. (Madrid, 1912), I, 245.Google Scholar

28 The primary sources for these events are the Diario de las Sesiones de las Cortes; Villanueva, Joaquín's Mi Viaje a las Cortes (Madrid, 1860)Google Scholar, especially valuable for the secret sessions; and the Count of Toreno's Historia (cited above), Vol. IV.Google Scholar

29 It is interesting to note that radicalism was strongest among the substitute deputies (suplentes). The Catalan delegation, for example, which contained the largest number of regular deputies, was the stronghold of conservatism.

30 Cf. August, 1811, sessions in the Diario and Villanueva, , op. cit., 271 ff.Google Scholar

31 November 8, 1811, Correspondence, V, 359.Google Scholar

32 On the military situation see the Diario, I, 161, 391392, 416418, 532536Google Scholar; IV, 2727; V, 4000; also Villanueva, , op. cit., pp. 154170, 257258, 358Google Scholar, and the Semanario Patriótico for 01 24, 1811.Google Scholar

33 This large number is somewhat deceiving, since many lasted for but a few issues, and most of them had such a small circulation as to be relatively unimportant; yet they do illustrate the many and varying shades of public opinion in Spain at the time.

34 Pp. 17, 55–56.

35 Diario de las Sesiones, IV, 2799.Google Scholar

36 No. 35, Dec. 6, 1810, pp. 58–59.

37 Op. cit., II, vii.

38 One of these plazas still survives in St. Augustine, Florida.