Royal statute of F. Martinez de la Rosa and formation of new order in Spain in the first half of the XIX century

The formation of the New – liberal-bourgeois – order in Spain lasted for almost one and a half century and experienced many «ups and downs». A milestone in this process is the Royal Statute written by an outstanding liberal conservative on the first half of the 19th century F. Martinez de la Rosa. I...

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Main Author: Yuri V. Vasilenko
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Institute of Philosophy and Law 2018-06-01
Series:Антиномии
Subjects:
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spelling doaj-877cfc0a71f043ad9357945a3097a50b2021-03-29T11:55:59ZengUral Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Institute of Philosophy and LawАнтиномии2686-72062686-925X2018-06-0118210.17506/ryipl.2016.18.2.5568Royal statute of F. Martinez de la Rosa and formation of new order in Spain in the first half of the XIX centuryYuri V. Vasilenkohttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-7865-6497The formation of the New – liberal-bourgeois – order in Spain lasted for almost one and a half century and experienced many «ups and downs». A milestone in this process is the Royal Statute written by an outstanding liberal conservative on the first half of the 19th century F. Martinez de la Rosa. In an effort to harmonize liberal Liberty and traditionalist Order, Martinez takes a position between left-wing liberals (progressists) and traditionalists. However, under the conditions of the liberal-bourgeois revolution and the first Carlist war, a stable political-ideological consensus between revolutionaries and conservative reactionaries was impossible. Trying to ensure the survival of the declared constitutional monarchy, Martinez was forced to make a tactical alliance with moderate traditionalists, which caused a flurry of criticism from the left. The imbalance of the political system led to the abolition of the Royal Statute and a new revolutionary cycle, in which Martinez occupies a definitely conservative position.royal statuteliberal conservatismmartinez de la rosa19th century spain
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yuri V. Vasilenko
spellingShingle Yuri V. Vasilenko
Royal statute of F. Martinez de la Rosa and formation of new order in Spain in the first half of the XIX century
Антиномии
royal statute
liberal conservatism
martinez de la rosa
19th century spain
author_facet Yuri V. Vasilenko
author_sort Yuri V. Vasilenko
title Royal statute of F. Martinez de la Rosa and formation of new order in Spain in the first half of the XIX century
title_short Royal statute of F. Martinez de la Rosa and formation of new order in Spain in the first half of the XIX century
title_full Royal statute of F. Martinez de la Rosa and formation of new order in Spain in the first half of the XIX century
title_fullStr Royal statute of F. Martinez de la Rosa and formation of new order in Spain in the first half of the XIX century
title_full_unstemmed Royal statute of F. Martinez de la Rosa and formation of new order in Spain in the first half of the XIX century
title_sort royal statute of f. martinez de la rosa and formation of new order in spain in the first half of the xix century
publisher Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Institute of Philosophy and Law
series Антиномии
issn 2686-7206
2686-925X
publishDate 2018-06-01
description The formation of the New – liberal-bourgeois – order in Spain lasted for almost one and a half century and experienced many «ups and downs». A milestone in this process is the Royal Statute written by an outstanding liberal conservative on the first half of the 19th century F. Martinez de la Rosa. In an effort to harmonize liberal Liberty and traditionalist Order, Martinez takes a position between left-wing liberals (progressists) and traditionalists. However, under the conditions of the liberal-bourgeois revolution and the first Carlist war, a stable political-ideological consensus between revolutionaries and conservative reactionaries was impossible. Trying to ensure the survival of the declared constitutional monarchy, Martinez was forced to make a tactical alliance with moderate traditionalists, which caused a flurry of criticism from the left. The imbalance of the political system led to the abolition of the Royal Statute and a new revolutionary cycle, in which Martinez occupies a definitely conservative position.
topic royal statute
liberal conservatism
martinez de la rosa
19th century spain
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