Spain Historical Setting
El Escorial, northwest of Madrid, built by Philip II in the second half of the sixteenth century
THE NATIONAL HISTORY of Spain dates back to the fifth
century
A.D., when the Visigoths established a Germanic successor
state
in the former Roman diocese of Hispania. Despite a period
of
internal political disunity during the Middle Ages, Spain
nevertheless is one of the oldest nation-states in Europe.
In the
late fifteenth century, Spain acquired its current borders
and
was united under a personal union of crowns by Ferdinand
of
Aragon (Spanish, Aragon) and Isabella of Castile (Spanish,
Castilla). For a period in the sixteenth and the
seventeenth
centuries, Portugal was part of that Iberian federation.
In the sixteenth century, Spain was the foremost
European
power, and it was deeply involved in European affairs from
that
period to the eighteenth century. Spain's kings ruled
provinces
scattered across Europe. The Spanish Empire was global,
and the
influence of Spanish culture was so pervasive, especially
in the
Americas, that Spanish is still the native tongue of more
than
200 million people outside Spain.
Recurrent political instability, military intervention
in
politics, frequent breakdowns of civil order, and periods
of
repressive government have characterized modern Spanish
history.
In the nineteenth century, Spain had a constitutional
framework
for parliamentary government, not unlike those of Britain
and
France, but it was unable to develop institutions capable
of
surviving the social, economic, and ideological stresses
of
Spanish society.
The Spanish Civil War (1936-39), which claimed more
than
500,000 lives, recapitulated on a larger scale and more
brutally
conflicts that had erupted periodically for generations.
These
conflicts, which centered around social and political
roles of
the Roman Catholic Church, class differences, and
struggles for
regional autonomy on the part of Basque and Catalan
nationalists,
were repressed but were not eliminated under the
authoritarian
rule of Nationalist leader Generalissimo Francisco Franco
y
Bahamonde (in power, 1939-75). In the closing years of the
Franco
regime, these conflicts flared, however, as militant
demands for
reform increased and mounting terrorist violence
threatened the
country's stability.
When Prince Juan Carlos de Borbon became king of Spain
following Franco's death in November 1975, there was
little
indication that he would be the instrument for the
democratization of Spain. Nevertheless, within three years
he and
his prime minister, Aldolfo Suarez Gonzalez (in office
1976-81),
had accomplished the historically unprecedented feat of
transforming a dictatorial regime into a pluralistic,
parliamentary democracy through nonviolent means. This
accomplishment made it possible to begin the process of
healing
Spain's historical schisms.
The success of this peaceful transition to democracy
can be
attributed to the young king's commitment to democratic
institutions and to his prime minister's ability to
maneuver
within the existing political establishment in order to
bring
about the necessary reforms. The failure of a coup attempt
in
February 1981 and the peaceful transfer of power from one
party
to another in October 1982 revealed the extent to which
democratic principles had taken root in Spanish society.
West European governments refused to cooperate with an
authoritarian regime in the immediate aftermath of World
War II,
and, in effect, they ostracized the country from the
region's
political, economic, and defense organizations. With the
onset of
the Cold War, however, Spain's strategic importance for
the
defense of Western Europe outweighed other political
considerations, and isolation of the Franco regime came to
an
end. Bilateral agreements, first negotiated in 1953,
permitted
the United States to maintain a chain of air and naval
bases in
Spain in support of the overall defense of Western Europe.
Spain
became a member of the United Nations in 1955 and joined
the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization in 1982.
Data as of December 1988
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