Hispanic Monarchy (political entity)
Spanish Empire territories, 1479 to 1716 / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Hispanic Monarchy (Monarquia Hispanica in spanish), also known as Catholic Monarchy[1] and historically referred to as Monarchy of Spain[lower-alpha 1], was the political entity encompassing the territories and dependencies of the Spanish Empire between 1479 and 1716. These regions maintained distinct, individual public institutions, councils, and legal systems, but were united under the control of a superior entity (the King of Spain)[2] and common state institutional structures. This monarchy was administered under a polysynodial system of councils. The Spanish monarch acted as king (or with the corresponding title) according to the political constitution of each kingdom, state, or lordship,[3] and thus, their formal power varied from one territory to another. However, they acted as a unified monarch over all the territories of the monarchy,[4] almost like a Composite Monarchy.
Monarchy of Spain | |
---|---|
1479–1716 | |
Capital | Madrid (1561-1601)
Valladolid (1601-1606) Madrid (since 1606) |
Official languages | Spanish |
Religion | Catholicism |
Government | Composite monarchy |
History | |
• Established | 1479 |
• Disestablished | 1716 |
Currency | Spanish real |
The Monarchy included the Crown of Castile — with Granada, Navarre and the kingdoms of the Indies — and Aragon — with Sicily, Naples, Sardinia, and the State of the Presidi —, Portugal and its overseas territories between 1580 and 1640, the territories of the Burgundian Circle except between 1598-1621 — Franche-Comté, the Netherlands, as well as Charolais —, the Duchy of Milan, the Marquisate of Finale, the Spanish East Indies, and Spanish Africa.[5][6]
The monarchy ended with the Treaties of Utrecht and Baden (1713-1714) and the Nueva Planta Decrees (1707-1716),[7] which produced a break in the system by implementing greater homogeneity and political centralization, relegating the polysynodial system.[8][9]