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| Spain History |
| About the Spain |
Spain, originally inhabited by Celts, Iberians,
and Basques, became a part of the Roman
Empire in 206 B.C., when it was conquered by
Scipio Africanus. In A.D. 412, the barbarian
Visigothic leader Ataulf crossed the Pyrenees
and ruled Spain, first in the name of the
Roman emperor and then independently. In
711, the Muslims under Tariq entered Spain
from Africa and within a few years completed
the subjugation of the country. In 732, the
Franks, led by Charles Martel, defeated the
Muslims near Poitiers, thus preventing the
further expansion of Islam in southern
Europe. Internal dissension of Spanish Islam
invited a steady Christian conquest from the
north.
Aragon and Castile were the most important
Spanish states from the 12th to the 15th
century, consolidated by the marriage of
Ferdinand II and Isabella I in 1469. In 1478,
they established the Inquisition, to root out
heresy and uncover Jews and Muslims who
had not sincerely converted to Christianity.
Torquemada, the most notorious of the grand
inquisitors, epitomized the Inquisition's
harshness and cruelty. The last Muslim
stronghold, Granada, was captured in 1492.
Roman Catholicism was established as the
official state religion and most Jews (1492)
and Muslims (1502) were expelled. In the era
of exploration, discovery, and colonization,
Spain amassed tremendous wealth and a vast
colonial empire through the conquest of
Mexico by Cortés (1519–1521) and Peru by
Pizarro (1532–1533). The Spanish Hapsburg
monarchy became for a time the most
powerful in the world. In 1588, Philip II sent
his invincible Armada to invade England, but
its destruction cost Spain its supremacy on the
seas and paved the way for England's
colonization of America. Spain then sank
rapidly to the status of a second-rate power
under the rule of weak Hapsburg kings, and it
never again played a major role in European
politics. The War of the Spanish Succession
(1701–1714) resulted in Spain's loss of
Belgium, Luxembourg, Milan, Sardinia, and
Naples. Its colonial empire in the Americas
and the Philippines vanished in wars and
revolutions during the 18th and 19th
centuries.
In World War I, Spain maintained a position of
neutrality. In 1923, Gen. Miguel Primo de
Rivera became dictator. In 1930, King Alfonso
XIII revoked the dictatorship, but a strong
antimonarchist and republican movement led
to his leaving Spain in 1931. The new
constitution declared Spain a workers'
republic, broke up the large estates,
separated church and state, and secularized
the schools. The elections held in 1936
returned a strong Popular Front majority, with
Manuel Azaña as president.
On July 18, 1936, a conservative army officer
in Morocco, Francisco Franco Bahamonde, led
a mutiny against the government. The civil
war that followed lasted three years and cost
the lives of nearly a million people. Franco
was aided by Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany,
while Soviet Russia helped the Loyalist side.
Several hundred leftist Americans served in
the Abraham Lincoln Brigade on the side of
the republic. The war ended when Franco
took Madrid on March 28, 1939. Franco
became head of the state, national chief of
the Falange Party (the governing party), and
prime minister and caudillo (leader).
In a referendum in 1947, the Spanish people
approved a Franco-drafted succession law
declaring Spain a monarchy again. Franco,
however, continued as chief of state. In 1969,
Franco and the Cortes (“states”) designated
Prince Juan Carlos Alfonso Victor María de
Borbón (who married Princess Sophia of
Greece in 1962) to become king of Spain
when the provisional government headed by
Franco came to an end. Franco died on Nov.
20, 1975, and Juan Carlos was proclaimed
king on Nov. 22.
Under pressure from Catalonian and Basque
nationalists, Prime Minister Adolfo Suárez
granted home rule to these regions in 1979.
Basque separatists committed hundreds of
terrorist bombings and kidnappings. With the
overwhelming election of Prime Minister Felipe
González Márquez and his Spanish Socialist
Workers Party in the Oct. 20, 1982,
parliamentary elections, the Franco past was
finally buried.
Spain entered NATO in 1982. Spain, along
with Portugal, joined the European Economic
Community, now the European Union, in
1986. General elections in March 1996
produced a victory for the conservative
Popular Party, and its leader, José María
Aznar, became prime minister. He and his
party easily won reelection in 2000.
In Aug. 2002, Batasuna, the political wing of
the Basque terrorist organization ETA, was
banned. The wisdom of driving the party
underground instead of permitting it a
legitimate political outlet has been questioned.
Aznar's backing of the U.S. war in Iraq was
highly unpopular—90% of Spaniards opposed
the war. (Spain sent no troops to Iraq during
the war but contributed 1,300 peacekeeping
forces during the reconstruction period.) Yet
Aznar's Popular Party did extremely well in
municipal elections in May 2003. The country's
relative prosperity and the prime minister's
tough stance against the ETA were thought to
be responsible for the strong showing.
On March 11, 2004, Spain suffered its most
horrific terrorist attack: 191 people were killed
and 1,400 were injured in bombings at
Madrid's railway station. The government at
first blamed ETA, but soon evidence emerged
that al-Qaeda was responsible. When record
numbers of voters went to the polls days
later, Aznar's Popular Party experienced a
stinging defeat, and José Luis Rodríguez
Zapatero of the Socialist Party became the
new prime minister. Many Spaniards blamed
Aznar's staunch support of the U.S. and the
war in Iraq for making Spain an al-Qaeda
target. Others were angered by what they
saw as the government's politically motivated
position that ETA was to blame for the attacks
at the same time that links to al-Qaeda were
emerging. By April, a dozen suspects, most of
them Moroccan, were arrested for the
bombings. On April 4, several suspects blew
themselves up during a police raid to avoid
capture. In May, the new prime minister made
good on his campaign promise, recalling
Spain's 1,300 soldiers from Iraq, much to the
displeasure of the United States, which said
Spain was appeasing terrorists.
In June 2005, despite strong opposition from
the Catholic Church, Spain legalized gay
marriage. (Three other countries permit samesex
marriage: Belgium, the Netherlands, and
Canada.)
After four decades of violence, the militant
Basque separatist group ETA, responsible for
more than 800 deaths and for terrorizing
Spanish society with its bombings and other
attacks, announced a permanent cease-fire on
March 24, 2006. In June 2007, however, ETA
renounced the cease-fire and vowed to begin
a new offensive.
In a June 2006 referendum, the region of
Catalonia voted for greater autonomy from
Spain.
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| About the Spain |
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