Philip's domestic policies are by the 1630s …
Years: 1633 - 1633
Philip's domestic policies are by the 1630s increasingly being impacted by the financial pressures of the Thirty Years War, and in particular the growing war with France.
The costs of the war are huge, and while they have largely fallen upon Castile, the ability of the crown to raise more funds and men from this source is increasingly limited.
Philip and his government are desperately trying to reduce the responsibilities of central government in response to the overstretch of the war, and various reform ideas that might have been pursued during the 1620s are rejected on this basis.
Financial restraints and higher taxes are put in place, but Philip is increasingly selling off regalian and feudal rights, along with much of the royal estate to fund the conflict.
It has been argued that the fiscal stringencies of the 1630s, combined with the strength and role of Olivares and the juntas, effectively cut Philip off from the three traditional pillars of support for the monarchy -- the grandees, the Church and the Council of Castile.
Locations
People
- Armand Jean du Plessis de Richelieu
- Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand
- Louis XIII of France
- Philip IV of Spain
Groups
- Mantua, Duchy of
- Spain, Habsburg Kingdom of
- Netherlands, Southern (Spanish)
- Netherlands, United Provinces of the (Dutch Republic)
- France, (Bourbon) Kingdom of
Topics
- Protestant Reformation
- Counter-Reformation (also Catholic Reformation or Catholic Revival)
- Eighty Years War (Netherlands, or Dutch, War of Independence)
- Thirty Years' War
