The French occupation of Spain during the …

Years: 1828 - 1828

The French occupation of Spain during the Napoleonic Wars had proved disastrous for the Spanish economy, and had left a deeply divided country prone to political instability; it will remain so for more than a century.

There is uneasy peace in Spain.

King Ferdinand VII, having in 1827 crushed a final revolt in Catalonia, is to spend the remainder of his reign restoring domestic stability and the integrity of Spain's finances.

Ferdinand's chief concern after 1823 has been how to solve the problem of his own succession.

Married three times in his life, he remains childless; the succession law of Philip V of Spain, which still stands in Ferdinand's time, excludes women from the succession.

By this law, Ferdinand's successor will be his brother, Carlos María Isidro de Borbón.

Carlos, however, is a reactionary and an authoritarian who desires the restoration of the traditional moralism of the Spanish state, the elimination of any traces of constitutionalism, and a close relationship with the Roman Catholic Church.

Though surely not a liberal, Ferdinand is fearful of Carlos's extremism.

Because of just such a conflict between reactionary and moderate forces in the royal family, war breaks out in neighboring Portugal in 1828—the War of the Two Brothers.

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