The ongoing Cuban revolt makes great demands …
Years: 1870 - 1870
July
The ongoing Cuban revolt makes great demands on Spain in men (one hundred thousand by 1870) and money.
Isabella II had abdicated her rights in Alfonso's favorI in June 1870.
Juan Prim’s attempts to establish a liberal constitutional monarchy in Spain are compounded by the difficulty in finding a new king.
The consideration, supported by Prim, of Prussia's candidate, Prince Leopold of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, is opposed by France.
Prim and the Prussian chancellor, Otto von Bismarck, persuade the reluctant Leopold to accept the Spanish throne.
This move greatly alarms France, who feels threatened by a possible combination of Prussia and Spain directed against it.
Leopold's candidacy is withdrawn under French diplomatic pressure, but the Prussian king William I is unwilling to bow to the French ambassador's demands that he promise to never again allow Leopold to be a candidate for the Spanish throne.
Bismarck edits William's telegraphed description of this interview, and on July 14, he publishes this provocative message, which accomplishes his purposes of infuriating the French government and provoking it into a declaration of war in July.
Locations
People
- Alfonso XII of Spain
- Isabella II of Spain
- Juan Prim, Marquis of los Castillejos
- Leopold, Prince of Hohenzollern
- Napoleon III
- Otto von Bismarck
- William I, German Emperor
Groups
- Prussia, Kingdom of
- France, Second Empire of
- German Confederation, North
- Spain, Regency of
- Spain, Savoyard Kingdom of
