The
seventeenth century was a period of unremitting political,
military, economic, and social decline. Neither Philip III
(r. 1598-1621) nor Philip IV (r. 1621-65) was competent to
give the kind of clear direction that Philip II had
provided. Responsibility passed to aristocratic advisers.
Gaspar de Guzman, count-duke of Olivares, attempted and
failed to establish the centralized administration that his
famous contemporary, Cardinal Richelieu, had introduced in
France. In reaction to Guzman's bureaucratic absolutism,
Catalonia revolted and was virtually annexed by France.
Portugal, with English aid, reasserted its independence in
1640, and an attempt was made to separate Andalusia from
Spain. In 1648, at the Peace of Westphalia, Spain assented
to the emperor's accommodation with the German Protestants,
and in 1654 it recognized the independence of the northern
Netherlands. During
the long regency for Charles II (1665-1700), the last of the
Spanish Habsburgs, validos milked Spain's treasury,
and Spain's government operated principally as a dispenser
of patronage. Plague, famine, floods, drought, and renewed
war with France wasted the country. The Peace of the
Pyrenees (1659) ended fifty years of warfare with France,
whose king, Louis XIV, found the temptation to exploit
weakened Spain too great. As part of the peace settlement,
the Spanish infanta Maria Teresa, had become the wife of
Louis XIV. Using Spain's failure to pay her dowry as a
pretext, Louis instigated the War of Devolution (1667- 68)
to acquire the Spanish Netherlands in lieu of the dowery.
Most of the European powers were ultimately involved in the
wars that Louis fought in the Netherlands.
Library of Congress Country StudySpain
in Decline
Library of Congress Country Study
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