
This fascinating account examines the fate which overtook the principality of Catalonia in the fifteenth century, reducing it from dominance within the state of Aragon to a marginal role in the Iberian power created by the union of Aragon and Castile. It begins by studying the tensions destabilising Catalonia: unrest among a peasantry resentful of outdated burdens; merchants and artisans struggling to wrest control of the towns from entrenched oligarchies; an aristocracy devoted to endless feuding; and a monarchy thrown into disarray by the extinction of the Catalan line and its replacement by a Castilian dynasty. In 1462, Catalonia degenerated into a civil war which lasted ten years. Part two seeks to explain how and why the king, Juan II, emerged victorious. The economic and military resources of the two camps, their tactics, and the lines along which Catalan society divided are examined. Alan Ryder look at the crucial part played by foreign powers in the conflict, who intervened on both sides until Juan turned the tables with his gamble on a Castilian crown for his heir, Fernando. The surrender of the insurgents in 1472 left Catalonia chaotic, devastated, and mired in many more years of war with France as Juan struggled to recover the territories he had rashly surrendered in return for French aid. Catalonia thus lay helpless before the might of Fernando, the Catholic King of Castile, when he became its ruler in 1479. The measures he imposed to restore order and subject the principality to the new 'Spanish' state are the theme of the final chapter.
This work investigates the political, social, and economic factors that precipitated the decline of Catalonia from a dominant power within the Crown of Aragon to a marginalized territory under the unified Spanish state. Alan Ryder, a noted historian of the Aragonese realm, utilizes archival records and contemporary accounts to analyze the internal fractures of fifteenth-century Catalan society. He argues that the convergence of peasant unrest, urban class conflict, and dynastic instability created a vacuum that allowed for the eventual imposition of Castilian hegemony.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Historians recognize this text as a definitive account of the fifteenth-century Catalan crisis, frequently citing it for its meticulous detail regarding the collapse of the principality's autonomy. Scholars often note the clarity with which Ryder navigates the complex web of dynastic politics and social upheaval during this transformative era.
Page Count:
297
Publication Date:
2007-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191607223
ISBN-13:
9780191607226
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