Charles II of Spain#Reign
{{Short description|King of Spain from 1665 to 1700}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2021}}
{{Infobox royalty
| name = Charles II
| image = Juan de Miranda Carreno 002.jpg
| caption = Portrait of King Charles II by Juan Carreño de Miranda
| succession = King of Spain
| moretext = (more...)
| reign = 17 September 1665 – {{nowr|1 November 1700}}
| regent1 = Mariana of Austria (1665–1675)
| predecessor = Philip IV
| successor = Philip V
| birth_date = {{Birth date|df=yes|1661|11|6}}
| birth_place = Madrid, Crown of Castile, Spain
| death_date = {{death date and age|df=yes|1700|11|1|1661|11|6}}
| death_place = Madrid, Crown of Castile, Spain
| burial_place = Monasterio del Escorial
| spouses = {{Plainlist|
- {{marriage|Marie Louise d'Orléans|1679|1689|end =d.}}
- {{marriage|Maria Anna of Neuburg|1689}}}}
| house = Habsburg
| father = Philip IV of Spain
| mother = Mariana of Austria
| religion = Catholic
| signature = Firma del Rey Carlos II.svg
}}
Charles II{{efn|{{langx|es|Carlos II|link=no}}}}{{efn|Also known to as The Bewitched or {{langx|es|El Hechizado}}}} (6 November 1661 – 1 November 1700) was King of Spain from 1665 to 1700. The last monarch from the House of Habsburg, which had ruled Spain since 1516, he died without an heir, leading to a European Great Power conflict over the succession.
For reasons still debated, Charles experienced lengthy periods of ill health throughout his life. This made the question of who would succeed him central to European diplomacy for much of his reign, one historian writing that "from the day of his birth, they were waiting for his death".{{Sfn|Langdon-Davies|1963|p=44}}
The two main candidates were the Austrian Habsburg Archduke Charles, and 16-year-old Philip of Anjou, grandson of Charles' half-sister Maria Theresa and Louis XIV of France. Shortly before his death in November 1700, Charles named Philip his heir, but the acquisition of an undivided Spanish Empire by either France or Austria threatened the European balance of power.
Failure to resolve these issues through diplomacy resulted in the 1701 to 1714 War of the Spanish Succession. It ended with the Habsburgs being replaced on the Spanish throne by the House of Bourbon, which still occupies this position.
Birth and early years
Born 6 November 1661, Charles was the only surviving son of Philip IV of Spain and his second wife, his niece Mariana of Austria. Marriage within the same extended family was then common among the nobility,{{efn|Largely to ensure the retention of lands and property}} but the Spanish and Austrian Habsburgs were unusual in the extent to which they followed this practice. Of eleven marriages contracted by Spanish monarchs between 1450 and 1661, most contained some element of consanguinity, Philip and Mariana being one of two unions between uncle and niece.{{sfn|Alvarez|Ceballos|Celsa|2009|pp=3–4}}{{Efn|Avunculate marriages, or those between uncle and niece, or aunt and nephew, were unusual but not unknown; examples from this period include Maximilian of Bavaria and his niece Maria Anna in 1635, Prince Maurice of Savoy and Princess Luisa Cristina of Savoy in 1642, while Charles's sister Margaret Theresa of Spain married her uncle Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor in 1666. It remains legal in states including Norway, Chile, Canada, Argentina, Australia, Finland, the Netherlands, Germany and Russia}} This policy may also have been driven by {{lang|es|limpieza de sangre}} or "blood purity" statutes enacted in the early 16th century, which remained in use until the 1860s.{{sfn|Kamen|2002|pp=344–345}}
Inter-marriage accentuated the so-called "Habsburg jaw", a physical characteristic common in both Spanish and Austrian Habsburgs. One contemporary reported this was so pronounced in Charles that he swallowed his food without thoroughly chewing, leading to frequent stomach problems.{{Sfn|Stanhope|1840|p=79}} A 2019 study based on an analysis of Habsburg portraits concluded this feature was likely due to a recessive trait, but in the absence of genetic material, such claims remain speculative.{{sfn|Vilas|2019|pp=553–561}}
The precise cause of Charles' ill-health remains disputed.{{sfn|Santaliestra|2014|pp=174–176}} Based on an analysis of contemporary accounts, some modern researchers argue they may have been due to one or more autosomal recessive disorders,{{sfn|Callaway|2013}}{{sfn|Martin|Heard|Fung|2021}} while others suggest an herpetic infection incurred as an infant, causing hydrocephalus.{{sfn|Turliuc|2019|pp=76–78}} Consistent with either theory, neither his elder sister, Margaret Theresa of Spain, nor his niece, Maria Antonia, daughter of the marriage of Margaret Theresa of Spain to her maternal uncle Leopold I, had similar health issues.{{sfn|Santaliestra|2014|pp=174–176}}
After his birth, he was entrusted to the royal governess Mariana Engracia Álvarez de Toledo Portugal y Alfonso-Pimentel.{{Cite web|url=http://dbe.rah.es/biografias/109029/mariana-engracia-de-toledo-portugal-y-pimentel|title=Mariana Engracia de Toledo Portugal y Pimentel | Real Academia de la Historia}} Under her careful supervision, he survived childhood attacks of measles, chickenpox, rubella and smallpox, any one of which was then potentially fatal.{{sfn|Calvo|1998|p=6}} He also had rickets, which left him unable to walk unaided until he was four and required him to wear leg braces until the age of five.{{Sfn|Maura|1879|p=288}}{{Efn|Rickets was common in the 17th century, even among the aristocracy; other examples include Charles I of England{{Sfn|Keevil|1954|pp=407-408}}}} Suggestions that he was largely uneducated until his teens appear to be incorrect; Ramos del Manzano, a professor at the University of Salamanca and legal expert, was appointed his tutor when he was six.{{Sfn|Lozano|2018|p=143}} From the age of 12, he received lessons in music from Juan del Vado, and in mathematics by Jose Zaragoza, Professor at the Colegio Imperial de Madrid.{{Sfn|Bordas|Robledo|1998|pp=392–393}}
The extent of his physical and mental disabilities is hard to assess, since little is known for certain, and many claims are either unproven or incorrect. While prone to illness, he was extremely active physically, and contemporaries reported he spent much of his time hunting.{{sfn|Mitchell|2013|p=303}} One often cited example of his alleged mental incapacity is the period he spent sleeping with his father's disinterred body; this was in fact done under instructions from Mariana, whose doctors advised this would help him produce an heir.{{sfn|Mitchell|2013|pp=307-308}}
Although reputedly subject to bouts of depression, his participation in government and reports from his council and foreign observers such as the French ambassador Jean-Baptiste Colbert, Marquess of Torcy, indicate his mental capacities remained intact.{{sfn|Rule|2017|pp=91–108}} A report from 1691 submitted by an envoy from the Sultan of Morocco, relates that he was received by Charles himself, who played a full part in the discussions.{{Sfn|Stanley|1868|pp=366–367}} Costanzo Operti, a Savoyard diplomat who held regular audiences with Charles during the Nine Years' War, described him as affable and generous but shy and lacking self-confidence, characteristics noted by other foreign diplomats.{{Sfn|Garcia|Alvariño|2015|pp=291-293}}
Reign
File:Retrato de la reina Mariana de Austria, by Diego Velázquez.jpg, {{circa|1656}}, Regent for Charles during his minority]]
Since Charles was a legal minor when Philip died on 17 September 1665, Mariana was appointed Queen Regent by the Council of Castile. The Spanish Empire remained an enormous global confederation, but its economic supremacy was increasingly challenged by the Dutch Republic and England, and its position in Europe destabilised by the expansionist policies of Louis XIV of France.
Her ability to respond effectively to the challenges facing the Empire was hampered by an ongoing power struggle with John Joseph of Austria, hereafter referred to as Don Juan, Charles's older, illegitimate half-brother. In addition, enacting essential reforms was complicated since Spain was a personal union between the Crown of Castile and Crown of Aragon, each with very distinct political cultures and traditions.{{efn|The Crown of Aragon was divided into the autonomous Kingdoms of Aragon, Valencia, Majorca, Naples, Sicily, Sardinia, and the Principality of Catalonia.}}{{sfn|Mitchell|2013|pp=7–9}} Infighting between those who ruled in Charles's name during his regency did little to help, but it is debatable how far they can be held responsible for long-term trends predating his reign. The monarchy proved remarkably resilient, and when Charles died, remained largely intact.{{sfn|Storrs|2006|pp=6–7}}
However, government finances were in perpetual crisis, the Crown declaring bankruptcy nine times between 1557 and 1666, including 1647, 1652, 1662, and 1666.{{sfn|Cowans|2003|pp=26–27}} Following the policy established by her husband Philip, Mariana ruled through a "{{lang|es|valido}}",{{Efn|Its literal translation is "favourite", but more properly refers to a chief minister}} the first being her personal confessor and fellow Austrian, Juan Everardo Nithard.{{sfn|Mitchell|2013|p=234}} His most urgent task was to end the costly wars with France and Portugal, achieved in the 1668 treaties of Aix-la-Chapelle and Lisbon. Despite acknowledging their necessity, Don Juan forced Mariana to dismiss Nithard in February 1669, who replaced him with Fernando de Valenzuela. He was a member of the lower {{lang|es|hidalgo}} class, so his appointment was deeply resented by the Grandees who normally filled such positions.{{sfn|Storrs|2006|p=155}}
In 1673, Spain was drawn into the Franco-Dutch War, placing additional strain on the economy, and Don Juan renewed efforts to remove Mariana as Regent. A month before Charles became a legal adult on 6 November 1675, he indicated his intention to take control of government, supported by his brother. When the Regency Council requested a two-year extension of their office on 4 November, Charles initially refused, but was later pressured into accepting. He was also forced to issue a Royal Decree ordering Don Juan to leave Madrid.{{Sfn|Mitchell|2014|pp=181–182}}
File:Juanjosedeaustria.jpg, whose political feud with his mother undermined the stability of his regime]]
Don Juan finally gained control of the government in January 1678 and exiled Valenzuela to the Philippines. His first action was to make peace with France in the 1678 Treaties of Nijmegen, with Spain ceding Franche-Comté and areas of the Spanish Netherlands returned in 1668.{{sfn|Horne|2005|p=168}} Seeking to minimise future conflict between the two countries, in August 1679 Don Juan brokered a match between Charles and the 17-year-old Marie Louise of Orléans, eldest niece of Louis XIV and daughter of Philippe I, Duke of Orléans. Arranging the marriage was Don Juan's last significant act; he died shortly before it took place in November 1679.{{sfn|Mitchell|2013|p=269}}
In February 1680, Juan Francisco de la Cerda, 8th Duke of Medinaceli became the new {{lang|es|valido}}. He clashed with Marie-Louise over the alleged influence exerted over her by the French ambassador, Pierre de Villars, who was expelled from Madrid in 1681, badly affecting the relationship between the two.{{sfn|Borgognoni|2018|p=20–24}} Medinaceli was further undermined by economic problems and the loss of Luxembourg following the 1683 War of the Reunions. In June 1684, he sought to bolster his support by appointing the Count of Oropesa as President of the Council of Castile, the second most powerful position in the state. However, continuing ill-health led him to resign in April 1685, with Oropesa taking over as de facto {{lang|es|valido}}.{{Cite web|last=Rex|first=Carolvs II, Hispaniarvm Et Indiarvm|date=30 May 2018|title=REINADO DE CARLOS II: El VIII Conde de Oropesa, una breve biografía (PARTE III)|url=http://reinadodecarlosii.blogspot.com/2018/05/el-viii-conde-de-oropesa-una-breve_30.html|access-date=27 October 2021|website=REINADO DE CARLOS II}} He retained this position until 1690.{{Sfn|Testino-Zafiropaulus|2015|pp=273–276}}
Economy
The so-called "Little Ice Age" of the 17th century was a period of crisis throughout Europe, leading to poor harvests and economic decline.{{sfn|De Vries|2009|pp=151–194}} Spain was especially affected, due in part to the parlous economic situation, particularly in Castile, where the population dropped from 6.5 million in 1600 to fewer than 5 million in 1680, whilst figures for Spain as a whole were 8.5 to 6.6 million.{{cite web |title=Charles II |url=https://www.britannica.com/place/Spain/Charles-II#ref70418 |website=Britannica.com |access-date=14 October 2021}} This was exacerbated by a series of wars with France and the need to defend the Empire, which were a constant drain on public expenditure. In 1663, Philip IV had converted state debt into government bonds, or juros, but high rates of interest meant taxes were often assigned to creditors years in advance to pay current liabilities. Although silver bullion imports from the Americas increased, the vast majority went to paying off foreign debtors.{{Sfn|Kamen|2002|pp=431-432}}
The globalisation of the Spanish trading system meant outsiders often had the most to lose from its collapse. By the 1670s, the bulk of foreign trade was controlled by Dutch and English merchants, while the domestic economy relied on French labour and imported wheat. The Marqués de Varinas, a senior colonial official, observed in 1687 that the Empire continued to exist in its present form "only because it enables the English, Dutch and French to exploit [it] more cheaply".{{Sfn|Kamen|2002|p=434}}
In the 1680s, Spanish officials issued a series of drastic deflationary decrees, revaluing the coinage at 25% of its previous value.{{Sfn|Darby|2014|p=74}} The immediate impact was the total disruption of commerce and collapse of financial credit; in response, debtors were given three months to repay government debts using the existing rate, later extended to six months. Having stabilised the position, in 1686 the coinage was readjusted to a more favourable rate and thereafter left unaltered.{{Sfn|Kamen|1964|p=63}}
Succession conflict and death
File:Marie Louise d'Orléans by Mignard wearing the Fleur-de-lis (showing her dignity as a Grand daughter of France) and the Spanish crown.jpg, Charles' first wife]]
Marie Louise was blamed for Charles' failure to produce an heir, while primitive fertility treatments gave her severe intestinal problems.{{sfn|García-Escudero López et al|2009|p=181}} She died in February 1689, shortly after the outbreak of the Nine Years' War with France. On the basis of her recorded symptoms, modern doctors believe her illness was almost certainly appendicitis.{{efn|Despite contemporary suggestions of poison, this claim was extremely common in an era when many illnesses were poorly understood, particularly since it could rarely be disproved.}}{{sfn|Rule|2017|p=97}} A new wife was selected from a family famous for its fertility, Maria Anna of Neuburg, daughter of Philip William, Elector Palatine, and sister-in-law to Emperor Leopold.{{Sfn|Rommelse|2011|p=224}}
A proxy marriage took place in August 1689 before a formal ceremony in May 1690.{{Sfn|Rule|2017|p=97}} Maria Anna also failed to produce an heir, almost certainly because Charles was by now physically incapable of doing so; his autopsy later revealed his sole remaining testicle was atrophied.{{sfn|García-Escudero López et al|2009|p=182}} His mother died on 16 May 1696, by which time Charles' health was clearly failing, making the succession increasingly urgent. Since the Crown of Spain passed according to cognatic primogeniture, it could be inherited through the female line. This enabled Charles' sisters Maria Theresa (1638–1683) and Margaret Theresa to pass their rights to the children of their marriages with Louis XIV and Emperor Leopold. However, to prevent a union between Spain and France, Maria Theresa had renounced her inheritance rights on her marriage; in return, Louis was promised a dowry of 500,000 gold écus, a huge sum that was never paid.{{sfn|Wolf|1968|p=117}}
The Peace of Ryswick which ended the Nine Years' War in 1697 was the result of mutual exhaustion, and left the issue of the succession unresolved. Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor reluctantly signed the treaty in October 1697, but viewed it as a temporary pause in hostilities.{{sfn|Meerts|2014|p=168}} Leopold and Margaret's daughter Maria Antonia had married Maximilian II Emanuel, Elector of Bavaria, and they had a son before her death in 1692, Joseph Ferdinand. In the Treaty of The Hague (1698), France, England and the Dutch Republic attempted to impose a diplomatic solution by making him heir to the bulk of the Spanish monarchy, with France gaining Naples, Sicily and the Spanish province of Gipuzkoa. In return, Leopold's younger son Charles was made ruler of Milan, a possession considered vital to the security of Austria's southern border.{{sfn|Ward|Leathes|2010|p=384}}
File:Marie-Anne de Neubourg, reine d'Espagne.jpg, Charles' pro-Austrian second wife]]
The Spanish government refused to approve any division of their territories, although they accepted Joseph Ferdinand as Charles' successor.{{sfn|Ward|Leathes|2010|p=385}} The latters' death in 1699 from smallpox led to the Treaty of London (1700), which made Archduke Charles the new heir, with Spanish possessions in Europe split between France, Savoy and Austria. Charles altered his will in favour of the Archduke, but once again stipulated an undivided Spanish monarchy.{{sfn|McKay|Scott|1983|pp=54–55}}
Most of the Castilian nobility disliked Maria Anna and her German courtiers and viewed a French candidate as more likely to ensure their independence. In September 1700, Charles became ill again; by 28 September he was no longer able to eat, and Luis Manuel Fernández de Portocarrero persuaded him to appoint Louis XIV's grandson, Philip of Anjou, as his heir.{{sfn|Hargreaves-Mawdsley|1979|pp=15–16}} He died on 1 November 1700, at age 38. The autopsy records his "heart was the size of a peppercorn; his lungs corroded; his intestines rotten and gangrenous; he had a single testicle, black as coal, and his head was full of water."{{sfn|Gargantilla |2005|p=?}} The last of these symptoms is indicative of hydrocephalus, a disease often associated with childhood measles, one of many illnesses contracted by Charles.{{sfn|Turliuc|2019|pp=76–78}}
Philip was proclaimed king of Spain on 16 November 1700, and the War of the Spanish Succession formally began on 9 July 1701.{{sfn|Falkner|2015|p=96}}
Legacy
Charles' reign has traditionally been viewed as one of decline and decay, a foreign ambassador commenting in 1691 "it is incomprehensible how this monarchy survives".{{Sfn|Kamen|2002|p=434}} More recent studies argue "both the myth of decline and an incapable king are simplistic and inexact".{{sfn|Ribot|2018|p=215}} Despite their disastrous short-term impact, the financial measures taken by his advisors ended the chronic instability which had affected the Spanish currency throughout the 17th century, and helped drive sustainable economic growth.{{Sfn|Villanueva|2006|pp=14–15}} Many of the commercial and political policies initiated under Charles formed the basis for reforms enacted by his Bourbon successors.{{Sfn|Fox|2013|p=55}}
His reign also saw the final political eclipse of the Spanish Inquisition, precipitated by its intervention in the succession crisis. When Charles changed his will in favour of Philip in 1700, the Inquisitor General Baltasar de Mendoza y Sandoval, an ally of Maria Anna, arrested his personal confessor Froilán Díaz on a charge of 'bewitching' the King. When Díaz was found not guilty, Mendoza attempted to arrest those who voted for his acquittal, resulting in the establishment of a Council to investigate the Inquisition; although it survived until 1834, its influence had ended.{{sfn|Kamen|1965|p=185}}
File:Carlos II de Espana recibe la sagrada forma (detalle), por Claudio Coello018.jpg, one of the last and most significant examples of Spanish Baroque painting]]
Though not as fond of the arts as his father, Charles employed artists such as the Italian painter Luca Giordano and Claudio Coello to decorate El Escorial. In 1690 the latter created one of the last and most significant examples of Spanish Baroque painting, Charles II adores the Holy Eucharist.{{Sfn|Sullivan|1985|pp=243–259}}
On 7 November 1693, a Royal Decree provided sanctuary in Spanish Florida for escaped slaves from the English Province of South Carolina.{{Sfn|Dubcovsky|2016|p=114}} Florida provided protection from storms in the Gulf of Mexico for Spanish merchant shipping. The decree was intended to bolster its population while undermining the neighbouring colony, which claimed the Spanish capital of St Augustine.{{sfn|Landers|1984|p=298}} Formalised in 1733 by Philip, it led to the founding in 1738 of Santa Teresa de Mose, the first legally sanctioned free black town in the present-day United States.{{sfn|Landers|1984|pp=300–301}}
The Caroline Islands and the town of Charleroi in modern Belgium were named after Charles in 1666 and 1686 respectively.{{sfn|Dunford|Lee|1999|p=303}} Decrees were also issued in his name approving universities in South America that still exist. In Peru, they include San Cristóbal, established in 1680, and the National University; in Guatemala, the {{lang|es|Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala}}, the fourth-oldest university on the continent. Others include {{lang|es|Santo Tomas Aquino}} in 1688, now part of the Central University of Ecuador, and finally in 1694 the {{lang|es|Universidad de San Nicolás de Mira}} in Bogotá, Colombia.{{sfn|Beltrán|Carmen|2012}}
{{War of the Spanish Succession family tree|State=Collapsed}}
Heraldry
class="toccolours collapsible collapsed" width=100% align="center" |
style="background:#ccccff;"|Heraldry of Charles II of Spain |
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{| class="wikitable" style="margin:1em auto; text-align:center;" |
195px
| 195px | 195px | 195px |
Coat of arms as King of Spain (1665–1668) | Coat of arms as King of Spain | Coat of arms as King of Naples & Sicily | Coat of arms as Duke of Milan |
File:Lesser Coat of Arms of Charles V of Naples and III of Sicily.svg
| File:Full Ornamented Coat of Arms of Philip III and Charles V of Naples (1650-1700).svg |
Lesser coat of arms as King of Naples (1665–1668) | Coat of arms as King of Naples & Sicily | Coat of arms as King of Navarre | Coat of arms as King of Galicia |
|}
Ancestry
{{Ancestors of Charles II of Spain|width=75%|state=collapsed}}
See also
Notes
{{notelist}}
References
{{Reflist|20em}}
Sources
{{refbegin|colwidth=30em}}
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{{refend}}
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Count of Flanders, Hainaut and Namur|years=1665–1700}}
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{{Austrian archdukes}}
{{Infantes of Spain}}
{{Princes of Asturias}}
{{Princes of Girona}}
{{Monarchs of Spain}}
{{Aragonese monarchs}}
{{Castilian monarchs}}
{{Navarrese monarchs}}
{{Kings of Naples}}
{{Monarchs of Sicily}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Charles 02 Of Spain}}
Category:17th-century Spanish monarchs
Category:17th-century Castilian monarchs
Category:17th-century Aragonese monarchs
Category:17th-century kings of Sicily
Category:17th-century monarchs of Naples
Category:17th-century Navarrese monarchs
Category:17th-century dukes of Milan
Category:17th-century House of Habsburg
Category:17th-century dukes of Brabant
Category:17th-century dukes of Limburg
Category:17th-century monarchs of Luxembourg
Category:17th-century counts of Flanders
Category:17th-century counts of Hainaut
Category:17th-century margraves of Namur
Category:Burials in the Pantheon of Kings at El Escorial
Category:Grand masters of the Order of the Golden Fleece
Category:Knights of the Golden Fleece
Category:Child monarchs from Europe
Category:Royalty and nobility with epilepsy