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Philip V of Spain

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Philip V
King of Spain
Reign 1 November 1700 – 14 January 1724
(&0000000000000023.00000023 years, &0000000000000074.00000074 days)
Predecessor Charles II
Successor Louis
King of Spain
Reign 6 September 1724 - 9 July 1746
(&0000000000000021.00000021 years, &0000000000000306.000000306 days)
Predecessor Louis
Successor Ferdinand VI
Spouse Princess Maria Luisa of Savoy
Elisabeth of Parma
Issue
Louis I of Spain
Ferdinand VI of Spain
Charles III of Spain
Mariana Victoria, Queen of Portugal
Philip, Duke of Parma
Maria Teresa, Dauphine of France
Louis, Count de Chinchon
Maria Antonieta, Queen of Sardinia
House House of Bourbon
Father Louis, Dauphin of France
Mother Duchess Maria Anna of Bavaria
Born 19 December 1683
Palace of Versailles France
Died 9 July 1746 (aged 62)
Madrid, Spain

Philip V of Spain (Versailles (France), 19 December 1683 - La Granja (Spain), 9 July 1746), born Philippe de France, fils de France and duc d'Anjou, was king of Spain from 1700 to 1724 and 1724 to 1746, the first of the Bourbon dynasty in Spain.

Philip was the second son of Louis, le Grand Dauphin and Maria Anna of Bavaria,[1] known as Dauphine Victoire. He was a younger brother of Louis, duc de Bourgogne and an uncle of Louis XV of France.

His paternal grandparents were Louis XIV of France[2] and Maria Theresa of Spain. His maternal grandparents were Ferdinand Maria, Elector of Bavaria and Adelaide Henriette of Savoy, the daughter of Victor Amadeus I, Duke of Savoy.

Contents

[edit] Early life

Philippe de France, duc d'Anjou was born at the Palace of Versailles[3] in France. His older brother, Louis de France, duc de Bourgogne, was in line to the throne right after his father, Le Grand Dauphin, thus leaving him and his younger brother, Charles de France, duc de Berry little expectation to ever rule over France.

[edit] Claims to the Spanish throne

In the year 1700, the King of Spain, Charles II, died. Charles' will named the 16-year old Philip, the grandson of Charles' sister Maria Theresa of Spain, as his successor.[1] Upon any possible refusal, the Crown of Spain would be offered next to Philip's younger brother, the duc de Berry, or, next, to Archduke Charles of Austria.[1]

Both claimants, Philip and Charles, had a legal right to the Spanish throne due to the fact that Philip's grandfather, King Louis XIV of France and Charles's father, Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor, were sons of Charles' aunts, Anne of Austria and Maria Anna of Austria. Philip had the better claim because his grandmother and great-grandmother were older than Leopold's. However, the Austrian branch claimed that Philip's grandmother had renounced the Spanish throne for herself and her descendants as part of her marriage contract. This was countered by the French branch's claim that it was on the basis of a dowry that had never been paid.[4]

After a long council meeting where the Dauphin spoke up in favour of his son's rights, it was agreed that Philip would ascend the throne but would forever renounce his claim to the throne of France for himself and his descendants.[5] It was not difficult to see whether Louis would have refused, as a Habsburg ruler in Spain would have put a possible enemy on three frontiers.

After the Royal Council decided to accept Charles' will naming Philip King of Spain, the Spanish ambassador was called in and introduced to his new King. The ambassador, along with his son, knelt before Philip and made a long speech in Spanish which Philip did not understand, although Louis XIV did. Ironically, Philip had only begun taking Spanish lessons that day.

[edit] War of Spanish Succession

However, the other powers of Europe contested the idea, eventually leading to the War of Spanish Succession (1701-1714). Although Philip was allowed to remain on the Spanish throne, Spain was forced to cede Minorca and Gibraltar to Great Britain; the Spanish Netherlands, Naples, Milan, and Sardinia to the Austrian Habsburgs; and Sicily and parts of the Milanese to Savoy.[6]

These losses greatly diminished the Spanish Empire in Europe, which had already been in decline. Throughout his reign, Philip sought to reverse the decline of Spanish power as Great Britain increasingly began to dominate at sea.

[edit] Marriages

[edit] First Marriage

Philip married his double-second cousin Princess Maria Luisa of Savoy (17 September 1688 – 14 February 1714) on 3 November 1701[7] and they had four sons:

[edit] Second Marriage

He married Elizabeth, Princess of Parma, (25 October 1692 – 11 July 1766), on 24 December 1714,[8] they had seven children:

[edit] Abdication and return

On 14 January 1724, Philip abdicated the throne to his eldest son, the seventeen-year old Louis, for reasons still the subject of debate:

One theory states that Philip V, who exhibited many elements of mental instability during his reign, did not wish to reign due to his increasing mental decline and so conscientiously abdicated in favour of his son.[9]

A second theory puts the abdication in context of the Bourbon dynasty. The French royal family recently had lost many legitimate agnates to diseases, making the lack of an heir and another continental war of succession a possibility. Philip V was a legitimate descendant of Louis XIV but matters were complicated by the Treaty of Utrecht (1713), which forbade a union of the French and Spanish crowns. The theory supposes that Philip V hoped that by abdicating the Spanish crown he could circumvent the Treaty and succeed to the French throne.[citation needed] However, this theory seems improbable as the French Bourbons' dynastic crisis was acute in 1711/1712 - before the Treaty of Utrecht was even signed - and not in 1724, a year after Louis XV had begun to govern in his own right. Furthermore, in the Treaty Philip had renounced his and his descendants' rights to the succession in France, regardless of who actually reigned in Spain.

At one point at the height of the crisis of 1712 Philip was offered the choice of renouncing the throne of Spain so that he could be made heir of France but he reluctantly refused.

In any case, Louis died on 31 August 1724 of smallpox, having reigned only seven month and leaving no issue. Philip was forced to return to the Spanish throne as his younger son, the later Ferdinand VI, was not yet of age.[citation needed]

[edit] Consequences of Philip V's reign

Philip helped his Bourbon relatives to make territorial gains in the War of the Polish Succession and the War of the Austrian Succession by reconquering Naples and Sicily from Austria and Oran from the Ottomans. Finally, at the end of his reign Spanish forces also successfully defended their American territories from a large British invasion during the War of Jenkins' Ear.

During his reign, Spain began to recover from the stagnation it had suffered during the twilight of the Spanish Habsburg dynasty. Ferdinand VI of Spain, his son by his first queen Maria Luisa of Savoy, succeeded him.

Philip was afflicted by fits of manic depression[citation needed] and increasingly fell victim to a deep melancholia. His second wife, Elizabeth Farnese, completely dominated her passive husband. She bore him further sons, including another successor, Charles III of Spain. He was later helped with his affliction by the castrato singer Carlo Broschi, famously known as Farinelli, who, for twenty years, sang the same four arias each night to the king before he went to sleep.[citation needed]

Philip died on 9 July 1746 and was buried in his favorite Royal Palace of La Granja de San Ildefonso.

[edit] Legacy

Half escudo gold coin of Philip V, dated 1743
  • To commemorate the indignities the city of Xàtiva suffered after Philip's victory in the Battle of Almansa in the War of the Spanish Succession, in which he ordered the city to be burned and renamed San Felipe, the portrait of the monarch hangs upside down in the local museum of L'Almodí [1]).
  • An equestrian statue of Philip V was commissioned during his lifetime to be erected in Lima, Viceroyalty of Peru. It came crashing down in a huge earthquake in 1746, in the same month Philip V himself died. The statue was never replaced.

[edit] Ancestry

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b c Kamen, Henry. "Philip V of Spain:: The King who Reigned Twice", p.6. Published by Yale University Press, 2001. ISBN 0300087187
  2. ^ "The Houghton Mifflin Dictionary of Biography", p.1203. Published by Houghton Mifflin, 2003 ISBN 061825210X.
  3. ^ "The New International Encyclopædia", p.14. Published by Dodd, Mead and Company, 1903.
  4. ^ Durant, Will. "The Age of Louis XIV", p.699. Simon and Schuster, New York, 1963.
  5. ^ Kamen, Henry. "Philip V of Spain:: The King who Reigned Twice", p.158. Published by Yale University Press, 2001. ISBN 0300087187
  6. ^ Durant, Will. "The Age of Louis XIV", p.715. Simon and Schuster, New York 1963.
  7. ^ Kamen, Henry. "Philip V of Spain: The King who Reigned Twice", p.12. Yale University Press, 2001. ISBN 0300087187
  8. ^ Kamen, Henry. "Philip V of Spain: The King who Reigned Twice", p.97. Yale University Press, 2001. ISBN 0300087187
  9. ^ p358, E.N. Williams, The Penguin Dictionary of English and European History

[edit] Sources

  • Armstrong, Edward (1892). Elizabeth Farnese: "The Termagant of Spain". London: Longmans, Green, and Co. 
  • Kamen, Henry (2001). Philip V of Spain: The King Who Reigned Twice. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-08718-7. 
  • Petrie, Sir Charles (1958). The Spanish Royal House. London: Geoffrey Bles. 

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