Dramatizing the Black Legend in Post-Armada England

2015 ◽  
pp. 209-230
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Mauricio Drelichman ◽  
Hans-Joachim Voth

This epilogue argues that Castile was solvent throughout Philip II's reign. A complex web of contractual obligations designed to ensure repayment governed the relationship between the king and his bankers. The same contracts allowed great flexibility for both the Crown and bankers when liquidity was tight. The risk of potential defaults was not a surprise; their likelihood was priced into the loan contracts. As a consequence, virtually every banking family turned a profit over the long term, while the king benefited from their services to run the largest empire that had yet existed. The epilogue then looks at the economic history version of Spain's Black Legend. The economic history version of the Black Legend emerged from a combination of two narratives: a rich historical tradition analyzing the decline of Spain as an economic and military power from the seventeenth century onward, combined with new institutional analysis highlighting the unconstrained power of the monarch.


1972 ◽  
Vol 45 (92) ◽  
pp. 606
Author(s):  
José Carlos Sebe Bom Meihy
Keyword(s):  

MALTBY (Willian S.) . — The black Legend in England: The development of anti-Spanish sentiment, 1558-1660. Duke University Press. 1971, 180 pp. 


Author(s):  
Gonzalo M. Quintero Saravia

The oldest reference to Bernardo de Gálvez’s “black legend” is by Alexander von Humboldt. In his Political Essay on the Kingdom of New Spain, first published in Paris in 1811, he says he heard during his travels in Mexico in 1803 that “Count Bernardo de Galvez [was] accused of having conceived the project of rendering New Spain independent from the peninsula.”...


Author(s):  
Raphaël Ingelbien

This chapter compares Henri Moke’s Le Gueux de Mer (1827) and Thomas Colley Grattan’s The Heiress of Bruges (1830), two historical novels set at the time of the Dutch Revolt and written in the final years of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands. The comparison provides insights into the respective priorities of British and ‘Netherlandic’ writers who dealt in images of Spain in the early nineteenth century. Beyond some clear differences in the ideological urgency of their work, the authors’ liberal politics, their sympathy towards Catholicism and the influence of Romantic Orientalism create important nuances in their versions of the Black Legend, which are ultimately denunciations of bigotry and tyranny rather than expressions of wholesale Hispanophobia.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document