El Ferrol: "Capital of the Maritime Department of the
North"
Charles III (
January 20,
1716 –
December 14,
1788) was
king of Spain from
1759
to
1788. The first son of the
second marriage of
Philip V with
Elizabeth Farnese
of
Parma, he was one of the
so-called "
enlightened monarchs".
It was his
good fortune to be sent to rule as duke of Parma by right of his
mother at the age of sixteen, and thus come under more intelligent
influence than he could have found in
Spain. On
December 1,
1734 he made himself master of
Naples and
Sicily by arms. Charles had, however, no military
tastes, seldom wore uniforms, and could, only with difficulty, be
persuaded to witness a review. The peremptory action of the
British admiral commanding in the
Mediterranean at the approach of the
War of the Austrian
Succession, who forced him to promise to observe neutrality
under a threat to bombard Naples, made a deep impression on his
mind. It gave him a feeling of hostility to
England which, in after-times, influenced his
policy.
As king of the Two Sicilies, Charles began there the
work of internal reform which he afterwards continued in Spain.
Foreign ministers who dealt with him agreed that he had no great
natural ability, but he was honestly desirous to do his duty as
king, and he showed good judgment in his choice of ministers. The
chief minister in Naples,
Tanucci, had a considerable influence over
him.
King of Spain
On
August 10,
1759, his half-brother
Ferdinand
VI died and Charles succeeded him as King. On
October 6,
1759 he abdicated the throne of the Two Sicilies
in favor of his third son,
Ferdinand.
As king of
Spain, his foreign policy was disastrous. His strong family feeling
and his detestation of
England, which was unchecked after the death of his
wife,
Maria Amalia of Saxony, led him into
the
Family
Compact with
France.
Spain was entangled in the close of the
Seven Years' War,
to her great loss. In
1770 he
almost ran into another war over the barren
Falkland Islands.
In
1779 he was, somewhat
reluctantly, led to join France and the American insurgents against
England, though he well knew that the independence of the English
colonies must have a ruinous influence on his own American
dominions. For his army he did practically nothing, and for his
fleet very little except build fine ships without taking measures
to train officers and men.
But his internal government was, on
the whole, beneficial to the country. He began by compelling the
people of Madrid to give up emptying their slops out of the
windows, and when they objected he said they were like children who
cried when their faces were washed. In
1766, his attempt to force the
madrileños to adopt the French dress for public
security reasons was the excuse for a riot (
Motín de
Esquilache) during which he did not display much personal
courage. For a long time after it he remained at
Aranjuez, leaving the government in
the hands of his minister
Pedro Pablo Aranda. Not all his reforms
were of this formal kind.
Charles was a thorough despot of the
benevolent order, and had been deeply offended by the real or
suspected share of the
Jesuits in the riot of 1766. He therefore consented
to the expulsion of the order, and was then the main advocate for
its suppression. His quarrel with
the Jesuits, and the recollection of some disputes with the pope he
had had when king of Naples turned him towards a general policy of
restriction of the overgrown power of the church. The number of the
idle clergy, and more particularly of the monastic orders, was
reduced, and the
Spanish Inquisition, though not
abolished, was rendered torpid.
In the meantime, much antiquated
legislation which tended to restrict trade and industry was
abolished; roads, canals and drainage works were carried out. Many
of his paternal ventures led to little more than waste of money, or
the creation of hotbeds of jobbery. Yet on the whole the country
prospered. The result was largely due to the king, who even when he
was ill-advised did at least work steadily at his task of
government.
He created the
Spanish Lottery and introduced
Christmas cribs
following Neapolitan models.
His example was not without effect on
some at least of the nobles. In his domestic life King Charles was
regular, and was a considerate master, though he had a somewhat
caustic tongue and took a rather cynical view of mankind. He was
passionately fond of hunting. During his later years he had some
trouble with his eldest son and his daughter-in-law. If Charles had
lived to see the beginning of the
French Revolution he would probably
have been frightened into reaction. As he died on the 14th of
December 1788 he left the reputation of a philanthropic and
philosophic king, still knicknamed "the mayor of
Madrid" because of the public works
there. In spite of his hostility to the
Jesuits, his dislike of friars in general, and his
jealousy of the
Spanish Inquisition, he was a very
sincere Roman Catholic, and showed much zeal in endeavouring to
persuade the pope to proclaim the
Immaculate
Conception as a dogma necessary to salvation.