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Talk:Modern Age

1,193 bytes added, 13:13, 14 October 2024
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|epigrafe=Spain before Imperial Europe
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[[File:Spain_Communities-and-germanias_1520-1522_map_16784_eng.jpg|left|thumb|300px|Map: Communities and germanías. 1520-1522. Spain. [//centrodedescargas.cnig.es/CentroDescargas/busquedaRedirigida.do?ruta=PUBLICACION_CNIG_DATOS_VARIOS/aneTematico/Spain_Communities-and-germanias_1520-1522_map_16784_eng.pdf PDF]. [//centrodedescargas.cnig.es/CentroDescargas/busquedaRedirigida.do?ruta=PUBLICACION_CNIG_DATOS_VARIOS/aneTematico/Spain_Communities-and-germanias_1520-1522_map_16784_eng.zip Data].]]
[[File:Spain_Lutheranism--Erasmus--gathered-and-enlightened-in-the-16th-century_1519-1625_map_16786_eng.jpg|right|thumb|300px|Map: Lutheranism, Erasmus, gathered and enlightened in the 16th century. 1519-1625. Spain. [//centrodedescargas.cnig.es/CentroDescargas/busquedaRedirigida.do?ruta=PUBLICACION_CNIG_DATOS_VARIOS/aneTematico/Spain_Lutheranism--Erasmus--gathered-and-enlightened-in-the-16th-century_1519-1625_map_16786_eng.pdf PDF]. [//centrodedescargas.cnig.es/CentroDescargas/busquedaRedirigida.do?ruta=PUBLICACION_CNIG_DATOS_VARIOS/aneTematico/Spain_Lutheranism--Erasmus--gathered-and-enlightened-in-the-16th-century_1519-1625_map_16786_eng.zip Data].]]
[[File:Spain_Mesta-and-transhumant-sheep-farming_1273-1836_map_15337_eng.jpg|right|thumb|300px|Map: Mesta and transhumant sheep farming. 1273-1836. Spain. [//centrodedescargas.cnig.es/CentroDescargas/busquedaRedirigida.do?ruta=PUBLICACION_CNIG_DATOS_VARIOS/aneTematico/Spain_Mesta-and-transhumant-sheep-farming_1273-1836_map_15337_eng.pdf PDF]. [//centrodedescargas.cnig.es/CentroDescargas/busquedaRedirigida.do?ruta=PUBLICACION_CNIG_DATOS_VARIOS/aneTematico/Spain_Mesta-and-transhumant-sheep-farming_1273-1836_map_15337_eng.zip Data].]]
Charles I of Spain and Holy Roman emperor Charles V, a remote foreigner who knew nothing about Spain, arrived in 1517 surrounded by Flemish lords, with whom he replaced the peninsular nobility in government. This inheritance was, for him, a simple addition to the glory of the Habsburgs. The disappointment of his subjects increased with his claim to the Imperial Crown, after the death of his grandfather Maximilian, and his demand that the cost (donations to the German prince-electors) should come from the ''Cortes de Castilla'' convened in 1519 while he was marching to Germany. He was crown Emperor in 1520, but caused an uprising in the cities of Castile (the ''Comunidades'') and trade union revolts in Valencia and Majorca (the ''Germanías''). The nobility condescended to them, until they saw their anti-lordly character (anti-Moorish in Valencia). The ''comuneros'' Padilla, Bravo and Maldonado were executed in [https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/72/Comuneros.jpg Villalar] (1521) and the ''Germanías'' (Llorens in Valencia) suffocated in 1522. From then on, the aristocracy and the people of the Spanish kingdoms became hopelessly enthusiastic about the labyrinth of European imperial politics.<br>
In order to isolate France, the Catholic Monarchs arranged the marriage of their children, Juan and Juana, with two Habsburgs. Although there was an economic interest as well. Spanish merino wool, the main raw material for export had competed advantageously with English wool since the 14<sup>th</sup> century with which it disputed the markets of Flanders and the Netherlands, a flourishing domain of the Habsburgs, inherited from the House of Burgundy. The great European textile centres were there: cloths, lace, tapestries, rugs and bedspreads. The fine linens were known throughout Europe as “cloth from Holland”. Nevertheless, while Flanders, in the south of the Netherlands, remained faithful to Spanish wool, the Dutch soon preferred English wool and linen or cotton, imported from overseas.<br>
The herds were owned by the nobility, powerfully organised in the association called the ''Mesta'' (1273-1836). The cattle migrated in winter, grazed on rented meadows in La Mancha and Extremadura, and returned in spring. They moved along their own paths, protected by cane (''cañas'') fences, or by ropes (''cuerdas'') between stakes, named ''cañadas'' (75 m wide), ''cordeles'' (38 m) and ''veredas'' (21 m), with periodic resting places (''descansaderos''). The ranchers paid the ''servicio y montazgo'' as they passed through the “royal ports” that marked the entire Sistema Central: a great fiscal source for the Crown. The fair of Medina del Campo was the financial centre, and export was organised from the Consulate of Burgos. The ''Mesta'', distributed territorially in four districts (''cuadrillas''), was grouped into route networks: Leonese, Segovian, Sorian and from Cuenca, with a meticulous judicial and economic regulation that still keeps a strong presence today.
 
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[[File:Enelaboracion.jpg|center|thumb|300px|''Comunidades'' and ''Germanías''. Spain. [XXX PDF]. [XXX Datos]. [XXX Interactivo].]]
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[[File:Enelaboracion.jpg|center|thumb|300px|Erasmism, lutheranism, ''recogidos'' and ''iluminados'' in the 16<sup>th</sup> century. Spain. [XXX PDF]. [XXX Datos]. [XXX Interactivo].]]
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[[File:Enelaboracion.jpg|center|thumb|300px|The ''mesta'' and transhumant sheep farming. Spain. [XXX PDF]. [XXX Datos]. [XXX Interactivo].]]
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{{ANEAutoria
|Autores=XXXMaría Sánchez Agustí, José Antonio Álvarez Castrillón, Mercedes de la Calle Carracedo, Daniel Galván Desvaux, Joaquín García Andrés, Isidoro González Gallego, Montserrat León Guerrero, Esther López Torres, Carlos Lozano Ruiz, Ignacio Martín Jiménez, Rosendo Martínez Rodríguez, Rafael de Miguel González.
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