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    Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: http://hdl.handle.net/10259/8604

    Título
    Amadeo I: the Republican King?
    Autor
    Higueras Castañeda, Eduardo
    Sánchez Collantes, SergioUBU authority Orcid
    Publicado en
    Monarchy and liberalism in Spain: the building of the nation-state, 1780-1931, p. 58-76
    Editorial
    Routledge
    Fecha de publicación
    2021
    ISBN
    978-0-367-40990-6
    Abstract
    The North American journalist Ambrose Bierce published the successive entries of his biting The Devil’s Dictionary in a variety of newspapers between 1881 and 1906. Although the words that introduce this chapter appear on the very first pages of the book thanks to pure alphabetical logic, they must have been amongst the last to be written. The first meaning for the term ‘abdication’, in fact, was explicitly dedicated to the death of the former queen of Spain, Isabel II, which occurred in Paris in 1904. Bierce later wrote the second meaning, which does not appear in all the editions of the book. Here, he did not only allude to only ‘poor Isabel’, but also condensed a conspicuously recurrent tradition in recent Spanish history in a single satirical definition. At that time, the latest Spanish king to carry on the tradition was the successor to Isabel II, Amadeo I of Savoy, although technically speaking, the duke of Aosta never abdicated. According to the Constitution of 1869, that required an uncomfortable parliamentary procedure. Amadeo I simply renounced the Crown, leaving the way open for the proclamation of the First Spanish Republic.
    Materia
    Historia
    History
    Política
    Political science
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10259/8604
    Versión del editor
    https://www.routledge.com/Monarchy-and-Liberalism-in-Spain-The-Building-of-the-Nation-State-1780-1931/San-Narciso-Barral-Martinez-Armenteros/p/book/9780367633820
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