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<dc:creator>Higueras Castañeda, Eduardo</dc:creator>
<dc:creator>Sánchez Collantes, Sergio</dc:creator>
<dc:date>2021</dc:date>
<dc:description>The North American journalist Ambrose Bierce published the successive entries of his&#xd;
biting The Devil’s Dictionary in a variety of newspapers between 1881 and 1906.&#xd;
Although the words that introduce this chapter appear on the very first pages of the book&#xd;
thanks to pure alphabetical logic, they must have been amongst the last to be written. The&#xd;
first meaning for the term ‘abdication’, in fact, was explicitly dedicated to the death of&#xd;
the former queen of Spain, Isabel II, which occurred in Paris in 1904. Bierce later wrote&#xd;
the second meaning, which does not appear in all the editions of the book. Here, he did&#xd;
not only allude to only ‘poor Isabel’, but also condensed a conspicuously recurrent&#xd;
tradition in recent Spanish history in a single satirical definition. At that time, the latest&#xd;
Spanish king to carry on the tradition was the successor to Isabel II, Amadeo I of Savoy,&#xd;
although technically speaking, the duke of Aosta never abdicated. According to the&#xd;
Constitution of 1869, that required an uncomfortable parliamentary procedure. Amadeo&#xd;
I simply renounced the Crown, leaving the way open for the proclamation of the First&#xd;
Spanish Republic.</dc:description>
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<dc:publisher>Routledge</dc:publisher>
<dc:title>Amadeo I: the Republican King?</dc:title>
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