fbpx
Wikipedia

Philip III of Spain

Philip III (Spanish: Felipe III; 14 April 1578 – 31 March 1621) was King of Spain. As Philip II, he was also King of Portugal, Naples, Sicily and Sardinia and Duke of Milan from 1598 until his death in 1621.

Philip III
Portrait by Andrés López Polanco, c. 1617
King of Spain and Portugal
Reign13 September 1598 – 31 March 1621
PredecessorPhilip II of Spain
SuccessorPhilip IV of Spain
Born14 April 1578
Royal Alcázar of Madrid, Madrid, Spain
Died31 March 1621(1621-03-31) (aged 42)
Madrid, Spain
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1599; died 1611)
Issue
HouseHabsburg
FatherPhilip II of Spain
MotherAnna of Austria
ReligionRoman Catholicism
Signature

A member of the House of Habsburg, Philip III was born in Madrid to King Philip II of Spain and his fourth wife, his niece Anna, the daughter of Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian II and Maria of Spain. Philip III later married his cousin Margaret of Austria, sister of Ferdinand II, Holy Roman Emperor.

Although also known in Spain as Philip the Pious,[1] Philip's political reputation abroad has been largely negative. Historians C. V. Wedgwood, R. Stradling and J. H. Elliott have described him, respectively, as an "undistinguished and insignificant man,"[2] a "miserable monarch,"[3] and a "pallid, anonymous creature, whose only virtue appeared to reside in a total absence of vice."[4] In particular, Philip's reliance on his corrupt chief minister, the Duke of Lerma, drew much criticism at the time and afterwards. For many, the decline of Spain can be dated to the economic difficulties that set in during the early years of his reign. Nonetheless, as the ruler of the Spanish Empire at its height and as the king who achieved a temporary peace with the Dutch (1609–1621) and brought Spain into the Thirty Years' War (1618–1648) through an (initially) extremely successful campaign, Philip's reign remains a critical period in Spanish history.

Early life Edit

After Philip III's older half-brother Don Carlos died insane, their father Philip II had concluded that one of the causes of Carlos' condition had been the influence of the warring factions at the Spanish court.[5] He believed that Carlos' education and upbringing had been badly affected by this, resulting in his lunacy and disobedience, and accordingly he set out to pay much greater attention to arrangements for his later sons.[5] Philip II appointed Juan de Zúñiga, then Prince Diego's governor, to continue this role for Philip, and chose García de Loaysa as his tutor.[5] They were joined by Cristóbal de Moura, a close supporter of Philip II. In combination, Philip believed, they would provide a consistent, stable upbringing for Prince Philip, and ensure that he would avoid the same fate as Carlos.[6] Philip's education was to follow the model for royal princes laid down by Father Juan de Mariana, focusing on the imposition of restraints and encouragement to form the personality of the individual at an early age, aiming to deliver a king who was neither tyrannical nor excessively under the influence of his courtiers.[6]

 
Philip III of Spain, 1599-1601, The Phoebus Foundation

Prince Philip appears to have been generally liked by his contemporaries: 'dynamic, good-natured and earnest,' suitably pious, having a 'lively body and a peaceful disposition,' albeit with a relatively weak constitution.[7] The comparison with the memory of the disobedient and ultimately insane Carlos was usually a positive one, although some commented that Prince Philip appeared less intelligent and politically competent than his late brother.[7] Indeed, although Philip was educated in Latin, French, Portuguese and astronomy, and appears to have been a competent linguist,[6] recent historians suspect that much of his tutors' focus on Philip's undeniably pleasant, pious and respectful disposition was to avoid reporting that, languages aside, he was not in fact particularly intelligent or academically gifted.[8] Nonetheless, Philip does not appear to have been naive—his correspondence to his daughters shows a distinctive cautious streak in his advice on dealing with court intrigue.[9]

Philip first met the Marquis of Denia—the future Duke of Lerma—then, a gentleman of the King's chamber, in his early teens.[8] Lerma and Philip became close friends, but Lerma was considered unsuitable by the King and Philip's tutors. Lerma was dispatched to Valencia as a Viceroy in 1595, with the aim of removing Philip from his influence;[8] but after Lerma pleaded poor health, he was allowed to return two years later. By now in poor health himself, King Philip II was becoming increasingly concerned over the prince's future, and he attempted to establish de Moura as a future, trusted advisor to his son, reinforcing de Loaysa's position by appointing him archbishop.[10] The prince received a new, conservative Dominican confessor.[10] The following year, Philip II died after a painful illness, leaving the Spanish Empire to his son (and grandnephew), King Philip III.

Religion, Philip and the role of women at court Edit

Philip married his cousin, Margaret of Austria, on 18 April 1599, a year after becoming king. Margaret, the sister of the future Emperor Ferdinand II, would be one of three women at Philip's court who would apply considerable influence over the King.[11] Margaret was considered by contemporaries to be extremely pious—in some cases, excessively pious, and too influenced by the Church[12]—'astute and very skillful' in her political dealings,[13] although 'melancholic' and unhappy over the influence of the Duke of Lerma over her husband at court.[12] Margaret continued to fight an ongoing battle with Lerma for influence up until her death in 1611. Philip had an 'affectionate, close relationship' with Margaret,[14] and paid her additional attention after they had a son in 1605.[14]

Margaret, alongside Philip's grandmother/aunt, Empress Maria—the Austrian representative to the Spanish court—and Margaret of the Cross, Maria's daughter—formed a powerful, uncompromising Catholic and pro-Austrian voice within Philip's life.[11] They were successful, for example, in convincing Philip to provide financial support to Ferdinand from 1600 onwards.[14] Philip steadily acquired other religious advisors. Father Juan de Santa Maria—confessor to Philip's daughter, doña Maria, was felt by contemporaries to have an excessive influence over Philip at the end of his life,[15] and both he and Luis de Aliaga, Philip's own confessor, were credited with influencing the overthrow of Lerma in 1618. Similarly Mariana de San Jose, a favoured nun of Queen Margaret's, was also criticised for her later influence over the King's actions.[15]

Style of government Edit

 
Philip III of Spain

The Spanish crown at the time ruled through a system of royal councils. The most significant of these were the Councils of State and its subordinate Council for War, that were in turn supported by the seven professional councils for the different regions, and four specialised councils for the Inquisition, the Military Orders, Finance and the Crusade tax.[16] These councils were then supplemented by small committees, or juntas, as necessary, such as the 'junta of the night' through which Philip II exercised personal authority towards the end of his reign.[17] As a matter of policy, Philip had tried to avoid appointing grandees to major positions of power within his government and relied heavily on the lesser nobles, the so-called 'service' nobility.[17] Philip II had taken the traditional system of councils and applied a high degree of personal scrutiny to them, especially in matters of paperwork, which he declined to delegate—the result was a 'ponderous' process.[18] To his contemporaries, the degree of personal oversight he exercised was excessive; his 'self-imposed role as the chief clerk to the Spanish empire'[19] was not thought entirely appropriate. Philip first started to become engaged in practical government at the age of 15, when he joined Philip II's private committee.[7]

Philip III's approach to government appears to have stemmed from three main drivers. Firstly, he was heavily influenced by the eirenic ideas being circulated in Italian circles in reaction to the new Humanist theories of governance, typified by Machiavelli.[20] Writers such as Girolamo Frachetta, who became a particular favourite of Philip, had propagated a conservative definition of 'reason of state' which centred on exercising a princely prudence and a strict obedience to the laws and customs of the country that one ruled.[21] Secondly, Philip may have shared Lerma's view that the governmental system of Philip II was fast proving impractical and unnecessarily excluded the great nobles of the kingdoms—it had been creaking badly in the last decades of his father's life.[22] Lastly, Philip's own personality and his friendship with Lerma heavily shaped his approach to policy-making. The result was a radical shift in the role of the crown in government from the model of Philip II.

Duke of Lerma as valido Edit

 
Francisco Goméz de Sandoval y Rojas, Duke of Lerma, Spanish statesman, Rubens

Within a few hours of Philip ascending to the throne, Lerma had been made a royal counsellor by the new king and set about establishing himself as a fully fledged valido, or royal favourite.[23] Lerma, in due course declared a duke, positioned himself as the gateway to the king. All the business of government, Philip instructed, was to arrive in writing and be channeled through Lerma before reaching him.[24] Whilst Philip was not hugely active in government in other ways, once these memoranda, or consulta, had reached him he appears to have been assiduous in commenting on them.[25] Debates in royal councils would now only begin upon the written instruction of the king—again, through Lerma.[26] All members of royal councils were under orders to maintain complete transparency with Lerma as the king's personal representative;[26] indeed, in 1612 the councils were ordered by Philip to obey Lerma as if he were the king.[25] The degree to which Lerma himself played an active role in government has been disputed. Contemporaries were inclined to see Lerma's hand in every action of government; others have since thought Lerma to have 'neither the temperament nor the energy' to impose himself greatly on the actions of government;[27] still others consider Lerma to have carefully attended only those Councils of State that addressed matters of great importance to the king,[28] creating a space for the wider professionalisation of government that had been lacking under Philip II.[29]

This new system of government became increasingly unpopular very quickly. The novel idea of a valido exercising power went against the long-standing popular conception that the king should exercise his powers personally, not through another.[30] Before long, the apparatus of the Spanish government was packed with Lerma's relatives, Lerma's servants and Lerma's political friends, to the exclusion of others.[31] Lerma responded by further limiting his public visibility in politics, avoiding signing and writing documents personally,[32] and constantly stressing that he was, humbly, only working on behalf of his master, Philip III.

Imperial proconsuls Edit

De Lerma's role as royal favourite at court was further complicated by the rise of various 'proconsuls' under Philip III's reign—significant Spanish representatives overseas, who came to exercise independent judgement and even independent policies in the absence of strong leadership from the centre.[33] The challenges to government communication during the period encouraged aspects of this, but the phenomenon was much more marked under Philip III than under either the reign of his father or son.

 
Ambrosio Spinola, one of Philip III's various imperial proconsuls, by Peter Paul Rubens

In the Netherlands, his father Philip II had bequeathed his remaining territories in the Low Countries to his daughter Isabella of Spain and her husband, Archduke Albert, under the condition that if she died without heirs, the province would return to the Spanish Crown. Given that Isabella was notoriously childless, it was clear that this was only intended to be a temporary measure, and that Philip II had envisaged an early revision to Philip III.[34] As a result, Philip's foreign policy in the Netherlands would be exercised through the strong-willed archdukes, but in the knowledge that ultimately the Spanish Netherlands would return to him as king.[35] Meanwhile, the Italian-born Ambrosio Spinola was to perform a crucial role as a Spanish general in the Army of Flanders. Having demonstrated his military prowess at the siege of Ostend in 1603, Spinola rapidly started to propose and implement policies almost independently of the central councils in Madrid,[36] somehow managing to achieve military victories even without central funding from Spain.[37] De Lerma was uncertain of how to deal with Spinola; on the one hand, de Lerma desperately needed a successful military commander in the Netherlands—on the other, de Lerma was contemptuous of Spinola's relatively low origins and scared of his potential to destabilise de Lerma at court.[38] In the years leading to the outbreak of war in 1618, Spinola was working to produce a plan to finally defeat the Dutch, involving an intervention in the Rhineland followed by fresh hostilities aiming to cut the Low Countries in two: portrayed at the time as the 'spider in the web' of Catholic politics in the region, Spinola was operating without significant consultation with Philip in Madrid.[39]

In Italy, a parallel situation emerged. The Count of Fuentes, as governor of Lombardy, exploited the lack of guidance from Madrid to pursue his own highly interventionist policy across north Italy, including making independent offers to support the Papacy by invading the Venetian Republic in 1607.[40] Fuentes remained in power and pursuing his own policies until his death. The Marquis of Villafranca, as governor of Milan, similarly exercised his own considerable judgement on foreign policy. The Duke of Osuna, who had married into the Sandovel family as a close ally of Lerma, again showed significant independence as the Viceroy of Naples towards the end of Philip's reign. In conjunction with the Spanish ambassador to Venice, the influential Marquis of Bedmar, Osuna pursued a policy of raising an extensive army, intercepting Venetian shipping and imposing sufficiently high taxes that threats of a revolt began to emerge. To exacerbate matters, Osuna was found to have prevented the local Neapolitans from petitioning Philip III to complain.[41] Osuna fell from power only when de Lerma had lost his royal favour, and Osuna's negative impact on Philip's plans for intervention in Germany had become intolerable.[41]

Fall of Lerma Edit

 
Rodrigo Calderón, executed by Philip III to satisfy the Duke of Lerma's enemies, painted by Peter Paul Rubens

From 1612 onwards, and certainly by 1617, the Lerma administration was crumbling. The monopoly of power in the hands of the Lerma's Sandoval family had generated numerous enemies; Lerma's personal enrichment in office had become a scandal; Lerma's extravagant spending and personal debts were beginning to alarm his own son, Cristóbal de Sandoval, Duke of Uceda; lastly, ten years of quiet diplomacy by Fathers Luis de Aliaga, Philip's confessor, and Juan de Santa Maria, Philip's daughter's confessor and a former client of Queen Margaret,[15] had begun to apply personal and religious pressure on the king to alter his method of government.[42] Philip remained close to Lerma, however, and supported him in becoming a cardinal in March 1618 under Pope Paul V, a position which would offer Lerma some protection as his government collapsed.

Lerma fell to an alliance of interests—Uceda, his son, led the attack, aiming to protect his future interests, allied with Don Baltasar de Zúñiga, a well-connected noble with a background in diplomacy across Europe, whose nephew, Olivares was close to the heir to the throne, Prince Philip. Lerma departed for his ducal seat, and for six weeks Philip did nothing; then, in October, Philip signed a decree renouncing the powers of his former valido, and announcing that he would rule in person.[42] Uceda initially took over as the primary voice at court, but without his father's extensive powers, whilst De Zúñiga became Philip's minister for foreign and military affairs. Philip, whilst unwilling to move further against Lerma, took politically symbolic action against Lerma's former secretary Rodrigo Calderón, a figure emblematic of the former administration. Calderón, suspected of having killed Philip's wife Queen Margaret by witchcraft in 1611, was ultimately tortured and then executed by Philip for the more plausible murder of the soldier Francisco de Juaras.[43]

Domestic policy Edit

 
Philip III of Spain

Philip inherited an empire considerably enlarged by his father. On the peninsula itself, Philip II had successfully acquired Portugal in 1580; across Europe, despite the ongoing Dutch revolt, Spanish possessions in Italy and along the Spanish Road appeared secure; globally, the combination of Castilian and Portuguese colonial territories gave a Spanish ruler unparalleled reach from the Americas to the Philippines and beyond through India to Africa.[44] The challenge for such a ruler was that these territories were in legal reality separate bodies, different entities bound together through the 'supraterritorial' royal institutions of the Spanish crown, utilising Castilian nobility as a ruling caste.[45] Even within the peninsula itself, Philip would rule through the kingdoms of Castile, Aragon, Valencia and Portugal, the autonomous provinces of Catalonia and Andalusia—all only loosely joined together through the institution of the Castile monarchy and the person of Philip III.[46] Each part had different taxation, privileges and military arrangements; in practice, the level of taxation in many of the more peripheral provinces was less than in Castile, but the privileged position of the Castilian nobility at all senior levels of royal appointment was a contentious issue for the less favoured provinces.

Expulsion of the Moriscos Edit

One of Philip's first domestic changes was the issuing of a decree in 1609 for the expulsion of the Moriscos from Spain, timed to coincide with the declaration of a truce in the war for the Netherlands.[47] The Moriscos were the descendants of those Muslims that had converted to Christianity during the Reconquista of the previous centuries; despite their conversion, they retained a distinctive culture, including many Islamic practices.[48] Philip II had made the elimination of the Morisco threat a key part of his domestic strategy in the south, attempting an assimilation campaign in the 1560s, which had resulted in the revolt that concluded in 1570.[49] In the final years of his rule, Philip's father had reinvigorated efforts to convert and assimilate the Moriscos, but with almost 200,000 in the south of Spain alone, it was clear by the early years of the new century that this policy was failing.[48]

 
Expulsion of the Moriscos at the port of Dénia, by Vincente Mostre

The idea of completely cleansing Spain of the Moriscos was proposed by Juan de Ribera, the Archbishop and Viceroy of Valencia, whose views were influential with Philip III. Philip's eventual decree to expel a nationality that had lived in Spain for over 800 years and was assimilated within it was based less on doctrinal than financial considerations—confiscating the 'wealth' of the Moriscos – which caused jealousy and resentment by other Christians in Spain, especially in Valencia. Financially, the royal treasury stood to gain by seizing the assets of the removed peoples, whilst in due course those close to the crown would benefit from cheap land or gifts of estates. Estimates vary slightly, but between around 275,000[48] to over 300,000[50] Moriscos were forced out of Spain between 1609 and 1614. To accomplish this, the armada, or navy, and 30,000 soldiers were mobilized with the mission of transporting the families to Tunis or Morocco. Philip intervened in the problematic decision of what to do with Morisco children—should they be allowed to take them to Islamic countries, where they would be brought up as Muslims—and if they were to remain in Spain, what should be done with them? Philip paternalistically decreed that Morisco children under the age of seven could not be taken to Islamic countries, but that any children remaining in Valencia should be free from the threat of enslavement,[51] and rejected some of Ribera's more extreme suggestions.[52]

Whilst popular at the time, and in keeping with earlier policies, this measure significantly damaged the economies of the Kingdom of Valencia, Aragon and Murcia. The supply of cheap labour and the number of rent paying property owners in these areas decreased considerably, as did agricultural outputs.[53] The cultivation of sugarcane and rice had to be substituted for white mulberry, vineyards and wheat.

Economic decline and failed reform Edit

 
Mateo Alemán, an early modern novelist who recorded the terrible 'plague that came down from Castile and the famine that rose from Andalusia' to cripple Philip III's domestic economy. Engraving by Pedro Perete

Philip III's reign was marked by significant economic problems across Spain. Famine struck during the 1590s through a sequence of bad harvests, whilst from 1599 to 1600 and for several years afterwards there was a terrible outbreak of bubonic plague across Spain, killing over 10% of the population.[54] Mateo Alemán, one of the first modern novelists in Europe, captured the despondent mood of the period, describing 'the plague that came down from Castile and the famine that rose from Andalusia' to grip the country.[55] Whilst the failing harvests affected the rural areas most, the plagues reduced the urban population most significantly, in turn reducing the demand for manufactured goods and undermining the economy further.[56] The result was an economically weakened Spain with a rapidly falling population.

Financially, Philip's situation did not appear much better. He had inherited huge debts from his father, Philip II, and an unhelpful tradition that the kingdom of Castile bore the brunt of royal taxation—Castile carried 65% of total imperial costs by 1616.[57] Philip III received no money from the cortes, or parliaments, of Aragon, the Basque provinces or Portugal; Valencia only provided one contribution, in 1604.[57] Philip did not openly challenge this situation, but instead depended more and more heavily on the Castilian cortes; in turn, the cortes increasingly began to tie new grants of money to specific projects, subtly but steadily altering the relationship between the king and cortes.[58] By the financial crisis of 1607, the cortes had even insisted that it be recalled every three years, and that Philip take an oath—on pain of excommunication—to promise that he had spent the royal funds in line with the promises made previously to the cortes.[58]

 
Philip III of Spain

Philip and Lerma's attempts to resolve this crisis largely failed, and were not helped by the increasing size of the royal household—an attempt to increase royal prestige and political authority[28]—Philip's own household costs rose enormously at a time of falling income.[59] Philip's attempts to issue new currency—in particular the issues of the copper vélon coinage in 1603–04, 1617 and 1621—simply created considerable instability.[57] The costs of the Dutch campaign resulted in Philip's bankruptcy in 1607, and the crown's attempt to resolve this by converting the asiento tax system—high-interest loans owed to tax farmers—into longer-term juros bonds paying a much lower interest, produced a short-term benefit, but at the price of losing financial flexibility during future crises.[57] By 1618, almost all Philip's incoming crown income was already assigned to its various creditors and he had almost no spending discretion left.[57] Financially, the Spanish state had become dominated by Genoese bankers and lenders under Philip II, whose lines of credit had allowed the Spanish state to continue during its moments of financial crisis; under Philip III this process remained unchecked, building up considerable resentment against this foreign influence,[60] some going so far as to term the bankers 'white moors'.[61]

Throughout Philip's reign, a body of analysis of Spain's condition began to emerge through the work of the numerous arbitristas, or commentators, that dominated public discussions from around 1600 through to the 1630s.[62] These different voices focused heavily on the political economy of Spain—the rural depopulation, the diverse and bureaucratic administrative methods, the social hierarchies and corruption, offering numerous, if often contradictory, solutions.[63] Nonetheless, through most of Philip's reign there was no significant attempt at reform—Philip continued to rule in line with local laws and customs. Philip encouraged consolidation of noble estates, selling off large quantities of crown lands to favoured nobles and creditors.[64] There were no attempts to create an equivalent to the French intendant position—the closest equivalent, the corregidor, lacked the strong links to the crown required to overcome local opposition.[64] Only in Philip's final years did reform begin to gain momentum; a reform committee, or Junta de Reformación, was established in Lerma's final months in 1618.[65] Under the incoming administration, including the reformist Baltasar de Zúñiga, this committee ground on, but would only deliver substantial, if ill-fated results, when rejuvenated under Philip IV's reign.

Foreign policy Edit

 
The Somerset House Conference between English and Spanish diplomats that brought an end to the Anglo–Spanish War (1585–1604)

On his accession, Philip inherited two major conflicts from his father. The first of these, the ongoing and long-running Dutch revolt, represented a serious challenge to Spanish power from the Protestant United Provinces in a crucial part of the Spanish Empire. The second, the Anglo–Spanish War was a newer, and less critical conflict with Protestant England, marked by a Spanish failure to successfully bring its huge military resources to bear on the smaller English military.

Philip's own foreign policy can be divided into three phases. For the first nine years of his reign, he pursued a highly aggressive set of policies, aiming to deliver a 'great victory'.[66] His instructions to Lerma to wage a war of 'blood and iron' on his rebellious subjects in the Netherlands reflects this.[32] After 1609, when it became evident that Spain was financially exhausted and Philip sought a truce with the Dutch, there followed a period of retrenchment; in the background, tensions continued to grow, however, and by 1618 the policies of Philip's 'proconsuls'—men like Spinola, Fuentes, Villafranca, Osuna and Bedmar—were increasingly at odds with de Lerma's policy from Madrid.[33] The final period, in which Philip intervened in the Holy Roman Empire to secure the election of Ferdinand II as Emperor and in which preparations were made for renewed conflict with the Dutch, largely occurred after the fall of de Lerma and the rise of a new, more aggressive set of advisors in the Madrid court.

War with the Dutch, England and the truce of 1609–21 Edit

Philip's initial aim was to achieve a decisive 'great victory'[66] in the long-running war against the rebellious Dutch provinces of the Spanish Netherlands, whilst placing renewed pressure on the English government of Queen Elizabeth I in an effort to terminate English support for their Dutch colleagues. The Spanish armada, or navy, rebuilt in the 1590s, remained effective against the English,[67] but after the failure of the Spanish invasion of Ireland, leading to the defeat at the Battle of Kinsale, Philip reluctantly accepted that further attacks on England were unlikely to succeed.[66] In the Netherlands, a new war strategy resulted in a re-establishment of Spanish power on the north side of the great rivers Meuse and Rhine, stepping up the military pressure on the rebel provinces. The strategy of a 'great victory,' however, began to descend into a financial war of attrition: the Southern Netherlands—still under Spanish control—and the Dutch Republic in the north—dominated by Calvinist Protestants—were both exhausted, and after the 1607 financial crisis, Spain too was unable to pursue the war. Philip III turned to peace negotiations instead; with the accession to the throne of James I of England it became possible to terminate both the war and English support to the Dutch, with the signature in 1604 of the Treaty of London.[68]

 
Statue of Philip III in Madrid, by Giambologna, finished by Pietro Tacca (1616).

The Twelve Years' Truce with the Dutch followed in 1609, which enabled the Southern Netherlands to recover, but it was a de facto recognition of the independence of the Dutch Republic, and many European powers established diplomatic relations with the Dutch. The truce did not stop the commercial and colonial expansion of the Dutch into the Caribbean and the East-Indies, although Spain had tried to impose the liquidation of the Dutch East India Company as a treaty condition. Minor concessions of the Dutch Republic were the scrapping of the plan to create a Dutch West India Company and to stop the harassment of the Portuguese in Asia. Both concessions were temporary as the Dutch soon recommenced preying upon Portuguese interests, which had already led to the Dutch–Portuguese War in 1602 and would continue till 1654. At least with peace in Europe, the Twelve Year's truce gave Philip's regime an opportunity to begin to recover its financial position.

 
Portrait by Diego Velázquez (detail)

With the death of Henry IV of France—a supporter of the war against Spain—a period of instability commenced in the Kingdom of France. In a sequence of aggressive policy moves, and largely without firm direction from Philip, his regional proconsuls of the Duke of Osuna, viceroy of Naples and the Marquess of Villafranca, the Governor of Milan, directed the Spanish policy in Italy that encountered resistance from the Duchy of Savoy and the Republic of Venice. To secure the connection between Milan and the Netherlands a new route was opened through Valtellina, then part of the independent state of the Three Leagues (the present-day canton of Graubünden, Switzerland), and in 1618 the plot of Venice occurred in which the authorities engaged in the persecution of pro-Spanish agents.

Entry to the Thirty Years' War Edit

In the final years of Philip's reign, Spain entered the initial part of the conflict that would become known as the Thirty Years' War (1618–48). The result was a decisive Spanish victory in the Holy Roman Empire that would lead to a recommencement of the war with the Dutch shortly after Philip's death. Europe was anticipating a fresh election for the position of Emperor upon the likely death of Matthias, who was heirless. Spain and Austria's common Habsburg ancestry influenced Spain's involvement in the convoluted politics of the Empire: on the one hand, Philip had a vested interest in the success of his cousin Ferdinand of Bohemia, who intended to follow Matthias to the throne; on the other, Philip had hopes of appointing one of his own family, such as Prince Philip, to the Imperial throne[69] and worried that a failed bid by Ferdinand might reduce collective Habsburg prestige.[70]

 
The Battle of White Mountain, 1620, a triumph for the later foreign policy of Philip III

Philip finally chose to intervene behind Ferdinand. Prince Philip had been rejected as unacceptable to the German nobility.[69] Philip had also been increasingly influenced over the years by first Queen Margaret, and later the other, powerful Habsburg women at court, whilst the incoming set of advisors that replaced de Lerma, especially de Zúñiga, also saw Spain's future as part of a strong alliance with a Habsburg Holy Roman Empire.[71] Finally, by the Oñate treaty of 29 July 1617, Ferdinand made a successful appeal to Philip's self-interest by promising Spain the Habsburg lands in Alsace in return for Spanish support for his election.[72]

Crisis broke out in Ferdinand's kingdom of Bohemia during 1618–19, with a confrontation between Catholic and Protestant factions. Ferdinand asked Spain for help to put down the rebellion; the Protestant rebels turned to Frederick V of the Palatinate as a new ruler and Emperor. The situation in the Empire was in many ways auspicious for Spanish strategy; in the Spanish Netherlands Ambrosio Spinola had been conspiring to find an opportunity to intervene with the Army of Flanders into the Electorate of the Palatinate. The Palatinate was a vital, Protestant set of territories along the Rhine guarding the most obvious route for reinforcements from other Spanish territories to arrive into the rebellious Dutch provinces (through Genoa).[39] France, assumed bound to support Frederick against Ferdinand, was in fact inclined to remain neutral.[73] The Spanish troops headed by Spinola in the Palatinate and by Johann Tserclaes, Count of Tilly in Bohemia achieved a decisive victory against the Czechs in the Battle of White Mountain in 1620. With the Dutch now vulnerable to a strike through the Rhine valley, a renewed war against the Provinces, with the aim of forcing the Dutch to a more suitable permanent peace, appeared inevitable. Philip died in 1621 shortly before the recommencement of war—his son, Philip IV, retained his chief foreign policy advisor, de Zúñiga, and an initially highly successful campaign against the Dutch began the same year.

Colonial policy Edit

Chile Edit

 
Armour of Philip III

In the Americas Philip inherited a difficult situation in Chile, where the Arauco War raged and the local Mapuche succeeded in razing seven Spanish cities (1598–1604). An estimate by Alonso González de Nájera put the toll at 3,000 Spanish settlers killed and 500 Spanish women taken into captivity by Mapuche.[74] In retaliation the proscription against enslaving Indians captured in war was lifted by Philip in 1608.[75][76] This decree was abused when Spanish settlers in Chiloé Archipelago used it to justify slave raids against groups such as the Chono of northwestern Patagonia who had never been under Spanish rule and never rebelled.[77]

Jesuit missionary Luis de Valdivia believed the Mapuche could be voluntarily converted to Christianity only if there was peace.[78][79] To diminish hostilities Valdivia proposed a Defensive War in a letter to Philip. The king supported the idea, issuing a decree that established the Defensive War as an official policy in 1612.[80] By the time Defensive War was established war between Spanish and Mapuche had been going on for 70 years.[80]

These policies were not without criticism. Maestre de campo and corregidor of Concepción Santiago de Tesillo claimed the Defensive War gave the Mapuche a much needed respite to replenish their forces that should have been denied.[81] The Real Audiencia of Santiago opined in the 1650s that slavery of Mapuches was one of the reasons for constant state of war between the Spanish and the Mapuche.[82]

Legacy Edit

 
Philip III's tomb, between those of his grandfather, father and son

Philip III died in Madrid on 31 March 1621, and was succeeded by his son, Philip IV, who rapidly completed the process of removing the last elements of the Sandoval family regime from court. The story told in the memoirs of the French ambassador Bassompierre, that he was killed by the heat of a brasero (a pan of hot charcoal), because the proper official to take it away was not at hand, is a humorous exaggeration of the formal etiquette of the court.[citation needed]

Philip has generally left a poor legacy with historians. Three major historians of the period have described an 'undistinguished and insignificant man',[34] a 'miserable monarch',[83] whose 'only virtue appeared to reside in a total absence of vice'.[84] More generally, Philip has largely retained the reputation of 'a weak, dim-witted monarch who preferred hunting and traveling to governing'.[85] Unlike Philip IV, whose reputation has improved significantly in the light of recent analysis, Philip III's reign has been relatively unstudied, possibly because of the negative interpretation given to the role of Philip and Lerma during the period.[85] Traditionally, the decline of Spain has been placed from the 1590s onwards; revisionist historians from the 1960s, however, presented an alternative analysis, arguing that in many ways Philip III's Spain of 1621—reinforced with new territories in Alsace, at peace with France, dominant in the Holy Roman Empire, and about to begin a successful campaign against the Dutch—was in a much stronger position than in 1598, despite the poor personal performance of her king during the period.[86] Philip's use of Lerma as his valido has formed one of the key historical and contemporary criticisms against him; recent work[87] has perhaps begun to present a more nuanced picture of the relationship and the institution that survived for the next forty years in Spanish royal government.

Family tree Edit

Like many Habsburgs, Philip III was the product of extensive inbreeding. His father, Philip II, a product of marriage between first cousins, married his niece, Anna of Austria, herself the product of a cousin couple. Philip III in turn married his first cousin once removed, Margaret of Austria. This pattern would continue in the next generation, ultimately culminating in the end of the Spanish Habsburg line in the person of Philip's feeble grandson, Charles II.

Ancestors of Philip III and his relationship with his wife
Notes:
  1. ^ a b Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor at the Encyclopædia Britannica
  2. ^ a b Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Joanna" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 15 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  3. ^ a b Wurzbach, Constantin, von, ed. (1860). "Habsburg, Elisabeth (eigentlich Isabella von Oesterreich)" . Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich [Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire] (in German). Vol. 6. p. 167 – via Wikisource.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
  4. ^ a b Kurth, Godefroid (1911). "Philip II" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 12. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  5. ^ a b Wurzbach, Constantin, von, ed. (1861). "Habsburg, Maria von Spanien" . Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich [Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire] (in German). Vol. 7. p. 19 – via Wikisource.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
  6. ^ a b Wurzbach, Constantin, von, ed. (1860). "Habsburg, Karl II. von Steiermark" . Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich [Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire] (in German). Vol. 6. p. 352 – via Wikisource.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
  7. ^ a b Press, Volker (1990), "Maximilian II.", Neue Deutsche Biographie (in German), vol. 16, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 471–475; (full text online)
  8. ^ a b Wurzbach, Constantin, von, ed. (1860). "Habsburg, Anna von Oesterreich (1528–1587)" . Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich [Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire] (in German). Vol. 6. p. 151 – via Wikisource.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
  9. ^ a b Wurzbach, Constantin, von, ed. (1860). "Habsburg, Anna von Oesterreich (Königin von Spanien)" . Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich [Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire] (in German). Vol. 6. p. 151 – via Wikisource.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
  10. ^ Sigmund Ritter von Riezler (1897), "Wilhelm V. (Herzog von Bayern)", Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB) (in German), vol. 42, Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 717–723
  11. ^ a b Wurzbach, Constantin, von, ed. (1861). "Habsburg, Philipp III." . Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich [Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire] (in German). Vol. 7. p. 120 – via Wikisource.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
  12. ^ a b Eder, Karl (1961), "Ferdinand II.", Neue Deutsche Biographie (in German), vol. 5, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 83–85; (full text online)
  13. ^ a b Wurzbach, Constantin, von, ed. (1861). "Habsburg, Margaretha (Königin von Spanien)" . Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich [Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire] (in German). Vol. 7. p. 13 – via Wikisource.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
  14. ^ a b Wurzbach, Constantin, von, ed. (1861). "Habsburg, Maria Anna von Spanien" . Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich [Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire] (in German). Vol. 7. p. 23 – via Wikisource.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
  15. ^ a b Wurzbach, Constantin, von, ed. (1861). "Habsburg, Philipp IV." . Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich [Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire] (in German). Vol. 7. p. 122 – via Wikisource.{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)

Family Edit

Philip married Margaret of Austria, his first-cousin-once-removed. They had 8 children, five of whom survived to adulthood:[citation needed]

Name Birth Death Notes
By Margaret of Austria (25 December 1584 – 3 October 1611; married in 1599)
Anne 22 September 1601  20 January 1666 Queen of France. Married Louis XIII
Maria 1 February 1603 1 March 1603 Died young
Philip IV 8 April 1605 17 September 1665 King of Spain. Married 1) Elisabeth of France (1602-1644) and 2) Mariana of Austria
Maria Anna 18 August 1606 13 May 1646 Holy Roman Empress. Married Ferdinand III, Holy Roman Emperor
Charles 15 September 1607 30 July 1632 Died unmarried
Ferdinand 16 May 1609 9 November 1641 A Cardinal
Margaret 24 May 1610 11 March 1617 Died young
Afonso 22 September 1611 16 September 1612 Died young

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Stradling, p. 9.
  2. ^ Wedgwood, p. 55.
  3. ^ Stradling, p. 18.
  4. ^ Elliott, 1963, pp. 300–301.
  5. ^ a b c Feros, p.16.
  6. ^ a b c Feros, p.17.
  7. ^ a b c Feros, p.19.
  8. ^ a b c Williams, p.38.
  9. ^ Sánchez, p.101.
  10. ^ a b Williams, p.39.
  11. ^ a b Sánchez, p.91.
  12. ^ a b Sánchez, p.98.
  13. ^ Sánchez, p.99.
  14. ^ a b c Sánchez, p.100.
  15. ^ a b c Sánchez, p.97.
  16. ^ Williams, p.35.
  17. ^ a b Williams, p.34.
  18. ^ Munck, p.49.
  19. ^ Mattingly, p.74.
  20. ^ Tuck, p.121.
  21. ^ Tuck, p.122.
  22. ^ Williams, pp.47–8.
  23. ^ Williams, p.42.
  24. ^ Feros, p.112.
  25. ^ a b Williams, p.104.
  26. ^ a b Feros, p.113.
  27. ^ Williams, p.105.
  28. ^ a b Feros, p.110.
  29. ^ Williams, p.9.
  30. ^ Feros, pp.117–8.
  31. ^ Feros, p.133.
  32. ^ a b Williams, p.10.
  33. ^ a b Polisensky, p.127.
  34. ^ a b Wedgwood, p.55.
  35. ^ In reality, the Archdukes outlived Philip, resulting in the reunification occurring under his son, Philip IV.
  36. ^ Williams, p.127.
  37. ^ Williams, p.128.
  38. ^ Williams, pp.126–7.
  39. ^ a b Wedgwood, pp.113–4.
  40. ^ Parker, 1984, p.153-4.
  41. ^ a b Williams, p.245.
  42. ^ a b Williams, p.241.
  43. ^ Williams, p.242.
  44. ^ Parker, 1984, p.146.
  45. ^ Zagorin, pp.3–4.
  46. ^ Parker, 1984, p.61.
  47. ^ Cruz, p.177.
  48. ^ a b c Parker, 1984, p.150.
  49. ^ Zagorin, p.15.
  50. ^ Perry, p.133.
  51. ^ Perry, p.148.
  52. ^ Perry, p.157.
  53. ^ De Maddalena, p.286.
  54. ^ Parker, 1985, p.235.
  55. ^ Parker, 1984, p.147.
  56. ^ Parker, 1984, pp.146–7.
  57. ^ a b c d e Munck, p.51.
  58. ^ a b Thompson, p.189.
  59. ^ Kamen, 1991, p. 200.
  60. ^ Cruz, p.102.
  61. ^ Cruz, p.103.
  62. ^ Parker, 1984, pp.147–8.
  63. ^ Parker, 1984, p.148.
  64. ^ a b Munck, p.50.
  65. ^ Kamen, p.214.
  66. ^ a b c Williams, p.125.
  67. ^ See Goodman (2002), for a thorough account of this revival.
  68. ^ Parker, 2004, p.212.
  69. ^ a b Wedgwood, p.75.
  70. ^ Wedgwood, p.89.
  71. ^ Ringrose, p.320.
  72. ^ Wedgwood, p.57.
  73. ^ Wedgwood, p.110-1.
  74. ^ Guzmán, Carmen Luz (2013). "Las cautivas de las Siete Ciudades: El cautiverio de mujeres hispanocriollas durante la Guerra de Arauco, en la perspectiva de cuatro cronistas (s. XVII)" [The captives of the Seven Cities: The captivity of hispanic-creole women during the Arauco's War, from the insight of four chroniclers (17th century)]. Intus-Legere Historia (in Spanish). 7 (1): 77–97. doi:10.15691/07176864.2014.0.94 (inactive 1 August 2023).{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of August 2023 (link)
  75. ^ "Philip III, had taken the drastic step of stripping indigenous "rebels" of the customary royal protection against enslavement in 1608, thus making Chile one of the few parts of the empire where slave taking was entirely legal." Reséndez, Andrés. The Other Slavery: The Uncovered Story of Indian Enslavement in America (pp. 127–128). Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. Kindle Edition.
  76. ^ Valenzuela Márquez, Jaime (2009). "Esclavos mapuches. Para una historia del secuestro y deportación de indígenas en la colonia". In Gaune, Rafael; Lara, Martín (eds.). Historias de racismo y discriminación en Chile (in Spanish). pp. 231–233.
  77. ^ Urbina Burgos, Rodolfo (2007). "El pueblo chono: de vagabundo y pagano a cristiano y sedentario mestizado". Orbis incognitvs: avisos y legados del Nuevo Mundo (PDF) (in Spanish). Huelva: Universidad de Huelva. pp. 325–346. ISBN 9788496826243.
  78. ^ Pinto Rodríguez, Jorge (1993). "Jesuitas, Franciscanos y Capuchinos italianos en la Araucanía (1600–1900)". Revista Complutense de Historia de América (in Spanish). 19: 109–147.
  79. ^ "Misioneros y mapuche (1600–1818)". Memoria Chilena (in Spanish). Biblioteca Nacional de Chile. Retrieved 30 January 2014.
  80. ^ a b "Guerra Defensiva". Memoria Chilena (in Spanish). Biblioteca Nacional de Chile. Retrieved 3 August 2019.
  81. ^ Baraibar, Alvaro (2013). "Chile como un "Flandes indiano" en las crónicas de los siglos VI y VII". Revista Chilena de Literatura (in Spanish). 85. from the original on 26 January 2017. Retrieved 30 January 2016.
  82. ^ Barros Arana, Diego (2000) [1884]. Historia General de Chile (in Spanish). Vol. IV (2 ed.). Santiago, Chile: Editorial Universitaria. p. 341. ISBN 956-11-1535-2.
  83. ^ Stradling, p.18.
  84. ^ Elliott, 1963, pp. 300–301.
  85. ^ a b Sánchez, p.92.
  86. ^ Parker, 1984, p.145.
  87. ^ In particular, Feros (2006) and Williams' (2006) recent extensive studies of the period, and Sánchez's (1996) analysis of the role of powerful women, often under-reported in historical documents, at Philip's court.

Bibliography Edit

  • Carter, Charles H. "The Nature of Spanish Government After Philip II." Historian 26#1 (1963): 1–18. online.
  • Cipolla, Carlo M. (ed) The Fontana Economic History of Europe: The Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. London: Fontana. (1974)
  • Cruz, Anne J. Discourses of Poverty: Social Reform and the Picaresque Novel. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. (1999)
  • Davenport, Frances G. European Treaties Bearing on the History of the United States and Its Dependencies. The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. (2004)
  • Elliott, J. H. Imperial Spain: 1469–1716. London: Penguin. (1963)
  • Feros, Antonio. Kingship and Favouritism in the Spain of Philip III, 1598–1621. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (2006)
  • Goodman, David. Spanish Naval Power, 1589–1665: Reconstruction and Defeat. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (2002)
  • Kamen, Henry. Spain, 1469–1714: A Society of Conflict. Harlow: Pearson Education. (2005)
  • Harvey, Leonard Patrick. Muslims in Spain, 1500–1614. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. (2005)
  • Hoffman, Philip T. and Kathyrn Norberg (eds). Fiscal Crises, Liberty, and Representative Government 1450–1789. (Stanford University Press, 2001)
  • Lynch, John. Spain Under the Habsburgs: vol 2 Spain and America (1959) online pp 14–61.
  • De Maddalena, Aldo. Rural Europe, 1500–1750. in Cipolla (ed) 1974.
  • Mattingly, Garrett. The Armada. New York: Mariner Books. (2005)
  • Munck, Thomas. Seventeenth Century Europe, 1598–1700. London: Macmillan. (1990)
  • Parker, Geoffrey. Europe in Crisis, 1598–1648. London: Fontana. (1984)
  • Parker, Geoffrey. The Dutch Revolt. London: Pelican Books. (1985)
  • Parker, Geoffrey. The Army of Flanders and the Spanish Road, 1567–1659. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (2004)
  • Perry, Mary Elizabeth. The Handless Maiden: Moriscos and the politics of religion in early modern Spain. Princeton: Princeton University Press. (2005)
  • Polisensky, J. V. The Thirty Years War. London: NEL. (1971)
  • Ringrose, David. Spain, Europe and the "Spanish Miracle", 1700–1900. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (1998)
  • Sánchez, Magdalena S. Pious and Political Images of a Habsburg Woman at the Court of Philip III (1598–1621). in Sánchez and Saint-Saëns (eds) 1996.
  • Sánchez, Magdalena S. and Alain Saint-Saëns (eds). Spanish women in the golden age: images and realities. Greenwood Publishing Group. (1996)
  • Stradling, R. A. Philip IV and the Government of Spain, 1621–1665. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (1988)
  • Thompson, I. A. A. Castile, Constitionalism and Liberty. in Hoffman and Norburg (eds) 2001.
  • Wedgwood, C. V. The Thirty Years War. London: Methuen. (1981)
  • Williams, Patrick. The Great Favourite: the Duke of Lerma and the court and government of Philip III of Spain, 1598–1621. Manchester: Manchester University Press. (2006)
  • Zagorin, Perez. Rebels and Rulers, 1500–1660. Volume II: Provincial rebellion: Revolutionary civil wars, 1560–1660. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. (1992)

Further reading Edit

  • "Philip III. of Spain" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. XVIII (9th ed.). 1885. p. 746.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Philip III., king of Spain". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 21 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • See also Paul C. Allen, Philip III and the Pax Hispanica: The Failure of Grand Strategy (Yale UP: 2000) for an extensive discussion of the foreign policy of Philip III. Allen's is a revisionist work that also argues for a greater role played in international affairs by the Council of State and its leaders in this period rather than by Lerma.
Philip III of Spain
Born: 14 April 1578 Died: 31 March 1621
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of Spain, Portugal, Sardinia, Naples, and Sicily;
Duke of Milan

1598–1621
Succeeded by
Spanish royalty
Preceded by Prince of Asturias
1582–98
Succeeded by
Prince of Portugal
1582–98
Succeeded by

philip, spain, philip, spanish, felipe, april, 1578, march, 1621, king, spain, philip, also, king, portugal, naples, sicily, sardinia, duke, milan, from, 1598, until, death, 1621, philip, iiiportrait, andrés, lópez, polanco, 1617king, spain, portugal, more, re. Philip III Spanish Felipe III 14 April 1578 31 March 1621 was King of Spain As Philip II he was also King of Portugal Naples Sicily and Sardinia and Duke of Milan from 1598 until his death in 1621 Philip IIIPortrait by Andres Lopez Polanco c 1617King of Spain and Portugal more Reign13 September 1598 31 March 1621PredecessorPhilip II of SpainSuccessorPhilip IV of SpainBorn14 April 1578Royal Alcazar of Madrid Madrid SpainDied31 March 1621 1621 03 31 aged 42 Madrid SpainBurialEl EscorialSpouseMargaret of Austria m 1599 died 1611 wbr IssueAnne Queen of France Infanta Maria Philip IV King of Spain Maria Anna Holy Roman Empress Infante Carlos Cardinal Infante Ferdinand Infanta Margarita Infante AlonsoHouseHabsburgFatherPhilip II of SpainMotherAnna of AustriaReligionRoman CatholicismSignatureA member of the House of Habsburg Philip III was born in Madrid to King Philip II of Spain and his fourth wife his niece Anna the daughter of Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian II and Maria of Spain Philip III later married his cousin Margaret of Austria sister of Ferdinand II Holy Roman Emperor Although also known in Spain as Philip the Pious 1 Philip s political reputation abroad has been largely negative Historians C V Wedgwood R Stradling and J H Elliott have described him respectively as an undistinguished and insignificant man 2 a miserable monarch 3 and a pallid anonymous creature whose only virtue appeared to reside in a total absence of vice 4 In particular Philip s reliance on his corrupt chief minister the Duke of Lerma drew much criticism at the time and afterwards For many the decline of Spain can be dated to the economic difficulties that set in during the early years of his reign Nonetheless as the ruler of the Spanish Empire at its height and as the king who achieved a temporary peace with the Dutch 1609 1621 and brought Spain into the Thirty Years War 1618 1648 through an initially extremely successful campaign Philip s reign remains a critical period in Spanish history Contents 1 Early life 2 Religion Philip and the role of women at court 3 Style of government 3 1 Duke of Lerma as valido 3 2 Imperial proconsuls 3 3 Fall of Lerma 4 Domestic policy 4 1 Expulsion of the Moriscos 4 2 Economic decline and failed reform 5 Foreign policy 5 1 War with the Dutch England and the truce of 1609 21 5 2 Entry to the Thirty Years War 6 Colonial policy 6 1 Chile 7 Legacy 8 Family tree 9 Family 10 See also 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 Further readingEarly life EditAfter Philip III s older half brother Don Carlos died insane their father Philip II had concluded that one of the causes of Carlos condition had been the influence of the warring factions at the Spanish court 5 He believed that Carlos education and upbringing had been badly affected by this resulting in his lunacy and disobedience and accordingly he set out to pay much greater attention to arrangements for his later sons 5 Philip II appointed Juan de Zuniga then Prince Diego s governor to continue this role for Philip and chose Garcia de Loaysa as his tutor 5 They were joined by Cristobal de Moura a close supporter of Philip II In combination Philip believed they would provide a consistent stable upbringing for Prince Philip and ensure that he would avoid the same fate as Carlos 6 Philip s education was to follow the model for royal princes laid down by Father Juan de Mariana focusing on the imposition of restraints and encouragement to form the personality of the individual at an early age aiming to deliver a king who was neither tyrannical nor excessively under the influence of his courtiers 6 nbsp Philip III of Spain 1599 1601 The Phoebus FoundationPrince Philip appears to have been generally liked by his contemporaries dynamic good natured and earnest suitably pious having a lively body and a peaceful disposition albeit with a relatively weak constitution 7 The comparison with the memory of the disobedient and ultimately insane Carlos was usually a positive one although some commented that Prince Philip appeared less intelligent and politically competent than his late brother 7 Indeed although Philip was educated in Latin French Portuguese and astronomy and appears to have been a competent linguist 6 recent historians suspect that much of his tutors focus on Philip s undeniably pleasant pious and respectful disposition was to avoid reporting that languages aside he was not in fact particularly intelligent or academically gifted 8 Nonetheless Philip does not appear to have been naive his correspondence to his daughters shows a distinctive cautious streak in his advice on dealing with court intrigue 9 Philip first met the Marquis of Denia the future Duke of Lerma then a gentleman of the King s chamber in his early teens 8 Lerma and Philip became close friends but Lerma was considered unsuitable by the King and Philip s tutors Lerma was dispatched to Valencia as a Viceroy in 1595 with the aim of removing Philip from his influence 8 but after Lerma pleaded poor health he was allowed to return two years later By now in poor health himself King Philip II was becoming increasingly concerned over the prince s future and he attempted to establish de Moura as a future trusted advisor to his son reinforcing de Loaysa s position by appointing him archbishop 10 The prince received a new conservative Dominican confessor 10 The following year Philip II died after a painful illness leaving the Spanish Empire to his son and grandnephew King Philip III Religion Philip and the role of women at court EditPhilip married his cousin Margaret of Austria on 18 April 1599 a year after becoming king Margaret the sister of the future Emperor Ferdinand II would be one of three women at Philip s court who would apply considerable influence over the King 11 Margaret was considered by contemporaries to be extremely pious in some cases excessively pious and too influenced by the Church 12 astute and very skillful in her political dealings 13 although melancholic and unhappy over the influence of the Duke of Lerma over her husband at court 12 Margaret continued to fight an ongoing battle with Lerma for influence up until her death in 1611 Philip had an affectionate close relationship with Margaret 14 and paid her additional attention after they had a son in 1605 14 Margaret alongside Philip s grandmother aunt Empress Maria the Austrian representative to the Spanish court and Margaret of the Cross Maria s daughter formed a powerful uncompromising Catholic and pro Austrian voice within Philip s life 11 They were successful for example in convincing Philip to provide financial support to Ferdinand from 1600 onwards 14 Philip steadily acquired other religious advisors Father Juan de Santa Maria confessor to Philip s daughter dona Maria was felt by contemporaries to have an excessive influence over Philip at the end of his life 15 and both he and Luis de Aliaga Philip s own confessor were credited with influencing the overthrow of Lerma in 1618 Similarly Mariana de San Jose a favoured nun of Queen Margaret s was also criticised for her later influence over the King s actions 15 Style of government Edit nbsp Philip III of SpainThe Spanish crown at the time ruled through a system of royal councils The most significant of these were the Councils of State and its subordinate Council for War that were in turn supported by the seven professional councils for the different regions and four specialised councils for the Inquisition the Military Orders Finance and the Crusade tax 16 These councils were then supplemented by small committees or juntas as necessary such as the junta of the night through which Philip II exercised personal authority towards the end of his reign 17 As a matter of policy Philip had tried to avoid appointing grandees to major positions of power within his government and relied heavily on the lesser nobles the so called service nobility 17 Philip II had taken the traditional system of councils and applied a high degree of personal scrutiny to them especially in matters of paperwork which he declined to delegate the result was a ponderous process 18 To his contemporaries the degree of personal oversight he exercised was excessive his self imposed role as the chief clerk to the Spanish empire 19 was not thought entirely appropriate Philip first started to become engaged in practical government at the age of 15 when he joined Philip II s private committee 7 Philip III s approach to government appears to have stemmed from three main drivers Firstly he was heavily influenced by the eirenic ideas being circulated in Italian circles in reaction to the new Humanist theories of governance typified by Machiavelli 20 Writers such as Girolamo Frachetta who became a particular favourite of Philip had propagated a conservative definition of reason of state which centred on exercising a princely prudence and a strict obedience to the laws and customs of the country that one ruled 21 Secondly Philip may have shared Lerma s view that the governmental system of Philip II was fast proving impractical and unnecessarily excluded the great nobles of the kingdoms it had been creaking badly in the last decades of his father s life 22 Lastly Philip s own personality and his friendship with Lerma heavily shaped his approach to policy making The result was a radical shift in the role of the crown in government from the model of Philip II Duke of Lerma as valido Edit nbsp Francisco Gomez de Sandoval y Rojas Duke of Lerma Spanish statesman RubensWithin a few hours of Philip ascending to the throne Lerma had been made a royal counsellor by the new king and set about establishing himself as a fully fledged valido or royal favourite 23 Lerma in due course declared a duke positioned himself as the gateway to the king All the business of government Philip instructed was to arrive in writing and be channeled through Lerma before reaching him 24 Whilst Philip was not hugely active in government in other ways once these memoranda or consulta had reached him he appears to have been assiduous in commenting on them 25 Debates in royal councils would now only begin upon the written instruction of the king again through Lerma 26 All members of royal councils were under orders to maintain complete transparency with Lerma as the king s personal representative 26 indeed in 1612 the councils were ordered by Philip to obey Lerma as if he were the king 25 The degree to which Lerma himself played an active role in government has been disputed Contemporaries were inclined to see Lerma s hand in every action of government others have since thought Lerma to have neither the temperament nor the energy to impose himself greatly on the actions of government 27 still others consider Lerma to have carefully attended only those Councils of State that addressed matters of great importance to the king 28 creating a space for the wider professionalisation of government that had been lacking under Philip II 29 This new system of government became increasingly unpopular very quickly The novel idea of a valido exercising power went against the long standing popular conception that the king should exercise his powers personally not through another 30 Before long the apparatus of the Spanish government was packed with Lerma s relatives Lerma s servants and Lerma s political friends to the exclusion of others 31 Lerma responded by further limiting his public visibility in politics avoiding signing and writing documents personally 32 and constantly stressing that he was humbly only working on behalf of his master Philip III Imperial proconsuls Edit De Lerma s role as royal favourite at court was further complicated by the rise of various proconsuls under Philip III s reign significant Spanish representatives overseas who came to exercise independent judgement and even independent policies in the absence of strong leadership from the centre 33 The challenges to government communication during the period encouraged aspects of this but the phenomenon was much more marked under Philip III than under either the reign of his father or son nbsp Ambrosio Spinola one of Philip III s various imperial proconsuls by Peter Paul RubensIn the Netherlands his father Philip II had bequeathed his remaining territories in the Low Countries to his daughter Isabella of Spain and her husband Archduke Albert under the condition that if she died without heirs the province would return to the Spanish Crown Given that Isabella was notoriously childless it was clear that this was only intended to be a temporary measure and that Philip II had envisaged an early revision to Philip III 34 As a result Philip s foreign policy in the Netherlands would be exercised through the strong willed archdukes but in the knowledge that ultimately the Spanish Netherlands would return to him as king 35 Meanwhile the Italian born Ambrosio Spinola was to perform a crucial role as a Spanish general in the Army of Flanders Having demonstrated his military prowess at the siege of Ostend in 1603 Spinola rapidly started to propose and implement policies almost independently of the central councils in Madrid 36 somehow managing to achieve military victories even without central funding from Spain 37 De Lerma was uncertain of how to deal with Spinola on the one hand de Lerma desperately needed a successful military commander in the Netherlands on the other de Lerma was contemptuous of Spinola s relatively low origins and scared of his potential to destabilise de Lerma at court 38 In the years leading to the outbreak of war in 1618 Spinola was working to produce a plan to finally defeat the Dutch involving an intervention in the Rhineland followed by fresh hostilities aiming to cut the Low Countries in two portrayed at the time as the spider in the web of Catholic politics in the region Spinola was operating without significant consultation with Philip in Madrid 39 In Italy a parallel situation emerged The Count of Fuentes as governor of Lombardy exploited the lack of guidance from Madrid to pursue his own highly interventionist policy across north Italy including making independent offers to support the Papacy by invading the Venetian Republic in 1607 40 Fuentes remained in power and pursuing his own policies until his death The Marquis of Villafranca as governor of Milan similarly exercised his own considerable judgement on foreign policy The Duke of Osuna who had married into the Sandovel family as a close ally of Lerma again showed significant independence as the Viceroy of Naples towards the end of Philip s reign In conjunction with the Spanish ambassador to Venice the influential Marquis of Bedmar Osuna pursued a policy of raising an extensive army intercepting Venetian shipping and imposing sufficiently high taxes that threats of a revolt began to emerge To exacerbate matters Osuna was found to have prevented the local Neapolitans from petitioning Philip III to complain 41 Osuna fell from power only when de Lerma had lost his royal favour and Osuna s negative impact on Philip s plans for intervention in Germany had become intolerable 41 Fall of Lerma Edit nbsp Rodrigo Calderon executed by Philip III to satisfy the Duke of Lerma s enemies painted by Peter Paul RubensFrom 1612 onwards and certainly by 1617 the Lerma administration was crumbling The monopoly of power in the hands of the Lerma s Sandoval family had generated numerous enemies Lerma s personal enrichment in office had become a scandal Lerma s extravagant spending and personal debts were beginning to alarm his own son Cristobal de Sandoval Duke of Uceda lastly ten years of quiet diplomacy by Fathers Luis de Aliaga Philip s confessor and Juan de Santa Maria Philip s daughter s confessor and a former client of Queen Margaret 15 had begun to apply personal and religious pressure on the king to alter his method of government 42 Philip remained close to Lerma however and supported him in becoming a cardinal in March 1618 under Pope Paul V a position which would offer Lerma some protection as his government collapsed Lerma fell to an alliance of interests Uceda his son led the attack aiming to protect his future interests allied with Don Baltasar de Zuniga a well connected noble with a background in diplomacy across Europe whose nephew Olivares was close to the heir to the throne Prince Philip Lerma departed for his ducal seat and for six weeks Philip did nothing then in October Philip signed a decree renouncing the powers of his former valido and announcing that he would rule in person 42 Uceda initially took over as the primary voice at court but without his father s extensive powers whilst De Zuniga became Philip s minister for foreign and military affairs Philip whilst unwilling to move further against Lerma took politically symbolic action against Lerma s former secretary Rodrigo Calderon a figure emblematic of the former administration Calderon suspected of having killed Philip s wife Queen Margaret by witchcraft in 1611 was ultimately tortured and then executed by Philip for the more plausible murder of the soldier Francisco de Juaras 43 Domestic policy Edit nbsp Philip III of SpainPhilip inherited an empire considerably enlarged by his father On the peninsula itself Philip II had successfully acquired Portugal in 1580 across Europe despite the ongoing Dutch revolt Spanish possessions in Italy and along the Spanish Road appeared secure globally the combination of Castilian and Portuguese colonial territories gave a Spanish ruler unparalleled reach from the Americas to the Philippines and beyond through India to Africa 44 The challenge for such a ruler was that these territories were in legal reality separate bodies different entities bound together through the supraterritorial royal institutions of the Spanish crown utilising Castilian nobility as a ruling caste 45 Even within the peninsula itself Philip would rule through the kingdoms of Castile Aragon Valencia and Portugal the autonomous provinces of Catalonia and Andalusia all only loosely joined together through the institution of the Castile monarchy and the person of Philip III 46 Each part had different taxation privileges and military arrangements in practice the level of taxation in many of the more peripheral provinces was less than in Castile but the privileged position of the Castilian nobility at all senior levels of royal appointment was a contentious issue for the less favoured provinces Expulsion of the Moriscos Edit Main article Expulsion of the Moriscos One of Philip s first domestic changes was the issuing of a decree in 1609 for the expulsion of the Moriscos from Spain timed to coincide with the declaration of a truce in the war for the Netherlands 47 The Moriscos were the descendants of those Muslims that had converted to Christianity during the Reconquista of the previous centuries despite their conversion they retained a distinctive culture including many Islamic practices 48 Philip II had made the elimination of the Morisco threat a key part of his domestic strategy in the south attempting an assimilation campaign in the 1560s which had resulted in the revolt that concluded in 1570 49 In the final years of his rule Philip s father had reinvigorated efforts to convert and assimilate the Moriscos but with almost 200 000 in the south of Spain alone it was clear by the early years of the new century that this policy was failing 48 nbsp Expulsion of the Moriscos at the port of Denia by Vincente MostreThe idea of completely cleansing Spain of the Moriscos was proposed by Juan de Ribera the Archbishop and Viceroy of Valencia whose views were influential with Philip III Philip s eventual decree to expel a nationality that had lived in Spain for over 800 years and was assimilated within it was based less on doctrinal than financial considerations confiscating the wealth of the Moriscos which caused jealousy and resentment by other Christians in Spain especially in Valencia Financially the royal treasury stood to gain by seizing the assets of the removed peoples whilst in due course those close to the crown would benefit from cheap land or gifts of estates Estimates vary slightly but between around 275 000 48 to over 300 000 50 Moriscos were forced out of Spain between 1609 and 1614 To accomplish this the armada or navy and 30 000 soldiers were mobilized with the mission of transporting the families to Tunis or Morocco Philip intervened in the problematic decision of what to do with Morisco children should they be allowed to take them to Islamic countries where they would be brought up as Muslims and if they were to remain in Spain what should be done with them Philip paternalistically decreed that Morisco children under the age of seven could not be taken to Islamic countries but that any children remaining in Valencia should be free from the threat of enslavement 51 and rejected some of Ribera s more extreme suggestions 52 Whilst popular at the time and in keeping with earlier policies this measure significantly damaged the economies of the Kingdom of Valencia Aragon and Murcia The supply of cheap labour and the number of rent paying property owners in these areas decreased considerably as did agricultural outputs 53 The cultivation of sugarcane and rice had to be substituted for white mulberry vineyards and wheat Economic decline and failed reform Edit nbsp Mateo Aleman an early modern novelist who recorded the terrible plague that came down from Castile and the famine that rose from Andalusia to cripple Philip III s domestic economy Engraving by Pedro PeretePhilip III s reign was marked by significant economic problems across Spain Famine struck during the 1590s through a sequence of bad harvests whilst from 1599 to 1600 and for several years afterwards there was a terrible outbreak of bubonic plague across Spain killing over 10 of the population 54 Mateo Aleman one of the first modern novelists in Europe captured the despondent mood of the period describing the plague that came down from Castile and the famine that rose from Andalusia to grip the country 55 Whilst the failing harvests affected the rural areas most the plagues reduced the urban population most significantly in turn reducing the demand for manufactured goods and undermining the economy further 56 The result was an economically weakened Spain with a rapidly falling population Financially Philip s situation did not appear much better He had inherited huge debts from his father Philip II and an unhelpful tradition that the kingdom of Castile bore the brunt of royal taxation Castile carried 65 of total imperial costs by 1616 57 Philip III received no money from the cortes or parliaments of Aragon the Basque provinces or Portugal Valencia only provided one contribution in 1604 57 Philip did not openly challenge this situation but instead depended more and more heavily on the Castilian cortes in turn the cortes increasingly began to tie new grants of money to specific projects subtly but steadily altering the relationship between the king and cortes 58 By the financial crisis of 1607 the cortes had even insisted that it be recalled every three years and that Philip take an oath on pain of excommunication to promise that he had spent the royal funds in line with the promises made previously to the cortes 58 nbsp Philip III of SpainPhilip and Lerma s attempts to resolve this crisis largely failed and were not helped by the increasing size of the royal household an attempt to increase royal prestige and political authority 28 Philip s own household costs rose enormously at a time of falling income 59 Philip s attempts to issue new currency in particular the issues of the copper velon coinage in 1603 04 1617 and 1621 simply created considerable instability 57 The costs of the Dutch campaign resulted in Philip s bankruptcy in 1607 and the crown s attempt to resolve this by converting the asiento tax system high interest loans owed to tax farmers into longer term juros bonds paying a much lower interest produced a short term benefit but at the price of losing financial flexibility during future crises 57 By 1618 almost all Philip s incoming crown income was already assigned to its various creditors and he had almost no spending discretion left 57 Financially the Spanish state had become dominated by Genoese bankers and lenders under Philip II whose lines of credit had allowed the Spanish state to continue during its moments of financial crisis under Philip III this process remained unchecked building up considerable resentment against this foreign influence 60 some going so far as to term the bankers white moors 61 Throughout Philip s reign a body of analysis of Spain s condition began to emerge through the work of the numerous arbitristas or commentators that dominated public discussions from around 1600 through to the 1630s 62 These different voices focused heavily on the political economy of Spain the rural depopulation the diverse and bureaucratic administrative methods the social hierarchies and corruption offering numerous if often contradictory solutions 63 Nonetheless through most of Philip s reign there was no significant attempt at reform Philip continued to rule in line with local laws and customs Philip encouraged consolidation of noble estates selling off large quantities of crown lands to favoured nobles and creditors 64 There were no attempts to create an equivalent to the French intendant position the closest equivalent the corregidor lacked the strong links to the crown required to overcome local opposition 64 Only in Philip s final years did reform begin to gain momentum a reform committee or Junta de Reformacion was established in Lerma s final months in 1618 65 Under the incoming administration including the reformist Baltasar de Zuniga this committee ground on but would only deliver substantial if ill fated results when rejuvenated under Philip IV s reign Foreign policy Edit nbsp The Somerset House Conference between English and Spanish diplomats that brought an end to the Anglo Spanish War 1585 1604 On his accession Philip inherited two major conflicts from his father The first of these the ongoing and long running Dutch revolt represented a serious challenge to Spanish power from the Protestant United Provinces in a crucial part of the Spanish Empire The second the Anglo Spanish War was a newer and less critical conflict with Protestant England marked by a Spanish failure to successfully bring its huge military resources to bear on the smaller English military Philip s own foreign policy can be divided into three phases For the first nine years of his reign he pursued a highly aggressive set of policies aiming to deliver a great victory 66 His instructions to Lerma to wage a war of blood and iron on his rebellious subjects in the Netherlands reflects this 32 After 1609 when it became evident that Spain was financially exhausted and Philip sought a truce with the Dutch there followed a period of retrenchment in the background tensions continued to grow however and by 1618 the policies of Philip s proconsuls men like Spinola Fuentes Villafranca Osuna and Bedmar were increasingly at odds with de Lerma s policy from Madrid 33 The final period in which Philip intervened in the Holy Roman Empire to secure the election of Ferdinand II as Emperor and in which preparations were made for renewed conflict with the Dutch largely occurred after the fall of de Lerma and the rise of a new more aggressive set of advisors in the Madrid court War with the Dutch England and the truce of 1609 21 Edit Philip s initial aim was to achieve a decisive great victory 66 in the long running war against the rebellious Dutch provinces of the Spanish Netherlands whilst placing renewed pressure on the English government of Queen Elizabeth I in an effort to terminate English support for their Dutch colleagues The Spanish armada or navy rebuilt in the 1590s remained effective against the English 67 but after the failure of the Spanish invasion of Ireland leading to the defeat at the Battle of Kinsale Philip reluctantly accepted that further attacks on England were unlikely to succeed 66 In the Netherlands a new war strategy resulted in a re establishment of Spanish power on the north side of the great rivers Meuse and Rhine stepping up the military pressure on the rebel provinces The strategy of a great victory however began to descend into a financial war of attrition the Southern Netherlands still under Spanish control and the Dutch Republic in the north dominated by Calvinist Protestants were both exhausted and after the 1607 financial crisis Spain too was unable to pursue the war Philip III turned to peace negotiations instead with the accession to the throne of James I of England it became possible to terminate both the war and English support to the Dutch with the signature in 1604 of the Treaty of London 68 nbsp Statue of Philip III in Madrid by Giambologna finished by Pietro Tacca 1616 The Twelve Years Truce with the Dutch followed in 1609 which enabled the Southern Netherlands to recover but it was a de facto recognition of the independence of the Dutch Republic and many European powers established diplomatic relations with the Dutch The truce did not stop the commercial and colonial expansion of the Dutch into the Caribbean and the East Indies although Spain had tried to impose the liquidation of the Dutch East India Company as a treaty condition Minor concessions of the Dutch Republic were the scrapping of the plan to create a Dutch West India Company and to stop the harassment of the Portuguese in Asia Both concessions were temporary as the Dutch soon recommenced preying upon Portuguese interests which had already led to the Dutch Portuguese War in 1602 and would continue till 1654 At least with peace in Europe the Twelve Year s truce gave Philip s regime an opportunity to begin to recover its financial position nbsp Portrait by Diego Velazquez detail With the death of Henry IV of France a supporter of the war against Spain a period of instability commenced in the Kingdom of France In a sequence of aggressive policy moves and largely without firm direction from Philip his regional proconsuls of the Duke of Osuna viceroy of Naples and the Marquess of Villafranca the Governor of Milan directed the Spanish policy in Italy that encountered resistance from the Duchy of Savoy and the Republic of Venice To secure the connection between Milan and the Netherlands a new route was opened through Valtellina then part of the independent state of the Three Leagues the present day canton of Graubunden Switzerland and in 1618 the plot of Venice occurred in which the authorities engaged in the persecution of pro Spanish agents Entry to the Thirty Years War Edit In the final years of Philip s reign Spain entered the initial part of the conflict that would become known as the Thirty Years War 1618 48 The result was a decisive Spanish victory in the Holy Roman Empire that would lead to a recommencement of the war with the Dutch shortly after Philip s death Europe was anticipating a fresh election for the position of Emperor upon the likely death of Matthias who was heirless Spain and Austria s common Habsburg ancestry influenced Spain s involvement in the convoluted politics of the Empire on the one hand Philip had a vested interest in the success of his cousin Ferdinand of Bohemia who intended to follow Matthias to the throne on the other Philip had hopes of appointing one of his own family such as Prince Philip to the Imperial throne 69 and worried that a failed bid by Ferdinand might reduce collective Habsburg prestige 70 nbsp The Battle of White Mountain 1620 a triumph for the later foreign policy of Philip IIIPhilip finally chose to intervene behind Ferdinand Prince Philip had been rejected as unacceptable to the German nobility 69 Philip had also been increasingly influenced over the years by first Queen Margaret and later the other powerful Habsburg women at court whilst the incoming set of advisors that replaced de Lerma especially de Zuniga also saw Spain s future as part of a strong alliance with a Habsburg Holy Roman Empire 71 Finally by the Onate treaty of 29 July 1617 Ferdinand made a successful appeal to Philip s self interest by promising Spain the Habsburg lands in Alsace in return for Spanish support for his election 72 Crisis broke out in Ferdinand s kingdom of Bohemia during 1618 19 with a confrontation between Catholic and Protestant factions Ferdinand asked Spain for help to put down the rebellion the Protestant rebels turned to Frederick V of the Palatinate as a new ruler and Emperor The situation in the Empire was in many ways auspicious for Spanish strategy in the Spanish Netherlands Ambrosio Spinola had been conspiring to find an opportunity to intervene with the Army of Flanders into the Electorate of the Palatinate The Palatinate was a vital Protestant set of territories along the Rhine guarding the most obvious route for reinforcements from other Spanish territories to arrive into the rebellious Dutch provinces through Genoa 39 France assumed bound to support Frederick against Ferdinand was in fact inclined to remain neutral 73 The Spanish troops headed by Spinola in the Palatinate and by Johann Tserclaes Count of Tilly in Bohemia achieved a decisive victory against the Czechs in the Battle of White Mountain in 1620 With the Dutch now vulnerable to a strike through the Rhine valley a renewed war against the Provinces with the aim of forcing the Dutch to a more suitable permanent peace appeared inevitable Philip died in 1621 shortly before the recommencement of war his son Philip IV retained his chief foreign policy advisor de Zuniga and an initially highly successful campaign against the Dutch began the same year Colonial policy EditChile Edit nbsp Armour of Philip IIIIn the Americas Philip inherited a difficult situation in Chile where the Arauco War raged and the local Mapuche succeeded in razing seven Spanish cities 1598 1604 An estimate by Alonso Gonzalez de Najera put the toll at 3 000 Spanish settlers killed and 500 Spanish women taken into captivity by Mapuche 74 In retaliation the proscription against enslaving Indians captured in war was lifted by Philip in 1608 75 76 This decree was abused when Spanish settlers in Chiloe Archipelago used it to justify slave raids against groups such as the Chono of northwestern Patagonia who had never been under Spanish rule and never rebelled 77 Jesuit missionary Luis de Valdivia believed the Mapuche could be voluntarily converted to Christianity only if there was peace 78 79 To diminish hostilities Valdivia proposed a Defensive War in a letter to Philip The king supported the idea issuing a decree that established the Defensive War as an official policy in 1612 80 By the time Defensive War was established war between Spanish and Mapuche had been going on for 70 years 80 These policies were not without criticism Maestre de campo and corregidor of Concepcion Santiago de Tesillo claimed the Defensive War gave the Mapuche a much needed respite to replenish their forces that should have been denied 81 The Real Audiencia of Santiago opined in the 1650s that slavery of Mapuches was one of the reasons for constant state of war between the Spanish and the Mapuche 82 Legacy Edit nbsp Philip III s tomb between those of his grandfather father and sonPhilip III died in Madrid on 31 March 1621 and was succeeded by his son Philip IV who rapidly completed the process of removing the last elements of the Sandoval family regime from court The story told in the memoirs of the French ambassador Bassompierre that he was killed by the heat of a brasero a pan of hot charcoal because the proper official to take it away was not at hand is a humorous exaggeration of the formal etiquette of the court citation needed Philip has generally left a poor legacy with historians Three major historians of the period have described an undistinguished and insignificant man 34 a miserable monarch 83 whose only virtue appeared to reside in a total absence of vice 84 More generally Philip has largely retained the reputation of a weak dim witted monarch who preferred hunting and traveling to governing 85 Unlike Philip IV whose reputation has improved significantly in the light of recent analysis Philip III s reign has been relatively unstudied possibly because of the negative interpretation given to the role of Philip and Lerma during the period 85 Traditionally the decline of Spain has been placed from the 1590s onwards revisionist historians from the 1960s however presented an alternative analysis arguing that in many ways Philip III s Spain of 1621 reinforced with new territories in Alsace at peace with France dominant in the Holy Roman Empire and about to begin a successful campaign against the Dutch was in a much stronger position than in 1598 despite the poor personal performance of her king during the period 86 Philip s use of Lerma as his valido has formed one of the key historical and contemporary criticisms against him recent work 87 has perhaps begun to present a more nuanced picture of the relationship and the institution that survived for the next forty years in Spanish royal government Family tree EditLike many Habsburgs Philip III was the product of extensive inbreeding His father Philip II a product of marriage between first cousins married his niece Anna of Austria herself the product of a cousin couple Philip III in turn married his first cousin once removed Margaret of Austria This pattern would continue in the next generation ultimately culminating in the end of the Spanish Habsburg line in the person of Philip s feeble grandson Charles II Ancestors of Philip III and his relationship with his wifeFerdinand IIKing of Aragon1452 1516Isabella IQueen of Castile1451 1504Manuel IKing of Portugal1469 1521Mariaof Aragon1482 1517JoannaQueen of Castile i ii iii 1479 1555Philip IKing of Castile i ii iii 1478 1506Isabellaof Portugal iv v 1503 39Charles VHoly Roman Emperor iv v 1500 58Ferdinand IHoly Roman Emperor vi vii viii 1503 64Annaof Bohemiaand Hungary vi vii viii 1503 47Mariaof Spain ix 1528 1603Maximilian IIHoly Roman Emperor ix 1527 76Annaof Austria x 1528 90Philip IIKing of Spain xi 1527 98Annaof Austria xi 1549 80Charles IIArchduke of Austria xii xiii 1540 90Maria Annaof Bavaria xii xiii 1551 1608Philip IIIKing of Spain xiv xv 1578 1621Margaretof Austria xiv xv 1584 1611Notes a b Charles V Holy Roman Emperor at the Encyclopaedia Britannica a b Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Joanna Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 15 11th ed Cambridge University Press a b Wurzbach Constantin von ed 1860 Habsburg Elisabeth eigentlich Isabella von Oesterreich Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire in German Vol 6 p 167 via Wikisource a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names editors list link a b Kurth Godefroid 1911 Philip II In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 12 New York Robert Appleton Company a b Wurzbach Constantin von ed 1861 Habsburg Maria von Spanien Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire in German Vol 7 p 19 via Wikisource a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names editors list link a b Wurzbach Constantin von ed 1860 Habsburg Karl II von Steiermark Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire in German Vol 6 p 352 via Wikisource a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names editors list link a b Press Volker 1990 Maximilian II Neue Deutsche Biographie in German vol 16 Berlin Duncker amp Humblot pp 471 475 full text online a b Wurzbach Constantin von ed 1860 Habsburg Anna von Oesterreich 1528 1587 Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire in German Vol 6 p 151 via Wikisource a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names editors list link a b Wurzbach Constantin von ed 1860 Habsburg Anna von Oesterreich Konigin von Spanien Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire in German Vol 6 p 151 via Wikisource a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names editors list link Sigmund Ritter von Riezler 1897 Wilhelm V Herzog von Bayern Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie ADB in German vol 42 Leipzig Duncker amp Humblot pp 717 723 a b Wurzbach Constantin von ed 1861 Habsburg Philipp III Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire in German Vol 7 p 120 via Wikisource a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names editors list link a b Eder Karl 1961 Ferdinand II Neue Deutsche Biographie in German vol 5 Berlin Duncker amp Humblot pp 83 85 full text online a b Wurzbach Constantin von ed 1861 Habsburg Margaretha Konigin von Spanien Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire in German Vol 7 p 13 via Wikisource a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names editors list link a b Wurzbach Constantin von ed 1861 Habsburg Maria Anna von Spanien Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire in German Vol 7 p 23 via Wikisource a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names editors list link a b Wurzbach Constantin von ed 1861 Habsburg Philipp IV Biographisches Lexikon des Kaiserthums Oesterreich Biographical Encyclopedia of the Austrian Empire in German Vol 7 p 122 via Wikisource a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names editors list link Family EditPhilip married Margaret of Austria his first cousin once removed They had 8 children five of whom survived to adulthood citation needed Name Birth Death NotesBy Margaret of Austria 25 December 1584 3 October 1611 married in 1599 Anne 22 September 1601 20 January 1666 Queen of France Married Louis XIIIMaria 1 February 1603 1 March 1603 Died youngPhilip IV 8 April 1605 17 September 1665 King of Spain Married 1 Elisabeth of France 1602 1644 and 2 Mariana of AustriaMaria Anna 18 August 1606 13 May 1646 Holy Roman Empress Married Ferdinand III Holy Roman EmperorCharles 15 September 1607 30 July 1632 Died unmarriedFerdinand 16 May 1609 9 November 1641 A CardinalMargaret 24 May 1610 11 March 1617 Died youngAfonso 22 September 1611 16 September 1612 Died youngSee also EditPalacio de la RiberaReferences Edit Stradling p 9 Wedgwood p 55 Stradling p 18 Elliott 1963 pp 300 301 a b c Feros p 16 a b c Feros p 17 a b c Feros p 19 a b c Williams p 38 Sanchez p 101 a b Williams p 39 a b Sanchez p 91 a b Sanchez p 98 Sanchez p 99 a b c Sanchez p 100 a b c Sanchez p 97 Williams p 35 a b Williams p 34 Munck p 49 Mattingly p 74 Tuck p 121 Tuck p 122 Williams pp 47 8 Williams p 42 Feros p 112 a b Williams p 104 a b Feros p 113 Williams p 105 a b Feros p 110 Williams p 9 Feros pp 117 8 Feros p 133 a b Williams p 10 a b Polisensky p 127 a b Wedgwood p 55 In reality the Archdukes outlived Philip resulting in the reunification occurring under his son Philip IV Williams p 127 Williams p 128 Williams pp 126 7 a b Wedgwood pp 113 4 Parker 1984 p 153 4 a b Williams p 245 a b Williams p 241 Williams p 242 Parker 1984 p 146 Zagorin pp 3 4 Parker 1984 p 61 Cruz p 177 a b c Parker 1984 p 150 Zagorin p 15 Perry p 133 Perry p 148 Perry p 157 De Maddalena p 286 Parker 1985 p 235 Parker 1984 p 147 Parker 1984 pp 146 7 a b c d e Munck p 51 a b Thompson p 189 Kamen 1991 p 200 Cruz p 102 Cruz p 103 Parker 1984 pp 147 8 Parker 1984 p 148 a b Munck p 50 Kamen p 214 a b c Williams p 125 See Goodman 2002 for a thorough account of this revival Parker 2004 p 212 a b Wedgwood p 75 Wedgwood p 89 Ringrose p 320 Wedgwood p 57 Wedgwood p 110 1 Guzman Carmen Luz 2013 Las cautivas de las Siete Ciudades El cautiverio de mujeres hispanocriollas durante la Guerra de Arauco en la perspectiva de cuatro cronistas s XVII The captives of the Seven Cities The captivity of hispanic creole women during the Arauco s War from the insight of four chroniclers 17th century Intus Legere Historia in Spanish 7 1 77 97 doi 10 15691 07176864 2014 0 94 inactive 1 August 2023 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of August 2023 link Philip III had taken the drastic step of stripping indigenous rebels of the customary royal protection against enslavement in 1608 thus making Chile one of the few parts of the empire where slave taking was entirely legal Resendez Andres The Other Slavery The Uncovered Story of Indian Enslavement in America pp 127 128 Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Kindle Edition Valenzuela Marquez Jaime 2009 Esclavos mapuches Para una historia del secuestro y deportacion de indigenas en la colonia In Gaune Rafael Lara Martin eds Historias de racismo y discriminacion en Chile in Spanish pp 231 233 Urbina Burgos Rodolfo 2007 El pueblo chono de vagabundo y pagano a cristiano y sedentario mestizado Orbis incognitvs avisos y legados del Nuevo Mundo PDF in Spanish Huelva Universidad de Huelva pp 325 346 ISBN 9788496826243 Pinto Rodriguez Jorge 1993 Jesuitas Franciscanos y Capuchinos italianos en la Araucania 1600 1900 Revista Complutense de Historia de America in Spanish 19 109 147 Misioneros y mapuche 1600 1818 Memoria Chilena in Spanish Biblioteca Nacional de Chile Retrieved 30 January 2014 a b Guerra Defensiva Memoria Chilena in Spanish Biblioteca Nacional de Chile Retrieved 3 August 2019 Baraibar Alvaro 2013 Chile como un Flandes indiano en las cronicas de los siglos VI y VII Revista Chilena de Literatura in Spanish 85 Archived from the original on 26 January 2017 Retrieved 30 January 2016 Barros Arana Diego 2000 1884 Historia General de Chile in Spanish Vol IV 2 ed Santiago Chile Editorial Universitaria p 341 ISBN 956 11 1535 2 Stradling p 18 Elliott 1963 pp 300 301 a b Sanchez p 92 Parker 1984 p 145 In particular Feros 2006 and Williams 2006 recent extensive studies of the period and Sanchez s 1996 analysis of the role of powerful women often under reported in historical documents at Philip s court Bibliography EditCarter Charles H The Nature of Spanish Government After Philip II Historian 26 1 1963 1 18 online Cipolla Carlo M ed The Fontana Economic History of Europe The Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries London Fontana 1974 Cruz Anne J Discourses of Poverty Social Reform and the Picaresque Novel Toronto University of Toronto Press 1999 Davenport Frances G European Treaties Bearing on the History of the United States and Its Dependencies The Lawbook Exchange Ltd 2004 Elliott J H Imperial Spain 1469 1716 London Penguin 1963 Feros Antonio Kingship and Favouritism in the Spain of Philip III 1598 1621 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2006 Goodman David Spanish Naval Power 1589 1665 Reconstruction and Defeat Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2002 Kamen Henry Spain 1469 1714 A Society of Conflict Harlow Pearson Education 2005 Harvey Leonard Patrick Muslims in Spain 1500 1614 Chicago University of Chicago Press 2005 Hoffman Philip T and Kathyrn Norberg eds Fiscal Crises Liberty and Representative Government 1450 1789 Stanford University Press 2001 Lynch John Spain Under the Habsburgs vol 2 Spain and America 1959 online pp 14 61 De Maddalena Aldo Rural Europe 1500 1750 in Cipolla ed 1974 Mattingly Garrett The Armada New York Mariner Books 2005 Munck Thomas Seventeenth Century Europe 1598 1700 London Macmillan 1990 Parker Geoffrey Europe in Crisis 1598 1648 London Fontana 1984 Parker Geoffrey The Dutch Revolt London Pelican Books 1985 Parker Geoffrey The Army of Flanders and the Spanish Road 1567 1659 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2004 Perry Mary Elizabeth The Handless Maiden Moriscos and the politics of religion in early modern Spain Princeton Princeton University Press 2005 Polisensky J V The Thirty Years War London NEL 1971 Ringrose David Spain Europe and the Spanish Miracle 1700 1900 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1998 Sanchez Magdalena S Pious and Political Images of a Habsburg Woman at the Court of Philip III 1598 1621 in Sanchez and Saint Saens eds 1996 Sanchez Magdalena S and Alain Saint Saens eds Spanish women in the golden age images and realities Greenwood Publishing Group 1996 Stradling R A Philip IV and the Government of Spain 1621 1665 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1988 Thompson I A A Castile Constitionalism and Liberty in Hoffman and Norburg eds 2001 Wedgwood C V The Thirty Years War London Methuen 1981 Williams Patrick The Great Favourite the Duke of Lerma and the court and government of Philip III of Spain 1598 1621 Manchester Manchester University Press 2006 Zagorin Perez Rebels and Rulers 1500 1660 Volume II Provincial rebellion Revolutionary civil wars 1560 1660 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1992 Further reading Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Philip III of Spain Philip III of Spain Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol XVIII 9th ed 1885 p 746 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Philip III king of Spain Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 21 11th ed Cambridge University Press See also Paul C Allen Philip III and the Pax Hispanica The Failure of Grand Strategy Yale UP 2000 for an extensive discussion of the foreign policy of Philip III Allen s is a revisionist work that also argues for a greater role played in international affairs by the Council of State and its leaders in this period rather than by Lerma Philip III of SpainHouse of HabsburgBorn 14 April 1578 Died 31 March 1621Regnal titlesPreceded byPhilip II of Spain King of Spain Portugal Sardinia Naples and Sicily Duke of Milan1598 1621 Succeeded byPhilip IV of SpainSpanish royaltyPreceded byDiego Prince of Asturias1582 98 Succeeded byPhilipPrince of Portugal1582 98 Succeeded byAnne Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Philip III of Spain amp oldid 1171743716, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.