Cortes and parliamentary regulations: the controversy of their creation in the liberal Spain (1810-1864)

Authors

  • Juan Ignacio Marcuello Benedicto Universidad Autónoma de Madrid

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17811/hc.v0i14.372

Keywords:

Parliamentary Regulations, Constitutional and Parliamentary History, Cortes nineteenth century, Constitutional Monarchy, Parliamentary System

Abstract

The principal main of this article is to study the origins and development of the special competence of the Spanish Parliament in order to create autonomously its own Regulation, since the formation of the 1.812’s political system until the fullness of Isabel II’s Constitutional Monarchy. The article emphasizes in the controversy related with this competence of the Parliament, strongly rejected by the authoritarian conservative sectors, -monarchist of Viluma Marquis in the politic reform process (1.845), Constitutional Projects of Bravo Murillo (1.852) and the Constitutional Reform Law (1.857)-. This controversy is related too with the resistances within the liberal conservative about the possible evolution to a Parliamentary Monarchy.

Fecha envío / Submission date:26/09/2012

Fecha de aceptación / Acceptance date:  03/01/2013

Author Biography

Juan Ignacio Marcuello Benedicto, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid

Profesor Titular de Historia Contemporánea en la Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. Acreditado al cuerpo de Catedráticos de Universidad por el Consejo de Universidades. Su línea de investigación se centra en el campo de la Historia constitucional y parlamentaria de la España del siglo XIX. Autor, entre otros, de los libros monográficos, La práctica parlamentaria en el reinado de Isabel II (Madrid 1.986) y La Constitución de 1.845 (Madrid 2.007), junto a diversos artículos y estudios sobre la Corona, Cortes y vertebración de la Monarquía constitucional en los reinados de Fernando VII e Isabel II.

Issue

Section

Spain: XVIIIth-XXth Centuries