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Topic: Carlos, Conde de Montemolin


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In the News (Wed 15 Feb 12)

  
  Mid-nineteenth Century Spain Encyclopedia Article @ Sorely.net   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Carlos, however, was a reactionary and an authoritarian who desired the restoration of the traditional moralism of the Spanish state, the elimination of any traces of constitutionalism, and a close relationship with the Roman Catholic Church.
Carlos disputed the legitimacy of Maria Christina's regency and the accession of her daughter, and declared himself to be the rightful heir to the Spanish throne.
Carlos Maria Isidro, Infante of Spain, the leader of the Carlist cause and pretender to the Spanish throne.
www.sorely.net /encyclopedia/Mid-nineteenth_century_Spain   (6868 words)

  
 Carlos - HighBeam Encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
CARLOS [Carlos] (Carlos María Isidro de Borbón), 1788-1855, second son of Charles IV of Spain.
A conservative and a devout Catholic, he was supported by the clerical party when he refused to recognize Isabella, daughter of his brother, Ferdinand VII, as successor to the Spanish throne.
CARLOS DELGADO: Star has big contract, humble outlook: The newest Marlin comes from modest beginnings in Puerto Rico that shaped his life and attitude, and gave him a quiet humility that he has kept.
www.encyclopedia.com /doc/1E1-carloss1p.html   (360 words)

  
 Spain
The geographical boundaries of Spain are: on the north, the Pyrenees, the Republic of Andorra, and the Bay of Biscay (known in Spain as Mar Cantabrico, or "Cantabrian Sea"); on the east, the Mediterranean; on the south, the Mediterranean, the Straits of Gibraltar and the Atlantic; on the west, Portugal and the Atlantic.
A second restoration began gloriously with Ferdinand (Fernando) I, who assembled the Council of Coyanza (Valencia de Don Juan), obtained from the King of Seville the relics of St. Isidore, which were translated to León, and fostered the Churches of Coimbra, León, Santiago, and Oviedo, and the monasteries of Oña, Arlanza and Sahagún.
Don Jusaph de Ecija administered the revenues of Alfonso XI, and Samuel Leví was chief favourite of Pedro the Cruel.
www.catholicity.com /encyclopedia/s/spain.html   (18077 words)

  
 carlists
Miguel Primo de Rivera's dictatorship (1923–1930) was opposed, but ambiguously viewed by Carlism; which, as most parties, entered a period of slumber, only to be awakened by the coming of the Second Republic in 1931.
As of 2002 Carlos Hugo donated their House's archives to the Archivo Histórico Nacional, which was protested by his brother Sixtus Henry and by all Carlist factions.
In 1960, Jaime de Borbón (Juan's eldest brother) proclaimed himself as Carlist Head (as "King Jaime IV of Spain"), as he claimed to be senior male by primogeniture of the dynasty.
www.hondparts.com /wiki/?title=Carlists   (3535 words)

  
 Carlism - Biocrawler   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
He landed in San Carlos de La Rápita (Tarragona), but was quickly detained, and forced to abdicate his rights.
After Alfonso Carlos' death, dynastic seniority — after the Salic law — fell upon Alfonso XIII, former constitutional King of Spain and then in exile at Rome, therefore, at least in theory, ending the family split.
Alfonso Carlos had named in 1936 Prince Francis Xavier of Borbón-Parma as regent, as he was the nearest Bourbon who shared the Carlist ideals.
www.biocrawler.com /encyclopedia/Carlism   (3365 words)

  
 Bourbon - LoveToKnow 1911   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
The fourth in direct descent from Louis of Vendome was Antoine de Bourbon, who in 15 4 8 married Jeanne d'Albret, heiress of Navarre, and became king of Navarre in 1554.
Egalite's son, Louis Philippe, was king of the French from 1830 to 1848; his grandson, Louis Philippe, comte de Paris (1838-1894), inherited on the death of the comte de Chambord the rights of that prince to the throne of France, and was called by the royalists Philip VII.
The nephew of the latter, Don Carlos Maria Juan Isidor, duke of Madrid, for some years carried on war in Spain with the object of attaining the rights contended for by the Carlist party.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /Bourbon   (1508 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Carlos, second son of Charles IV of Spain (Spanish And Portuguese History, Biography) - Encyclopedia
Carlos, second son of Charles IV of Spain, Spanish And Portuguese History, Biographies
Carlos (Carlos MarIa Isidro de BorbOn), 1788–1855, second son of Charles IV of Spain.
Defeated in 1839, he escaped to France and renounced his claim in favor of his son, Don Carlos, conde de MontemolIn.
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/C/CarlosSp.html   (247 words)

  
 Carlists - HighBeam Encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Ferdinand's brother, Don Carlos, refused to recognize Isabella and claimed the throne.
Don Carlos's son, Don Carlos, conde de Montemolín (1818-61), made an unsuccessful attempt at a new uprising in 1860.
Montemolín's claims were revived by his nephew, Don Carlos, duque de Madrid (1848-1909), after the deposition (1868) of Isabella.
www.encyclopedia.com /doc/1E1-carlists.html   (408 words)

  
 CARLOS, DON (1788-1855) - Online Information article about CARLOS, DON (1788-1855)
French intervention in 1823, Don Carlos continued to behave as the affectionate brother and loyal subject of Ferdinand VII.
Don Carlos remained in Spain till the defeat of his party, and then escaped to France on the 14th of September 1839.
Cologne, the count of Montemolin publicly retracted his renunication on the 15th of June, on the ignominious ground that it had been extorted by fear, Montemolin and his brother Ferdinand died within a fortnight of one another in January 1861 without issue.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /CAR_CAU/CARLOS_DON_1788_1855_.html   (1864 words)

  
 The Bourbons   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Its members were descended from Louis I, duc de Bourbon from 1327 to 1342, the grandson of the French king Louis IX (ruled 1226-70).
and of Conti, was descended from Louis, prince de Condé, one of Henry IV's uncles.
This meant that the sonless Ferdinand could be succeeded not by his brother Don Carlos conde de Molina but by his elder daughter Isabella (born after the revocation); and though Ferdinand temporarily reinstated the Salic Law in September 1832, he revoked it again 13 days later.
history-world.org /bourbons.htm   (1833 words)

  
 spanish history - spanish villa - property - spain - discount - cheap
The conservative and theocratic tendencies of Carlos and the promise of regional autonomy appealed to his rural base.
The claims of Carlos were revived by his son Don Carlos, Conde de Montemolin.
One of the main stumbling blocks to Franco appointing king Juan Carlos as his successor was opposition from the Carlist faction.
www.fiestasiesta.co.uk /history/carlist_wars.html   (375 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Carlists (Spanish And Portuguese History) - Encyclopedia
Don Carlos's son, Don Carlos, conde de MontemolIn (1818–61), made an unsuccessful attempt at a new uprising in 1860.
MontemolIn's claims were revived by his nephew, Don Carlos, duque de Madrid (1848–1909), after the deposition (1868) of Isabella.
Two insurrections (1869, 1872) failed, but after the abdication (1873) of King Amadeus and the proclamation of the first republic, the Carlists seized most of the Basque Provs.
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/C/Carlists.html   (413 words)

  
 Spain
He opposed the powerful Spanish minister Manuel de Godoy (1767-1851), who, after the death of Ferdinand's first wife in 1806, tried to force the marriage of the prince to a daughter of the late Louis XVI of France.
She was made heir apparent by a decree that set aside the Salic Law forbidding the succession of a woman, and ascended the throne on the death of her father in 1833, her mother Maria Christina being appointed queen regent.
An insurrection in favor of her uncle, Don Carlos, raged with great violence until the Carlists were defeated in 1839.
website.lineone.net /~johnbidmead/Spain.htm   (6847 words)

  
 CARLOS IV DE BOURBON KING OF SPAIN DESCENDANTS : 9 GENERATIONS   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Carlos IV de Borbón, prince de Tarente, prince des Asturies (1759-1788), rey de España (1788-1808), born on 12 November 1748, Portici - palais royal de Portici (Napoli), baptized on 15 November 1748, died on 19 January 1819, Napoli - palais royal de Napoli (age at death: 70 years old).
Carlos, born on 19 September 1771, Escorial, baptized on 19 September 1771, died on 7 March 1774, buried, panthéon des enfants, Escorial (age at death: 2 years old).
Carlos I, duque de Bragança, rei de Portugal (34th, 1889-1909), Herzog von Sachsen, born in 1863, murdered on 1 February 1908 (age at death: 45 years old).
www.suttonclonard.com /ZZ_DesCarlosIVBorbon.htm   (5081 words)

  
 Namnlöst dokument   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Ferdinand's brother Carlos did not accept the change of the successional laws made by Ferdinand and declared himself to be King Carlos V. Carlos V
Instead he proclaimed himself as King Carlos V. He married Maria Francisca de Asis de Braganza on September 22, 1816 (she died on August 28, 1834).
Parents: Carlos V and Maria Francisca de Asis de Braganza.
www.warholm.nu /Spancarlist.html   (316 words)

  
 The Ultimate Carlism Dog Breeds Information Guide and Reference
The radical branch of the absolutists (or royalists), known as the Apostólicos, looked upon the heir presumptive, Infante Carlos Maria Isidro as his natural head, as he was profoundly devout and, specially after 1820, staunch anti-liberal.
In 1827, Catalonia was shaken by the rebellion of the Agreugats/Agraviados ("the Grievous"), an ultra-absolutist movement, which, for a time, controlled great parts of the region.
But according to the theory of legitimacy in exercise, many Carlists thought that Alfonso XIII and his heir Juan de Borbón where radically disqualified to head the "Cause".
www.dogluvers.com /dog_breeds/Carlism   (3186 words)

  
 Carlos, second son of Charles IV of Spain — FactMonster.com
Carlos, second son of Charles IV of Spain — FactMonster.com
Carlos (Carlos María Isidro de Borbón), 1788–1855, second son of Charles IV of Spain.
A conservative and a devout Catholic, he was supported by the clerical party when he refused to recognize Isabella, daughter of his brother,
www.factmonster.com /ce6/people/A0810465.html   (104 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Radical and sweeping reforms were introduced and carried through by Señor La Cierva.
He began by reorganizing the protectorate, giving it a more numerous and better qualified personnel, creating the "Junta Superior de Beneficencia" to assist the Protectorate, and constituting a special bureau for the management of expenditures, liquidations, and savings effected by it in favour of the charitable institutions.
Another measure was the formation of archives, provincial and municipal, with corresponding indexes, giving a great deal of correct, though incomplete, statistics, to serve as a basis for the knowledge of the work done in behalf of charity, the number, capital, and patronage of the various charitable institutions.
www.catholicity.com /encyclopedia/s/spain.htm   (19138 words)

  
 Columbia Encyclopedia- Carlos - AOL Research & Learn
Columbia Encyclopedia- Carlos - AOL Research & Learn
(Carlos María Isidro de Borbón), 1788–1855, second son of Charles IV of Spain.
In a rare celestial event, the planet Mercury will transit across the face of the sun Nov. 8.
reference.aol.com /columbia/_a/carlos/20051205210509990037   (133 words)

  
 ► » CARLISM   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
WI any of the Carlist pretenders--Carlos Maria Isidro, the Conde de
Montemolin, Carlos Maria de los Dolores--had succeeded in defeating
If this is true, then Carlos' best chance was for his brother to die that
www.ipsomet.com /CARLISM-2527005.html   (398 words)

  
 spain
1i) Elena Maria Isabella Dominica Infanta of Spain, Duquesa de Lugo (b.Madrid
Nicolas de Haro y Fernández de Córdoba (b.Seville
Isabel de Esteban y de Iranzo, Cdsa de Esteban (Madrid 6 Jun 1894-Madrid 14 Nov 1964)
pages.prodigy.net /ptheroff/gotha/spain.html   (4418 words)

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