Corte y Monarquía en la Europa del siglo XIXIntroducción

  1. Ángeles Lario
  2. Raquel Sánchez
Libro:
La Historia: lost in translation?
  1. Damián A. González Madrid (coord.)
  2. Manuel Ortiz Heras (coord.)
  3. Juan Sisinio Pérez Garzón Cuenca (coord.)

Editorial: Ediciones de la Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha ; Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha

ISBN: 978-84-9044-265-4

Año de publicación: 2017

Páginas: 211-214

Congreso: Asociación de Historia Contemporánea. Congreso (13. 2016. Albacete)

Tipo: Aportación congreso

Resumen

The monarchy was determinant in the political conformation of the contemporary Europe. His permanency in the liberal revolutions did necessarily to create a "constitutional suit" that one could adapt to his characteristics. This one was the parliamentary government that separated since then America, whit Presidencial System, from Europe, whit Parliamentary System. The position of the king remained established by the Constitution and the doctrine, but the monarchy had to go away adapting slowly also in his internal live to his new position in the Contemporary State, in which it was stopping having of potestas but having of auctoritas, with a symbolic power associated with the nation that was demanding an extreme tidiness in his behaviors and relations. Thus, it was becoming necessary to limit the scope of the network of court influences surrounding the crown.