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Ferdinand VII King of Spain, 17841833 (aged 48 years)

Name
Ferdinand VII // King of Spain
Given names
Ferdinand VII
Name suffix
King of Spain
Family with parents
father
mother
himself
17841833
Birth: 14 October 1784 36 33 San Lorenzo de El Escorial, Community of Madrid, Spain
Death: 29 September 1833Madrid, Community of Madrid, Spain
4 years
younger brother
Family with Maria Christina of Naples
himself
17841833
Birth: 14 October 1784 36 33 San Lorenzo de El Escorial, Community of Madrid, Spain
Death: 29 September 1833Madrid, Community of Madrid, Spain
partner
daughter
18301904
Birth: 1830 45 24 Madrid, Community of Madrid, Spain
Death: 1904
Birth
Address: El Escorial, San Lorenzo de El Escorial, Community of Madrid, Spain.
Birth of a brother
Death of a paternal grandfather
Death of a mother
Death of a father
Birth of a daughter
Death
Last change
11 November 202209:28:08
Author of last change: Danny
Note

Ferdinand VII (1784-1833), king of Spain (1808 and 1814-33), whose reign
was one of the most disastrous in Spanish history.

Born in the Escorial, near Madrid, on October 14, 1784, Ferdinand was the
son of Charles IV. 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. When Ferdinand instead proposed to a niece of Napoleon,
Godoy persuaded Charles to arrest his son for pLotting to overthrow him.
Exploiting the situation, Napoleon invaded Spain. When a mob stormed the
royal palace, demanding the Death of Godoy, the king, wholly dependent on
his minister, abdicated in favor of Ferdinand. Napoleon, However, had
other plans. Intending the Spanish crown for his Brother, Joseph
Bonaparte, he invited Ferdinand to France, where he imprisoned him and
forced him to return the throne to his father. Charles IV then
obsequiously presented the Spanish crown to the French emperor. Ferdinand
remained a prisoner until 1813, when Napoleon, after the Peninsular War,
realized that Spain was lost to him. He then released Ferdinand, who
reascended the throne in 1814.

Ferdinand's rule was harsh and oppressive. In 1820, after several revolts,
a full-scale revolution Broke out, instigated by liberal elements and
aided by the army. The liberal constitution of 1812, which the king had
set aside, was restored, and Ferdinand was imprisoned. In 1823, However,
the Holy Alliance sent a powerful French army to Spain, which restored
Ferdinand to the throne. In 1829 Ferdinand married his fourth wife, Maria
Christina of Naples (1806-78). Under her influence he abolished (1830) the
pragmatic sanction of the Salic Law, which passed succession to the
Spanish throne through males of the royal family. This act deprived
Ferdinand's Brother, Don Carlos (1788-1855), of the throne and later led
to years of civil war. On Ferdinand's Death in Madrid on September 29,
1833, his daughter, Isabella II, was proclaimed queen, with her mother,
Maria Christina, as regent.

During Ferdinand's reign, Spain lost its colonies in North and South
America (except for Cuba and Puerto Rico) and suffered great loss of
prestige as a European power.