Charles III (r. 1759-88), Spain's enlightened despot…
1756 CE to 1767 CE
Charles III (r. 1759-88), Spain's enlightened despot par excellence, had served his royal apprenticeship as king of Naples.
He is one of Europe's most active patrons of the Enlightenment, a period during which attempts are made to reform society through the application of reason to political, social, and economic problems.
Despite Charles's attempt to reform the economy, the impact of the Enlightenment is essentially negative.
Anticlericalism is an integral part of Enlightenment ideology, but it is carried to greater lengths in Spain than elsewhere in Europe because of government sponsorship.
Public charities financed by the church are considered antisocial because they are thought to discourage initiative, and they were therefore abolished.
The state suppresses monasteries and confiscates their property.
The Jesuits, outspoken opponents of regalism, are expelled.
Their expulsion virtually cripples higher education in Spain.
The state also bans the teachings of medieval philosophers and of the sixteenth-century Jesuit political theorists who had argued for the ' 'divine right of the people' ' over their kings.
The government employs the Inquisition to discipline antiregalist clerics.