Spain, Bourbon Kingdom (second restoration) of
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1874 CE to 1931 CE
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Micronesia (1828–1971 CE)
Empires, War, and the Long Road to Self-Determination
Geography & Environmental Context
Micronesia comprises two fixed subregions:
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West Micronesia: the Mariana Islands (including Guam and Saipan) and the Caroline Islands (Palau, Yap, Chuuk, Pohnpei, Kosrae).
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East Micronesia: the Marshall Islands, Kiribati (Gilbert Islands), and outlying eastern Carolines.
Together they form a constellation of volcanic high islands, coral atolls, and low reef platforms spread across millions of square kilometers of the western and central Pacific. Each relied on fragile freshwater lenses, breadfruit and coconut groves, and rich reef fisheries.
Climate & Environmental Shifts
Tropical trade winds and the oscillating El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) produced alternating droughts and heavy rains. Cyclones occasionally destroyed breadfruit and coconut trees; droughts threatened taro pits on atolls. Colonial copra plantations and wartime construction damaged fragile ecosystems. In the mid-20th century, U.S. nuclear testing in the Marshalls (1946–58) contaminated land and sea, while population displacement and coastal erosion worsened under new infrastructure and population pressure.
Subsistence & Settlement
Traditional horticulture—taro, breadfruit, pandanus, bananas, and coconuts—remained central. Fishing and inter-atoll exchange provided protein and salt. Colonial rule reoriented economies toward copra and later wage labor:
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Spanish rule lingered until the late 19th century, followed by German administration (1899–1914) emphasizing copra.
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Japanese mandate (1914–1944) industrialized sugar, fishing, and shipping networks, and established schools, ports, and airfields, drawing Japanese settlers to Saipan, Palau, and Chuuk.
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After World War II, the United States Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands (TTPI, 1947) unified most of Micronesia under U.N. mandate, bringing cash employment, U.S. education, and aid dependence.
Technology & Material Culture
Indigenous canoe and navigation traditions persisted in parts of Yap, Palau, and the Marshalls. Missions and colonial governments introduced iron tools, printed cloth, and concrete housing. Japanese period architecture—sugar mills, piers, and warehouses—left enduring marks. After 1945, U.S. administration introduced radios, diesel generators, prefabricated schools, and modern shipping. Traditional arts—canoe carving, weaving, shell ornament—continued, increasingly as symbols of identity.
Movement & Interaction Corridors
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Maritime networks: Islanders maintained canoe routes linking atolls for kinship and trade; colonial steamers later replaced them.
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Labor migration: Men traveled to work on plantations, ships, and military bases; after WWII, educational and labor programs sent Micronesians to Guam, Hawai‘i, and the continental U.S.
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Military geography: The islands formed a key Pacific battleground during WWII—Guam, Saipan, Palau, and the Marshalls endured fierce fighting. Postwar bases at Kwajalein, Guam, and Yap tied the region to Cold War strategy.
Cultural & Symbolic Expressions
Christianity—Catholic and Protestant—became dominant but intertwined with traditional cosmologies. Oral histories, navigation chants, and lineage rituals survived under mission influence. Japanese schools spread literacy before 1945; after 1947, U.S. schooling in English created a new educated elite. Political identity coalesced through the Congress of Micronesia (1965), foreshadowing later independence movements.
Environmental Adaptation & Resilience
Atoll dwellers preserved breadfruit fermentation and inter-island reciprocity to withstand famine. After cyclones, communities replanted coconuts and taro and relied on church networks for relief. Environmental knowledge of winds, reefs, and tides remained central even as modern technology arrived. In the nuclear-test zones of Bikini and Enewetak, displaced islanders rebuilt new villages on distant atolls, maintaining cohesion through shared rituals and appeals for restitution.
Political & Military Shocks
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Colonial succession: Spain → Germany → Japan → United States.
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World War II: Devastation from battles at Saipan, Palau, Truk Lagoon, and Tarawa; massive civilian displacement.
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Nuclear testing: Bikini and Enewetak atolls (1946–58) used for U.S. weapons tests, displacing populations and spreading radiation.
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Postwar governance: The Trust Territory (1947) placed Micronesia under U.S. administration with U.N. oversight; by the 1960s, local legislatures and constitutional conventions moved toward self-government.
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Strategic islands: Guam and Saipan integrated as U.S. territories; Palau and the Marshalls negotiated special compacts; Kiribati moved toward British-led independence (achieved 1979).
Transition
Between 1828 and 1971, Micronesia journeyed from missionized atolls and colonial plantations to a fragmented constellation of Cold War dependencies and emerging nations. The 19th century brought European and Japanese imperial control; World War II brought devastation; the U.S. Trust Territory introduced education and aid but also dependency and nuclear trauma. Through it all, Micronesian societies retained core resilience—canoe voyaging, clan solidarity, and spiritual reciprocity with land and sea. By 1971, the region stood poised for decolonization, its people navigating between the legacies of empire and the assertion of renewed island sovereignty.
Southeast Asia (1828–1971 CE)
Colonial Grids, Island Arcs, and the Long March to Independence
Geography & Environmental Context
Southeast Asia in this framework comprises two fixed subregions:
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Southeastern Asia: the Indochinese peninsula (Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam), the Malay Peninsula, and the great archipelagos of Sumatra–Java–Borneo–Sulawesi and the Philippines.
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Andamanasia: the Andaman and Nicobar Islands in the Bay of Bengal and the outer-island arc off Sumatra—Aceh, Simeulue, Nias, the Batu and Mentawai Islands (excluding the Mergui Archipelago and Thailand’s west coast).
Volcanic chains, folded highlands, alluvial deltas (Irrawaddy, Chao Phraya, Mekong, Red), mangrove coasts, and reef-fringed islands create one of the world’s most diverse human ecologies.
Climate & Environmental Shifts
Monsoons dictated seasons; ENSO cycles brought episodic droughts and floods. Cyclones battered the Bay of Bengal and South China Sea littorals; great rivers shifted with silt loads from hillside logging and war-time disruption. Along the Sunda trench, earthquakes and tsunamis periodically struck Aceh–Nias–Mentawai; volcanic eruptions (e.g., Krakatoa, 1883) altered coastlines, fisheries, and global climate. Colonial plantations cleared forest belts; 20th-century damming and irrigation reworked paddies and dry fields.
Subsistence & Settlement
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Rice heartlands in Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, and Java intensified wet-rice (irrigated) and rain-fed systems; canals and dikes extended deltas.
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Plantations & mines reoriented landscapes: rubber and tin in Malaya; coffee, tea, sugar, tobacco in the Dutch archipelago; sugar, hemp in the Philippines; nickel, coal, oil in parts of Indonesia.
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Andamanasia balanced copra, sago, cloves, and pepper with fishing; the Andaman & Nicobar served the British Raj as a penal settlement (Port Blair), while Aceh’s uplands and coasts supported pepper gardens and Islamic scholarly towns.
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Urban hubs—Saigon/Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi, Bangkok, Rangoon/Yangon, Singapore, Batavia/Jakarta, Manila—grew on port and railway grids; Banda Aceh, Padang, Medan, and Port Blair tied Andamanasia into colonial networks.
Technology & Material Culture
Steamships, lighthouses, and telegraph cables stitched coasts to metropoles. The 19th century laid roads, rails, canals, and irrigation schemes (e.g., Cochinchina’s canal grids; Java’s irrigation works). Rubber tapping, tin dredging, and oil rigs transformed work rhythms; mission and vernacular presses fostered literacy. After WWII, airfields and highways expanded; small engines and outboard motors changed coastal livelihoods. Tiled mosques, wats, and churches stood beside longhouses, kampong stilt houses, and shophouse streets.
Movement & Interaction Corridors
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Diasporas reshaped society: Chinese and Indian migrants fueled plantations, mines, and trade in Malaya, Burma, Thailand, and the Indies; Javanese and Chinese migrated intra-archipelago.
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Pilgrimage & scholarship flowed through Aceh—the “Verandah of Mecca”—and port cities; Andaman & Nicobar saw convict, guard, and trader circuits of the Raj.
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War corridors: Japanese occupation (1941–45) militarized ports, rails, and airstrips; Allied return routes cross-cut deltas and hill country; postwar insurgencies made jungles and mountains strategic spaces.
Cultural & Symbolic Expressions
Theravāda Buddhism (Thailand, Burma/Myanmar, Laos, Cambodia), Islam (Malaya, Sumatra/Aceh, parts of Borneo), Catholicism (Philippines, Vietnam enclaves), and Confucian and indigenous traditions intertwined. Reformist presses and schools incubated national literatures: Vietnamese quốc ngữ journalism, Indonesian and Malay novels, Filipino propagandists, Burmese and Thai reformers. In Andamanasia, Acehnese ulama sustained Islamic learning and resistance; Nicobarese and Andamanese kept island cosmologies even as penal and mission regimes pressed in.
Environmental Adaptation & Resilience
Intensive rice ecologies (terraces, bunds, dikes) buffered monsoon swings; swidden–wet rice mosaics in uplands spread risk. Island communities hedged with copra gardens, lagoon fisheries, breadfruit, sago, and inter-island reciprocity. After cyclones or war, kin networks and temple or mosque charities organized rebuilding; post-1960s “Green Revolution” seeds and fertilizers began to alter village agronomy.
Political & Military Shocks
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Colonial consolidation (19th–early 20th c.):
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British in Burma and Malaya/Singapore; French in Indochina; Dutch in the East Indies; U.S. in the Philippines; Siam/Thailand remained formally independent but ceded buffer territories.
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Aceh War (1873–1904): a long anti-Dutch jihad reshaped Sumatra’s northwest; Mentawai and Nias folded into Dutch rule with missionization and pax colonia.
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Andaman & Nicobar penal settlement entrenched British control in the Bay of Bengal.
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Japanese occupation (1941–45): dismantled colonial rule, mobilized labor, and built military infrastructure; famine and atrocities scarred Indochina and Burma.
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Independence waves:
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Indonesia proclaimed 1945 (recognized 1949); Burma 1948; Philippines 1946; Malaya 1957 (Malaysia 1963; Singapore independent 1965); Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam 1953–54 (with Vietnam’s partition).
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Konfrontasi (1963–66) rattled new Malaysia; Sukarno → Suharto (1965–66) upheaval reordered Indonesia.
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Vietnam War escalation (1960s), Laotian/Cambodian conflicts, Malayan Emergency (1948–60), and Burmese coups (1962) defined the Cold War map.
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Transition
Between 1828 and 1971, Southeastern Asia moved from plantation grids and concessionary mines under European flags to a mosaic of independent states and Cold War battlegrounds. Japanese occupation shattered imperial prestige; postwar governments asserted sovereignty but faced insurgency, partition, and economic rebuilding. In Andamanasia, the Aceh War and penal colony years epitomized the arc from coercion to contested autonomy; in the wider region, rice fields, rubber estates, and ports fed a global economy even as revolutions and wars redrew borders. By 1971, Bangkok, Jakarta, Manila, Saigon, Rangoon, Singapore, and Kuala Lumpur anchored a transformed region—its monsoon ecologies and island arcs still the stage on which new nations balanced tradition, development, and geopolitical pressure.
Middle Africa (1828–1971 CE): Abolition, Partition, Extraction, and Independence
Geographic & Environmental Context
The subregion of Middle Africa includes Chad, the Central African Republic, Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, São Tomé and Príncipe, Gabon, the Republic of the Congo, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Angola.Anchors included the Congo–Kasai–Ubangi river system and ports (Matadi, Léopoldville/Kinshasa, Brazzaville), the Atlantic harbors of Luanda, Lobito, Pointe-Noire, Libreville, Douala, the Cameroon Highlands and forest massifs, the northern savanna and Lake Chad basin, and the Gulf of Guinea islands (São Tomé, Príncipe, Bioko). From equatorial rainforest to Sahelian margin, the region’s corridors were re-engineered by abolition’s aftermath, the Scramble for Africa, and 20th-century state formation.
Climate & Environmental Shifts
With the retreat of the Little Ice Age, rainfall belts oscillated. Congo basin forests stayed humid, but dry-season length varied by decade; high river years expanded floodplain farming yet raised erosion risk. The Lake Chad basin swung between flood and shrinkage pulses (notably late 1960s drought). Along the Atlantic, heavy rains alternated with stormy seasons that reshaped estuaries and mangroves. Logging, plantation clearance, and later oil extraction intensified local micro-climate and watershed stress.
Subsistence & Settlement
Abolition redirected labor from slave corridors to plantations, mines, and ports.
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Forest and riverine belts: Cassava (by now a staple famine reserve), plantain/banana, yam, taro, maize, oil palm, groundnuts, and beans anchored household nutrition; fishing and smoked/dried fish stores remained vital. Cocoa and coffee spread in Cameroon, Gabon, and on São Tomé and Príncipe, where plantation monoculture dominated.
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Savanna and Lake Chad: Millet, sorghum, rice, and cattle herding persisted, with recession farming along floodplains.
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Urbanization: Port and rail towns (Douala, Pointe-Noire, Libreville, Léopoldville/Kinshasa, Brazzaville, Luanda) expanded around docks, depots, and workshops; mining towns rose in Katanga (copper, cobalt), Kasai (diamonds), and the Angolan interior (iron, diamonds).
Technology & Material Culture
Colonial regimes laid railways that reoriented trade: the Congo–Ocean Railway (1921–1934) to Pointe-Noire; the Benguela Railway linking Katanga to Lobito; Douala–Nkongsamba and other lines in Cameroon. River steamers, dredged channels, and ports (Matadi, Boma) integrated the Congo corridor with the Atlantic. Concession companies built mills for palm oil, timber yards, and mining plants; mission presses, schools, and clinics proliferated. Forced-labor systems supplied roads, rails, and estates—prestations in French Equatorial Africa, contract labor and chibalo in Portuguese Angola, with coerced migration to São Tomé and Príncipe cocoa roças (sparking early 1900s boycotts). Household craft and market production—blacksmithing, weaving, pottery, canoe carpentry—adapted to cash economies; urban workshops forged a new artisanal landscape.
Movement & Interaction Corridors
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River and rail grids funneled palm products, timber, copper/cobalt, diamonds, and cocoa to Atlantic ports.
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Atlantic lanes connected Luanda, Lobito, Pointe-Noire, Douala, Libreville, and São Tomé with Lisbon, Antwerp, Marseille, and later New York.
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Labor migrations moved workers from savannas to mines, plantations, and docks; seasonal and contract flows tied the Lake Chad fringe to forest and port towns.
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Mission and medical circuits (sleeping-sickness campaigns) penetrated deep inland. Late in the period, roads and airstrips extended state reach; large projects (e.g., Inga on the lower Congo, planned in the 1960s) heralded hydro-modernity at decade’s end.
Cultural & Symbolic Expressions
Mission Christianity spread schooling, print, and new associational life; prophetic and African-initiated churches transformed religious landscapes—Kimbanguism (founded 1921) in the lower Congo became a mass church by mid-century; later Angolan movements (e.g., Tokoist strands) blended biblical and local idioms. Urban music and dance forged modern publics: Congolese rumba/soukous, Cameroonian makossa, Angolan semba, all carried ngoma drum lineages into amplified nightlife. Writers (e.g., Ferdinand Oyono, Mongo Beti) and painters chronicled colonial contradiction. Court and village arts endured—masks, nkisi figures, raffia and cotton textiles—now circulating through markets and museums alike.
Environmental Adaptation & Resilience
Households hedged risk with multicropping (cassava as standing reserve), compound gardens, and fish smoking/drying. Forest communities rotated fields and protected sacred groves; savanna herders shifted grazing with the rains; floodplain cultivators followed river pulses. During epidemics and forced labor drives, kin networks rehomed dependents; mutual-aid societies, mission parishes, and later unions buffered shocks. Conservation began as colonial game reserves and national parks (e.g., Odzala 1930s) and post-colonial protected areas; fisheries and forest regulations emerged unevenly under pressure from urban markets.
Technology & Power Shifts (Conflict & Polity Dynamics)
The Atlantic slave trade collapsed, but concessionary regimes (rubber, ivory) in the Congo Free State (1885–1908)produced catastrophic violence—amputation terror and demographic collapse—before annexation as the Belgian Congo. France consolidated French Equatorial Africa; Germany took Kamerun (later partitioned to France/Britain after World War I); Spain held Equatorial Guinea; Portugal deepened rule in Angola and on São Tomé and Príncipe. After 1945, anticolonial nationalism surged: strikes, student leagues, churches, and cultural clubs nurtured parties and fronts.
Key turning points:
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Congo–Léopoldville independence (1960): crisis—Patrice Lumumba, Katanga secession (1960–1963), UN intervention, and the 1965 coup by Joseph-Désiré Mobutu; the country was renamed Zaire in 1971.
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Congo–Brazzaville, Gabon, Chad, Central African Republic, Cameroon: 1960 independence, followed by one-party consolidations and, in places, insurgencies (UPC in Cameroon; conflict in Chad from 1965).
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Equatorial Guinea: independence (1968), authoritarian turn under Francisco Macías Nguema.
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Angola: anticolonial war from 1961 (MPLA, FNLA, UNITA), still under Portuguese rule within our span.
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São Tomé and Príncipe: plantations persisted under Portugal; independence would follow after 1971.
Transition
By 1971 CE, Middle Africa had traversed coerced extraction, partition, and a turbulent decolonization. New states—Cameroon (federation of 1961), Congo-Brazzaville, Gabon, Chad, the Central African Republic, Equatorial Guinea, and Zaire—stood astride river and rail grids built for export, now reimagined for nation-building. Angola fought a widening independence war; São Tomé and Príncipe remained under plantation rule; Gabon entered an oil economy; Kinshasa’s rumba and Brazzaville’s dance bands broadcast urban modernities from riverbanks to continents. Beneath the rush of copper and oil, timber and cocoa, household multicropping, river fisheries, and kin solidarities still sustained everyday life—resilient repertoires forged across forests and floodplains, now tasked with the work of sovereignty.
Southwest Europe (1828–1971 CE)
Nationhood, Civil War, and the Making of Modern Iberia
Geography & Environmental Context
Southwest Europe comprises two fixed subregions:
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Mediterranean Southwest Europe — Italy (including Sardinia and Sicily), Malta, southeastern Spain, and the Balearic Islands.
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Atlantic Southwest Europe — northern Spain and central to northern Portugal, including Lisbon, the Tagus Valley, and the Cantabrian Mountains.
Anchors include the Apennines, the Po and Ebro valleys, the Italian Peninsula’s volcanic south, the Tagus, Douro, and Guadalquivir rivers, and key coastal and urban centers—Rome, Naples, Milan, Barcelona, Valencia, Lisbon, and Porto. The region bridges the Atlantic and Mediterranean, uniting maritime trade routes, mountain frontiers, and deep agricultural basins that have long sustained dense populations and layered civilizations.
Climate & Environmental Shifts
A Mediterranean climate of hot, dry summers and mild, wet winters dominated much of the south, while the northwest’s Atlantic façade received abundant rainfall. Deforestation and soil exhaustion from centuries of cultivation gave way to reforestation and terracing programs in the 19th century. Earthquakes occasionally struck southern Italy and Portugal’s coast. By the mid-20th century, irrigation and dam projects modernized agriculture, while industrialization, urban air pollution, and rural depopulation reshaped landscapes.
Subsistence & Settlement
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Agriculture: Grain, olives, vines, and citrus remained staples; the 19th century saw agrarian reforms and consolidation under liberal monarchies. Mechanization and fertilizers expanded yields by mid-century, but sharecropping and land inequality persisted in southern Italy, Sicily, and Spain.
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Urbanization: Lisbon, Barcelona, Milan, Rome, and Naples grew as administrative and industrial centers. Northern Italy industrialized rapidly after unification, while southern regions lagged.
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Migration: Seasonal and transatlantic migration (to the Americas and later to northern Europe) served as economic safety valves. After WWII, internal migration filled factory towns in northern Italy and Catalonia.
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Fishing and maritime trade: Coastal economies thrived on shipbuilding, sardine and tuna fisheries, and maritime commerce linking the Atlantic and Mediterranean basins.
Technology & Material Culture
Railways (Lisbon–Madrid, Milan–Turin, Naples–Rome) and telegraphs in the 19th century integrated national markets. Industrialization centered on textiles, steel, and shipbuilding, while southern agrarian zones remained semifeudal. After WWII, infrastructure and consumer industries (automobiles, household goods) expanded under European reconstruction aid. Architecture ranged from neoclassical state projects to fascist monumentalism and postwar modernism. Artistic modernism flourished: Gaudí’s Catalan designs, Marinetti’s Futurism, and Morandi’s minimalist painting exemplified divergent paths to modernity.
Movement & Interaction Corridors
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Maritime corridors: The Mediterranean and Atlantic coasts connected ports like Genoa, Barcelona, and Lisbon to imperial routes across Africa and the Americas.
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Rail and road networks: Bound the interior to ports; after 1950, highways and airports tied Iberia and Italy to Western Europe’s tourism boom.
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Labor migration: Italians and Portuguese joined transatlantic migrations to Brazil, Argentina, and the U.S.; by the 1960s, many worked in France, Germany, and Switzerland.
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Tourism routes: The French and Italian Rivieras, Spanish Balearics, and Portuguese Algarve became global tourist zones after WWII.
Cultural & Symbolic Expressions
Romantic nationalism merged with Catholic revival and liberal reform.
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Italy: Giuseppe Verdi’s operas and Garibaldi’s campaigns symbolized unification (Risorgimento). Postwar cinema—Rossellini, De Sica, Fellini—portrayed social reconstruction.
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Spain: Writers and artists such as Goya, Unamuno, and Picasso reflected political trauma and creative rebellion; Flamenco and Andalusian folk arts embodied enduring regional identities.
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Portugal: Fado captured nostalgia under authoritarian rule; poets like Fernando Pessoa gave voice to existential modernism.
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Malta and the Balearics: Maritime cultures blended Catholic ritual, seafaring craft, and multilingual exchange.
Catholicism remained culturally dominant, yet anticlerical movements and republicanism spurred secular education and reform.
Environmental Adaptation & Resilience
Irrigation and terrace maintenance stabilized fragile mountain agriculture; coastal marshes were drained; reforestation curbed erosion. Postwar hydroelectric and dam projects (notably on the Tagus and Po) modernized water and power supply. Cooperative farming and later Common Market integration improved productivity. Rural depopulation and emigration altered traditional village structures but relieved demographic pressure on marginal lands.
Political & Military Shocks
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Liberal revolutions: Spain and Portugal alternated between monarchy and republic amid 19th-century liberal uprisings.
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Italian Unification (Risorgimento, 1848–71) created a single kingdom under Victor Emmanuel II; regional disparities persisted.
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Republics and dictatorships:
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Spain’s First Republic (1873–74) failed amid instability; the Second Republic (1931–39) collapsed in the Spanish Civil War, leading to Francisco Franco’s dictatorship (1939–75).
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Portugal’s Estado Novo, founded by António Salazar (1933), maintained corporatist authoritarianism until the Carnation Revolution (1974).
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Italy’s Fascist regime under Mussolini (1922–43) joined the Axis powers; postwar reconstruction created a republic (1946).
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World Wars: Italy fought on both sides; Spain and Portugal remained neutral in WWII but served as refuges and transit corridors.
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Decolonization: Italy lost Libya, Eritrea, and Somaliland; Portugal clung to its African colonies; Spain withdrew from Morocco’s protectorate (1956).
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Cold War: Italy and Portugal joined NATO (1949); Spain aligned with the U.S. (1953 agreements) despite Franco’s isolation.
Transition
Between 1828 and 1971, Southwest Europe traversed the arc from agrarian monarchies and fragmented kingdoms to industrial, authoritarian, and democratic states. The Risorgimento, Iberian revolutions, and postwar transitions forged modern nations marked by stark contrasts—prosperous industrial norths and impoverished rural souths, deep religiosity and militant secularism, dictatorship and democracy. The rebuilding after WWII brought integration into Western alliances and the first wave of tourism-led growth. By 1971, the region—its olive terraces, factory belts, and crowded ports—stood as both the southern pillar of Western Europe and a crossroads of lingering empires and emerging modern identities.
Mediterranean Southwest Europe (1828–1971 CE): Nation-Building, Dictatorship, and the Reinvention of Mediterranean Economies
Geography & Environmental Context
Mediterranean Southwest Europe encompasses Italy (including Sardinia and Sicily), Malta, southeastern Spain (Andalusia, Murcia, Valencia, Catalonia’s southern coast, and the Balearic Islands). Anchors include the Po Valley and northern Italian plain, the Apennines, Mount Vesuvius and Etna, the Sicilian interior, the Ebro and Guadalquivir valleys, the Balearic archipelagos, and Malta’s limestone plateaus. This is a region of rugged Mediterranean coastlines, volcanic soils, and irrigated plains that supported agriculture, industry, and rapidly growing urban centers such as Rome, Milan, Naples, Palermo, Barcelona, Valencia, Seville, Palma de Mallorca, and Valletta.
Climate & Environmental Shifts
The climate remained characteristically Mediterranean: hot, dry summers and cool, wet winters. Drought cycles in Andalusia and Sicily produced periodic crop failures in the 19th century, while devastating floods affected northern Italy (notably the Adige flood of 1882). Volcanic eruptions at Etna and Vesuvius (most famously 1906 and 1944) threatened nearby settlements. Reforestation and irrigation works expanded in the 20th century, particularly under Fascist Italy’s land reclamation schemes (Pontine Marshes) and Spain’s Franco-era irrigation projects.
Subsistence & Settlement
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Agriculture:
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Italy: Wheat in the south; olives, vines, and citrus across peninsular and insular zones; dairy and maize in the Po Valley.
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Spain: Wheat, citrus, rice (Valencia), and olives; Andalusia’s latifundia coexisted with smallholders.
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Malta: Dryland farming of wheat and barley with reliance on imported food.
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Industry:
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Italy’s “industrial triangle” (Milan–Turin–Genoa) became Europe’s key steel, textile, and automotive hub.
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Barcelona developed as Spain’s textile and industrial center.
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Naples, Palermo, Andalusian cities lagged behind, locked in agrarian economies.
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Urban growth: Rome became Italy’s capital (1871); Barcelona and Valencia expanded port industry; Valletta was transformed by British naval dominance. By the mid-20th century, rapid urbanization created sprawling suburbs and modernist housing.
Technology & Material Culture
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Transport: Railways (Piedmont, Catalonia, Andalusia, Naples–Rome) and modern ports transformed connectivity in the 19th century. After WWII, motorways and airports (Milan Malpensa, Rome Fiumicino, Barcelona El Prat, Palma de Mallorca) anchored tourism.
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Industry & energy: Coal in Asturias and Sardinia; hydroelectric in the Alps and Pyrenees; Fiat (Turin) symbolized Italian industrial growth; postwar petrochemicals reshaped Sicilian and Andalusian coasts.
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Everyday life: Rural material culture—stone farmhouses, terraced vineyards, hand looms—gave way to urban consumer goods: radios, Vespa scooters, Fiat cars, and televisions by the 1960s.
Movement & Interaction Corridors
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Migration:
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19th century: Italians emigrated en masse to the Americas (Argentina, Brazil, the U.S.), and Spaniards to Cuba, Mexico, and Argentina.
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20th century: Postwar flows sent workers to France, Germany, Switzerland, and Belgium; remittances fueled local economies.
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Colonial ties:
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Spain retained colonies in Africa until mid-20th century; Italy pursued expansion (Libya, East Africa, Albania, Dodecanese).
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Malta, as a British fortress colony, was central in Mediterranean naval strategy until independence (1964).
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Tourism: Began in the 19th century with aristocratic visits to Naples, Sicily, and the Balearics; exploded in the 1950s–60s with charter flights to Mallorca, Ibiza, Costa del Sol, Amalfi, and Capri.
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War corridors: Italian unification wars (Risorgimento), Spanish Civil War (1936–1939), both World Wars, and Cold War naval deployments in Malta all militarized the region.
Cultural & Symbolic Expressions
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Nationalism: Italy’s Risorgimento (Mazzini, Garibaldi, Cavour) culminated in unification (1861–1871). Spain oscillated between monarchy, republic, dictatorship, and Franco’s authoritarianism (1939–1975). Malta blended Catholic and British influences, asserting independence mid-century.
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Arts & literature: Italian Romanticism (Verdi), Futurism, and postwar neorealist cinema (Rossellini, De Sica). Spanish cultural figures (Goya’s late works, Gaudí’s Barcelona architecture, Picasso, Miró, Lorca) shaped global modernism.
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Religion & tradition: Catholicism dominated, with papal authority central in Italy; local fiestas, processions, and Mediterranean folk traditions persisted.
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Tourist imagery: Romantic depictions of Capri, Amalfi, and Andalusia, later mass-marketed as sun-and-sea resorts, reshaped cultural perception of the Mediterranean.
Environmental Adaptation & Resilience
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Agrarian reform: Land reforms in Italy (1950s–60s) and Spain (Franco’s agrarian policy) redistributed holdings, though inequality persisted.
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Irrigation: Expansion of canals and reservoirs modernized citrus and rice production in Valencia and Sicily.
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Terracing: Maintained soil fertility in hilly regions; mechanization after 1950 reduced reliance on labor-intensive terrace farming.
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Urban resilience: Cities devastated in WWII (Naples, Rome, Barcelona, Valletta) were rebuilt with modernist architecture and new transport systems.
Political & Military Shocks
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Italy: Unification (1861–71); Fascist rule (1922–43); WWII defeat and transition to republic (1946).
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Spain: Carlist Wars; colonial loss in 1898; Civil War (1936–39) leading to Franco’s dictatorship; neutrality in WWII; tourism-led development by the 1960s.
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Malta: Great Siege memories lived on under British rule; WWII bombardments earned it the George Cross; independence achieved in 1964.
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Allied & Axis strategy: Mediterranean ports and islands were pivotal in both World Wars, especially Sicily, Malta, and Gibraltar’s approaches.
Transition
Between 1828 and 1971, Mediterranean Southwest Europe moved from agrarian economies under monarchy and empire toward industrialization, dictatorship, and postwar integration. Italy unified and industrialized unevenly, its north surging ahead while the south lagged. Spain suffered civil war and Francoist repression, yet by the 1960s pivoted toward mass tourism. Malta endured as a fortress colony, emerging into independence. Across the region, emigration and remittances provided lifelines, while the rise of modern tourism, consumer culture, and European integration marked the final transformation of this Mediterranean arc into a keystone of 20th-century Europe.
Atlantic Southwest Europe (1828–1971 CE)
Interior Vineyards, Coal Valleys, and Capitals under Dictatorships
Geography & Environmental Context
Atlantic Southwest Europe comprises northern Spain and central to northern Portugal (including Lisbon). It is an interior-leaning Atlantic rim: Galicia, Asturias, Cantabria, León, and the northern Meseta in Spain; Minho, Trás-os-Montes, Beira, and the Tagus–Douro valleys in Portugal—plus Lisbon as an estuarine capital. The landscape mixes rain-fed hills, granitic uplands, river terraces, and vineyard slopes (notably the Douro), with cool, wet winters and mild summers that favor grains, vines, and pasture.
Climate & Environmental Shifts
A temperate, ocean-modulated regime brought high rainfall to the northwest and drier interiors to the south and east. Crop failures periodically followed cold spells (1830s) and vine disease (phylloxera in the 1870s–1890s). Post-1945 damming moderated river floods and expanded irrigation, while mid-century reforestation (eucalyptus and pine, especially in Galicia and northern Portugal) altered fire regimes and rural economies.
Subsistence & Settlement
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Farms & holdings: A mosaic of small plots—minifundio in Galicia/Minho—produced rye, maize, potatoes, wine, olives, and garden crops; communal pastures supported cattle and dairy. In some Portuguese districts, larger latifúndio-style estates lingered on the margins of the region.
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Vine and olive belts: The Douro’s schist terraces supplied fortified wines; Dão and Bairrada developed quality table wines. Phylloxera devastation forced grafting onto American rootstocks and vineyard restructuring.
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Mining & industry: Asturias and León expanded coal and iron (19th–early 20th c.), feeding steelworks and railways; textile workshops and paper mills dotted Minho and Beira; Lisbon drew food-processing, printing, and later electrical goods.
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Urban network: Lisbon dominated administration, finance, and culture; Porto led wine trade and manufacturing; Oviedo, León, Santiago de Compostela, Braga, and Guimarães anchored regional services, schools, and markets.
Technology & Material Culture
Railways (Douro line to the Upper Douro; Minho and Beira lines; León–Asturias coal routes) linked interior valleys to capitals. Wine technology modernized with grafting, sulfur, and temperature-aware cellaring; cooperative dairies spread in Minho and Galicia. Hydropower projects (e.g., mid-century Douro/Tagus systems; Zêzere’s Castelo de Bode) electrified towns and mills. Rural material life shifted from stone farmsteads and hand looms to radio, bicycles, and, after 1950, tractors and household appliances—unevenly distributed.
Movement & Interaction Corridors
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River corridors: The Douro and Tagus valleys funneled grain, wine, and timber toward Porto and Lisbon; Spain’s northern coal lines moved fuel to interior foundries and power.
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Emigration: Recurring out-migration to the Americas (19th c.) and, after 1945, to France, Germany, Switzerland, and Luxembourg relieved rural pressure and sent remittances home.
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Pilgrimage & learning: Roads to Santiago de Compostela sustained hospitality trades; universities in Santiago, Coimbra, and Lisbon shaped professional elites.
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State arteries: Customs, conscription, and schooling integrated hinterlands into centralized regimes in Madrid and Lisbon.
Cultural & Symbolic Expressions
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Portugal: Liberal Wars (1828–1834) gave way to constitutional monarchism, then the Estado Novo (from 1933), which promoted ruralist ideals and fado as urban folklore, while censoring dissent. Coimbra fado, literary modernism, and Lisbon cafés nurtured counter-cultures beneath official narratives.
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Spain (north): The Carlist Wars repeatedly mobilized conservative rural communities; the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939) ruptured Galicia–Asturias–León, followed by Franco’s dictatorship. Galician letters (Castelao, later Celso Emilio Ferreiro) and regional languages persisted within censorship’s limits; craft festivals, romerías, and confraternities sustained local identity.
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Common threads: Brotherhoods, harvest feasts, wine confraternities, and student tunas (song groups) bridged town and countryside; post-1945 football clubs, radio, and television reknit cultural space.
Environmental Adaptation & Resilience
Terracing and dry-stone walls conserved thin soils on vine slopes; crop rotations (maize–beans–fodder) stabilized yields; chestnut groves, dairy cooperatives, and small orchards buffered income. After phylloxera, grafting and hillside replanting rescued wine. Hydropower, rural electrification, and postwar road-building reduced isolation; remittances financed cisterns, masonry houses, and tractors. Forest cooperatives and parish firefighting faced new plantation fire risks.
Political & Military Shocks
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Portugal: Liberal Wars (1828–1834); late-century republican agitation culminating in 1910 revolution; Estado Novo consolidation (1933–1971 within this period), wartime neutrality, and colonial wars beginning in the 1960s.
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Spain: Carlist conflicts (1833–1876), industrial strikes in Asturias (early 20th c.), Civil War (1936–1939) with severe repression in the aftermath; autarky (1940s) followed by development plans (1960s) that spurred roads, dams, and migration.
These shocks redirected land tenure, taxation, and conscription, reshaping everyday life from village commons to university lecture halls.
Transition
From 1828 to 1971, Atlantic Southwest Europe shifted from smallholder mosaics and coal valleys into a region of terraced wines, electrified interiors, and authoritarian capitals. The Douro’s rebuilt vineyards, Lisbon’s bureaucratic and cultural gravity, Asturias’s coal districts, and Galicia–Minho’s emigrant networks defined its arc. Wars and dictatorships constrained politics, yet households adapted through cooperative dairies, hydropower, remittances, and education. By 1971, despite persistent rural poverty pockets, the region stood knitted to Western European markets and migration circuits—its hillsides of vine and maize, and its capitals’ ministries and cafés, poised for the democratic transformations and EEC integrations soon to follow.
Ramón María Narváez and his fellow generals have dominated Spain's domestic politics as representatives of the moderados between 1844 and 1854.
Their administrative, educational, and financial measures and the formation of the Civil Guard are lasting achievements; however, the generals cannot stabilize their rule on the basis of their constitution of 1845, a conservative revision of 1837.
The period is disturbed by a series of progresista military risings.
To the left of the progresistas, who are prepared to accept the monarchy if it gives them office, a Democratic Party has developed; it is prepared to dethrone Isabella II.
Never strong in numbers outside the towns, the Democrats have radicalized politics.
Orthodox progresista politicians are embarrassed by their extremist attitudes but cannot neglect their potential role as urban revolutionaries.
It is discontented generals, however, who successfully revolt in June 1854, led by General Leopoldo O'Donnell, a Moderate who espouses liberal sentiments.
The rebellious military oligarchs are prepared to sacrifice the dynasty because the queen and her mother favor a rigid court conservatism that effectively excludes them from influence.
Spanish troops under General Leopoldo O'Donnell defeat the Moroccan Army in the Battle of Tétouan on January 13, 1860.
The Spaniards, spurred by a national passion for African conquest, had declared war on Morocco in 1859 after a conflict over the borders of the Ceuta.
The Spanish expeditionary force, which had departed from Algeciras, is composed of thirty-six thousand men, sixty-five pieces of artillery, and forty-one ships, which include steamships, sailboats, and smaller vessels.
General Leopoldo O'Donnell, 1st Conde de Lucena (later created Duque de Tetuán), a future Prime Minister of Spain, had personally taken charge of the expedition and divided these forces into three corps.
These are commanded by General The 5th Marqués de Torreblanca, General Antonio Ros de Olano and General Ramón de Echagüe.
Reserves had been placed under the command of General The 1st Conde de Reus.
Admiral Segundo Díaz Herrero commanded the fleet.
The objective of the Spanish forces was to take Tetuuán, which had served as a base for raids on Ceuta and Melilla.
Hostilities between Moroccan and Spanish troops had begun on December 17, 1859, when the column commanded by The Marqués de Torreblanca occupied the Sierra de Bullones.
On December 19, Echagüe had captured the Palacio del Serrallo.
The Conde de Lucena commands a force that landed at Ceuta on 21 December.
By Christmas Day, the three columns had consolidated their positions and awaited orders to advance towards Tetouan.
On January 1, 1860, the Conde de Reus advanced towards the port of Guad al Gelu.
The Marqués de Torreblanca’s column and the Royal Spanish Navy guarded his flank.
Clashes had continued until January 31, 1860, when a major Moroccan offensive was stopped.
The Conde de Lucena, supported by forces composed of Catalan volunteers, had begun a march towards the objective of Tétouan.
Covering fire is provided by units commanded by General The Conde de Reus and General Ros de Olano.
Spanish artillery inflicts heavy losses on the Moroccan ranks; the Moroccan forces that remain take refuge in Tétouan.
The city falls on February 6, 1860.
A week of further fighting will follow before hostilities cease.
Leopoldo O’Donnell himself had commanded the victorious expeditionary force in the Spanish-Moroccan War of 1859-60, and greatly increased his popularity; he is awarded a dukedom on March 27, 1860, as the Duke of Tetuan (Duque de Tetuán).
Leopoldo O'Donnell's Liberal Union, which is an attempt to fuse all dynastic parties in a broad-based coalition, has provided a long period of stable government from 1856 to 1863).
The so-called bienio progresista has witnessed economic expansion, a compromise solution to the problem of church property, and O'Donnell's opportunistic interventions in Morocco, Santo Domingo, and Mexico.