Notes
Isabelle II, Queen of Spain (1830-1904)
Provenance
This watch is accompanied by a personal card from Le Prince L. Ch.
de Bourbon-Sidle, attesting that it used to belong to 11.1\4. the Queen
Isabelle II of Spain.
Isabella II, Queen of Spain, from 1833 to 1868, was born on October
10, 1830, in Madrid and died on April 9, 1904, in Paris. Her troubled
reign was marked by political instability and the rule of military
politicians. Isabella 's failure to respond to growing demands for a more
progressive regime, her questionable private life, and her political
irresponsability contributed to the decline in monarchical strength and
prestige that led to her deposition in the Revolution of 1868.
The elder daughter of Ferdinand VII by his fourth wife, Maria
Cristina, Isabella was proclaimed Queen on her father's death in
1833. Her right to succeed to the throne was disputed by supporters
of her uncle, Don Carlos, and her accession precipitated civil war
(First Carlist War, 1833-39). During Isabella 's minority (1833-43),
her mother and Gen. Baldomero Espartero, a hero of the civil war,
acted successively as regents. In 1843 Espartero was dcsposcd by
military officers and Isabella was declared of age.
The period of Isabella 's personal rule, from 1843 to 1868, was
characterized by political unrest and a series of uprisings. Her
government was dominated by military politicians, most notably
Gen. Ramon Maria Narvaez and the somewhat more liberal Gen.
Leopoldo O'Donnell. Liberal opposition to the regime's
authoritarianism became increasingly directed at the Queen.
Scandalous reports on the private conduct of Isabella who lived
apart from her husband, Francisco de Asis de Borbon, as well as her
arbitrary political interference, further damaged the monarchical
cause. The abortive uprising of 1866, and the deaths of O ' Donnell
(1867) and Narvaez (1868), weakened her position further. In the
antaunn of 1868 a successful revolution drove her into exile.
Isabella settled in Paris, where in 1870 she abdicated in favour of her
eldest surviving son, the future Alfonso XII (1874-85). She retur ned
to Spain for a time after Alfonso 's accession but was unsuccessful in
influencing political affairs.