- Iberian Federalism
Iberic Federalism or Pan-Iberism is an
ideology from the beginning of the 20th century purporting thefederation of both countries in theIberian Peninsula :Portugal andSpain . These ideals were mainly promoted by republican and socialist movements in both nations.Precedents
Portugal and Spain share a common history.
Spanish and Portuguese are both Romance languages and have influenced each other and both countries have similar ethnicity and culture.Portuguese has origins as an independent evolution of
Galician-Portuguese in the Kingdom of Portugal. TheGalician language instead was influenced by Galicia's incorporation to theCrown of Castile .Both countries forged themselves and their common border in the
Reconquista against the Moors. In 1512,Ferdinand II of Aragón conquered thekingdom of Navarre bringing what will be known as "Spain" under a common rule. However Portugal was an independent country, competing with Castile in the colonial expansion.TheTreaty of Tordesillas divided the world in a Portuguese and aCastilian hemispheres of influence.Another level of unification was brought by the flight of many
Spanish Jews in 1492 to Portugal.After 1496, thePortuguese Jews and their new brethren were forced to convert or otherwise expelled from Portugal.The exodus mixed the Iberian Jews forging theSephardic community with itsLadino language .As a result of the disapparition of
Sebastian I of Portugal in thebattle of Alcazarquivir ,Philip II of Spain exerted his dynastic rights and used Castilian troops to overcome the rival pretender.The national poet of PortugalLuís de Camões opposed Philip but had himself written some sonnets in Spanish (bilingualism was then common in both courts).In 1581, Philip became Philip I of Portugal, joining both crowns in the most extended empire of the history upon that time. The Spanish Habsburgs (
Philip III of Spain and II of Portugal,Philip IV of Spain and III of Portugal) ruled what has later been called theIberian Union , a personal union of different kingdoms. In 1640, the duke of Bragança gathered those unrestful in Portugal and the support ofCardinal Richelieu of France. His rebellion succeeded and he became theJohn IV of Portugal . The North African city ofCeuta decided to leave the crown of Portugal and remain under the Spanish king.In 1801, the Portuguese city of
Olivença was occupied by Spain and passed to Spanish sovereignty asOlivenza . Portugal has since claimed the city back and there is no common definition of the border in the area.History
It was
José Marchena who, in the 18th century, gave this doctrine a progressive, federal andrepublic an tone in "l'Avis aux espagnols". In theLiberal Triennium (1820 -1823 ), the secret liberal organizations tried to spread Iberism in Portugal, to create seven confederated republics, five in Spain and Lusitania Ulterior and Lusitania Citerior in Portugal.In the laterRevolutionary Sexennium , the movement reached its apogee; General Prim was compelled byKeratry to join the countries as a newOliver Cromwell .After his murder, theFirst Spanish Republic (1873 -1874 ) seemed the right moment for the union given its federalism.".
The nationalistic dictatorships of Portugal and
Francoist Spain shared many political similarities and some degree of mutual support but both countries were said to live "back to back".Currently no party represented in either country's parliament has the goal of Iberism but both countries joined the
European Economic Community in 1986 and their borders have been opened since then.Large companies have opened shop in the neighboring country, and the Portuguese state closed thebirth center ofElvas , sending patients to theExtremadura health system" [http://www.hoy.es/pg060306/prensa/noticias/Regional/200603/06/HOY-REG-095.html Prevén que 350 niños portugueses nazcan cada año en Badajoz] ", "Hoy ", 6th March 2006.] " [http://dn.sapo.pt/2006/07/12/sociedade/badajoz_realizou_partos_gravidas_ale.html Badajoz realizou 15 partos de grávidas alentejanas num mês] ", "Diário de Notícias ", 12th July 2006.] .Some groups defend Iberism, including some Spanish and Portuguese officers [http://www.farodevigo.es/secciones/noticia.jsp?pIdNoticia=60292&pIndiceNoticia=2&pIdSeccion=4&pNumEjemplar=2611] .One 2006 survey [http://sol.sapo.pt/PaginaInicial/Sociedade/Interior.aspx?content_id=2294] showed only 28% of the Portuguese think that Portugal and Spain should be one country.42% of these would put the capital inMadrid and a 41% inLisbon .96.5% thought that theeconomy of Portugal would fare better in a union with Spain, and more than a half would acceptJuan Carlos I of Spain (who was exiled near Lisbon) as head of state (note that the survey was taken at a moment of crisis in the Portuguese economy). A similar survey in SpainFact|date=April 2007, after the Portuguese one, showed that 45.7% of Spanish think thatPortugal and Spain should merge; this support is especially higher among younger citizens (18 to 24 years old) and communities near the border with Portugal. But in Spain only 3.3% would prefer Lisbon as the capital, while 80% would prefer Madrid. 43.4% think the country should be known as España/Espanha (Spain) against 39.4% preferring Iberia.Flag of Iberia
The Iberian flag was created by the Catalan diplomat and writer
Sinibaldo de Mas (Sinibald Mas i Sans in Catalan), in 1854. It is quartered with the colours of the monarchist Portuguese (blue and white) and Spanish flags (red and yellow), dating from 1830 and 1785 respectively. The Iberian flag is older than the republican Spanish and Portuguese flags (1868 and 1911 respectively).It is not a coincidence that the Iberian flag has the same colours (in a different order) as the flag of the Maritime Province of Barcelona. Barcelona was the birth-place of Mas i Sans.
According to some Iberists, the Federation or Confederation should be formed by the peninsular parts of Portugal and Spain (without the Aran Valley, which should belong to Gascony), the Balearic Islands, Gibraltar, Andorra, and the Basque and Catalan regions of France. Four languages should be official: Spanish, Galician-Portuguese, Catalan and Basque.
Mas i Sans wanted the federal or confederate capital city of Iberia to be established at Santarém, Ribatejo, Portugal, but the capital city of the Diocesis Hispaniarum, created by the Roman Emperor Diocletianus in 287 C.E. was Emerita Augusta, Mérida, Spanish Extremadura.
Iberist personalities
*
Miguel de Unamuno , Spanish philosopher.
*Juan Valera , Spanish writer.
*Emilio Castelar , president of the First Spanish Republic.
*Joan Maragall .
*Sinibaldo de Mas .
*Francisco Pi y Margall , president of the First Spanish Republic.
*José Saramago , PortugueseNobel Prize in Literature , resident inLanzarote , Spain.
*Mário Lino , minister of public works, transports and communications of Portugal.
*António Lobo Antunes , writer.ee also
*The former Iberian colonies of South America are advancing their own economic union in the
Mercosur /Mercosul .
*Some Galician nationalists supportreintegrationism , the unification or approximation of Portuguese and Galician, which would separate from Castilian influence.
*There are tendencies among thenationalities of Spain advocating the breakup of the country.
*Foreign relations of Portugal
*Foreign relations of Spain
*The Stone Raft , a book byJosé Saramago in which the Iberian Peninsula splits off the European Continent and floats towards the Atlantic Ocean.
*Portuguese-Spanish relations Notes
References
*Rocamora, Jose Antonio. "El nacionalismo ibérico: 1732-1936". Publicaciones Universidad de Valladolid.
*Cabero Diéguez, Valentín. "Iberismo y cooperación: pasado y futuro de la península ibérica." Publicaciones universidad de Salamanca.
* [http://es.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Iberismo&oldid=4872268 The corresponding article] in the Spanish Wikipedia, Retrieved on30 September 2006 .External links
* [http://www.lainsignia.org/2000/abril/cul_065.htm Mi iberismo] , by José Saramago.
* [http://www.cei.pt Center of Iberian Studies] .
* [http://unioniberica.forogeneral.es/ Forum of iberian union: iberistas en contacto.] es
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