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GASPAR DE GUZMAN See also: Olivares and duke of See also: San Lucar (1587-1645), See also: Spanish royal favourite andminister, was See also: born in See also: Rome, where his See also: father was Spanish ambassador, on the 6th of See also: January 1587
.
His compound title is explained by the fact that he inherited the title of count of Olivares, but was created duke of San Lucar by the favour of See also: Philip IV
.
He begged the
See also: king to allow him to preserve his inherited title in combination with the new honour—according to a practice of which there are a few other examples in Spanish
See also: history
.
Therefore he was commonly spoken of as el condeduque
.
During the See also: life of Philip III. he was appointed to a See also: post in the See also: household of the heir apparent, Philip, by the See also: interest of his maternal See also: uncle See also: Don Baltasar de Z$niga, who was the See also: head of the See also: prince's establishment
.
Olivares made it his business to acquire the most See also: complete influence over the See also: young prince
.
When Philip IV. ascended the See also: throne in 1621, at the age of six-teen, he showed his confidence in Olivares by ordering that all papers requiring the royal signature should first be sent to the count-duke
.
Olivares could now boast to his uncle Don Baltasar de Zflniga that he was " all." He became what is known in See also: Spain as a valido — something more than a See also: prime See also: minister, the favourite and alter ego of the king
.
For twenty-two years he directed the policy of Spain
.
It was a See also: period of See also: constant war, and finally of disaster abroad and of See also: rebellion at home
.
The Spaniards, who were too thoroughly monarchical to blame the king, held his favourite responsible for the misfortunes of the country
.
The count-duke became, and for long remained, in the opinion of his countrymen, the accepted See also: model of a grasping and incapable favourite
.
Of See also: late, largely under the inspiration of Don Antonio Canovas, there has been a certain reaction in his favour
.
It would certainly be most unjust to blame Olivares alone for the decadence of Spain, which was due to See also: internal causes of long See also: standing
.
The See also: gross errors of his policy—the renewal of the war with See also: Holland in 1621, the persistence of Spain in taking
See also: part in the See also: Thirty Years' War, the lesser See also: wars undertaken in See also: northern See also: Italy, and the entire neglect of all effort to promote the unification of the different states forming the See also: peninsular kingdom—were shared by him with the king, the See also: Church and the commercial classes
.
When he had fallen from power he wrote an
See also: apology, in which he maintained that he had always wished to see more See also: attention paid to internal See also: government, and above all to the complete unification of See also: Portugal with Spain
.
But if this was not an afterthought, he must, on his own showing, stand accused of having carried out during long years a policy which he knew to be disastrous to his country, rather than See also: risk the loss of the king's favour and of his place
.
Olivares did not share the king's taste for See also: art and literature, but he formed a vast collection of See also: state papers, See also: ancient and contemporary, which he endeavoured to protect from destruction by entailing them as an See also: heirloom
.
He also formed a splendid See also: aviary which, under the name of the " hencoop," was a favourite subject of ridicule with his enemies
.
Towards the end of his period of favour he caused See also: great offence by legitimizing a supposed See also: bastard son of very doubtful paternity and worthless See also: personal character, and by arranging a See also: rich See also: marriage for him
.
The fall of Olivares was immediately due to the revolts of Portugal and See also: Catalonia in 164o
.
The king parted with him reluctantly, and only under the pressure of a strong See also: court intrigue headed by See also: Queen Isabella
.
It was noted with anxiety by his enemies that he was succeeded in the king's confidence by his See also: nephew the count of See also: Haro
.
There remains, however, a letter from the king, in which Philip tells his old favourite, with frivolous ferocity, that it might be necessary to sacrifice his life in See also: order to avert unpopularity from the royal See also: house
.
Olivares was driven from office in 1643 . He retired by the king's order toSee also: Toro
.
Here he endeavoured to satisfy his passion for activity, partly by sharing in the municipal government of the See also: town and the regulation of its See also: commons, woods and pastures, and partly by the composition of the apology he published under the title of El Nicandro, which was perhaps written by an See also: agent, but was undeniably inspired by the fallen minister
.
The Nicandro was denounced to the Inquisition, and it is not impossible that Olivares might have ended in the prisons of the See also: Holy Office, or on the See also: scaffold, if he had not died on the 22nd of See also: July 1645
.
See the Estudios del reinado de Felipe IV. of Don Antonio :Canovas (See also: Madrid, 1889) ; and Don F
.
Silvela's introduction, much less favourable to Olivares, to his edition of the Callas de Sor Maria de Agreda y del rey Felipe IV
.
(Madrid, 1885-1886)
.
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