Romantic strifethe First Carlist War (1833–1840) in British fiction.

  1. Medina Calzada, Sara 1
  1. 1 Universidad de Valladolid
    info

    Universidad de Valladolid

    Valladolid, España

    ROR https://ror.org/01fvbaw18

Revue:
IJES: international journal of English studies

ISSN: 1578-7044 1989-6131

Année de publication: 2022

Volumen: 22

Número: 2

Pages: 1-15

Type: Article

DOI: 10.6018/IJES.515151 DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openDIGITUM editor

D'autres publications dans: IJES: international journal of English studies

Résumé

British volunteers fought on both sides of the First Carlist War (1833–1840), the dynastic struggle between the liberal factions that championed Isabella II and the reactionary forces that supported Don Carlos’s claim to the Spanish throne. Despite British intervention, the conflict did not arouse as much interest in Britain as the Peninsular War (1808–1814), but it served as the setting for several English literary works that reconstructed it from different perspectives. These fictional texts include George Ryder’s Los Arcos (1845), Frederick Hardman’s The Student of Salamanca (1845–1846), and Edward Augustus Milman’s The Wayside Cross; or, the Raid of Gomez (1847). This paper analyses these texts focusing on their representations of Spain and the First Carlist War and shows that they mostly ignore British intervention in the conflict and perpetuate the romantic image of Spain that had emerged in Britain during the Peninsular War.

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