Commonwealth of Catalonia

Assembly of Catalonia 1914–1925

Commonwealth of Catalonia
Mancomunitat de Catalunya (Catalan)
Mancomunidad de Cataluña (Spanish)
1914–1925
CapitalBarcelona
Common languages
official
Spanish
used de facto
Catalan
GovernmentFederation of provinces
President 
• 1914–1917
Enric Prat de la Riba (first)
• 1924–1925
Alfons Sala (imposed) (last)
Historical eraBourbon Restoration
• Established
6 April 1914
• Primo de Rivera coup d'état
13 September 1923
• Disestablished
20 March 1925
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Province of Barcelona
Province of Tarragona
Province of Lleida
Province of Girona
Province of Barcelona
Province of Tarragona
Province of Lleida
Province of Girona

The Commonwealth of Catalonia (Catalan: Mancomunitat de Catalunya, IPA: [məŋkumuniˈtad kətəˈluɲə]) was a deliberative assembly made up of the councillors of the four provinces of Catalonia. Promoted in its final stages of gestation by the Regionalist League of Catalonia, it was strongly endorsed by municipal referendum in October 1913.[1]: 8 

The Commonwealth was created in 1914 (symbolically the 200th anniversary of the year of the loss of governing institutions independent of the Spanish central administration) and was disbanded and outlawed in 1925 during Miguel Primo de Rivera's dictatorship.[2]

Although it had only administrative functions and its powers did not go beyond those of the provincial councils, it had great symbolic and practical importance: it represented the first recognition by the Spanish State of the identity and territorial unity of Catalonia since 1714.[3][1]: 19  and was responsible for the creation of many public institutions in health, culture and technical education and science and notably for the support of the Catalan language.[1]: 9 

History

Promoters of the Commonwealth of Catalonia project in 1911

The lower house of the Spanish Parliament approved the creation of a Commonwealth but with limited powers compared to those originally envisioned for it by its promoters. The Spanish Senate never approved the creation of the authority. On 18 December 1913 the king signed the law granting all Spanish provinces the right to group themselves into associations or commonwealths. Catalonia was to prove to be the only commonwealth so formed.

The first President of the Commonwealth of Catalonia was Enric Prat de la Riba and the second was the architect Josep Puig i Cadafalch, both of the Lliga Regionalista, who led a programme to create an efficient infrastructure of roads and ports, hydraulic works, railways, telephones, charities and healthcare. The Commonwealth also undertook initiatives to increase agricultural and forest yields, introducing technological improvements, the improvement of services and education, and promoting education in technologies necessary for Catalan industry.

The Commonwealth was dissolved and outlawed under Miguel Primo de Rivera's dictatorship on 20 March 1925.[3]

Structure

The Assembly of the Commonwealth was initially made up of 36 for councillors from Province of Barcelona and 20 from each of the Provinces of Tarragona, Girona and Lleida) and elected Enric Prat de la Riba, leader of the Regionalist League, as president of the Commonwealth on 6 April 1914. In addition to the assembly and the president, the Commonwealth included an Executive council made up of 2 councillors from each province.[2][3]

Legacy

Part of a series on the
History of Catalonia
Arms of Catalonia
Principality of Catalonia, printed in Antwerp in 1608 by Jan Baptist Vrients
Prehistory  
Iberians c. 6th BC – c. 1st BC
Greek colonies c. 6th BC – c. 1st BC
Roman conquest of Hispania 218 BC – 19 BC
Tarraconensis 27 BC – 476 AD
Medieval
Visigoths 5th century – c.720
Al-Andalus 713–1154
Catalan counties c.760 – 12th century
County of Barcelona 801–1162
Crown of Aragon 1162–1715
Principality of Catalonia c. 12th century – 1714
Compromise of Caspe 1412
War of the Remences 1462–1486
Catalan Civil War 1462–1472
Early modern
Catholic Monarchs 1469–1516
Habsburg Spain 1516–1700
Reapers' War / Catalan Republic 1640–1659
Treaty of the Pyrenees 1659
Revolt of the Barretines 1687–1689
War of the Spanish Succession 1700–1715
War of the Catalans 1713–1714
Nueva Planta decrees 1716
Modern
Peninsular War 1808–1814
Liberals and Carlists 1833–1876
Renaixença 1833–1892
Catalanism 1870s–
Tragic Week 1909
Commonwealth 1914–1925
La Canadenca strike 1919
Catalan Republic 1931
Republican Generalitat / Statute of Autonomy 1932–1939
Events of 6 October 1934
Spanish Civil War / Revolution 1936–1939
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The Commonwealth created and consolidated a set of cultural and scientific institutions (most of which still exist today) to give greater prestige to Catalan language and culture, such as the Institut d'Estudis Catalans (Institute of Catalan Studies), the Biblioteca de Catalunya (Library of Catalonia), the Escola Industrial [ca; es] (Industrial School), the Escola Superior de Belles Arts (College of Fine Arts), the College of Higher Commercial Studies or the Escola del Treball (College of Industry). Prat de la Riba also created, the Escola de l'Administració Local (School of Local Administration), and required Catalan civil servants to have attended this institution.

Another important effort of the Commonwealth was the promotion of the work of Pompeu Fabra, who was chiefly responsible for the current Catalan writing system and linguistic standard.

On 25 January 1919, the Commonwealth approved a draft Statute of Autonomy. This Statute envisaged an autonomous government made up of a parliament, an executive and a governor-general, defined an autonomous financial framework and delineated the powers of the state and a government of Catalonia. The draft was rejected by the Spanish government, but it remained a point of reference for the drafting of the 1932 Statute of Autonomy.[4][5]

References

  1. ^ a b c Balcells, Albert, ed. (2015). La Mancomunitat de Catalunya (1914); centennial symposium (in Catalan). Barcelona: Institut d'Estudis Catalans. ISBN 978-84-9965-252-8. Retrieved 10 June 2019.
  2. ^ a b "Towards autonomy: the Commonwealth of Catalonia, 1914–1925". Retrieved 15 June 2019.
  3. ^ a b c "Mancomunitat de Catalunya" [Commonwealth of Catalonia]. Encyclopedia Catalana (in Catalan). Grup Enciclopèdia Catalana. Retrieved 15 October 2012.
  4. ^ Molas Batllori, Isidre (1983). "El Projecte d'Estatut d'Autonomia de Catalunya" [The design of the Statute of Autonomy of 1919] (PDF). Recerques: Història, economia, cultura (in Catalan). 1983 (14): 69–79. ISSN 0210-380X. Retrieved 15 June 2019.
  5. ^ "Beginnings of the autonomous regime, 1918–1932". Generalitat de Catalunya. Retrieved 15 June 2019.

External links

  • "Mancomunitat de Catalunya Exhibition". 2014. Retrieved 15 June 2019.

See also

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