Criminal consequences of the rioting from the end of the War of Independence to that of the first Carlist

Authors

  • Miguel Pino Abad

Keywords:

Asonada, Penal law, Fernando VII

Abstract

Traditionally, any meeting or riot meeting has been understood as an act of agony to make hostilities or disturb public order. It has also been known by the names of riot, bustle, sedition, mutiny, rebellion, or popular commotion. It has been pointed out that, among the causes that could cause it, were misery, excessive taxes, vices of public administration, abuses of power, humiliation or religious fanaticism. As is well known, the return of Ferdinand VII, after the War of Independence, meant that all the legislation prior to 1808, and, among them, that pertaining to the subject at hand, came back into force. This requires that, in order to achieve a correct knowledge of it, we must go back to the legislation enacted since the late Middle Ages, with special mention of the novelties that occurred from 1814 to the final moment of our journey, which we have located with the conclusion of the first Carlist war

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Published

2021-11-01

How to Cite

Miguel Pino Abad. (2021). Criminal consequences of the rioting from the end of the War of Independence to that of the first Carlist. GLOSSAE. European Journal of Legal History, (18), pp. 62–110. Retrieved from https://glossae.eu/glossaeojs/article/view/442

Issue

Section

Studies