GraySkyl
New Member
I love collecting weird fun facts I can share with people unexpectedly, and I need to grow my collection! Please let me know of any cool, interesting, or just plain weird fun facts you know of!
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Oh, how I wish I was her, sabotaging the structure of nobility from withinQueen Christina of Sweden loved raising people to nobility to the extent that the number of noble families doubled during her reign, with the amount of Count and Barons reportedly have sextupled.
This, however, proved to be a bit of a problem as the crown was supposed to give away an estate to each Count and Baron. But Christina had ennobled so many that she lost track of which estates belonged to the crown and which she'd already given away. This led to some estates being given away twice.
Well, her actions ended up cementing the nobility's power more than anything else. When she abdicated the throne, roughly half the country was on land owned by the nobility.Oh, how I wish I was her, sabotaging the structure of nobility from within
Oops, I forgot the best part. To remedy this, the estate letters that were given away by the crown had to be changed to include a clause where they were only valid as long as they hadn't already given away the same estate to someone else.This, however, proved to be a bit of a problem as the crown was supposed to give away an estate to each Count and Baron. But Christina had ennobled so many that she lost track of which estates belonged to the crown and which she'd already given away. This led to some estates being given away twice.
To add to the list of Spanish facts:When the House of Bourbon won the Spanish Throne after the War of Spanish Succession, Philip V Bourbon conducted a general survey of the realm where the new Bourbon dynasty discovered that Aragon was still using Roman numerals in accounting, and not Arabic numbers.
The Kingdom of Spain was in reality at least eight different states, all of which the King of Spain was head of state. All of which had their own laws, traditions, aristocratic traditions that the king had to swear allegiance to. Three of these were three separate Basque Republics. This is in comparison to France at the height of Absolutism where the King was at the height of it all, but power was delegated out from him downwards into the patchwork of dioceses, parlements, provincial assemblies, and so on and were more or less coordinated by the royal Council Of State, Spain had no such organ but rather a tendency to cliques surrounding the most currently favored friend of the King, a tradition that would remain until roughly Napoleon