In Spanish historiography it is often
assumed that ecclesiastical institutions, and
especially monasteries, were destitute by the
time of the disentailment and exclaustration
or expulsion of religious orders in 1835.
This has been generally assumed to be
due to the fact that there was widespread
tenant opposition to paying land rents after
the Spanish War of Independence and the
Cadiz Cortes or parliament. However, an
examination of the detailed accounting of
the Cistercian monasteries of Galicia, which
were numerous and even opulent at that time,
indicates that the Bernardian monks reached
the time of exclaustration with almost full
income from the rents in kind stipulated in
the foral land tenancy or foro contracts. Still,
a detailed analysis of the financial situation of these institutions reveals a tendency for both
income and expenditures to decrease after
the eighteenth century. In a good number of
cases these religious institutions had to rely
on various forms of funding to face their more
or less serious financial deficits. Nevertheless,
a careful study of the financial registries and
records of the expenditures for court cases
indicate that the cause of the lack of financial
liquidity was not actually due to extensive
labourer resistance to paying the foral taxes or
the tithes, but instead arose from other fiscal,
political and contextual factors, which all came
together to affect the balance of income and
expenditures in these monasteries.
Author
Saavedra, Pegerto
Keywords
Monasterios cistercienses,
rentas,
situación financiera,
Galicia,
siglos XVIII-XIX,
Cistercian monasteries,
rent income,
financial situation,
17th-19th century