With the dynastic change, the Office with the new king
Philip V was extended by disposition of his grandfather King
Louis XIV of France with a Council of Office of chosen personages, who at the beginning were
Manuel Arias y Porres, who was president of the Council of Castile, and
Cardinal Portocarrero. In this way the King of France avoided an excessive influence of the Secretary of Office over the Spanish monarch and at the same time the King of France could control and supervise the government of the Spanish monarchy. Initially, to keep up appearances, the French ambassador
Henri Harcourt dispatched with Cardinal Portocarrero separately. This Council of Office controlled the dispatch with the monarch. In 1704, after the loss of
Gibraltar, the Council de Office was reformed and enlarged with Manuel Arias,
José de Solís y Valderrábano, new president of the Council of Castile,
Juan Domingo de Haro, president of the Council of Flanders,
Antonio Sebastián de Toledo Molina y Salazar, president of the Council of Italy and the French ambassador
Antonio Carlos de Gramont, in addition to the king and the secretary of Office
Antonio de Ubilla. At the end of January 1705
Pedro Fernández del Campo was appointed as the new Secretary of the Office, and since it was impossible for this newcomer to efficiently carry out all the bureaucratic work, the king established in the Royal Decree of July 11, 1705 the division of the secretariat into two distinct offices according to the demands of government to win the
War of Succession: the affairs of War and Finance fell to
José de Grimaldo, while "
everything else of any matter" (primarily justice and ecclesiastical affairs) remained with Pedro Fernández del Campo. However, the Council of Office can in no way be considered the predecessor of the Council of Ministers, since it was an advisory body in which there was no division of competences among its members and which was dissolved in 1715. The year 1714 saw the death of Queen
Maria Luisa Gabriela of Savoy in February and the return of
Jean Orry to
Spain at the end of April, which brought about some administrative changes: the Secretary of the Office
Pedro Fernandez del Campo was replaced by
Manuel Vadillo and the Royal Decree of November 30, 1714 implemented the French ministerial system, establishing four secretaries of the Office: • Office of
State and negotiation of ministers and foreign affairs, in charge of foreign affairs, for
José Grimaldo; • Office of
Ecclesiastical Affairs, justice and jurisdiction, in charge of ecclesiastical affairs, the maintenance of the royalties of the Crown, the regime of the universities, and the justice and jurisdiction of Councils and courts, especially in appointments, for
Manuel Vadillo; • Office of
War, in charge of military affairs, for
Miguel Fernández Durán; • Office of
Navy and the Indies, in charge of naval affairs and America, for
Bernardo Tinajero de la Escalera. Jean Orry, the architect of the reform, was left in charge of a General Overseer's Office for Treasury affairs that supervised the whole administration, controlling the expenses, and in addition, the Overseer's Office had a general intendant who assisted him in order to facilitate the opinions to the rest of the secretaries, and who was
Lorenzo Armengual de la Mota. The Decree of 1714 also established a Cabinet Council, in which the secretaries were integrated, although it is not known if it formed a separate Council or if they were integrated into the pre-existing Council of Office; however, the life of this Council ended with the fall of Orry at the beginning of 1715, so that
Giulio Alberoni cut off the dispatch of the secretaries with the king and thus controlled the remaining secretaries. The new Secretaries of the Office accumulated the attributions of the Secretaries of State (of the Council of State) of the 16th century as liaisons between the Councils and the King, to those of the Secretaries of the Universal Office of the 17th century as channelers of the monarch's communications, thus adding the prestige of the title of Secretary of State to any secretary who entered the Office with the monarch, becoming the first figures of the Administration to control the whole of the administrative apparatus. It was not until the Royal Decree of November 30, 1714 that the figure of
Secretary of State and of the Office was institutionalized, a generic title for the minister to which was added the specific department over which the office was exercised. Thus, the
Minister of War was the
Secretary of State and of the Office of War, or the
Minister of State was the
Secretary of State and of the Office of State, also called
Secretary of the Office of State, and from 1734, as the
first Secretary of State, since in fact, the Secretary of the Office of State was the one who would stand out above all the others as the highest-ranking matters passed through his hands. The Secretaries of State and of the Office were the origin of the ministers, in charge of a specific department and with a professional bureaucracy at their disposal, with their work they went from bureaucrats to political figures. The Secretaries of State and of the Office had privileged access to the monarch, having direct communication with him, which meant, to resolve and decide with the king, as well as to put in writing those verbal resolutions to give them course. The dispatch with the king was done regularly and directly with the monarch and in a reserved manner, and the secretaries also assumed the attributions of the old Councils, as well as the control of their personnel, without undermining the specific competences of the Council of Castile regarding the courts of Justice and Internal Government, as well as the collaboration with the king in the legislative process (being the only Council with legislative function). On February 7, 1715, Orry was dismissed and on April 28, 1715, another new reform in the Secretariats of the Office took place: the General Overseer was suppressed, which was integrated into the
Intendencia General converted into an Office of
Treasury or office of the Intendente General, in which
Lorenzo Armengual de la Mota was kept; the Office of Navy and Indias was also suppressed and its affairs were divided among the three Secretariats of War, State and Justice. When Cardinal
Giulio Alberoni was the new influential man in the Court the Royal Decree of April 2, 1717 arose, which produced another new reorganization of the Universal Office, which was divided between: •
State and Foreign Affairs (with Grimaldo); •
War, Navy and Justice of Spain and the Indies (with
José Rodrigo y Villalpando), •
Political Government and Treasury of Spain and the Indies (with
Manuel Fernández Durán). After the fall of Alberoni in December 1719, another new reorganization took place on December 1, 1720, with the secretariats of: •
State, with José Grimaldo; •
War, Navy and the Indies (except for ecclesiastical matters), with Miguel Fernández Durán, •
Treasury, with
Juan de Dios del Río González, •
Justice and Political Government (with the ecclesiastical of the Indies), with José Rodrigo. With the fall of
Fernández Durán, a new reorganization took place when his Secretariat was divided into two: on the one hand, War, and on the other, the Navy and the Indies, leaving the organization in the five specialized and differentiated Secretaries of the Office until the 19th century, although it happened that the same person simultaneously occupied two or more Secretariats, as in the case of
José Patiño Rosales,
José del Campillo y Cossío,
Zenón de Somodevilla, or
Leopoldo de Gregorio. It was not until the reign of
Ferdinand VI when the distribution of competencies among five secretariats ("State", "Grace and Justice", "Navy and the Indies", "Treasury" and "War") took place: the State Secretariat by Royal Decree of May 15, 1754 and the remaining ones by Royal Decree of August 26, 1754. Only between the Royal Decree of July 8, 1787 and that of April 25, 1790, the number of Secretariats was fixed at seven: "State", "Grace and Justice of Spain", "Navy", "War", "Treasury", "Grace and Justice of the Indies" and "Commerce and Navigation of the Indies", which returned to five in 1790, considering the creation of sections of the Indies in the other Secretariats so that they would deal with both Spanish and Indian affairs in an undifferentiated manner: "Grace and Justice of the Indies" was assimilated to that of Spain, " Commerce and Navigation of the Indies" was divided between War, Treasury and Navy. The five Secretariats of State and of the Office were maintained during the rest of the monarchical absolutism. Only at the end of the reign of
Ferdinand VII was the
Ministry of General Development of the Kingdom incorporated. The creation of this ministry arose from a need, expressed by
Sáinz de Andino, which was "for the direct purpose of preserving order, the common security of the State, the good regime of the things of common use and the play of the action of the Government in everything that states order to the promotion and common prosperity of the people". The establishment of the Secretariat of State and the Office of General Development of the Kingdom by the royal decree of November 5, 1832, reduced the Office of State to foreign relations, while the new ministry was attributed the internal government, which included public instruction, printing and newspapers, whether belonging to the Government or to private individuals, or the Royal Academies and Royal Archives. The absolute government of the monarch was interrupted with the implementation of the
Statute of Bayonne and the
Constitution of 1812, which modified the ministerial structure; article 27 of the Constitution of Bayonne of 1808 established nine ministries: a Ministry of Justice, another of Ecclesiastical Business, another of Foreign Business, another of the Interior, another of the Treasury, another of War, another of the Navy, another of the Indies and another of General Police; and article 222 of the Constitution of 1812 established seven secretaries of the office: For the Office of State, the Office of the Interior of the Kingdom for the Peninsula and adjacent Islands, the Office of the Interior of the Kingdom for Overseas, the Office of Grace and Justice, the Office of the Treasury, the Office of War, and the Office of the Navy. During the reign of
Charles III, the novelty of the collective office was introduced with the creation by royal decree of July 8, 1787 of the
Junta Suprema de Estado (Supreme Board of the State), an institutionalized meeting of all the secretaries to deliberate on matters that went beyond the scope of each secretariat. It was dissolved by decree of February 28, 1792 after the fall of the
Count of Floridablanca. It would not be until the royal decree of November 19, 1823, when the
Council of Ministers or cabinet, presided over by a president of the council (or head of government), was definitively constituted. == See also ==