Essay Topic Hub

Spain
Essays

1,825+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,825 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Spain is a subject that appears across history, political science, cultural studies, and international relations courses. Its long arc from medieval kingdom to global empire, followed by decline, dictatorship, and democratic transition, gives it unusual range as an academic subject. Students are drawn to Spain because it sits at the intersection of European development and world history, serving as a bridge between the Old World and the Americas, between Christian and Islamic civilization, and between colonial power and postcolonial consequence. Its influence on language, law, religion, and governance across multiple continents makes it genuinely difficult to contain within a single discipline.

The papers archived on this topic reflect that breadth. Many take a historical approach, tracing how Spain became a world power and examining specific episodes such as the Spanish Armada's confrontation with England in 1588 or the conquest of New Spain. Others shift to cultural and colonial analysis, exploring how Spanish conquest shaped contemporary Mexican identity or produced lasting structures in colonial Africa and the Philippines. Some papers zoom into individual figures or movements, including the architect Antonio Gaudí, while others engage with policy questions such as immigration and international commercial law, situating modern Spain within contemporary European frameworks.

A strong essay on Spain needs a clearly bounded thesis — covering five centuries in a few pages produces only surface-level survey. Papers that work well commit to one period, region, or causal argument and support it with specific historical evidence or textual analysis. The most common pitfall is treating Spain as a backdrop rather than an agent, so make sure your argument explains why Spanish decisions, institutions, or culture produced particular outcomes rather than simply describing what happened.

1,825 papers
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Comparison of the Holocaust to other state-sponsored persecutions
Despite the fact that humans have been violently killing off humans since the beginning of civilization, the word "genocide," which encompasses that of "holocaust," did not exist before 1944.
Paper Undergraduate
Peter Paul Rubens and his artistic contributions
The Life and Art of Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640)
Paper Undergraduate
The European Union's comprehensive system of fundamental rights protection under the Treaty of Lisbon
¶ … Treaty of Lisbon is the culmination of many years of negotiations highlighted by heated debates, compromise, and disappointments. All twenty seven members of the European Union signed the agreement with Czech…
Paper Undergraduate
Community Nurse Diabetic Clinic One
One of the hallmarks of economic progress is ironically the fact that certain kinds of diseases become far more common. Diabetes is one of these diseases. The causes for diabetes are complicated, including genetic as…
Paper Doctorate
Justo L.Gonzalez, the Story Christianity, 1 Volume
This paper discusses the Crusades focusing on how people who embarked on such campaigns were influenced and on their expectations. It relates to their history,it analyzes matters from a modern point of view, and goes at determining the general effects that these conflicts have on the contemporary society. While they lasted for approximately two centuries (even though some believe that they extend much further until the recent years), people typically seem to ignore their importance.
Essay Doctorate
The role of politics in the establishment of Lutheranism in Germany and Scandinavia
The Reformation was as much a political phenomenon as it was a religious phenomenon. Although the Reformation was guided by common basic beliefs in the individual's capacity for salvation, it proceeded according to the…
Paper Undergraduate
Presumption, Often Promulgated by Scholars
Modernism, in one sense ,is a reaction to romanticism and classicism; the strict rules of art and the overly emotive forms and themes so popular in the late 19th century. Romanticism began as a reaction – not so much against anything concrete, more as a result of social moods of the time-period. In music it was a way to expand Classical "rules," harmonies, and forms of expression; in literature and poetry a broad range of reactions towards pieces that were too formal. As an artistic movement, then, romanticism meant many things, but focused on nature, the meaning and exploration of the self, the idea that it was permissible to bend the rules of society in order to engender self-actualization, and the freedom to challenge authority and reason. Modernism in literature, on the other hand, is the literary expression of tendencies that surround individualism, mistrust of institutions (political, social, religious), apathy, agnosticism, and individualism.
Paper Undergraduate
Import-export strategies between Spain and Scottish and Southern Energy
Wind and Gas: Opening up the Spanish Front for SS&E
Research Paper Undergraduate
Classical Baroque Comparing and Contrasting
Comparing and Contrasting Baroque and Classical Music
Paper Undergraduate
Robert Evans and his career in Hollywood film production
Robert Evans: A life on film and behind the scenes of the film industry