Alfredo Alvar


Alfredo Alvar Ezquerra is a Spanish historian, research professor at the Spanish National Research Council and modern history specialist. He is a correspondent academician at the Royal Academy of History and associated professor at the Complutense University of Madrid.
He is son to Manuel Alvar, a prominent Spanish philologist.

Teachings and research

Alvar's research has been almost totally concentrated on the Spanish Modern Age; in his first years, the kingdom of Philip II and how Madrid became the permanent headquarters of the Court drew his attention; afterwards, his fields of research have comprised, to name a few, historiography, arbitrismo and biographies of relevant people in the Spanish 16th and 17th centuries. Anthony Giddens’ theory of structuration and the Annales School and Fernand Braudel, have been extremely influential in Alvar's thinking, and sociology and economy are present throughout his works.
Innovation in History comes mainly as a result of either a new interpretation of old sources, or bringing to light unknown data and sources. Probably, Alvar's most defining methodological feature has been the permanent quest for new scientific sources, something straightforward even from his very first book, but especially in his last biographies and a research project regarding the minutes of Madrid's town hall meetings in the last decades of the 16th century.
Professor Alvar has participated in 18 scientific projects and he has been leading researcher in 14 of them. Beyond his teachings at the Complutense University, he set up the Chair of Spanish Modern History in Quito, Ecuador, where he was invited professor.
But if there is one field where Alfredo Alvar is active, that is scientific diffusion. He is or has been actively engaged in different scientific journals, directing some of them and his different courses, lectures and seminars are a constant feature of Madrid's cultural life.

Works

Among his almost twenty books, the most remarkable are:
Moreover, Alvar has coordinated and edited complete collections of history books and some remarkable titles for Spanish historiography, such as the forementioned Accounts and Letters, by Antonio Pérez ; the edition of the Spanish translation of De Materia Medica by Dioscorides, and the encyclopaedical Topographical Accounts of Phillip II, an extremely interesting effort to know how there were the different villages of the kingdom, but not, as it was previously assumed before Alvar's work, a mere accountability study in order to tax them.