List of titles and honours of the Spanish Crown
The current Spanish constitution refers to the monarchy as "the Crown of Spain" and the constitutional title of the monarch is simply rey/reina de España: that is, "king/queen of Spain". However, the constitution allows for the use of other historic titles pertaining to the Spanish monarchy, without specifying them. A decree promulgated 6 November 1987 at the Council of Ministers regulates the titles further, and on that basis the monarch of Spain has a right to use those other titles appertaining to the Crown. Contrary to some belief, the long titulary that contains the list of over 20 kingdoms is not in state use, nor is it used in Spanish diplomacy. In fact, it has never been in use in that form, as "Spain" was never a part of the list in pre-1837 era when the long list was officially used.
Spain, mentioned differently in the titulary depending on which monarch was reigning, was for more than three centuries also symbolized by the long list that started "... of Castile, León, Aragón, ..." The following long titulary in the feudal style was the last used officially in 1836 by Isabella II of Spain before she became constitutional queen.
The first king to officially use a derivation of the name "Spain" as the realm in the titulary was Charles I of Spain, who used Rex Hispaniarum et Indiarum. This title was often used after his title of Holy Roman Emperor which was superior to that of king. During his brief and controversial occupancy of the throne Joseph Napoleon Bonaparte, brother of Emperor Napoleon, also used a similar title, King of the Spains and the Indies, he conferred the title "Prince of Spain" to be hereditary on his children and grandchildren in the male and female line.
During the first restoration of the Bourbons, it returned to the traditional format until 1837, when the short version "queen of the Spains" was taken into use by Isabella II. The singular Spain was first used by Amadeo—he was "by divine grace and will of nation, king of Spain". During the second restoration, King Alfonso XII started to use "constitutional king of Spain, by divine and constitutional grace".
With the third restoration of the royal house of Spain, still current as of 2017, the monarch uses the simple title "king of Spain", without any divine, national or constitutional reference.
Juan Carlos, king until June 2014, did not use the title of Catholic Majesty and the other titles and honours, but did not relinquish them.
Titles associated with the Spanish crown
The titles used by the last Habsburg king of Spain, Charles II, were:File:Full Ornamented Royal Coat of Arms of Spain.svg|thumb|335px|right| from Charles III to Alfonso XIII
The Kingdoms
- King of Spain
- King of Castile
- King of León
- King of Aragon
- King of the Two Sicilies
- King of Jerusalem
- King of Cyprus
- King of Navarre
- King of Granada
- King of Mallorca
- King of Toledo
- King of Seville
- King of Valencia
- King of Galicia
- King of Sardinia
- King of Cordoba
- King of Corsica
- King of Menorca
- King of Murcia
- King of Jaén
- King of the Algarves
- King of Algeciras
- King of Gibraltar
- King of the Canary Islands
- King of the Spanish East and West Indies and of the Islands and Mainland of the Ocean Sea
Archduchies
- Archduke of Austria
Duchies
- Duke of Burgundy
- Duke of Brabant
- Duke of Limburg
- Duke of Lothier
- Duke of Milan
- Duke of Luxembourg
- Duke of Athens
- Duke of Neopatria
Counties
- Count of Habsburg
- Count of Flanders
- Count of Burgundy
- Count of Hainaut
- Count of Namur
- Count of Artois
- Count of Charolais
- Count of Tyrol
- Count of Roussillon
- Count of Cerdanya
- Count of Barcelona
- Count of Girona
- Count of Osona
- Count of Besalú
- Count of Covadonga
Lordships
- Lord of Biscay
- Lord of Molina
Other titles maintained, but usually abbreviated with "etc."
- Duke of Gelderland, of Styria, of Carniola, of Carinthia, and of Württemberg;
- Landgrave of Alsace;
- Prince of Swabia;
- Palatine Count of Burgundy;
- Count of Artois, of Hainaut, of Namur, of Gorizia, of Haut-Rhin, and of Kyburg;
- Marquis of Oristano, and of Goceano;
- Margrave of the Holy Roman Empire, and of Burgau;
- Lord of Salins, of Mechelen, of the Slovenian March, of Pordenone, and of Tripoli.
Military rank
- Captain General of the Royal Spanish Armed Forces and their Supreme Commander
Hereditary orders of Spain
- Sovereign Grand Master of the Celebrated Order of the Golden Fleece
- Grand Master of the Royal & Distinguished Order of Charles III
- Grand Master of the Royal Order of Isabel, the Catholic
- Grand Master of the Royal and Military Order of Saint Ferdinand
- Grand Master of the Royal and Military Order of Saint Hermenegild
- Grand Master of the Order of Montesa
- Grand Master of the Order of Alcántara
- Grand Master of the Order of Calatrava
- Grand Master of the Order of Santiago
- Grand Master of the Order of Queen Maria Luisa
Titles of the heir apparent or heir presumptive
Principalities
- Prince of Asturias—title of the first-in-line to the Kingdom of Spain and earlier Crown of Castile-León
- Prince of Girona—title of the first-in-line of the Crown of Aragon
- Prince of Viana—title of the first-in-line of the Kingdom of Navarre
Duchies, counties and lordships
- Duke of Montblanc—title of the first-in-line to the Principality of Catalonia
- Count of Cervera—title of the first-in-line to the Kingdom of Valencia
- Lord of Balaguer—title of the first in line to the Kingdom of Mallorca
Orders of the heir apparent
- Knight of the Celebrated Order of the Golden Fleece
- Knight of the Collar of the Royal and Distinguished Order of Charles III
- Knight Grand Cross of the Royal and Military Order of San Hermenegildo
- Commandeur-Major of Castile of the Order of Santiago
- Knight of the Order of Alcántara
- Knight of the Order of Calatrava
- Knight of the Order of Montesa
Royal titles
Duchies
- Cádiz
- Seville
- Segovia
- Badajoz
- Soria
- Lugo
- Palma de Mallorca
Counties
- Chinchón
- Molina
- Montemolín
- Montizón
- Barcelona
- Covadonga