"We do not want to give up that which we have built together," he said yesterday, adding that the country had overcome "the mistakes of the past" -- in an apparent reference to Spain's former military dictatorship.
"In recent decades Spaniards have continued our history, honouring our sovereign decision to live together in democracy," he said at the Princess of Asturias Awards, Spain's answer to the Nobel prizes.
"We have lived and shared successes and failures, triumphs and sacrifices, which have united us in joys and sufferings. We can not forget it."
After Catalonia held a banned independence referendum on October 1 -- sparking Spain's worst political crisis since it emerged from dictatorship in 1977 -- Felipe had branded the separatist drive illegal and thrown his weight behind the national government.
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