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Concession of Évora Monte: The Failure of Liberalism in Nineteenth-Century Portugal [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 186 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 234x161x21 mm, weight: 445 g, 19 BW Photos
  • Išleidimo metai: 11-Sep-2014
  • Leidėjas: Lexington Books
  • ISBN-10: 0739193317
  • ISBN-13: 9780739193310
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 186 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 234x161x21 mm, weight: 445 g, 19 BW Photos
  • Išleidimo metai: 11-Sep-2014
  • Leidėjas: Lexington Books
  • ISBN-10: 0739193317
  • ISBN-13: 9780739193310
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
In a period when the monarch was the key figure in the Portuguese government, the struggle for the throne among members of the royal family was of crucial significance. Against a backdrop of new liberal ideas, economic conservatism, and modernization, Dom Pedro challenged his brother, Dom Miguel (the Usurper), on behalf of his young daughter (Maria II) for the throne. But this struggle for the throne, and for a workable constitution, did little to change the fundamentally agrarian economy, so that in the end neither the monarch, nor the liberal ideals of the urban elite, nor foreign pressures had any fundamental effect on society as a whole.

The Concession of Évora Monte describes the economic and political problems unleashed by the Peninsular War and the evacuation of the court to Brazil; the 1820 revolution, the first Portuguese constitution, and the counter revolution; the attempt by Dom Pedro when he became king (while also emperor of Brazil) to introduce the new Constitutional Charter and pass the throne on to his young daughter; the usurpation of the throne by his brother Dom Miguel; the War of the Two Brothers in which Dom Pedro defeated Dom Miguel and forced him into exile. The signing of the Concession in 1834 marked the end of the civil war, but it did not bring peace and stability. The changes introduced by the victorious Dom Pedro did not solve the basic issues of Portuguese society, nor did the efforts of his daughter, Maria II, during the 1830s and the 1840s. Several attempts were made to impose a new liberal constitution on the country, but in the end it was the formation after 1850 of new political parties sharing the governing which brought stability. The country remained conservative despite the modernization which came to the cities but which penetrated the countryside only to a degree.

This book argues that liberalism in Portugal was an urban phenomenon involving a very small minority of the people, and points to a variety of reasons for this. Portugal remained a rural, conservative society into the twentieth century and throughout the Salazar regimes until, perhaps, the Carnation Revolution in 1974.

Recenzijos

A very successful synthesis of a long period of Portuguese history, rich in domestic events and constant dramatic changes of fortune, in a country forced to fight for its survival throughout the European power struggle before, during, and after Napoleon. After skimming over the Portuguese eighteenth century period of enlightenment, Dr. Ronald Thomson addresses the country's political struggle with the two liberal projects, the revolutionary French approach and the British liberal parliamentary approach, and the violent struggle between two royal figures and brothers, embodying the romantic desire of political and social change, and the popular resistance to end the long prevailing Ancient Regime. The author concludes that the social and economic characteristics in the making of Portuguese society of the time explain the democratic shortfalls in the development of a truly liberal society in Portugal, in contrast to the more advanced economic societal models already existent in Northern Europe. The work is rational and synthetic, written in a very clear style, concentrating on key events, pragmatic and scrupulously fair in its analysis; a welcome, fresh work that will enrich Portuguese historiography, so often ideologically biased. -- Pedro de Avillez, Historian and Publisher

Illustrations and Maps
ix
Introduction: The Concession of Evora Monte xi
The Houses of Braganca and Braganca-Saxe-Coburg xiv
Part One The War of the Two Brothers
1 The Peninsular War
3(16)
A The Portuguese Monarchy and Brazil
5(3)
B The Peninsular War and Its Aftermath
8(6)
C The Liberal Ideology
14(5)
2 Joao VI
19(36)
A The Structure of Portuguese Society
19(5)
B Portugal (and Brazil), 1814--1820
24(6)
C Spain's 1812 Cadiz Constitution
30(2)
D The 1820 Portuguese Revolution and the Return of Joao VI
32(4)
E The Constitution of 1822
36(5)
F Dom Pedro and Brazil
41(4)
G The Counter-Revolution
45(8)
H The Death of Joao VI
53(2)
3 The War of the Two Brothers
55(38)
A King Pedro IV
55(3)
B The Constitutional Charter, 1826
58(4)
C The Competition for Power: the International Stage
62(2)
D The Competition for Power: the National Stage
64(4)
E King Miguel I
68(9)
F Dom Pedro, Duke of Braganca
77(3)
G The War of the Two Brothers, 1832-1834
80(13)
Part Two The Concession of Evora Monte
4 The Concession of Evora Monte
93(8)
5 1834
101(22)
A The Liberals and the Miguelists
101(4)
B The Government in 1834
105(2)
C Social Reforms
107(1)
D The Liberals and the Church
108(7)
E Dom Miguel
115(5)
F The Death of Dom Pedro
120(3)
Part Three An Unstable Peace
6 Maria II
123(28)
A Maria II and the Portugal of 1834
123(3)
B The Frustration of the Radicals, 1834-1838
126(7)
C Constitutional Change, 1838
133(4)
D The Search for Moderation 1838-1851
137(4)
E Miguelism and the Countryside
141(5)
F Regeneration, 1851-1856
146(2)
G The Death of Dona Maria II
148(3)
Conclusion: The Failure of Portuguese Liberalism
151(14)
A Pedro V, 1853-1861
151(1)
B Portugal, 1861-1910
152(1)
C The Twentieth Century
153(2)
D The Failure of Liberalism
155(10)
Appendix 1 The Constitutions of Portugal 165(1)
Appendix 2 The Descendants of Dom Miguel 166(3)
Appendix 3 Ranald MacDonell 169(2)
Bibliography 171(6)
Index 177
Ron B. Thomson is a retired fellow of the Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies in Toronto.