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Some
Portuguese & English
History
compiled by John Warren,
1996
English military co-operation with Portugal may be traced back to
1147 when the re-conquest of Lisbon was achieved by Alfonso
Henriques with the help of an army of Crusaders from Britain on
their way to the Holy Land.
Following the decade of Pedro I of Portugal (1357-1367), marked by summary justice and boisterous festivities,
an instability returned to the whole area of Portugal,
Castile and Aragon.
John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster (d. 1399 son of Edward III and
brother of Edward the Black Prince) married in September 1371
Constance, daughter of Pedro III King of Castile and to further
his claim to the throne of Castile following the death of Pedro
III negotiated an alliance with Fernando I of Portugal (1367-1383).
This alliance, sworn in St Paul's on 16th June 1373 was the
first treaty between Portugal and England, making Portugal
England's oldest ally.
Following the death of Fernando I, and a fight for the Portuguese
succession John of Avis was proclaimed João I (1384-1433). In
1385 João I won the battle of Aljubarrota against the Castilians
with the help of English archers.
João I continued the friendly alliance with England and with
John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster and in 1386 on the 17th May a
new Anglo-Portuguese treaty was concluded in the Star Chamber at
Westminster.
This new treaty referred to as the Treaty of Windsor, although it
is really a re-ratification of the treaty of 1373 contained
political, military and economic clauses, and above all it laid
down that:
"there shall be between the two above mentioned
kings now reigning, and their heirs and successors and between
the subjects of both kingdoms, an inviolable, eternal, solid,
perpetual and true league of friendship, alliance and union, not
only between each other, their heirs and successors, but also
between and in favour of their kingdoms, lands, dominions and
subjects, vassals, allies and friends, wherever they may be, so
that each of them shall have the obligation to assist and give
aid to the other against all people now born of who shall come to
be born and who shall seek to violate the peace of others or in
any way make bold to offend their states........."
Following the treaty, Lancaster prepared to invade Castile from
Portugal and João I sent a squadron of galleys for the defence
of England.
In February 1387 João I married Philippa, daughter of John of
Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster by his wife Constance (see above,
descended from Pedro III of Castile), thus cementing the alliance
and the claim to the House of Castile.
João I and his dynasty instigated the exciting period in
Portuguese history known as the age of the great discoveries.
The Great Discoveries
On 25 July, 1415 a fleet of more than 200 ships under the command
of King João I and his three sons, of which Prince Henry was
one, set sail from Lisbon. The Portuguese seizure of Ceuta put an
end to the Barbarians' acts of piracy along the coast and assured
them control of the Straits of Gibraltar. The spirit of the
crusades was not altogether lacking from this enterprise in which
Christians opposed Mohammedans. Finally the idea of discovering a
new world, of pushing back the boundaries of the unknown was
constantly in the minds of men of ambition at that time.
Prince Henry (the navigator) who founded the Sagres School
realised that the capture of Ceuta did not ensure the safety of
the spice route by land from India to the Mediterranean. The idea
was born in his mind to discover a sea route from Europe to India.
To this end he gathered to the Sagres Promontory (south of
Lisbon, at the western end of the Algarve) cosmographers,
cartographers and navigators. Prince Henry then sent out ships to
discover the route around Africa.
Famous names of the ship captains include, Diogo Cão,
Bartholomeu Dias, Gil Eanes and Vasco de Gama.
Prince Henry inspired new methods of colonisation by the setting
up of trading posts, exchanges and banks. These offices run by
private individuals fostered the development of towns independent
of the local powers, such as for example Goa.
Henry died in 1460, but the stage had already been set, the route
to India and to many other places was achieved as a result of his
inspiration.
Catherine of Bragança
In 1662 Catherine of Bragança daughter of King John IV of
Portugal married King Charles II of England, who was glad of her
dowry of some £300,000 together with the naval bases of Tangier
and Bombay. To place this event in the context of British history
of the time it is interesting to note that during the reign of
Charles II the Great Plague (1665) and the Fire of London (1666)
took place. The Habeas Corpus Act was passed (1679) and the
emergence of the two party political system, Whig and Tory,
became apparent.
Port Wine
The Methuen Treaty of 1703 provided conditions for the shipping
of Port wine to Britain. This trade has remained popular and
continues to this day, with the British continuing to import
large quantities of Port wine
The Napoleonic Wars
Portugal joined the coalition against Revolutionary France in
1793. Napoleon invaded Portugal but with little success. The Duke
of Wellington although then only Mr Wellesley was there with some
troops who engaged in guerrilla war tactics and finally forced
the French from the Peninsular. However Portugal suffered
violence and depredations from both armies, material poverty and
political and moral effects were tragic. Rival factions,
supported at times by both the English and the French emerged to
fight a civil war (1828-1834).
Argument about Africa
In 1890 Britain and Portugal had their only real disagreement, which
was about the Portuguese desire to link Angola on the west side
of Africa with Mozambique on the east. This project to enhance
the administration and efficiency of the two Portuguese colonies
was thwarted by Britain in a crass and unfriendly manner, which
has not been forgotten in Portugal. The British for their own
reasons wanted to keep open the corridor linking the north of
Africa with South Africa. Despite this disagreement and the heavy
handed ultimatum from the British the relationship continued, the
Portuguese Anglo treaty continued in tact.
More recent
In 1907 King Carlos I of Portugal (1889-1908), was experiencing
political problems with republicans.
On 1st February, 1908 as the king with his family were crossing
the Terreiro do Paço in Lisbon in an open landau, they were
attacked by a group of assassins.
A young man shot the King in the head. the landau moved forward
and a bearded man shot dead the heir to the throne Prince Luis
Filipe, his younger brother Dom Manuel, was wounded in the arm.
It was the first regicide in Portuguese history.
The sudden disappearance of Dom Carlos and his heir brought to
the throne a prince who had not been expected or trained to rule.
The political parties began again to intrigue in their usual
manner. Finally on 5th October, 1910 Manuel II abdicated and a
republic was proclaimed.
Dom Manuel, seeing there was nothing further to be done, was
joined by his mother and grandmother at Mafra, and went to the
neighbouring fishing village of Ericeira, where he embarked on
the yacht Dona Amélia for Gibraltar and England. He settled at
Twickenham and devoted himself to his splendid library. He died
in 1932.
The republic did not restore order or the economy and when
Portugal entered the 1st World War in 1916 matters became worse
at home.
In 1928 Dr António Salazar was appointed Minister of Finance and
economic and political stability was gradually restored. Dr
Salazar became Prime Minister in 1932.
During World War II Dr Salazar steered a tricky course to
maintain neutrality, made difficult by the proximity of Franco's
Spain and threats by Germany against the Portuguese merchant
fleet and possessions. In 1942 Dr Salazar reluctantly agreed to
sell Wolfram (Tungsten ore) to Germany.
Lisbon was an exciting place during the war where allied and
German spies mingled..
In 1943 Portugal provided the British Fleet with facilities in
the Azores during the Battle of the Atlantic.
Finally in 1944 the allies asked Dr Salazar to suspend all
deliveries of Wolfram to Germany and despite threats from Germany
Portugal declared a total embargo on the shipments. When the war
ended, Dr Salazar had succeeded in upholding the neutrality of
Portugal whilst reconciling it with the requirements of the
ancient Alliance.
The revolution of 25th April, 1974
The background to the revolution was that the former regime of Dr
Salazar who died in July 1970, was now run by incompetents and
that Caetano his successor continued a ruinous and unpopular anti-guerrilla
war in Africa (Angola and Mozambique).
A group of captains formed the "Movimento das Forcas Armadas"
(MFA) or Armed Forces Movement.
On 23 April, 1974 Captain Otelo Saraiva de Carvalho (later
popularly known just as "Otelo"), gave final
instructions, at a meeting in the Edward VII park in Lisbon, in
sealed envelopes, to the MFA men secretly responsible for the
whole of the Portuguese territory.
On 25 April at 12.25 am, José Afonso's song, "Grandola vila
Morena", played during a broadcast from Radio Renascenca,
gave the signal for the start of the insurrection. Troops loyal
to the MFA and their captains secured all important positions
including radio and television. There were practically no
casualties and the 25th April has become symbolised by a now
famous photograph of a marine chatting to students, in the barrel
of his machine gun there is a carnation.
The president Marcelo Caetano took refuge in the Republican
National Guards' barracks in the Largo do Carmo square in Lisbon,
which was barricaded.
By 7.45 p.m. Caetano surrendered and a National Junta presided
over by General Spinola was invested with the powers of
government.
General Spinola resigned in September 1974 and General Costa
Gomes became president. The communist experiment was in full
swing at this stage. When communism was finally seen to be a
failure it was already 1976 and General António Ramalho Eanes
was elected president on 27 June 1976, subsequently Portugal
moved through a period of socialism, the well known figure of Dr.
Mario Soares was to become Prime Minister. The people finally
tired of socialism and elected Mr. Anibal Cavaco Silva as prime
minister on a centre right ticket. By this time Mario Soares had
become President, more for his national appeal as an exile in
Paris before the revolution than for his politics.