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Reações Internacionais à Revolução Liberal Portuguesa na Imprensa Vintista (1820-1823)
Diogo Domingues
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AbstractOn August 24 1820, a military pronouncement, ocurred in the city of Porto, drops the foundations of the Old Regime in Portugal, opening the way for the implantation of liberalism at the western end of the european territory. The Portuguese liberal revolution has aroused, soon its inicial moments, the most distinct foreign reactions, which oscillated between sympathy for the revolutionary cause, admittedly liberal, even though advocate of the monarchy and Catholicism, and the condemnation of the movement initiated in the Invicta city, approaching it from the ideals conveyed by the French Revolution, at a time when most European governments seemed unanimous in condemning the political situation that it resulted in. This chapter intends to study in a somewhat more profound way the nature of these same international reactions as well as its manifestations and its effects for the conduct of the internal and external policy of the portuguese kingdom, resorting to some national press titles of the period between the revolution of 1820 and the military coup of Vila-Francada, in the Spring of 1823, which ends up dictating the collapse of the first liberal regime in the history of portuguese nation.
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Last Update: 2022-08-18
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