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Encyclopedia > Contestado War
Contestado War

Date: October, 1912August, 1916
Location: Contestado Region, Southern Brazil
Result: Governist Victory
Casus belli: Social Conflicts, Religious Fanaticism, Proclamation of the Republic
Combatants

Rebels

Brazilian Forces
Commanders
José Maria Carlos Frederico de Mesquita
Strength
10,000 8,000
Casualties
5.000 - 8.000 dead, wounded or disappeared
20,000 civilians
800 - 1,000 dead, wounded, deserted or disappeared
20,000 civilians

The Contestado War (Portuguese: Guerra do Contestado), broadly speaking, was a land war between rebelled civilians and the Brazilian state and federal police and military forces. It was fought in a region rich in wood and yerba mate that was contested by the States of Paraná, Santa Catarina and even Argentina, from October 1912 to August 1916. The war had its casus belli in the social conflicts in the region, the result of local disobediences, particularly regarding the regularization of land ownership on the part of the cablocos. The conflict was permeated by religious fanaticism expressed by the messianism and faith of the rebellious cablocos that they were engaged in a religious war; at the same time, it reflected the dissatisfaction of the population with its material situation. Image File history File links Contestado. ... Look up October in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ... 1912 (MCMXII) was a leap year starting on Monday in the Gregorian calendar (or a leap year starting on Tuesday in the 13-day-slower Julian calendar). ... August is the eighth month of the year in the Gregorian Calendar and one of seven Gregorian months with the length of 31 days. ... 1916 (MCMXVI) was a leap year starting on Saturday (link will take you to calendar). ... Casus belli is a modern Latin expression meaning occasion of war. ... Image File history File links Bandeira_do_Contestado. ... A rebellion is, in the most general sense, a refusal to accept authority. ... Image File history File links Flag_of_Brazil. ... Miguel Boaventura Lucena (died October 22, 1912) was a Brazilian religious people fromstate of Santa Catarina, probably the west the state. ... Binomial name Ilex paraguariensis A. St. ... Other meanings: Paraná, Argentina, Paraná River Paraná is one of the states of Brazil, located in the southern part of the country, bordering Paraguay and Argentina. ... Flag of Santa Catarina See other Brazilian States Capital Florianópolis Largest City Joinville Area 95,442. ... 1912 (MCMXII) was a leap year starting on Monday in the Gregorian calendar (or a leap year starting on Tuesday in the 13-day-slower Julian calendar). ... 1916 (MCMXVI) was a leap year starting on Saturday (link will take you to calendar). ... This page deals with property as ownership rights. ... For other uses of the term, see Holy War. ...

Contents


Prologue: the monks' power

The origins of the Contestado War can be understood best by beginning a little earlier and considering the influence of three monks of the region. The first one who rose to prominence was João Maria, a man of Italian origin, who wandered, preaching and attending to the sick, from 1844 to 1870. He lived a very simple life, and his ethics and lifestyle attracted thousands of followers. He died in 1870, in Sorocaba, São Paulo state. A monk is a person who practices asceticism, the conditioning of mind and body in favor of the spirit. ... 1870 (MDCCCLXX) was a common year starting on Saturday (see link for calendar) of the Gregorian calendar or a common year starting on Monday of the 12-day-slower Julian calendar. ... The City of Sorocaba Sorocaba is a city in southern Brazil, in the southeastern portion of São Paulo State. ... Flag of São Paulo See other Brazilian States Capital São Paulo Largest City São Paulo Area 248,176. ...


The second monk also adopted the alias of João Maria, although his real name was Atanás Marcaf, probably of Syrian origin. He appeared to the public during the Federalist Revolution of 1893; he belonged to the maragatos faction, and projected a firm and even messianic stature. He even made prophecies about the political events of his time. He was active in the region between the Iguaçu and Uruguay rivers. As a sign of his unquestioned influence over the faithful, a portion of them waited for his return by resurrection after his disappearance in 1908. Iguaçu WaterFalls Photo by: Daniel Spillere Andrade The Iguazu River (Portuguese:Rio Iguaçu, Spanish:Río Iguazú) is born in Sierra do Mar in the Brazilian state of Paraná to finish over a thousand kilometers southeast at the Paraná River, in the triple border with Paraguay and Argentina. ...


The wait of the faithful ended in 1912, when the figure of the third monk appeared in public. He was initially known as an herbal healer, having presented himself under the name of José Maria de Santo Agostinho, although, according to a report of the police of Vila de Palmas, Paraná state, he was, in reality, an army deserter who had been convicted of rape, by the name of Miguel Lucena de Boaventura.


Because no one knew his origins, and because he lived a straight and honest life, it was not difficult for him to achieve the people's admiration and confidence in a short period of time. One of his claims to fame was the account of his resurrection of a young lady (who probably was just a victim of catalepsy). He was also said to have cured the colonel Francisco de Almeida's wife of a previously uncurable illness. After this event. the monk won even more fame and trust by declining the land and significant quantity of gold that the grateful colonel offered him. Catalepsy is a condition characterized most often by rigidity of the extremities and by decreased sensitivity to pain. ...


From this point on, José Maria began to be considered a saint: a man who had come to Earth only to heal the sick and aid the needy. Methodical and organized, he was quite different from the familiar healers. He knew how to read and write and he described in his notebooks the medical properties of the plants found in the region. With the permission of Colonel Almedia, he set up what was known as the "people's pharmacy" at the ranch of one of the foremen, where he stored up medicinal herbs that he used in his daily medical consultations with anyone who wished to visit him, until the late hours of the night. A saint is, broadly defined, a holy person. ... Bowl of Hygeia Pharmacy (from the Greek φάρμακον = drug) is the profession charged with ensuring the safe use of medication. ...


Ignited estopim

The railroad, one of the causes of the Contestado War
The railroad, one of the causes of the Contestado War

The estopim was still to be ignited. A foreign company was designated to finish the railroad that was started in 1890 by the engineer João Teixeira Soares. This railroad would connect the cities of São Paulo to Santa Maria, in Rio Grande do Sul. With the giving up of Teixeira, the concession of this road was transferred, in 1908, to theBrazil Railway Company, a north-American company owned by Percival Farquhar. Image File history File links Download high resolution version (1024x768, 134 KB) © 2003 by Tomasz Sienicki File links The following pages link to this file: Railroad tie ... Image File history File links Download high resolution version (1024x768, 134 KB) © 2003 by Tomasz Sienicki File links The following pages link to this file: Railroad tie ... Landmark buildings Edifício Italia (at left) and Copan (curved façade at center), in São Paulo Downtown. ... Santa Maria in Italian/Portuguese/Spanish refers to Holy Mary or Blessed Virgin Mary (Mary, the mother of Jesus) The Santa Maria was the largest of the three ships used by Christopher Columbus in his first voyage across the Atlantic Ocean Places Places named Santa Maria include: Santa Maria is... Rio Grande do Sul (pron. ...


Beyond the right to finish the workmanships, it gained of the government the right to explore a band of 30 kilometers, 15 kilometers of each side of the railroad. The Company legally dispossessed the lands that bordered and offered it work in the seedbed of workmanships of the railroad to the families of one who holds legal titles to property who had been dispossessed. At the same time, the concession guarantee that another coligada company to the trust, the Southern Brazil Lumber & Colonization, started to explore and to commercialize the wood of the region, with the right to resell lands dispossessed throughout the railroad. While it had service, everything was well. It is calculated that about 8000 men they had worked in the workmanships of the railroad: workers proceeding from the urban population of Rio De Janeiro, of Saints, Salvador and Recife, with faith in the promise of many advantages and high wages. A family of Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso in 1997 A family consists of a domestic group of people (or a number of domestic groups), typically affiliated by birth or marriage, or by comparable legal relationships — including domestic partnership, adoption, surname and (in some cases) ownership (as occurred in the Roman Empire). ...


When the workmanships had finished, an enormous population of camponeses was without having what to make and for where to go. Identical situation to the one of a great number of workers of is that they had not returned to the origin cities because they had been only dismissed for the company that did not honor the commitment of taking them in return when the end of the works arrived.


This situation was similar to the one of the expulsos camponeses of its lands on the part of powerful lumber companies who also came if installing in the region. In this context of misery and poverty between the caboclos, saint entered in scene monge, that would inflame the inhabitants of the territory contested against the situation that they were facing and the occupation and exploration of lands on the part of strange companies to the region.


The first casualties

The Brazilian government, then led by Marshal Hermes da Fonseca, who was responsible for the policy of Savlaçoes, of military inverventions in various states of the country to eliminate political adversaries, saw signs of a rebellion in this movement and decided to repress it, sending troops to calm tempers. Hermes Rodrigues da Fonseca (May 12, 1855 - September 9, 1923) was a Brazilian soldier and politician. ...


Foreseeing what was coming, José Maria (Miguel Lucena Boaventura) left immediately for Irani with all the his following. Irani, at this time, belonged to Palmas, a city that was in the jurisdiction of Paraná. As Paraná and Santa Catarina then had unresolved disputes about territory and boundaries, Paraná saw this great movement of people as a strategy by the State of Santa Catarina to occupy those lands. Miguel Boaventura Lucena (died October 22, 1912) was a Brazilian religious people fromstate of Santa Catarina, probably the west the state. ... Palmas may refer to: Palmas, the capital of the state of Tocantins in Brazil Palmas a centenary small city in the south of the state of Paraná in Brazil. ...


The Contestado war began here in October 1912. In defense of its lands, some troops of the Paranense Regiment of Security were sent out, to force the invaders to return to Santa Catarina.


But things did not go as planned. A bloody confrontation started between government troops and followers of the Contestado in a place called Banhado Grande. At the end of the battle, dozens of people from both sides were dead, and a great amount of guns and ammuntion had been taken from the Paraná forces by the rebels. Among those killed were Colonel Gualberto João, who commanded the troops, and also the Monk Jose Maria, but the partisans of the Contestado had obtained their first victory.


Jose Maria was buried with boards by his followers, in order to facilitate his resurrection, since caboclos believed that this would revive folloied of Army Magic, vulgarly called Army of Is Sebastião, that would help them to fortify the Celestial Monarchy and to knock down the Republic, that each time more was given credit to be an instrument of the devil, dominated for the figures of the colonels.


Statistics of the war

  • Size of combat area: 20,000 km²
  • Population living in the combat area: about 40,000 inhabitants
  • Municipalities of Paraná (at the time): Rio Negro, Itaiópolis, Timbó, Três Barras, União da Vitória and Palmas
  • Municipalities of Santa Catarina (at the time): Lages, Curitibanos, Campos Novos and Canoinhas

The Negro (Spanish: black) River, the great northern tributary of the Amazon River and the largest blackwater river in the world, has its sources along the watershed between the Orinoco and the Amazon basins, and also connects with the Orinoco by way of the Casiquiare canal. ... Palmas may refer to: Palmas, the capital of the state of Tocantins in Brazil Palmas a centenary small city in the south of the state of Paraná in Brazil. ... Lages is a Brazilian town located in the south of the state of Santa Catarina. ... Canoinhas is a Brazilian city, in the north plateau of the State of Santa Catarina. ...

References

  • 'Grandes Acontecimentos da História - Revista da Editora 3, nº 4 (setembro de 1973)
  • Diacon, Todd A. Millenarian Vision, Capitalist Reality: Brazil's Contestado Rebellion, 1912-1916 (Duke University Press 1991), ISBN 0822311674

Duke University is a private, coeducational, research university located in Durham, North Carolina, USA. Officially founded as Duke University in 1924, Duke traces its institutional roots back to 1838. ...

External links

  • Onwar
  • Article
  • UNC article with a brief mention
  • Brief mention on a Yale site.


 
 

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