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Encyclopedia > Pedro IV
Pedro I, Emperor of Brazil; Pedro IV of Portugal
Pedro I, Emperor of Brazil; Pedro IV of Portugal

Pedro I of Brazil, known as "Dom Pedro" (October 12, 1798 - September 24, 1834), proclaimed Brazil independent from Portugal and became Brazil's first Emperor. He also held the Portuguese throne briefly as Pedro IV of Portugal.

Contents

Early years

Pedro I was born in the Queluz Palace, near Lisbon. His father was the regent prince at the time but would soon become King John VI of Portugal (João VI); his mother was Carlota Joaquina, Princess of Spain, daughter of Charles IV of Spain. His full name was Pedro de Alcântara Francisco António João Carlos Xavier de Paula Miguel Rafael Joaquim José Gonzaga Pascoal Cipriano Serafim de Bragança e Bourbon.


In 1807, when he was nine, the royal family moved to Brazil in order to escape the Napoleonic Wars, where they would remain for 13 years. Their presence made Rio de Janeiro the de facto capital of the Portuguese Empire, and led to Brazil being elevated to the status of a kingdom co-equal with Portugal. It was in Rio, on November 5, 1817, that Pedro married his first wife, Maria Leopoldina, Archduchess of Austria.


Brazilian independence

When King João VI finally returned to Portugal, in the early 1820s, most of the privileges that had been accorded to Brazil were rescinded, sparking the ire of local nationalists. Pedro, who had remained in the country as regent, sided with the nationalist element and even supported the Portuguese Constitutionalist movement that led to the revolt in Oporto, 1820. When pressed by the Portuguese court to return, he refused. For that, he was demoted from regent to a mere representative of the Lisbon court in Brazil. These news reached him on September 7, 1822, when he had just arrived in São Paulo, from a visit to the port of Santos. On the banks of the Ipiranga River, he unsheathed his sword, and declared "Independence or death!" He was proclaimed Emperor of Brazil on October 12 and crowned on December 1.


Troubled reign

The early years of Brazilian independence were very difficult ones. Dom Pedro I assumed the title of Emperor instead of King, both to underline the diversity of the Brazilian provinces and as an emulation of Napoleon, who linked the idea of Empire -as opposed to that of Kingdom- to the French Revolution and modernity. Nevertheless, D Pedro I had to manage a much more patriarchal country than relatively cosmopolitan Rio de Janeiro, and soon he was seeming to forget his liberal ideals by otorgating a Constitution (proclaimed on February 24, 1824) that gave him substantial power, what was seen as necessary to keep control of the interior, particularly in the yet feudal North. Many provinces, particularly in the North, favored continued association with Portugal, republican sentiment soared, and in 1825, during a war with Argentina, the Cisplatine province seceded to become Uruguay. Furthermore, Pedro had a number of illicit affairs, which cost him some popularity.


On the death of his father, Pedro chose to inherit his title as King of Portugal (Pedro IV) on March 10, 1826, ignoring the restrictions of his own Constitution. He promulgated the Portuguese liberal constitution of April 26, but was forced to abdicate on May 28 from the Portuguese crown in favor of his daughter Maria II. Since she was then only 7 years old, he nominated his brother Dom Miguel as steward, on the promise that he would marry her. Meanwhile, his aparent indecision between Brazil and Portugal further damaged his waning popularity.


On October 17, 1829 he married his second wife, Princess Amélie de Beauharnais von Leuchtenberg, in Rio de Janeiro. Amélie was the daughter of Eugène de Beauharnais, and the granddaughter of the Empress Josephine. She was also the sister of Charles Auguste Eugène Napoléon de Beauharnais, who married his (Pedro's) daughter Maria II.


Return to Portugal

In the aftermath of a political crisis that followed the dissmissal of his ministers, Pedro abdicated his throne in Brazil in favor of his son Pedro II on April 7, 1831, who was only 5 at the time. He then returned to Portugal to fight against his brother King Miguel, who meanwhile had usurped the Portuguese crown (the War of the Two Brothers). In 1834 he overthrew the usurper and restored his daughter Maria II to her title.


He died in Queluz, the palace of his birth, at the age of 36. In 1972, his remains were returned to Brazil and reinterred in the present Ipiranga Museum. In all he had five legitimate children and nine illegitimate ones, including five with his best-known lover Domitila, Marquess of Santos, one with her sister, and one with a nun in Portugal.


See also


Preceded by:
John VI
King of Portugal
1826
Succeeded by:
Maria II
Preceded by:
inaugural
Emperor of Brazil
1822-1831
Succeeded by:
Pedro II



  Results from FactBites:
 
Pedro - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (367 words)
Pedro is the Spanish and Portuguese version of the name Peter, derived from the word Petros (Greek for rock, from πέτÏα or Petra, a translation of the Aramaic Kephas or Cephas), through the Latin Petrus.
Pedro Eugenio Aramburu, de facto president of Argentina from 1955 to 1958.
Pedro Rosselló, Governor of Puerto Rico from 1993 to 2001.
Pedro I of Brazil - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1459 words)
Pedro I, Emperor of Brazil; Pedro IV of Portugal
Pedro I was born Oct. 12, 1798, at the time of revolution in France in Queluz Palace, near Lisbon.
Pedro's grandmother, the insane queen Maria I deceased in 1816, whereby Pedro became the heir to the both kingdoms (Portugal and Brazil) and received the titles Prince of Brazil and 18th Duke of Braganza.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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