Imperial Portugal in the Age of Atlantic Revolutions : the Luso-Brazilian World, c.1770-1850.
A pioneering account of the links between Portugal and Brazil which survived despite the demise of the Portuguese Atlantic empire.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Cambridge :
Cambridge University Press,
2013.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover; Imperial Portugal in the Age of Atlantic Revolutions; Title; Copyright; Contents; Figures; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; Map of the Portuguese Atlantic world c. 1800; Introduction; 1 The reform of empire in the late eighteenth century; Part I; Extirpation, circulation, and integration; After Pombal: agrarianism and ideologies of development; The impact of foreign ideas: emulation and its discontents; Controlling territory, re-shaping subjects; Negative appraisals of reform before 1808; Part II; The perils and opportunities of free trade.
- The slave trade, slavery, and European settlement schemes at the turn of the nineteenth century2 From foreign invasion to imperial disintegration; Part I; Occupation, liberation, and desperation: Portugal and the French revolutionary wars; The road to a Reino Unido: the court in Rio de Janeiro and the reconfiguration of the Portuguese empire; Revolt in an age of restoration, 1815-1823; Political journalism, exile, and the emergence of critics of the Old Regime; PART II.
- Constitutionalism in Portugal: enlightenment jurisprudence, the "ancient constitution," and the making of the 1822 ConstitutionPortuguese conservative thought in the age of revolutions; Part III; Judicious reform, empire redux, new-fangled federation, or permanent separation? The dissolution of the Portuguese empire, 1821; Between colony and independent polity: the interstitial character of the Assembléia Constituinte; 3 Decolonization's progeny; Part I; In the shadow of the Cortes: Dom Pedro, the Confederation of the Equator, and the Brazilian Constitution of 1824.
- The 1823 restoration in Portugal and the making of neo-absolutismReconciliation, reconquest, or recognition? Portugal and Brazil, 1823-1826; Part II; The empire strikes back: the Atlantic origins and repercussions of the 1826 Portuguese Carta Constitucional; The initial reception of the Carta in Portugal; Sir Charles Stuart, British recognition of Brazil, and the international history of the 1826 Carta; 4 The last Atlantic revolution; Part I; Dom Miguel, conservative political thought, foreign constitutional models, and the reaction to the 1826 Carta.
- The "cause of Dom Miguel" and the turbulent politics of the late 1820sThe Carta, its supporters, and the first phase of the Civil War; The emigrados, their ideological divisions, and the formation of a united opposition to Dom Miguel; Part II; The Regency of Terceira; Dom Pedro, Brazilian politics, and the shaping of the Portuguese Civil War; Strange triumph: emigrado factional conflict, military victory, and the end of the Civil War; Part III; The international context of the Portuguese Civil War: British foreign policy, Spanish domestic politics, multinational financi.