59 research outputs found
A criação do Terceiro Corpo do Exército na província do Rio Grande do Sul: conflitos políticos resultantes da administração militar nos anos críticos da Guerra do Paraguai (1866-1867)
The Enigma of Liberalism in Imperial Brazil, 1822-1889
The Empire of Brazil, 1822-1889, conformed, it is widely agreed, to the Liberal model. The constitution of 1824 incorporated its precepts; political discourse was conducted in those terms; reform campaigns sought to remove imperfections. While not untrue, this narrative evades the inconsistencies and contradictions, some innate to the ideology, some specific to the country, that characterized Liberalism in Imperial Brazil. Radical liberals (such as Teófilo Ottoni, “the king of the people,”) eschewed social reforms. Slavery long remained a taboo subject, being abolished only in 1888. The impetus for reform often lay not in popular pressure but in imposition from above. Very importantly, the Liberal order depended on the oversight and management of Pedro II (“I have sworn the Constitution”) who, as one critic observed, “spent fifty years pretending he ruled a free people”. Liberalism in Imperial Brazil was an enigma, simultaneously a reality and an artifice
Trading Beyond the Mountains: The British Fur Trade on the Pacific, 1793–1843. By Richard S. Mackie · Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 1997. xiv + 420 pp. Figures, maps, tables, notes, bibliography, and index. Cloth, $75.00. ISBN 0774805595.
Imperial Cities and Seasonal Residences: Petrópolis, Summer Capital of Brazil (1843–1889), and its European Counterparts
El Brasil monárquico: De la independencia a la república, capítulos de historia e historiografia
Jan Pachonski and Reuel K. Wilson. Poland's Caribbean Tragedy: A Study of Polish Legions in the Haitian War of Independence 1802-1803. Boulder, Colo.: East European Monographs, 1986. xii, 386 pp. $35.00. Distributed by Columbia University Press.
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