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House of Braganza

The Most Serene House of Braganza (Portuguese: Sereníssima Casa de Bragança), also known as the Brigantine Dynasty (Dinastia Brigantina), is a dynasty of emperors, kings, princes, and dukes of Portuguese origin which reigned in Europe and the Americas.

Most Serene House of Braganza
Sereníssima Casa de Bragança
Parent housePortuguese House of Burgundy
by way of the House of Aviz
CountryPortugal, Brazil
Founded1442; 581 years ago (1442)
FounderAfonso I, Duke of Braganza
Current headDuarte Pio, Duke of Braganza
Final ruler
United Kingdom of Portugal,
Brazil and the Algarves:
John VI (1822)
Kingdom of Portugal:
Manuel II (1910)
Empire of Brazil:
Pedro II (1889)
Titles
Deposition
Kingdom of Portugal:
1910 Implementation of the Republic
Empire of Brazil:
1889 Proclamation of the Republic
Cadet branchesAgnatic:

Non-agnatic:

The house was founded by Afonso I, 1st Duke of Braganza, illegitimate son of King John I of Portugal of the House of Aviz, and would eventually grow into one of the wealthiest and most powerful noble houses of Iberia during the Renaissance period. The Braganzas came to rule the Kingdom of Portugal and the Algarves after successfully deposing the Philippine Dynasty in the Restoration War, resulting in the Duke of Braganza becoming King John IV of Portugal, in 1640. The Braganzas ruled Portugal and the Portuguese Empire from 1640 and with the creation of the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarves, in 1815, and the subsequent independence of the Empire of Brazil, in 1822, the Braganzas came to rule as the monarchs of Brazil.

The House of Braganza produced 15 Portuguese monarchs and all four Brazilian monarchs, numerous consorts to various European kingdoms, such as Catherine of Braganza (wife of Charles II of England who introduced tea to Britain) and Maria Isabel of Braganza (wife of Ferdinand VII of Spain who founded the El Prado Museum), as well as sometime candidates for the thrones of Poland and Greece, Infante Manuel, Count of Ourém and Pedro, Duke of Braganza, respectively, and numerous other notable figures in the histories of Europe and the Americas. The Braganzas were deposed from their thrones in Europe and the Americas at the turn of the 19th–20th centuries, when Emperor Pedro II was deposed in Brazil, in 1889, and when King Manuel II was deposed in Portugal, in 1910.

Following the reign of King John VI of Portugal, the Braganzas were split into three main branches of the family: the Brazilian branch, headed by King John VI's eldest son, Emperor Pedro I of Brazil, the Constitutional branch, headed by Emperor Pedro I's eldest daughter, Queen Maria II of Portugal, and the Miguelist branch, headed by King John VI's second eldest son, King Miguel I of Portugal. The Brazilian branch, following 1921, became the House of Orléans-Braganza, whose leadership is disputed by two branches of its own: the Vassouras branch, headed by Bertrand of Orléans-Braganza, and the Petrópolis branch, headed by Prince Pedro Carlos of Orléans-Braganza. The Constitutional branch died out with the death of King Manuel II in 1932, passing its claim to the Portuguese throne to the Miguelist branch[citation needed], by way of Duarte Nuno, Duke of Braganza. The claim to the Portuguese Crown, and thus to the leadership of the House of Braganza, passed to Duarte Nuno's son, Duarte Pio, Duke of Braganza, who is currently the most recognized pretender to the Portuguese throne.

History

Feudal establishment

 
Afonso I, first Duke of Braganza and founder of the House of Braganza
 
Isabel of Braganza was the first to intermarry with the royal family, as wife of Infante João, Constable of Portugal.

The House of Braganza originated with Afonso I, an illegitimate son of King John I of Portugal, founder of the House of Aviz, and Inês Pires.[a] Though Afonso was illegitimate, his father valued and cared for him a great deal, demonstrated by his arrangement of Afonso's marriage to Beatriz Pereira de Alvim, daughter of Nuno Álvares Pereira, Portugal's most important general and a personal friend of King John I. As well as increasing his social status by his marriage into a well-established house, Afonso also became the eighth Count of Barcelos, an honour ceded to him by his father-in-law, who had been made the seventh count by John I.

With his newly consolidated place in the nobility of Portugal, Afonso commenced what would be a highly successful political and social career. In 1415 he took part in the Conquest of Ceuta, alongside his father, his brothers, and the leading members of the nobility and military. By the time of his father's death in 1433, Afonso had won favour with his brother, King Duarte I and the rest of high Portuguese society. With his brother's premature death in 1438, a regency was established for Afonso's nephew, the 6 year old King Afonso V, under the leadership of the king's mother, Leonor of Aragon, and later Afonso's brother, Infante Pedro, Duke of Coimbra. The Duke of Coimbra's regency, however, soon proved unpopular and Afonso quickly became the King's preferred advisor. On 30 December 1442, the Duke of Coimbra, still the King's regent and thus acting in his name, created Afonso as the Duke of Braganza, as a gesture of good will and reconciliation between the two brothers. Afonso's elevation to the dukedom, the highest level of nobility, marked the foundation of the House of Braganza, which was to become a key family in Portuguese history.

As a result of the hard work and success of Afonso I, his children all secured successful positions and lived privileged lives. Afonso I's first son, Afonso of Braganza, was a prominent member of the nobility, having been ceded, by his grandfather, Nuno Álvares Pereira, the lucrative and powerful title of Count of Ourém, in 1422. He was an accomplished diplomat, and served as the king's representative at the Council of Basel in 1436, and the Council of Florence in 1439. In 1451, the Count of Ourém was made Marquis of Valença and escorted Infanta Leonor of Portugal to her husband Frederick III, Holy Roman Emperor. Later, in 1458, he participated in the capture and conquest of Alcácer-Ceguer. The Marquis of Valença, however, died in 1460, one year before his father and therefore did not succeed him. Afonso I's first daughter, Isabel of Braganza, married Infante João, Lord of Reguengos de Monsaraz, thus relinking the House of Braganza to the Royal House of Portugal. Isabel's strategic marriage proved successful, and produced four children, whose descendants would be some of the most important in Iberian history. Afonso I's last child and successor, Fernando I, Duke of Braganza, continued his legacy of prominence in the military and society.

When Fernando I was born, in 1403, his grandfather, Nuno Álvares Pereira, ceded him the title of Count of Arraiolos. Fernando became an accomplished military man, participating in various Portuguese imperial campaigns. Though Fernando I was a popular and powerful member of the nobility, he did not always find himself in the favour of the king, most notably exemplified when Fernando I openly declaimed King Duarte I, at the Portuguese Cortes, on the topic of the rescue and recovery of the King's brother, Infante Fernando, Lord of Salvaterra de Magos from the Moors. However, Fernando I became a favourite of both the royal and imperial government and of King Afonso V, earning him the position of Governor of Ceuta and the titles of Marquis of Vila Viçosa and Count of Neiva.

 
The Palace of the Dukes, in Guimarães, was seat of the House of Braganza from 1420 until Fernando II of Braganza was executed for treason by King João II in 1483.

Fernando I's children, by his wife, Joana de Castro, Lady of Cadaval, continued to enlarge the influence of the House of Braganza. Of his nine children, all six who survived to adulthood established themselves either through positions or marriages, though the actions of King João II would seek to weaken their influence. Fernando I's first son and successor, Fernando II, was initially a bright and popular nobleman, but his conflict with King João II would see his and the House's downfall. His second son, João of Braganza, 1st Marquis of Montemor-o-Novo, was an accomplished military man and was made Constable of Portugal. Fernando's third son, Afonso of Braganza, became a popular nobleman of society and was made 1st Count of Faro. The Duke's fourth son, Álvaro of Braganza, inherited the fiefs of his mother, becoming the 5th Lord of Ferreira, 4th Lord of Cadaval, and 1st Lord of Tentúgal. Fernando's eldest surviving daughter, Beatriz of Braganza, married Pedro de Meneses, 1st Marquis of Vila Real. Fernando's last surviving child, Guiomar of Braganza, married Henrique de Meneses, 4th Count of Viana do Alentejo. Ultimately, however, Fernando I's children and grandchildren would suffer great difficulty under the reign of King João II.

By the tenure of the third duke, Fernando II, the House of Braganza was undoubtedly one of the greatest noble houses of Portugal and Iberia as a whole. Fernando II continued the House's legacy of acquisition and gained the title of Duke of Guimarães. To the Duke and the House's downfall, however, King João II's reign concerned itself with the royal consolidation of power and the diminishment of the nobility. In his mission to centralize power, the King executed many nobleman of the great houses of Portugal, alongside confiscating their properties and exiling their families. Fernando II, having been a prominent and powerful nobleman, was accused of treason and executed by King João II; the House's titles and properties were merged into the crown and its members exiled to Castile.

Due to their father's misfortunes, Fernando II's children, from his marriage to Isabel of Viseu, daughter of Infante Fernando, Duke of Viseu and Beja, initially had a tumultuous childhood; but King João II's successor, King Manuel I, who had previously himself been the Duke of Beja, chose to forgive the House and re-grant them all their properties in exchange for their loyalty. Fernando II's oldest surviving son and successor, Jaime I, returned to Portugal and reestablished himself at Vila Viçosa, the former seat of the Dukes. Fernando II's only other surviving son, Dinis of Braganza, married Beatriz de Castro Osório, Countess of Lemos, and had four children with her.

Portuguese Renaissance

 
Jaime I restored the Braganzas' status after his father's execution and built the Ducal Palace of Vila Viçosa.

Jaime I's tenure as Duke of Braganza was one of restoration and grandness. Upon his return to Portugal from exile, Jaime took possession of the House's formerly confiscated properties. In order to establish a new image for the House, he ordered the construction of a new seat for the House, which would become one of the largest palaces in Iberia, the Ducal Palace of Vila Viçosa. Jaime I's restoration also continued with the House's relations with the King, Jaime I having becoming a favourite of King Manuel I and even once his temporary heir. The Duke also had his share of scandal, having funded the conquest of the city of Azamor, for the royal crown as, as punishment for his ordering the murder of his first wife, Leonor Pérez de Guzman, daughter of Juan Alfonso Pérez de Guzmán, 3rd Duke of Medina Sidonia.

The children of Jaime I, both the two first children by his first wife, Leonor of Pérez de Guzman, and the later eight children by his second wife, Joana of Mendoça, all saw successful lives under the restored House of Braganza. Jaime I's first daughter, Isabel of Braganza, married Infante Duarte, Duke of Guimarães, and had three children, while his first son and successor, Teodósio I, was a successful prince of the Portuguese Renaissance. Five of Jaime I's children, Jaime, Maria, Fulgêncio, Teotónio, and Vicência, all entered into religious orders. The Duke's second daughter, Joana of Braganza, married Bernardino de Cardenas, 3rd Marquis of Elche, and his third daughter, Eugénia of Braganza, married Francisco de Melo, 2nd Marquis of Ferreira. Jaime I's only other son, other than Teodósio I, to not enter into the church, Constantino of Braganza, married Maria de Melo, daughter of D. Rodrigo de Melo, 1st Marquis of Ferreira, but had no children. Constantino was famed as a great officer of the Portuguese Empire, having served as the Viceroy of Portuguese India and Captain of Ribeira Grande, among other positions.

The fifth Duke, Teodósio I, is remembered for being the personification of the Portuguese Renaissance. A patron of the arts and scholarly noble, Teodósio I maintained the prestige of the House of Braganza, although not leaving a significant mark on the House's history. The Duke notably ceded the Dukedom of Guimarães to Infante Duarte of Portugal as the dowry of his sister, Isabel of Braganza.

Teodósio I's first son, Jaime of Braganza, died before he could inherit his father's titles, fighting alongside King Sebastião I at the Battle of Alcácer Quibir. The Duke's only daughter, Isabel of Braganza, married Miguel Luis de Meneses, 1st Duke of Caminha, though their union had no issue. Teodósio I's last child and successor, João I, lived a very different life from Teodósio I's calm and relatively peaceful tenure, having been involved in the controversies of the Portuguese succession crisis of 1580 and the subsequent War of the Portuguese Succession.

João I's tenure as Duke was one intertwined with controversy and intrigue. Having been married to Infanta Catarina, daughter of Infante Duarte, Duke of Guimarães, and thus a grandchild of King Manuel I, during the succession crisis of 1580, the couple pressed their claims to the Portuguese throne. Though Infanta Catarina was a popular claimant, her Habsburg cousin was eventually crowned Philip I of Portugal and the Iberian Union was established. In an attempt at reconciliation with the Brigantine House, King Philip I renewed the title of Constable of Portugal, which João I had held previously, to the Duke's first son, Teodósio II, alongside other title and land grants to the Duke and the House.

João I's daughters, Maria, Serefina, Querubina, and Angélica, were some of the most eligible ladies of Portugal and all Iberia, though the only one to marry was Serefina of Braganza, who married Castilian Juan Fernandez Pacheco, 5th Duke of Escalona. The Duke's oldest son and successor, Teodósio II, famously fought in the Battle of Alcácer Quibir at the age of ten and later became an accomplished general. João I's second son, Duarte of Braganza, was made 1st Marquis of Frechilla, and the Duke's third son, Alexandre of Braganza, became Archbishop of Évora, both receiving their titles and many concessions from King Philip I when the monarch was making amends with the House of Braganza. Unlike his other sons, João I's last son, Filipe of Braganza, died without marriage, children, or titles.

 
In 1640, John IV of Portugal became the first Braganza to reign as King of Portugal, starting the Portuguese Restoration War.

The seventh Duke, Teodósio II, became famous at a young age, having been made page to King Sebastião I and having marched into the Battle of Alcácer Quibir, alongside the King and his uncle, Jaime of Braganza, at the age of ten. Teodósio II later pledged his allegiance and became a faithful countryman to the Philippine Dynasty, having even defended Lisbon against King Philip I's rival claimant to the throne, António, Prior of Crato, who had been acclaimed, by his supporters, as King António I of Portugal. In recognition for his military prowess, Teodósio II was made Constable of Portugal. The Duke's support and service to the Philippine Dynasty, earned the Braganzas more lands and titles and, by 1640, the House had amassed around 80,000 vassals, alongside numerous churches, orders, and institutions under its patronage.[1]

In 1603, Teodósio II married Ana de Velasco y Girón, daughter of Castilian Juan Fernández de Velasco, 5th Duke of Frías, and had four children with her. The Duke's first son and successor, João II, raise the House of Braganza to new heights of power, having launched the Portuguese Restoration War and been acclaimed King João IV of Portugal, thus installing the House as the ruling dynasty of Portugal. Teodósio II's second son, Duarte of Braganza, was made Lord of Vila do Conde and became a diplomat, serving at the court of Ferdinand III, Holy Roman Emperor, but later died a prisoner as a cost of the Restoration War. Teodósio II's two other children, Alexandre and Catarina, both died without children, titles, or marriage.

Throne of Portugal

 
Queen Catherine of Braganza, wife of Charles II of England, credited with introducing the English to tea-drinking, popular with the Portuguese nobility.

By 1640 the wise policies of D. Philip I in respect of Portugal were long past. The country was overtaxed, Portuguese colonies were left unprotected, and the King Philip III of Portugal no longer had the trust or support of most Portuguese nobility. He was especially loathed by the powerful Portuguese guild of merchants. Portugal, like the rest of Philip's kingdoms, was on the verge of rebellion.

The eighth Duke of Braganza, D. João II of Braganza, had inherited the claim of his grandmother, Infanta Catarina of Portugal, and the remoter claim through of his grandfather João I of Braganza. Because of his claims, the discontent Portuguese nobility asked João II to lead their restoration as their king.

According to court historians, D. João II was a modest man without particular ambitions to the crown. Legend says that his wife, Dona Luisa de Guzmán, daughter of the duke of Medina-Sidonia, urged him to accept the offer, saying "I'd rather be queen for one day than duchess for a lifetime." He accepted the leadership of the rebellion, which was successful, and was acclaimed João IV of Portugal on 1 December 1640.

After the accession of the Braganzas to the throne, the duchy was linked to the Crown. "Duke of Braganza" became the traditional title of the heir to the throne, together with Prince of Brazil and, later, Prince Royal of Portugal, much as Prince of Wales is in the United Kingdom or Prince of Asturias in Spain.

Under D. João's sons D. Afonso VI and D. Pedro II, the Portuguese colonial empire, part of which was lost during the Spanish occupation, was restored and expanded, bringing new wealth to Portugal.

The zenith of the Braganza dynasty came with the long reign of D. João V (1706–1750), who ruled with grandeur and piety. The reign of D. José I, son of D. João V, was marked by the great earthquake, which struck Lisbon in 1755. The political genius of his reign was the 1st Marquis of Pombal. The end of the 18th century was characterized by stability, under the rule of Dona Maria I (1777–1816), who discharged Pombal at her accession. Unfortunately Dona Maria became psychologically unstable, displaying similar symptoms to George III of the United Kingdom in his later years.

Realm in Brazil

 

In 1808, faced with impending Napoleonic invasion, the Braganzas transferred their royal court to the State of Brazil, Portugal's largest colony. Some time after they had crossed the Atlantic, a royal decree changed the status of Brazil from a Portuguese colony into kingdom alongside Portugal, and the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarves was formed. In 1821, D. João VI, who succeeded in 1816, returned to Portugal.

D. Pedro, Prince Royal of Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves, the eldest son of D. João VI and also regent in Brazil, sided with the Brazilian rebels in January 1822. He was acclaimed Emperor D. Pedro I of an independent Brazil in 1822, founding the Empire of Brazil. D. Pedro I ruled Brazil until 1831, when he abdicated in favor of his young son D. Pedro II, and returned to Portugal to aid his daughter D. Maria II (see below).

D. Pedro II, being only 6 years old at the time of his coronation, had a regency established. The regency would rule until 1840, when the Emperor turned 14 years old. His reign would last until 1889, when the Brazilian monarchy was abolished. His reign would see the abolition of slavery in Brazil, economic growth, and very long periods of tranquility and development in his empire.

Warring branches

 
King-Emperor João VI's children split the Braganzas into 3 branches: the Brazilian Imperial branch, the Portuguese Constitutional branch, and the exiled Miguelist branch.

In Portugal, D. Pedro I of Brazil became King as D. Pedro IV (1826), but no one wanted to re-establish the union of Portugal and Brazil. Pedro abdicated the Portuguese throne in favor of his daughter Princess Maria da Glória, then seven years old. D. Pedro's brother D. Miguel was to act as Regent, and to marry Maria when she came of age. In 1828, Miguel instead proclaimed himself King of Portugal and repudiated the liberal constitution granted by D. João VI, trying to establish an absolute monarchy.

In 1828, Maria II was forced into exile by her uncle, the new King Miguel I. Her father D. Pedro IV of Portugal returned from Brazil, launched a successful military campaign, from the Azores, against Miguel I. He finally defeated and exiled Miguel I in 1834. Though exiled, Miguel would not give up his claim to the throne and would establish the Miguelist branch of the House of Braganza. The strategic marriages of his children to the various royal houses of Europe would earn him the nickname the "Grandfather of Europe" (see Descendants of Miguel I of Portugal).

First Reign of Brazil

On 7 September 1822, Dom Pedro of Braganza, Prince Royal of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarves, member of the House of Braganza, heir apparent to the Portuguese throne and Regent of the Kingdom of Brazil, declared the country's independence from the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarves and was acclaimed Emperor of Brazil. On 12 October, the prince was acclaimed Pedro I, first Emperor of the newly created Empire of Brazil, a constitutional monarchy. In 1825, signing the treaty of Rio de Janeiro of this date, his father, King Dom João VI, recognized the independence of the new state, the former Portuguese dominion, now Empire of Brazil.

Pedro I encountered a number of crises during his reign. A secessionist rebellion in the Cisplatine Province in early 1825 and the subsequent attempt by the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata (later Argentina) to annex Cisplatina led the Empire into the failed Cisplatine War. In March 1826, João VI died and Pedro I inherited the Portuguese crown, briefly becoming King Pedro IV of Portugal before abdicating in favor of his eldest daughter, Maria II. The situation worsened in 1828 when the war in the south ended with Brazil's loss of Cisplatina, which would become the independent republic of Uruguay. During the same year in Lisbon, Maria II's throne was usurped by Prince Miguel, Pedro I's younger brother.

Other difficulties arose when the Empire's parliament opened in 1826. Pedro I, along with a significant percentage of the legislature, argued for an independent judiciary, a popularly elected legislature and a government which would be led by the emperor who held broad executive powers and prerogatives. Others in parliament argued for a similar structure, only with a less influential role for the monarch and the legislative branch being dominant in policy and governance.

The struggle over whether the government would be dominated by the emperor or by the parliament was carried over into debates from 1826 to 1831 on the establishment of the governmental and political structure. Unable to deal with the problems in both Brazil and Portugal simultaneously, the Emperor abdicated on behalf of his son, Pedro II, on 7 April 1831 and immediately sailed for Europe to restore his daughter to her throne.

Second Reign of Brazil

Pedro I's successor in Brazil was his five-year-old son, Pedro II. As the latter was still a minor, a weak regency was created. The power vacuum resulting from the absence of a ruling monarch as the ultimate arbiter in political disputes led to regional civil wars between local factions. Having inherited an empire on the verge of disintegration, Pedro II, once he was declared of age in 1840, at 14 years old, managed to bring peace and stability to the country, which eventually became an emerging international power. Brazil was victorious in three international conflicts (the Platine War, the Uruguayan War and the Paraguayan War) under Pedro II's rule, and the Empire prevailed in several other international disputes and outbreaks of domestic strife. With prosperity and economic development came an influx of European immigration, including Protestants and Jews, although Brazil remained mostly Catholic. Slavery, which had initially been widespread, was restricted by successive legislation until its final abolition in 1888 by Princess Isabel.

Even though the last four decades of Pedro II's reign were marked by continuous internal peace and economic prosperity, he had no desire to see the monarchy survive beyond his lifetime and made no effort to maintain support for the institution. The next in line to the throne was his daughter Isabel, but neither Pedro II nor the ruling classes considered a female monarch acceptable.[citation needed] Lacking any viable heir, the Empire's political leaders saw no reason to defend the monarchy. Although there was no desire among the majority of Brazilians to change the country's form of government, republicans began pressuring army officers to overthrow the monarchy. After a 58-year reign, on 15 November 1889 the Emperor was overthrown in a sudden coup d'état led by a clique of military leaders whose goal was the formation of a republic headed by a dictator, forming the First Brazilian Republic. Throughout the coup Pedro II dismissed all suggestions put forward by politicians and military leaders for quelling the rebellion. The Emperor and his family were exiled to the Portuguese kingdom and France. Although there was significant monarchist reaction after the fall of the Empire,[citation needed] this was thoroughly suppressed, and neither Pedro II nor his daughter and heiress supported a forced restoration.

Constitutional Kings

 
Manuel II, last King of Portugal and the last Braganza to rule as a monarch.

In 1835, Queen Maria II of Portugal married Prince Ferdinand of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, later King Ferdinand II of Portugal. Despite the tradition of following the custom of patrilineal descent of royal houses, common throughout Europe, Article 5 of the Portuguese constitution of 1826 stated that "The Reigning Dynasty of the Most Serene House of Braganza Shall Continue in the Person of Lady Princess Maria da Glória, by the Abdication and Cession of Her August Father Lord Pedro I, Emperor of Brazil, Legitimate Heir and Successor of Lord João VI.".[2]

Maria II was succeeded in 1853 by her son D. Pedro V, a hard-working reformer who died prematurely in 1861 due to cholera. D. Pedro V was succeeded by his brother D. Luís, as D. Pedro V had no children.

D. Luís I was succeeded in 1889 by his son D. Carlos I. Carlos I's popularity dramatically declined after the British Ultimatum of 1890, whereby the Portuguese Empire ceded its claim to territories (known as the Pink Map) between Portuguese West Africa and Portuguese East Africa to the British. Pursuant to his unpopularity, the monarchy became increasingly unpopular in the country.

King Carlos I was assassinated in 1908 together with his eldest son, D. Luís Filipe, Prince Royal of Portugal and Duke of Braganza, by republicans. His younger son, D. Manuel, Duke of Beja, survived the attack on his father and elder brother and became king as Manuel II, but was toppled two years later in the 1910 republican revolution. After the revolution, Manuel was forced into exile in Great Britain by the Portuguese First Republic, but he would continue to support his fatherland until his death.[citation needed]

Modern Braganzas

Portuguese Braganzas

 
D. Duarte Pio, Duke of Braganza, Head of the House of Braganza and recognized pretender to the Crown of Portugal since 1976.

After the revolution of 1910, King Manuel II settled in England until his death in 1932. He was childless, and descendants of Miguel of Braganza (the usurper of 1826) claimed the throne. In 1920–22, the two (of the now four) branches of the House of Braganza negotiated an alleged pact under which Manuel II named as his heir Duarte Nuno of Braganza[citation needed], grandson of Miguel. Duarte Nuno, now Duke of Braganza, remained the Braganza pretender until his death in 1976. In 1942, he married a great-granddaughter of Emperor Pedro II of Brazil, uniting the two lines of the House.

In 1950 Portugal repealed the law of exile against the Braganzas,[3] and D. Duarte Nuno moved to the country in 1952.

Duarte Nuno was succeeded as pretender by his son, Duarte Pio of Braganza (born 1945). Duarte Pio served in the Portuguese Armed Forces and took the customary oath of allegiance to the Republic, but Portuguese monarchists recognize him as the pretender to the Portuguese throne. In 1995 he married Isabel de Herédia, a Portuguese businesswoman and descendant of Francisco Correia de Herédia, Viscount of Ribeira Brava[4] (a Vitalício title,[4] meaning Life peerage). He worked actively in support of the independence of East Timor from Indonesia.

Duarte Pio and Isabel have three children. Duarte Pio's oldest son is Afonso de Santa Maria, who bears the traditional titles of Prince of Beira (as heir apparent to the Portuguese pretender) and Duke of Barcelos (as heir apparent to the Duke of Braganza).[citation needed] He has a brother Dinis, Duke of Porto, and a sister, Infanta Maria Francisca.

 
Prince Bertrand of Orléans-Braganza, Head of the Brazilian Imperial Family since the death of his older brother in 2022.

Maria Pia of Saxe-Coburg and Braganza, who claimed she was an illegitimate daughter of King Carlos I of Portugal, began asserting that she was the heir to the throne from 1957. Allegedly, she adopted the Italian Rosario Poidimani, transferring her claimed rights to the Portuguese throne to him.

Brazilian Braganzas

After the military coup of 1889, Emperor Dom Pedro II settled in France until his death in 1891. His eldest daughter and family went to live in the Chateau d'Eu in French Normandy. She was recognized by Brazilian monarchists as Empress-in-Exile as Dona Isabel I of Brazil until her death in 1921.

She was succeeded by her grandson, Prince Pedro Henrique of Orléans-Braganza, as Head of the Imperial House of Brazil, and he by his son and current Head, Prince Luiz of Orléans-Braganza.

With the end of the banishment of the Imperial Family in 1920, some princes returned to live in Brazil, while another remained in Europe. After the end of World War II, Prince Pedro Henrique, then Head of the Imperial House and married to Princess Maria Elisabeth of Bavaria, returned to Brazil with his family.

The Imperial House of Brazil divided into rival branches because of the renunciation of Pedro de Alcântara, Prince of Grão-Pará in 1908 and the subsequent repudiation of that act by his descendants.[5]

While some members of the two branches of the family subsequently lived in the Grão-Pará Palace, some married royalty or nobles and have lived in Europe, and others elsewhere in Brazil.[5] A 1993 referendum on restoration of the monarchy was defeated, garnering 13.2 percent of the vote against 66 percent for the republic.[6] Members of both the so-called Petropolis branch of Braganzas (Princes Pedro Gastão and his nephew, Joazinho of Orléans-Braganza) and the more broadly recognised Vassouras line of the Imperial Family led by Prince Luiz Gastão of Orléans-Braganza, participated in the restoration effort,[5] and the Head of the Vassouras branch continues to lead a growing movement to restore the monarchy.[citation needed]

Braganza dukes and monarchs

 
D. João II of Braganza – The first Braganza King of Portugal as King João IV.
 
D. Pedro I of Braganza
The 1st Emperor of Brazil and King of Portugal as Emperor-King Pedro I & IV.

Dukes of Braganza (before ascension to the throne)

Monarchs of Portugal

Name Became monarch Notes
João IV of Portugal 1640 King of Portugal and the Algarves;
first Braganza monarch of Portugal
Afonso VI of Portugal 1656 King of Portugal and the Algarves;
died without heir
Pedro II of Portugal 1683 King of Portugal and the Algarves;
brother of Afonso VI
João V of Portugal 1706 King of Portugal and the Algarves
José I of Portugal 1750 King of Portugal and the Algarves
Maria I of Portugal &
Pedro III of Portugal
1777 Queen and King of Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves
João VI of Portugal 1816 King of Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves;
Titular Emperor of Brazil
Pedro IV of Portugal 1826 King of Portugal and the Algarves;
Emperor of Brazil
Maria II of Portugal 1826 Queen of Portugal and the Algarves;
lost throne to Miguel I in 1828;
regained throne in 1834
Miguel I of Portugal 1828 King of Portugal and the Algarves;
reigned for 6 years; succeeded by Maria II
Pedro V of Portugal 1853 King of Portugal and the Algarves
Luís I of Portugal 1861 King of Portugal and the Algarves
Carlos I of Portugal 1889 King of Portugal and the Algarves;
assassinated in Lisbon Regicide
Manuel II of Portugal 1908 King of Portugal and the Algarves;
last monarch of Portugal

Monarchs of Brazil

Name Became monarch Notes
Maria I of Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves 1815 Queen and founder of the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves
John VI of Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves 1816 King of Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves;
Titular Emperor of Brazil; last King of Brazil
Pedro I of Brazil 1822 Emperor of Brazil; proclaimer of Brazilian Independence
King of Portugal and the Algarves
Pedro II of Brazil 1831 Emperor of Brazil; last Emperor of Brazil

Symbols

Wyvern

The traditional symbol and crest of the House of Braganza is a green wyvern, commonly taken to be a dragon,[7][8][9] representing Saint George,[10] patron saint of Portugal.

This symbol can be found in many different monuments in Portugal and Brazil, such as the Monument to the Independence of Brazil in São Paulo and in the palaces of the Imperial family in Rio de Janeiro and Petrópolis. It is famously found atop the Portuguese Crown Sceptre, the Sceptre of the Dragon and the Sceptre of the Emperor of Brazil.

The wyvern is also sometimes used as a supporter in the coat of arms of both the Brazilian and Portuguese branches of the family.

Because of its use in heraldry by the Braganza as the ruling house, and given Pedro IV's link with Porto, a dragon was added to the old coat of arms of the municipality of Porto[7] and is still a part of FC Porto's coat of arms, who are nicknamed "The Dragons".

Curse of the Braganzas

Since the 17th century, the House of Braganza has allegedly suffered from the Curse of the Braganzas (Portuguese: Maldição dos Braganças). For supposedly mistreating a Franciscan friar, a curse was purportedly placed on King João IV of Portugal, stating that never again would a first-born male of the Braganza Dynasty live long enough to succeed to the throne. Since the reign of King João IV, all first-born Braganza males, with only three exceptions, have died before they had the opportunity to reign as monarch, either in Portugal or Brazil.

Supposed victims of the Curse of the Braganzas:

Estates and properties

Armorial

Coat of arms Title Tenure Coat of arms Title Tenure Coat of arms Title Tenure
 
Emperor of Brazil 1822–1889
 
King of the United Kingdom of
Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves
1815–1825
 
King of Portugal 1640–1910
 
King of the Algarves 1640–1910
 
Prince of Portugal
Prince of Brazil
Prince Royal of Portugal
1481–present [b]
 
Prince of Beira 1734–present [c]
 
Prince Imperial of Brazil 1822–present
 
Duke of Braganza
Duke of Guimarães
Duke of Barcelos
Marquis of Vila Viçosa
1442–present [d]
 
Duke of Porto 1833–present[e]
 
Duke of Viseu 1909–present[f]
 
Duke of Coimbra 1847–present [g]
 
Count of Ourém
Count of Neiva
Count of Faria
1451–present[b]

Genealogy

Ducal line: Afonso I to Teodósio II (1377–1630)

Genealogical tree of the House of Braganza, during its ducal period, from origins of its founder, Afonso I, Duke of Braganza, to the issue of its last noble duke, Teodósio II, Duke of Braganza:

King Pedro I
King of Portugal and the Algarve
(1320–1367)
 
 
Member of the Portuguese House of Burgundy
King João I
King of Portugal and the Algarve
(1357–1433)
 
 
Founder of the House of Aviz
Afonso I
1st Duke of Braganza, 8th Count of Barcelos
(1377–1461)
 
Founder of the House of Braganza
Afonso of Braganza
1st Marquis of Valença
(1400–1460)
 
Fernando I
2nd Duke of Braganza, 1st Marquis of Vila Viçosa
(1403–1478)
 
Isabel of Braganza
Infanta of Portugal
(1402–1466)
 
Infante João
Constable of Portugal
(1400–1442)
 
From his issue
descend the lines of the
Counts of Vimioso and
the Marquises of Valença
João of Braganza
1st Marquis of Montemor-o-Novo
(1430–1484)
 
Fernando II
3rd Duke of Braganza, 1st Duke of Guimarães
(1430–1483)
 
Álvaro of Braganza
Lord of Cadaval
(1440–1504)
 
Afonso of Braganza
1st Count of Faro
(1435–1483)
 
Infanta Beatriz
Duchess of Viseu
(1430–1506)
 
Dinis of Braganza
6th Count of Lemos
(1481–1516)
 
Jaime I
4th Duke of Braganza, 2nd Duke of Guimarães
(1479–1532)
 
From his issue
descend the lines of
the Dukes of Aveiro and
the House of Cadaval
From his issue
descend the lines of
the Counts of Faro and
the Counts of Odemira
King Manuel I
King of Portugal and the Algarves
(1469–1521)
 
 
From his issue
descend the lines of
the Counts of Lemos, the Dukes of Berwick,
and the Dukes of Veragua in Spain and
the Counts of Santa Cruz, the Marquesses of Gouvêa
and the Marquesses of Lavradio in Portugal.
Isabel of Lencastre
Duchess of Braganza
(1513–1558)
 
Teodósio I
5th Duke of Braganza, 3rd Duke of Guimarães
(1510–1563)
 
Constantino of Braganza
Viceroy of India
(1528–1575)
 
Isabel of Braganza
Duchess of Guimarães
(1514–1576)
 
Infante Duarte
4th Duke of Guimarães
(1515–1540)
 
João I
6th Duke of Braganza, 1st Duke of Barcelos
(1543–1583)
 
Infanta Catarina
Duchess of Braganza
(1540–1614)
 
Teodósio II
7th Duke of Braganza, 2nd Duke of Barcelos
(1568–1630)
 
Duarte of Braganza
1st Marquis of Frechilla
(1569–1627)
 
Duarte of Braganza
Lord of Vila do Conde
(1605–1649)
 
King João IV
King of Portugal and the Algarves
8th Duke of Braganza, 6th Duke of Guimarães

(1604–1656)
 
 
From him descend
the lines of the Dukes
of Frías
and Escalona and
the Marquises of Jarandilla
and Villar de Grajanejos.

Royal line: João IV to João VI (1604–1826)

Genealogical tree of the House of Braganza, from its first monarch, João IV, King of Portugal, to the fracture of the house into its three main branches, in the issue of João VI, King of United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves:

King João IV
King of Portugal and the Algarves
8th Duke of Braganza

(1604–1656)
 
 
Prince Teodósio
1st Prince of Brazil
(1634–1653)
 
King Afonso VI
King of Portugal and the Algarves
(1643–1683)
 
 
King Pedro II
King of Portugal and the Algarves
(1648–1706)
 
 
Princess Joana
1st Princess of Beira
(1635–1653)
 
Queen Catarina
Queen Consort of England
(1638–1705)
 
 
Infante Francisco
Duke of Beja
(1691–1742)
 
 
Infante António
Infante of Portugal
(1695–1775)
 
 
Infanta Francisca Josefa
Infanta of Portugal
(1699–1736)
 
 
King João V
King of Portugal and the Algarves
(1689–1750)
 
 
Infante Manuel
Count of Ourém
(1697–1766)
 
 
Princess Isabel Luísa
Princess of Beira
(1669–1690)
 
Luísa of Braganza
Duchess of Cadaval
(1679–1732)
 
 
José of Braganza
Archbishop of Braga
(1703–1756)

 
Miguel of Braganza
Duke of Lafões
(1699–1724)
 
 
João of Braganza
Duke of Abrantes
(1726–1780)
 
 
Infante Carlos
Infante of Portugal
(1716–1736)
 
 
King José I
King of Portugal and the Algarves
(1714–1777)
 
 
Queen Barbara
Queen Consort of Spain
(1711–1758)
 
José of Braganza
High-Inquisitor of Portugal
(1720–1801)

 
Gaspar of Braganza
Archbishop of Braga
(1715–1789)

 
From his issue
descend the lines of the
Dukes of Lafões, the
Marquises of Marialva
and of Arronches
King Peter III
King of Portugal and the Algarves
3rd Lord of the Infantado

(1717–1786)
 
 
Queen Maria I
Queen of Portugal and the Algarves
Queen of Brazil

(1734–1816)
 
Infanta Maria Ana
Infanta of Portugal
(1736–1813)

 
 
Infanta Doroteia
Infanta of Portugal
(1739–1771)

 
 
Infanta Mariana
Infanta of Portugal
Infanta of Spain

(1768–1788)
 
King João VI
King of Portugal and the Algarves
King and Emperor of Brazil

(1767–1826)
 
Prince José
Prince of Brazil
Prince of Beira

(1761–1788)
 
Princess Benedita
Princess of Brazil
Princess of Beira

(1746–1829)
 
Infante Pedro
Infante of Portugal
Infante of Spain

(1786–1812)
 
 
Princess Teresa
Princess of Beira
Countess of Molina

(1793–1874)
 
King Miguel I
King of Portugal and the Algarves
Duke of Braganza

(1802–1866)
 
 
Emperor-King Pedro I/IV
King of Portugal and the Algarves
Emperor of Brazil

(1798–1834)
  
Queen Maria Isabel
Queen Consort of Spain
Infanta of Portugal

(1787–1818)
 
Infanta Assunção
Infanta of Portugal
(1805–1834)

 
 
Infanta Francisca
Infanta of Portugal
Infanta of Spain

(1800–1834)
 
 
Infanta Isabel
Regent of Portugal
Infanta of Portugal

(1801–1876)
 
 
Infanta Ana de Jesus
Infanta of Portugal
Marquise of Loulé

(1806–1857)
 
 
From their marriage
descends the
House of
Bourbon-Braganza
From him descends
the Miguelist branch of the
House of Braganza
Queen Maria II
Queen of Portugal and the Algarves
(1819–1853)
 
 
Emperor Pedro II
Emperor of Brazil
(1825–1891)
 
From her marriage
descends the
House of Loulé
From her descends
the Constitutional branch of the
House of Braganza
From him descends
the Brazilian branch of the
House of Braganza

Constitutional line: Maria II to Manuel II (1819–1932)

Imperial line: Pedro I to Pedro II (1798–1891)

Genealogical tree of the Brazilian branch House of Braganza, from its first monarch, Pedro I, Emperor of Brazil, to the issue of Pedro II, the last Emperor of Brazil.

Orléans-Braganza line: Isabel to Luiz & Pedro Carlos (1846–Present)

Genealogical tree of the House of Orléans-Braganza, from its origin to the current claimants:

Vassouras line: The descendants of Prince Luís of Orléans-Braganza


Princess Isabel
Princess Imperial of Brazil
Countess of Eu
(1846-1921)
 
Prince Pedro de Alcântara
Prince Imperial of Brazil
Prince of Orléans-Braganza
(1875-1940)
 
Prince Luís
Prince Imperial of Brazil
Prince of Orléans-Braganza
(1878-1920)
 
Prince Antônio Gastão
Prince of Brazil
Prince of Orléans-Braganza
(1881-1918)
 
Prince Pedro Henrique
Prince and Head of the House of Orléans-Braganza
(1909-1981)
 
Prince Luiz Gastão
Prince Imperial of Brazil
Prince of Orléans-Braganza
(1911-1931)
 
Princess Pia Maria
Princess Imperial of Brazil
Princess of Orléans-Braganza
Countess Nicolay
(1913-2000)
 
Prince Luiz
Prince and Head of the House of Orléans-Braganza
(1938–2022)
 
Prince Bertrand
Prince and Head of the House of Orléans-Braganza
(b. 1941)
 
Princess Isabel
Princess of Brazil
Princess of Orléans-Braganza
(1944–2017)
 
Prince Antônio
Prince Imperial of Brazil
Prince of Orléans-Braganza
(b. 1950)
 
Princess Eleanora
Princess of Brazil
Princess of Orléans-Braganza
Princess of Ligne
(b. 1953)
 
Seven more
Princes of Orléans-Braganza
who renounced their dynastic rights
Prince Rafael Antônio
Prince of Grão-Pará
Prince of Orléans-Braganza
(b. 1986)
 
Princess Maria Gabriela
Princess of Brazil
Princess of Orléans-Braganza
(b. 1989)
 


Petrópolis line: The descendants of Pedro de Alcântara, Prince of Grão-Pará

Princess Isabel
Princess Imperial of Brazil
(1846–1921)
 
Prince Pedro de Alcântara
Prince of Grão-Pará
Prince of Orléans-Braganza

(1875–1940)
 
Prince Luís
Prince Imperial of Brazil
Prince of Orléans-Braganza

(1878–1920)
 
Prince Antônio Gastão
Prince of Brazil
Prince of Orléans-Braganza

(1881–1918)
 
Princess Isabelle
Princess of Orléans-Braganza
Countess of Paris

(1911–2003)
   
Prince Pedro Gastão
Prince of Orléans-Braganza
(1913–2007)
 
Princess Maria Francisca
Princess of Orléans-Braganza
Duchess of Braganza

(1914–1968)
   
Prince João Maria
Prince of Orléans-Braganza
(1916–2005)
 
Princess Teresa Teodora
Princess of Orléans-Braganza
(1919–2011)
 
Prince Pedro Carlos
Prince of Orléans-Braganza
(b. 1945)
 
Princess Maria da Glória
Princess of Orléans-Braganza
former Crown Princess of Yugoslavia

(b. 1946)
   

Miguelist line: Miguel I to Duarte Pio (1802–Present)

Agnatic descendants of John IV

Non-agnatic branches

See also

Endnotes

  1. ^ There is some controversy regarding the ancestry of Inês Pires (born in Borba, c. 1350). She was the daughter of Pedro Esteves (for that she is sometimes called Inês Pires Esteves) and Maria Anes ("Grande Enciclopédia Portuguesa e Brasileira", Editorial Enciclopédia, Lisboa, vol. 4, pp. 172; António Caetano de Sousa, "História Genealógica da Casa Real Portuguesa", Atlântida Ed., Coimbra, 1946, vol. 2, pp. 25). Some historians and genealogist claim that her father was a converso – a Jew converted to Catholicism (Augusto Soares d' Azevedo Barbosa de Pinho Leal, "Portugal Antigo e Moderno", Cota d' Armas, Lisboa, 1990; Isabel Violante Pereira, "De Mendo da Guarda a D. Manuel I", Livros Horizonte, Lisboa, 2001), while the majority of sources give her a long and well attested noble Christian ancestry (Felgueiras Gayo, "Nobiliário das Famílias de Portugal", Carvalhos de Basto, Braga, 1989).
  2. ^ a b Title currently held by Duarte Pio, Duke of Braganza
  3. ^ Title currently held by Afonso, Prince of Beira
  4. ^ Titles currently held by Duarte Pio, Duke of Braganza and Afonso, Prince of Beira
  5. ^ Title currently held Infante Dinis, Duke of Porto
  6. ^ Title currently held by Infante Miguel, Duke of Viseu
  7. ^ Title currently held by Infante Maria Francisca, Duchess of Coimbra

References

  1. ^ McMurdo 1889, p. 363.
  2. ^ Portuguese Constitution of 1826 p. Title 1, Article 5.
  3. ^ Law no. 2040 (published in the Diário do Governo no. 99/1950, Series I of 1950-05-27, page 323)
  4. ^ a b (in Portuguese) "Nobreza de Portugal e do Brasil", Direcção de Afonso Eduardo Martins Zúquete, Editorial Enciclopédia, 2.ª Edição, Lisboa, 1989, Volume Terceiro, p. 214
  5. ^ a b c Podesta, Don. 20 April 1993. Claimants Dream of New Brazilian Monarchy.
  6. ^ Justiça Eleitoral. Resultado Geral do Plebiscito de 1993.
  7. ^ a b Barbosa 1860, p. 167
  8. ^ Berry 1828, article: America, Independent States of (Note: English translation of a decree of Emperor Dom Pedro I of Brazil)
  9. ^ Brazil 1890, p. 3 (Portuguese Royal decree signed by Prince Regent Dom João on 20 January 1813)
  10. ^ Sousa 1736, p. 28

Sources

  • Barbosa, Ignacio de Vilhena (1860). As cidades e villas da Monarchia portugueza que teem brasão d'armas: Volume I. Lisboa: Typographia do Panorama.
  • Berry, William (1828). Encyclopaedia Heraldica or Complete Dictionary of Heraldry: Volume I. London: Sherwood, Gilbert and Piper.
  • Brazil (1890). Collecção das leis do Brazil de 1812. Rio de Janeiro: Imprensa Nacional.
  • Leal, Augusto Soares de Azevedo Barbosa de Pinho (1882). Portugal Antigo e Moderno; Diccionario: Volume X. Lisboa: Mattos Moreira.
  • McMurdo, Edward (1889). History of Portugal: Volume 3. London: S. Low, Marston, Searle, & Rivington.
  • Nicolas, Sir Nicholas Harris (1841). History of the orders of knighthood of the British Empire; of the order of the Guelphs of Hanover; and of the medals, clasps and crosses, conferred for naval and military services; Volume I. London: Pickering, Rodwell.
  • Sousa, D. Antonio Caetano de (1736). Historia Genealogica da Casa Real Portugueza: Tomo II. Lisboa: Joseph Antonio da Sylva.

External links

  • Geneall – Genealogy of the House of Braganza
  • CoinsHome – Family Tree of the House of Braganza
House of Braganza
Cadet branch of the House of Aviz
Regnal titles
Preceded by Ruling House of the
Kingdom of Portugal and the Algarves

1640–1910
Monarchy Abolished
See First Portuguese Republic
New title Ruling House of the
Kingdom of Brazil

1815–1822
Independence of Brazil
See Empire of Brazil
New title Ruling House of the
Empire of Brazil

1822–1889
Monarchy Abolished
See First Brazilian Republic
Titles in pretence
Preceded by
Itself
as the reigning house
— TITULAR —
Claimant House of the
Portuguese monarchy

1910–present
Reason for succession failure:
Portuguese monarchy abolished
Incumbent
Preceded by
Itself
as the reigning house
— TITULAR —
Claimant House of the
Brazilian monarchy

1889–1921
Reason for succession failure:
Brazilian monarchy abolished
Succeeded by

house, braganza, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, 2014, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, most, ser. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Most Serene House of Braganza Portuguese Serenissima Casa de Braganca also known as the Brigantine Dynasty Dinastia Brigantina is a dynasty of emperors kings princes and dukes of Portuguese origin which reigned in Europe and the Americas Most Serene House of BraganzaSerenissima Casa de BragancaParent housePortuguese House of Burgundy by way of the House of AvizCountryPortugal BrazilFounded1442 581 years ago 1442 FounderAfonso I Duke of BraganzaCurrent headDuarte Pio Duke of BraganzaFinal rulerUnited Kingdom of Portugal Brazil and the Algarves John VI 1822 Kingdom of Portugal Manuel II 1910 Empire of Brazil Pedro II 1889 TitlesList Emperor of BrazilKing of the United Kingdom of Portugal Brazil and the AlgarvesKing of PortugalKing of BrazilKing of the AlgarvePrince Imperial of BrazilPrince Royal of United Kingdom of Portugal Brazil and the AlgarvesPrince Royal of Portugal and the AlgarvesPrince of BrazilPrince of BeiraPrince of Grao ParaPrince of BrazilPrince of PortugalInfante of PortugalDuke of BraganzaDuke of GuimaraesDuke of BarcelosDuke of PortoDuke of BejaDukes of ViseuDuke of CoimbraMarquis of Vila VicosaMarquis of ValencaMarquis of Montemor o NovoMarquis of Frechilla and VillarramielCount of GuimaraesCount of BarcelosCount of ArraiolosCount of OuremCount of NeivaCount of FaroCount of FariaDepositionKingdom of Portugal 1910 Implementation of the Republic Empire of Brazil 1889 Proclamation of the RepublicCadet branchesAgnatic House of Lafoes House of Valenca House of Cadaval House of Melo de PortugalNon agnatic House of Orleans Braganza House of Braganza Saxe Coburg and Gotha House of Bourbon BraganzaThe house was founded by Afonso I 1st Duke of Braganza illegitimate son of King John I of Portugal of the House of Aviz and would eventually grow into one of the wealthiest and most powerful noble houses of Iberia during the Renaissance period The Braganzas came to rule the Kingdom of Portugal and the Algarves after successfully deposing the Philippine Dynasty in the Restoration War resulting in the Duke of Braganza becoming King John IV of Portugal in 1640 The Braganzas ruled Portugal and the Portuguese Empire from 1640 and with the creation of the United Kingdom of Portugal Brazil and the Algarves in 1815 and the subsequent independence of the Empire of Brazil in 1822 the Braganzas came to rule as the monarchs of Brazil The House of Braganza produced 15 Portuguese monarchs and all four Brazilian monarchs numerous consorts to various European kingdoms such as Catherine of Braganza wife of Charles II of England who introduced tea to Britain and Maria Isabel of Braganza wife of Ferdinand VII of Spain who founded the El Prado Museum as well as sometime candidates for the thrones of Poland and Greece Infante Manuel Count of Ourem and Pedro Duke of Braganza respectively and numerous other notable figures in the histories of Europe and the Americas The Braganzas were deposed from their thrones in Europe and the Americas at the turn of the 19th 20th centuries when Emperor Pedro II was deposed in Brazil in 1889 and when King Manuel II was deposed in Portugal in 1910 Following the reign of King John VI of Portugal the Braganzas were split into three main branches of the family the Brazilian branch headed by King John VI s eldest son Emperor Pedro I of Brazil the Constitutional branch headed by Emperor Pedro I s eldest daughter Queen Maria II of Portugal and the Miguelist branch headed by King John VI s second eldest son King Miguel I of Portugal The Brazilian branch following 1921 became the House of Orleans Braganza whose leadership is disputed by two branches of its own the Vassouras branch headed by Bertrand of Orleans Braganza and the Petropolis branch headed by Prince Pedro Carlos of Orleans Braganza The Constitutional branch died out with the death of King Manuel II in 1932 passing its claim to the Portuguese throne to the Miguelist branch citation needed by way of Duarte Nuno Duke of Braganza The claim to the Portuguese Crown and thus to the leadership of the House of Braganza passed to Duarte Nuno s son Duarte Pio Duke of Braganza who is currently the most recognized pretender to the Portuguese throne Contents 1 History 1 1 Feudal establishment 1 2 Portuguese Renaissance 1 3 Throne of Portugal 1 4 Realm in Brazil 1 5 Warring branches 1 6 First Reign of Brazil 1 7 Second Reign of Brazil 1 8 Constitutional Kings 1 9 Modern Braganzas 1 9 1 Portuguese Braganzas 1 9 2 Brazilian Braganzas 2 Braganza dukes and monarchs 2 1 Dukes of Braganza before ascension to the throne 2 2 Monarchs of Portugal 2 3 Monarchs of Brazil 3 Symbols 3 1 Wyvern 3 2 Curse of the Braganzas 3 3 Estates and properties 3 4 Armorial 4 Genealogy 4 1 Ducal line Afonso I to Teodosio II 1377 1630 4 2 Royal line Joao IV to Joao VI 1604 1826 4 3 Constitutional line Maria II to Manuel II 1819 1932 4 4 Imperial line Pedro I to Pedro II 1798 1891 4 4 1 Orleans Braganza line Isabel to Luiz amp Pedro Carlos 1846 Present 4 5 Miguelist line Miguel I to Duarte Pio 1802 Present 4 6 Agnatic descendants of John IV 4 7 Non agnatic branches 5 See also 6 Endnotes 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksHistory EditFeudal establishment Edit Afonso I first Duke of Braganza and founder of the House of Braganza Isabel of Braganza was the first to intermarry with the royal family as wife of Infante Joao Constable of Portugal The House of Braganza originated with Afonso I an illegitimate son of King John I of Portugal founder of the House of Aviz and Ines Pires a Though Afonso was illegitimate his father valued and cared for him a great deal demonstrated by his arrangement of Afonso s marriage to Beatriz Pereira de Alvim daughter of Nuno Alvares Pereira Portugal s most important general and a personal friend of King John I As well as increasing his social status by his marriage into a well established house Afonso also became the eighth Count of Barcelos an honour ceded to him by his father in law who had been made the seventh count by John I With his newly consolidated place in the nobility of Portugal Afonso commenced what would be a highly successful political and social career In 1415 he took part in the Conquest of Ceuta alongside his father his brothers and the leading members of the nobility and military By the time of his father s death in 1433 Afonso had won favour with his brother King Duarte I and the rest of high Portuguese society With his brother s premature death in 1438 a regency was established for Afonso s nephew the 6 year old King Afonso V under the leadership of the king s mother Leonor of Aragon and later Afonso s brother Infante Pedro Duke of Coimbra The Duke of Coimbra s regency however soon proved unpopular and Afonso quickly became the King s preferred advisor On 30 December 1442 the Duke of Coimbra still the King s regent and thus acting in his name created Afonso as the Duke of Braganza as a gesture of good will and reconciliation between the two brothers Afonso s elevation to the dukedom the highest level of nobility marked the foundation of the House of Braganza which was to become a key family in Portuguese history As a result of the hard work and success of Afonso I his children all secured successful positions and lived privileged lives Afonso I s first son Afonso of Braganza was a prominent member of the nobility having been ceded by his grandfather Nuno Alvares Pereira the lucrative and powerful title of Count of Ourem in 1422 He was an accomplished diplomat and served as the king s representative at the Council of Basel in 1436 and the Council of Florence in 1439 In 1451 the Count of Ourem was made Marquis of Valenca and escorted Infanta Leonor of Portugal to her husband Frederick III Holy Roman Emperor Later in 1458 he participated in the capture and conquest of Alcacer Ceguer The Marquis of Valenca however died in 1460 one year before his father and therefore did not succeed him Afonso I s first daughter Isabel of Braganza married Infante Joao Lord of Reguengos de Monsaraz thus relinking the House of Braganza to the Royal House of Portugal Isabel s strategic marriage proved successful and produced four children whose descendants would be some of the most important in Iberian history Afonso I s last child and successor Fernando I Duke of Braganza continued his legacy of prominence in the military and society When Fernando I was born in 1403 his grandfather Nuno Alvares Pereira ceded him the title of Count of Arraiolos Fernando became an accomplished military man participating in various Portuguese imperial campaigns Though Fernando I was a popular and powerful member of the nobility he did not always find himself in the favour of the king most notably exemplified when Fernando I openly declaimed King Duarte I at the Portuguese Cortes on the topic of the rescue and recovery of the King s brother Infante Fernando Lord of Salvaterra de Magos from the Moors However Fernando I became a favourite of both the royal and imperial government and of King Afonso V earning him the position of Governor of Ceuta and the titles of Marquis of Vila Vicosa and Count of Neiva The Palace of the Dukes in Guimaraes was seat of the House of Braganza from 1420 until Fernando II of Braganza was executed for treason by King Joao II in 1483 Fernando I s children by his wife Joana de Castro Lady of Cadaval continued to enlarge the influence of the House of Braganza Of his nine children all six who survived to adulthood established themselves either through positions or marriages though the actions of King Joao II would seek to weaken their influence Fernando I s first son and successor Fernando II was initially a bright and popular nobleman but his conflict with King Joao II would see his and the House s downfall His second son Joao of Braganza 1st Marquis of Montemor o Novo was an accomplished military man and was made Constable of Portugal Fernando s third son Afonso of Braganza became a popular nobleman of society and was made 1st Count of Faro The Duke s fourth son Alvaro of Braganza inherited the fiefs of his mother becoming the 5th Lord of Ferreira 4th Lord of Cadaval and 1st Lord of Tentugal Fernando s eldest surviving daughter Beatriz of Braganza married Pedro de Meneses 1st Marquis of Vila Real Fernando s last surviving child Guiomar of Braganza married Henrique de Meneses 4th Count of Viana do Alentejo Ultimately however Fernando I s children and grandchildren would suffer great difficulty under the reign of King Joao II By the tenure of the third duke Fernando II the House of Braganza was undoubtedly one of the greatest noble houses of Portugal and Iberia as a whole Fernando II continued the House s legacy of acquisition and gained the title of Duke of Guimaraes To the Duke and the House s downfall however King Joao II s reign concerned itself with the royal consolidation of power and the diminishment of the nobility In his mission to centralize power the King executed many nobleman of the great houses of Portugal alongside confiscating their properties and exiling their families Fernando II having been a prominent and powerful nobleman was accused of treason and executed by King Joao II the House s titles and properties were merged into the crown and its members exiled to Castile Due to their father s misfortunes Fernando II s children from his marriage to Isabel of Viseu daughter of Infante Fernando Duke of Viseu and Beja initially had a tumultuous childhood but King Joao II s successor King Manuel I who had previously himself been the Duke of Beja chose to forgive the House and re grant them all their properties in exchange for their loyalty Fernando II s oldest surviving son and successor Jaime I returned to Portugal and reestablished himself at Vila Vicosa the former seat of the Dukes Fernando II s only other surviving son Dinis of Braganza married Beatriz de Castro Osorio Countess of Lemos and had four children with her Portuguese Renaissance Edit Jaime I restored the Braganzas status after his father s execution and built the Ducal Palace of Vila Vicosa Joao of Braganza Marquis of Montemor o Novo led the Portuguese conquest of Tangiers in 1472 Jaime I s tenure as Duke of Braganza was one of restoration and grandness Upon his return to Portugal from exile Jaime took possession of the House s formerly confiscated properties In order to establish a new image for the House he ordered the construction of a new seat for the House which would become one of the largest palaces in Iberia the Ducal Palace of Vila Vicosa Jaime I s restoration also continued with the House s relations with the King Jaime I having becoming a favourite of King Manuel I and even once his temporary heir The Duke also had his share of scandal having funded the conquest of the city of Azamor for the royal crown as as punishment for his ordering the murder of his first wife Leonor Perez de Guzman daughter of Juan Alfonso Perez de Guzman 3rd Duke of Medina Sidonia The children of Jaime I both the two first children by his first wife Leonor of Perez de Guzman and the later eight children by his second wife Joana of Mendoca all saw successful lives under the restored House of Braganza Jaime I s first daughter Isabel of Braganza married Infante Duarte Duke of Guimaraes and had three children while his first son and successor Teodosio I was a successful prince of the Portuguese Renaissance Five of Jaime I s children Jaime Maria Fulgencio Teotonio and Vicencia all entered into religious orders The Duke s second daughter Joana of Braganza married Bernardino de Cardenas 3rd Marquis of Elche and his third daughter Eugenia of Braganza married Francisco de Melo 2nd Marquis of Ferreira Jaime I s only other son other than Teodosio I to not enter into the church Constantino of Braganza married Maria de Melo daughter of D Rodrigo de Melo 1st Marquis of Ferreira but had no children Constantino was famed as a great officer of the Portuguese Empire having served as the Viceroy of Portuguese India and Captain of Ribeira Grande among other positions Constantino of Braganza was Viceroy of Portuguese India amp led the 1st Portuguese invasion of Sri Lanka The fifth Duke Teodosio I is remembered for being the personification of the Portuguese Renaissance A patron of the arts and scholarly noble Teodosio I maintained the prestige of the House of Braganza although not leaving a significant mark on the House s history The Duke notably ceded the Dukedom of Guimaraes to Infante Duarte of Portugal as the dowry of his sister Isabel of Braganza Teodosio I s first son Jaime of Braganza died before he could inherit his father s titles fighting alongside King Sebastiao I at the Battle of Alcacer Quibir The Duke s only daughter Isabel of Braganza married Miguel Luis de Meneses 1st Duke of Caminha though their union had no issue Teodosio I s last child and successor Joao I lived a very different life from Teodosio I s calm and relatively peaceful tenure having been involved in the controversies of the Portuguese succession crisis of 1580 and the subsequent War of the Portuguese Succession Joao I s tenure as Duke was one intertwined with controversy and intrigue Having been married to Infanta Catarina daughter of Infante Duarte Duke of Guimaraes and thus a grandchild of King Manuel I during the succession crisis of 1580 the couple pressed their claims to the Portuguese throne Though Infanta Catarina was a popular claimant her Habsburg cousin was eventually crowned Philip I of Portugal and the Iberian Union was established In an attempt at reconciliation with the Brigantine House King Philip I renewed the title of Constable of Portugal which Joao I had held previously to the Duke s first son Teodosio II alongside other title and land grants to the Duke and the House Joao I s daughters Maria Serefina Querubina and Angelica were some of the most eligible ladies of Portugal and all Iberia though the only one to marry was Serefina of Braganza who married Castilian Juan Fernandez Pacheco 5th Duke of Escalona The Duke s oldest son and successor Teodosio II famously fought in the Battle of Alcacer Quibir at the age of ten and later became an accomplished general Joao I s second son Duarte of Braganza was made 1st Marquis of Frechilla and the Duke s third son Alexandre of Braganza became Archbishop of Evora both receiving their titles and many concessions from King Philip I when the monarch was making amends with the House of Braganza Unlike his other sons Joao I s last son Filipe of Braganza died without marriage children or titles In 1640 John IV of Portugal became the first Braganza to reign as King of Portugal starting the Portuguese Restoration War The seventh Duke Teodosio II became famous at a young age having been made page to King Sebastiao I and having marched into the Battle of Alcacer Quibir alongside the King and his uncle Jaime of Braganza at the age of ten Teodosio II later pledged his allegiance and became a faithful countryman to the Philippine Dynasty having even defended Lisbon against King Philip I s rival claimant to the throne Antonio Prior of Crato who had been acclaimed by his supporters as King Antonio I of Portugal In recognition for his military prowess Teodosio II was made Constable of Portugal The Duke s support and service to the Philippine Dynasty earned the Braganzas more lands and titles and by 1640 the House had amassed around 80 000 vassals alongside numerous churches orders and institutions under its patronage 1 In 1603 Teodosio II married Ana de Velasco y Giron daughter of Castilian Juan Fernandez de Velasco 5th Duke of Frias and had four children with her The Duke s first son and successor Joao II raise the House of Braganza to new heights of power having launched the Portuguese Restoration War and been acclaimed King Joao IV of Portugal thus installing the House as the ruling dynasty of Portugal Teodosio II s second son Duarte of Braganza was made Lord of Vila do Conde and became a diplomat serving at the court of Ferdinand III Holy Roman Emperor but later died a prisoner as a cost of the Restoration War Teodosio II s two other children Alexandre and Catarina both died without children titles or marriage Throne of Portugal Edit Queen Catherine of Braganza wife of Charles II of England credited with introducing the English to tea drinking popular with the Portuguese nobility By 1640 the wise policies of D Philip I in respect of Portugal were long past The country was overtaxed Portuguese colonies were left unprotected and the King Philip III of Portugal no longer had the trust or support of most Portuguese nobility He was especially loathed by the powerful Portuguese guild of merchants Portugal like the rest of Philip s kingdoms was on the verge of rebellion The eighth Duke of Braganza D Joao II of Braganza had inherited the claim of his grandmother Infanta Catarina of Portugal and the remoter claim through of his grandfather Joao I of Braganza Because of his claims the discontent Portuguese nobility asked Joao II to lead their restoration as their king According to court historians D Joao II was a modest man without particular ambitions to the crown Legend says that his wife Dona Luisa de Guzman daughter of the duke of Medina Sidonia urged him to accept the offer saying I d rather be queen for one day than duchess for a lifetime He accepted the leadership of the rebellion which was successful and was acclaimed Joao IV of Portugal on 1 December 1640 After the accession of the Braganzas to the throne the duchy was linked to the Crown Duke of Braganza became the traditional title of the heir to the throne together with Prince of Brazil and later Prince Royal of Portugal much as Prince of Wales is in the United Kingdom or Prince of Asturias in Spain Under D Joao s sons D Afonso VI and D Pedro II the Portuguese colonial empire part of which was lost during the Spanish occupation was restored and expanded bringing new wealth to Portugal The zenith of the Braganza dynasty came with the long reign of D Joao V 1706 1750 who ruled with grandeur and piety The reign of D Jose I son of D Joao V was marked by the great earthquake which struck Lisbon in 1755 The political genius of his reign was the 1st Marquis of Pombal The end of the 18th century was characterized by stability under the rule of Dona Maria I 1777 1816 who discharged Pombal at her accession Unfortunately Dona Maria became psychologically unstable displaying similar symptoms to George III of the United Kingdom in his later years Realm in Brazil Edit Queen Maria I became the first monarch of Brazil with the creation of the United Kingdom of Portugal Brazil and the Algarves in 1815 In 1808 faced with impending Napoleonic invasion the Braganzas transferred their royal court to the State of Brazil Portugal s largest colony Some time after they had crossed the Atlantic a royal decree changed the status of Brazil from a Portuguese colony into kingdom alongside Portugal and the United Kingdom of Portugal Brazil and the Algarves was formed In 1821 D Joao VI who succeeded in 1816 returned to Portugal D Pedro Prince Royal of Portugal Brazil and the Algarves the eldest son of D Joao VI and also regent in Brazil sided with the Brazilian rebels in January 1822 He was acclaimed Emperor D Pedro I of an independent Brazil in 1822 founding the Empire of Brazil D Pedro I ruled Brazil until 1831 when he abdicated in favor of his young son D Pedro II and returned to Portugal to aid his daughter D Maria II see below D Pedro II being only 6 years old at the time of his coronation had a regency established The regency would rule until 1840 when the Emperor turned 14 years old His reign would last until 1889 when the Brazilian monarchy was abolished His reign would see the abolition of slavery in Brazil economic growth and very long periods of tranquility and development in his empire Warring branches Edit King Emperor Joao VI s children split the Braganzas into 3 branches the Brazilian Imperial branch the Portuguese Constitutional branch and the exiled Miguelist branch In Portugal D Pedro I of Brazil became King as D Pedro IV 1826 but no one wanted to re establish the union of Portugal and Brazil Pedro abdicated the Portuguese throne in favor of his daughter Princess Maria da Gloria then seven years old D Pedro s brother D Miguel was to act as Regent and to marry Maria when she came of age In 1828 Miguel instead proclaimed himself King of Portugal and repudiated the liberal constitution granted by D Joao VI trying to establish an absolute monarchy In 1828 Maria II was forced into exile by her uncle the new King Miguel I Her father D Pedro IV of Portugal returned from Brazil launched a successful military campaign from the Azores against Miguel I He finally defeated and exiled Miguel I in 1834 Though exiled Miguel would not give up his claim to the throne and would establish the Miguelist branch of the House of Braganza The strategic marriages of his children to the various royal houses of Europe would earn him the nickname the Grandfather of Europe see Descendants of Miguel I of Portugal First Reign of Brazil Edit Emperor King Pedro I amp IV achieved Brazil s independence as Emperor of Brazil amp won the Liberal Wars as King of Portugal On 7 September 1822 Dom Pedro of Braganza Prince Royal of Portugal Brazil and the Algarves member of the House of Braganza heir apparent to the Portuguese throne and Regent of the Kingdom of Brazil declared the country s independence from the United Kingdom of Portugal Brazil and the Algarves and was acclaimed Emperor of Brazil On 12 October the prince was acclaimed Pedro I first Emperor of the newly created Empire of Brazil a constitutional monarchy In 1825 signing the treaty of Rio de Janeiro of this date his father King Dom Joao VI recognized the independence of the new state the former Portuguese dominion now Empire of Brazil Pedro I encountered a number of crises during his reign A secessionist rebellion in the Cisplatine Province in early 1825 and the subsequent attempt by the United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata later Argentina to annex Cisplatina led the Empire into the failed Cisplatine War In March 1826 Joao VI died and Pedro I inherited the Portuguese crown briefly becoming King Pedro IV of Portugal before abdicating in favor of his eldest daughter Maria II The situation worsened in 1828 when the war in the south ended with Brazil s loss of Cisplatina which would become the independent republic of Uruguay During the same year in Lisbon Maria II s throne was usurped by Prince Miguel Pedro I s younger brother Other difficulties arose when the Empire s parliament opened in 1826 Pedro I along with a significant percentage of the legislature argued for an independent judiciary a popularly elected legislature and a government which would be led by the emperor who held broad executive powers and prerogatives Others in parliament argued for a similar structure only with a less influential role for the monarch and the legislative branch being dominant in policy and governance The struggle over whether the government would be dominated by the emperor or by the parliament was carried over into debates from 1826 to 1831 on the establishment of the governmental and political structure Unable to deal with the problems in both Brazil and Portugal simultaneously the Emperor abdicated on behalf of his son Pedro II on 7 April 1831 and immediately sailed for Europe to restore his daughter to her throne Second Reign of Brazil Edit Pedro II was the last Emperor of Brazil after the Proclamation of the Republic of Brazil in 1889 Isabel of Braganza Princess Imperial of Brazil signed the Lei Aurea in 1888 abolishing slavery in Brazil Pedro I s successor in Brazil was his five year old son Pedro II As the latter was still a minor a weak regency was created The power vacuum resulting from the absence of a ruling monarch as the ultimate arbiter in political disputes led to regional civil wars between local factions Having inherited an empire on the verge of disintegration Pedro II once he was declared of age in 1840 at 14 years old managed to bring peace and stability to the country which eventually became an emerging international power Brazil was victorious in three international conflicts the Platine War the Uruguayan War and the Paraguayan War under Pedro II s rule and the Empire prevailed in several other international disputes and outbreaks of domestic strife With prosperity and economic development came an influx of European immigration including Protestants and Jews although Brazil remained mostly Catholic Slavery which had initially been widespread was restricted by successive legislation until its final abolition in 1888 by Princess Isabel Even though the last four decades of Pedro II s reign were marked by continuous internal peace and economic prosperity he had no desire to see the monarchy survive beyond his lifetime and made no effort to maintain support for the institution The next in line to the throne was his daughter Isabel but neither Pedro II nor the ruling classes considered a female monarch acceptable citation needed Lacking any viable heir the Empire s political leaders saw no reason to defend the monarchy Although there was no desire among the majority of Brazilians to change the country s form of government republicans began pressuring army officers to overthrow the monarchy After a 58 year reign on 15 November 1889 the Emperor was overthrown in a sudden coup d etat led by a clique of military leaders whose goal was the formation of a republic headed by a dictator forming the First Brazilian Republic Throughout the coup Pedro II dismissed all suggestions put forward by politicians and military leaders for quelling the rebellion The Emperor and his family were exiled to the Portuguese kingdom and France Although there was significant monarchist reaction after the fall of the Empire citation needed this was thoroughly suppressed and neither Pedro II nor his daughter and heiress supported a forced restoration Constitutional Kings Edit Manuel II last King of Portugal and the last Braganza to rule as a monarch In 1835 Queen Maria II of Portugal married Prince Ferdinand of Saxe Coburg Gotha later King Ferdinand II of Portugal Despite the tradition of following the custom of patrilineal descent of royal houses common throughout Europe Article 5 of the Portuguese constitution of 1826 stated that The Reigning Dynasty of the Most Serene House of Braganza Shall Continue in the Person of Lady Princess Maria da Gloria by the Abdication and Cession of Her August Father Lord Pedro I Emperor of Brazil Legitimate Heir and Successor of Lord Joao VI 2 Maria II was succeeded in 1853 by her son D Pedro V a hard working reformer who died prematurely in 1861 due to cholera D Pedro V was succeeded by his brother D Luis as D Pedro V had no children D Luis I was succeeded in 1889 by his son D Carlos I Carlos I s popularity dramatically declined after the British Ultimatum of 1890 whereby the Portuguese Empire ceded its claim to territories known as the Pink Map between Portuguese West Africa and Portuguese East Africa to the British Pursuant to his unpopularity the monarchy became increasingly unpopular in the country King Carlos I was assassinated in 1908 together with his eldest son D Luis Filipe Prince Royal of Portugal and Duke of Braganza by republicans His younger son D Manuel Duke of Beja survived the attack on his father and elder brother and became king as Manuel II but was toppled two years later in the 1910 republican revolution After the revolution Manuel was forced into exile in Great Britain by the Portuguese First Republic but he would continue to support his fatherland until his death citation needed Modern Braganzas Edit Portuguese Braganzas Edit D Duarte Pio Duke of Braganza Head of the House of Braganza and recognized pretender to the Crown of Portugal since 1976 After the revolution of 1910 King Manuel II settled in England until his death in 1932 He was childless and descendants of Miguel of Braganza the usurper of 1826 claimed the throne In 1920 22 the two of the now four branches of the House of Braganza negotiated an alleged pact under which Manuel II named as his heir Duarte Nuno of Braganza citation needed grandson of Miguel Duarte Nuno now Duke of Braganza remained the Braganza pretender until his death in 1976 In 1942 he married a great granddaughter of Emperor Pedro II of Brazil uniting the two lines of the House In 1950 Portugal repealed the law of exile against the Braganzas 3 and D Duarte Nuno moved to the country in 1952 Duarte Nuno was succeeded as pretender by his son Duarte Pio of Braganza born 1945 Duarte Pio served in the Portuguese Armed Forces and took the customary oath of allegiance to the Republic but Portuguese monarchists recognize him as the pretender to the Portuguese throne In 1995 he married Isabel de Heredia a Portuguese businesswoman and descendant of Francisco Correia de Heredia Viscount of Ribeira Brava 4 a Vitalicio title 4 meaning Life peerage He worked actively in support of the independence of East Timor from Indonesia Duarte Pio and Isabel have three children Duarte Pio s oldest son is Afonso de Santa Maria who bears the traditional titles of Prince of Beira as heir apparent to the Portuguese pretender and Duke of Barcelos as heir apparent to the Duke of Braganza citation needed He has a brother Dinis Duke of Porto and a sister Infanta Maria Francisca Prince Bertrand of Orleans Braganza Head of the Brazilian Imperial Family since the death of his older brother in 2022 Maria Pia of Saxe Coburg and Braganza who claimed she was an illegitimate daughter of King Carlos I of Portugal began asserting that she was the heir to the throne from 1957 Allegedly she adopted the Italian Rosario Poidimani transferring her claimed rights to the Portuguese throne to him Brazilian Braganzas Edit Main articles Brazilian Imperial Family and House of Orleans Braganza After the military coup of 1889 Emperor Dom Pedro II settled in France until his death in 1891 His eldest daughter and family went to live in the Chateau d Eu in French Normandy She was recognized by Brazilian monarchists as Empress in Exile as Dona Isabel I of Brazil until her death in 1921 She was succeeded by her grandson Prince Pedro Henrique of Orleans Braganza as Head of the Imperial House of Brazil and he by his son and current Head Prince Luiz of Orleans Braganza With the end of the banishment of the Imperial Family in 1920 some princes returned to live in Brazil while another remained in Europe After the end of World War II Prince Pedro Henrique then Head of the Imperial House and married to Princess Maria Elisabeth of Bavaria returned to Brazil with his family The Imperial House of Brazil divided into rival branches because of the renunciation of Pedro de Alcantara Prince of Grao Para in 1908 and the subsequent repudiation of that act by his descendants 5 While some members of the two branches of the family subsequently lived in the Grao Para Palace some married royalty or nobles and have lived in Europe and others elsewhere in Brazil 5 A 1993 referendum on restoration of the monarchy was defeated garnering 13 2 percent of the vote against 66 percent for the republic 6 Members of both the so called Petropolis branch of Braganzas Princes Pedro Gastao and his nephew Joazinho of Orleans Braganza and the more broadly recognised Vassouras line of the Imperial Family led by Prince Luiz Gastao of Orleans Braganza participated in the restoration effort 5 and the Head of the Vassouras branch continues to lead a growing movement to restore the monarchy citation needed Braganza dukes and monarchs EditMain articles List of Dukes of Braganza List of Portuguese monarchs and List of monarchs of Brazil D Joao II of Braganza The first Braganza King of Portugal as King Joao IV D Pedro I of Braganza The 1st Emperor of Brazil and King of Portugal as Emperor King Pedro I amp IV Dukes of Braganza before ascension to the throne Edit Name Became duke NotesAfonso I of Braganza 1442 Duke of Braganza Count of BarcelosFernando I of Braganza 1461 Duke of Braganza Marquis of Vila VicosaFernando II of Braganza 1478 Duke of Braganza Duke of GuimaraesJaime I of Braganza 1498 Duke of BraganzaTeodosio I of Braganza 1532 Duke of Braganza ceded Dukedom of GuimaraesJoao I of Braganza 1563 Duke of Braganza Duke of BarcelosTeodosio II of Braganza 1583 Duke of BraganzaJoao II of Braganza 1630 Duke of Braganza Duke of Guimaraes first Braganza monarch of PortugalMonarchs of Portugal Edit Name Became monarch NotesJoao IV of Portugal 1640 King of Portugal and the Algarves first Braganza monarch of PortugalAfonso VI of Portugal 1656 King of Portugal and the Algarves died without heirPedro II of Portugal 1683 King of Portugal and the Algarves brother of Afonso VIJoao V of Portugal 1706 King of Portugal and the AlgarvesJose I of Portugal 1750 King of Portugal and the AlgarvesMaria I of Portugal amp Pedro III of Portugal 1777 Queen and King of Portugal Brazil and the AlgarvesJoao VI of Portugal 1816 King of Portugal Brazil and the Algarves Titular Emperor of BrazilPedro IV of Portugal 1826 King of Portugal and the Algarves Emperor of BrazilMaria II of Portugal 1826 Queen of Portugal and the Algarves lost throne to Miguel I in 1828 regained throne in 1834Miguel I of Portugal 1828 King of Portugal and the Algarves reigned for 6 years succeeded by Maria IIPedro V of Portugal 1853 King of Portugal and the AlgarvesLuis I of Portugal 1861 King of Portugal and the AlgarvesCarlos I of Portugal 1889 King of Portugal and the Algarves assassinated in Lisbon RegicideManuel II of Portugal 1908 King of Portugal and the Algarves last monarch of PortugalMonarchs of Brazil Edit Name Became monarch NotesMaria I of Portugal Brazil and the Algarves 1815 Queen and founder of the United Kingdom of Portugal Brazil and the AlgarvesJohn VI of Portugal Brazil and the Algarves 1816 King of Portugal Brazil and the Algarves Titular Emperor of Brazil last King of BrazilPedro I of Brazil 1822 Emperor of Brazil proclaimer of Brazilian Independence King of Portugal and the AlgarvesPedro II of Brazil 1831 Emperor of Brazil last Emperor of BrazilSymbols EditWyvern Edit The Sceptre of the Dragon The traditional symbol and crest of the House of Braganza is a green wyvern commonly taken to be a dragon 7 8 9 representing Saint George 10 patron saint of Portugal This symbol can be found in many different monuments in Portugal and Brazil such as the Monument to the Independence of Brazil in Sao Paulo and in the palaces of the Imperial family in Rio de Janeiro and Petropolis It is famously found atop the Portuguese Crown Sceptre the Sceptre of the Dragon and the Sceptre of the Emperor of Brazil The wyvern is also sometimes used as a supporter in the coat of arms of both the Brazilian and Portuguese branches of the family Because of its use in heraldry by the Braganza as the ruling house and given Pedro IV s link with Porto a dragon was added to the old coat of arms of the municipality of Porto 7 and is still a part of FC Porto s coat of arms who are nicknamed The Dragons Curse of the Braganzas Edit Main article Curse of the Braganzas Since the 17th century the House of Braganza has allegedly suffered from the Curse of the Braganzas Portuguese Maldicao dos Bragancas For supposedly mistreating a Franciscan friar a curse was purportedly placed on King Joao IV of Portugal stating that never again would a first born male of the Braganza Dynasty live long enough to succeed to the throne Since the reign of King Joao IV all first born Braganza males with only three exceptions have died before they had the opportunity to reign as monarch either in Portugal or Brazil Supposed victims of the Curse of the Braganzas Teodosio of Braganza Prince of Brazil 1634 1653 First born son of King Joao IV of Portugal Joao of Braganza Prince of Brazil 1688 1688 First born son of King Pedro II of Portugal Pedro of Braganza Prince of Brazil 1712 1714 First born son of King Joao V of Portugal Jose of Braganza Prince of Brazil 1761 1788 First born son of Queen Maria I of Portugal amp King Pedro III of Portugal Francisco Antonio of Braganza Prince of Beira 1795 1801 First born son of King Joao VI of Portugal Miguel of Braganza Prince of Beira 1820 First born son of King Emperor Pedro I amp IV Afonso of Braganza Prince Imperial of Brazil 1845 1847 First born son of Emperor Pedro II of Brazil Luis Filipe of Braganza Prince Royal of Portugal 1887 1908 First born son of King Carlos I of Portugal Estates and properties Edit Ajuda National Palace Lisbon Belem Palace Lisbon Bucaco Palace Bucaco Palace of the Carrancas Porto Ducal Palace Vila Vicosa Palace of the Dukes Guimaraes Necessidades Palace Lisbon Imperial Palace of Petropolis Petropolis Mafra National Palace Mafra Pena National Palace Sintra Paco de Sao Cristovao Rio de Janeiro Palace of Queluz Sintra Guanabara Palace Rio de Janeiro Sintra National Palace Sintra Paco Imperial Rio de JaneiroArmorial Edit See also List of titles and honours of the Portuguese Crown Coat of arms Title Tenure Coat of arms Title Tenure Coat of arms Title Tenure Emperor of Brazil 1822 1889 King of the United Kingdom of Portugal Brazil and the Algarves 1815 1825 King of Portugal 1640 1910 King of the Algarves 1640 1910 Prince of PortugalPrince of BrazilPrince Royal of Portugal 1481 present b Prince of Beira 1734 present c Prince Imperial of Brazil 1822 present Duke of BraganzaDuke of GuimaraesDuke of BarcelosMarquis of Vila Vicosa 1442 present d Duke of Porto 1833 present e Duke of Viseu 1909 present f Duke of Coimbra 1847 present g Count of OuremCount of NeivaCount of Faria 1451 present b Genealogy EditSee also Genealogical tree of the monarchs of Portugal Ducal line Afonso I to Teodosio II 1377 1630 Edit Genealogical tree of the House of Braganza during its ducal period from origins of its founder Afonso I Duke of Braganza to the issue of its last noble duke Teodosio II Duke of Braganza King Pedro IKing of Portugal and the Algarve 1320 1367 Member of the Portuguese House of BurgundyKing Joao IKing of Portugal and the Algarve 1357 1433 Founder of the House of AvizAfonso I1st Duke of Braganza 8th Count of Barcelos 1377 1461 Founder of the House of BraganzaAfonso of Braganza1st Marquis of Valenca 1400 1460 Fernando I2nd Duke of Braganza 1st Marquis of Vila Vicosa 1403 1478 Isabel of BraganzaInfanta of Portugal 1402 1466 Infante JoaoConstable of Portugal 1400 1442 From his issuedescend the lines of theCounts of Vimioso and the Marquises of ValencaJoao of Braganza1st Marquis of Montemor o Novo 1430 1484 Fernando II3rd Duke of Braganza 1st Duke of Guimaraes 1430 1483 Alvaro of BraganzaLord of Cadaval 1440 1504 Afonso of Braganza1st Count of Faro 1435 1483 Infanta BeatrizDuchess of Viseu 1430 1506 Dinis of Braganza6th Count of Lemos 1481 1516 Jaime I4th Duke of Braganza 2nd Duke of Guimaraes 1479 1532 From his issuedescend the lines ofthe Dukes of Aveiro and the House of CadavalFrom his issuedescend the lines ofthe Counts of Faro and the Counts of OdemiraKing Manuel IKing of Portugal and the Algarves 1469 1521 From his issuedescend the lines ofthe Counts of Lemos the Dukes of Berwick and the Dukes of Veragua in Spain andthe Counts of Santa Cruz the Marquesses of Gouveaand the Marquesses of Lavradio in Portugal Isabel of LencastreDuchess of Braganza 1513 1558 Teodosio I5th Duke of Braganza 3rd Duke of Guimaraes 1510 1563 Constantino of BraganzaViceroy of India 1528 1575 Isabel of BraganzaDuchess of Guimaraes 1514 1576 Infante Duarte4th Duke of Guimaraes 1515 1540 Joao I6th Duke of Braganza 1st Duke of Barcelos 1543 1583 Infanta CatarinaDuchess of Braganza 1540 1614 Teodosio II7th Duke of Braganza 2nd Duke of Barcelos 1568 1630 Duarte of Braganza1st Marquis of Frechilla 1569 1627 Duarte of BraganzaLord of Vila do Conde 1605 1649 King Joao IVKing of Portugal and the Algarves8th Duke of Braganza 6th Duke of Guimaraes 1604 1656 From him descendthe lines of the Dukes of Frias and Escalona and the Marquises of Jarandilla and Villar de Grajanejos Royal line Joao IV to Joao VI 1604 1826 Edit Genealogical tree of the House of Braganza from its first monarch Joao IV King of Portugal to the fracture of the house into its three main branches in the issue of Joao VI King of United Kingdom of Portugal Brazil and the Algarves King Joao IVKing of Portugal and the Algarves8th Duke of Braganza 1604 1656 Prince Teodosio1st Prince of Brazil 1634 1653 King Afonso VIKing of Portugal and the Algarves 1643 1683 King Pedro IIKing of Portugal and the Algarves 1648 1706 Princess Joana1st Princess of Beira 1635 1653 Queen CatarinaQueen Consort of England 1638 1705 Infante FranciscoDuke of Beja 1691 1742 Infante AntonioInfante of Portugal 1695 1775 Infanta Francisca JosefaInfanta of Portugal 1699 1736 King Joao VKing of Portugal and the Algarves 1689 1750 Infante ManuelCount of Ourem 1697 1766 Princess Isabel LuisaPrincess of Beira 1669 1690 Luisa of BraganzaDuchess of Cadaval 1679 1732 Jose of BraganzaArchbishop of Braga 1703 1756 Miguel of BraganzaDuke of Lafoes 1699 1724 Joao of BraganzaDuke of Abrantes 1726 1780 Infante CarlosInfante of Portugal 1716 1736 King Jose IKing of Portugal and the Algarves 1714 1777 Queen BarbaraQueen Consort of Spain 1711 1758 Jose of BraganzaHigh Inquisitor of Portugal 1720 1801 Gaspar of BraganzaArchbishop of Braga 1715 1789 From his issuedescend the lines of theDukes of Lafoes the Marquises of Marialvaand of ArronchesKing Peter IIIKing of Portugal and the Algarves3rd Lord of the Infantado 1717 1786 Queen Maria IQueen of Portugal and the AlgarvesQueen of Brazil 1734 1816 Infanta Maria AnaInfanta of Portugal 1736 1813 Infanta DoroteiaInfanta of Portugal 1739 1771 Infanta MarianaInfanta of PortugalInfanta of Spain 1768 1788 King Joao VIKing of Portugal and the AlgarvesKing and Emperor of Brazil 1767 1826 Prince JosePrince of BrazilPrince of Beira 1761 1788 Princess BeneditaPrincess of BrazilPrincess of Beira 1746 1829 Infante PedroInfante of PortugalInfante of Spain 1786 1812 Princess TeresaPrincess of BeiraCountess of Molina 1793 1874 King Miguel IKing of Portugal and the AlgarvesDuke of Braganza 1802 1866 Emperor King Pedro I IVKing of Portugal and the AlgarvesEmperor of Brazil 1798 1834 Queen Maria IsabelQueen Consort of SpainInfanta of Portugal 1787 1818 Infanta AssuncaoInfanta of Portugal 1805 1834 Infanta FranciscaInfanta of PortugalInfanta of Spain 1800 1834 Infanta IsabelRegent of PortugalInfanta of Portugal 1801 1876 Infanta Ana de JesusInfanta of PortugalMarquise of Loule 1806 1857 From their marriagedescends the House ofBourbon BraganzaFrom him descends the Miguelist branch of theHouse of BraganzaQueen Maria IIQueen of Portugal and the Algarves 1819 1853 Emperor Pedro IIEmperor of Brazil 1825 1891 From her marriagedescends the House of LouleFrom her descends the Constitutional branch of theHouse of BraganzaFrom him descends the Brazilian branch of theHouse of BraganzaConstitutional line Maria II to Manuel II 1819 1932 Edit Imperial line Pedro I to Pedro II 1798 1891 Edit Genealogical tree of the Brazilian branch House of Braganza from its first monarch Pedro I Emperor of Brazil to the issue of Pedro II the last Emperor of Brazil Emperor King Pedro I IVKing of Portugal and the AlgarvesEmperor of Brazil 1798 1834 Queen Maria IIQueen of Portugal and the Algarves 1819 1853 Princess JanuariaPrincess Imperial of BrazilCountess of Aquila 1822 1901 Emperor Pedro IIEmperor of Brazil 1825 1891 Princess PaulaPrincess of Brazil 1823 1833 Princess FranciscaPrincess of BrazilPrincess of Joinville 1824 1898 Princess Maria AmeliaPrincess of Brazil 1831 1853 From her descends theConstitutional LinePrincess IsabelPrincess Imperial of Brazil 1846 1921 Princess LeopoldinaPrincess of BrazilPrincess of Saxe Coburg and Gotha 1847 1871 From her descends theHouse of Orleans BraganzaFrom her descends the cadet branch of theBrazilian Imperial FamilyOrleans Braganza line Isabel to Luiz amp Pedro Carlos 1846 Present Edit Genealogical tree of the House of Orleans Braganza from its origin to the current claimants Vassouras line The descendants of Prince Luis of Orleans Braganza Princess IsabelPrincess Imperial of BrazilCountess of Eu 1846 1921 Prince Pedro de AlcantaraPrince Imperial of BrazilPrince of Orleans Braganza 1875 1940 Prince LuisPrince Imperial of BrazilPrince of Orleans Braganza 1878 1920 Prince Antonio GastaoPrince of BrazilPrince of Orleans Braganza 1881 1918 Prince Pedro HenriquePrince and Head of the House of Orleans Braganza 1909 1981 Prince Luiz GastaoPrince Imperial of BrazilPrince of Orleans Braganza 1911 1931 Princess Pia MariaPrincess Imperial of BrazilPrincess of Orleans BraganzaCountess Nicolay 1913 2000 Prince LuizPrince and Head of the House of Orleans Braganza 1938 2022 Prince BertrandPrince and Head of the House of Orleans Braganza b 1941 Princess IsabelPrincess of BrazilPrincess of Orleans Braganza 1944 2017 Prince AntonioPrince Imperial of BrazilPrince of Orleans Braganza b 1950 Princess EleanoraPrincess of BrazilPrincess of Orleans BraganzaPrincess of Ligne b 1953 Seven more Princes of Orleans Braganza who renounced their dynastic rightsPrince Rafael AntonioPrince of Grao ParaPrince of Orleans Braganza b 1986 Princess Maria GabrielaPrincess of BrazilPrincess of Orleans Braganza b 1989 Petropolis line The descendants of Pedro de Alcantara Prince of Grao Para Princess IsabelPrincess Imperial of Brazil 1846 1921 Prince Pedro de AlcantaraPrince of Grao ParaPrince of Orleans Braganza 1875 1940 Prince LuisPrince Imperial of BrazilPrince of Orleans Braganza 1878 1920 Prince Antonio GastaoPrince of BrazilPrince of Orleans Braganza 1881 1918 Princess IsabellePrincess of Orleans BraganzaCountess of Paris 1911 2003 Prince Pedro GastaoPrince of Orleans Braganza 1913 2007 Princess Maria FranciscaPrincess of Orleans BraganzaDuchess of Braganza 1914 1968 Prince Joao MariaPrince of Orleans Braganza 1916 2005 Princess Teresa TeodoraPrincess of Orleans Braganza 1919 2011 Prince Pedro CarlosPrince of Orleans Braganza b 1945 Princess Maria da GloriaPrincess of Orleans Braganzaformer Crown Princess of Yugoslavia b 1946 Miguelist line Miguel I to Duarte Pio 1802 Present Edit Agnatic descendants of John IV Edit John IV of Portugal Teodosio Prince of Brazil Afonso VI of Portugal Peter II of Portugal Joao Prince of Brazil John V of Portugal Pedro Prince of Brazil Joseph I of Portugal Infante Carlos of Portugal Peter III of Portugal Jose Prince of Brazil John VI of Portugal Francisco Antonio Prince of Beira Pedro I of Brazil Miguel Prince of Beira Joao Carlos Prince of Beira Pedro II of Brazil Afonso Prince Imperial of Brazil Pedro Afonso Prince Imperial of Brazil Miguel I of Portugal Miguel Duke of Braganza Prince Miguel Duke of Viseu renounced his succession rights John de Braganca 1912 1991 Miguel de Braganca 1951 Miguel de Braganca 1986 Miguel de Braganca 1915 1996 Prince Francis Joseph of Braganza Duarte Nuno Duke of Braganza Duarte Pio Duke of Braganza Afonso Prince of Beira Infante Dinis Duke of Porto Infante Miguel Duke of Viseu Infante Henrique Duke of Coimbra Infante Alexandre of Portugal Infante Francisco Duke of Beja Infante Antonio of Portugal Infante Manuel Count of Ourem Miguel de Braganca illegitimate Dukes of Lafoes Non agnatic branches Edit Maria I of Portugal John VI of Portugal Pedro I of Brazil Maria II of Portugal House of Braganza Saxe Coburg and Gotha Pedro II of Brazil Isabel Princess Imperial of Brazil House of Orleans Braganza Infanta Maria Ana Vitoria of Portugal House of Bourbon BraganzaSee also EditDescendants of John VI of Portugal Descendants of Miguel I of Portugal List of Portuguese monarchs List of Brazilian monarchs Curse of the BraganzasEndnotes Edit There is some controversy regarding the ancestry of Ines Pires born in Borba c 1350 She was the daughter of Pedro Esteves for that she is sometimes called Ines Pires Esteves and Maria Anes Grande Enciclopedia Portuguesa e Brasileira Editorial Enciclopedia Lisboa vol 4 pp 172 Antonio Caetano de Sousa Historia Genealogica da Casa Real Portuguesa Atlantida Ed Coimbra 1946 vol 2 pp 25 Some historians and genealogist claim that her father was a converso a Jew converted to Catholicism Augusto Soares d Azevedo Barbosa de Pinho Leal Portugal Antigo e Moderno Cota d Armas Lisboa 1990 Isabel Violante Pereira De Mendo da Guarda a D Manuel I Livros Horizonte Lisboa 2001 while the majority of sources give her a long and well attested noble Christian ancestry Felgueiras Gayo Nobiliario das Familias de Portugal Carvalhos de Basto Braga 1989 a b Title currently held by Duarte Pio Duke of Braganza Title currently held by Afonso Prince of Beira Titles currently held by Duarte Pio Duke of Braganza and Afonso Prince of Beira Title currently held Infante Dinis Duke of Porto Title currently held by Infante Miguel Duke of Viseu Title currently held by Infante Maria Francisca Duchess of CoimbraReferences Edit McMurdo 1889 p 363 Portuguese Constitution of 1826 p Title 1 Article 5 Law no 2040 published in the Diario do Governo no 99 1950 Series I of 1950 05 27 page 323 a b in Portuguese Nobreza de Portugal e do Brasil Direccao de Afonso Eduardo Martins Zuquete Editorial Enciclopedia 2 ª Edicao Lisboa 1989 Volume Terceiro p 214 a b c Podesta Don 20 April 1993 Claimants Dream of New Brazilian Monarchy Justica Eleitoral Resultado Geral do Plebiscito de 1993 a b Barbosa 1860 p 167 Berry 1828 article America Independent States of Note English translation of a decree of Emperor Dom Pedro I of Brazil Brazil 1890 p 3 Portuguese Royal decree signed by Prince Regent Dom Joao on 20 January 1813 Sousa 1736 p 28Sources EditBarbosa Ignacio de Vilhena 1860 As cidades e villas da Monarchia portugueza que teem brasao d armas Volume I Lisboa Typographia do Panorama Berry William 1828 Encyclopaedia Heraldica or Complete Dictionary of Heraldry Volume I London Sherwood Gilbert and Piper Brazil 1890 Colleccao das leis do Brazil de 1812 Rio de Janeiro Imprensa Nacional Leal Augusto Soares de Azevedo Barbosa de Pinho 1882 Portugal Antigo e Moderno Diccionario Volume X Lisboa Mattos Moreira McMurdo Edward 1889 History of Portugal Volume 3 London S Low Marston Searle amp Rivington Nicolas Sir Nicholas Harris 1841 History of the orders of knighthood of the British Empire of the order of the Guelphs of Hanover and of the medals clasps and crosses conferred for naval and military services Volume I London Pickering Rodwell Sousa D Antonio Caetano de 1736 Historia Genealogica da Casa Real Portugueza Tomo II Lisboa Joseph Antonio da Sylva External links EditGeneall Genealogy of the House of Braganza CoinsHome Family Tree of the House of Braganza Royal House House of BraganzaCadet branch of the House of AvizRegnal titlesPreceded byHouse of Habsburg Ruling House of the Kingdom of Portugal and the Algarves1640 1910 Monarchy AbolishedSee First Portuguese RepublicNew title Ruling House of the Kingdom of Brazil1815 1822 Independence of BrazilSee Empire of BrazilNew title Ruling House of the Empire of Brazil1822 1889 Monarchy AbolishedSee First Brazilian RepublicTitles in pretencePreceded byItselfas the reigning house TITULAR Claimant House of the Portuguese monarchy1910 presentReason for succession failure Portuguese monarchy abolished IncumbentPreceded byItselfas the reigning house TITULAR Claimant House of the Brazilian monarchy1889 1921Reason for succession failure Brazilian monarchy abolished Succeeded byHouse of Orleans Braganza Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title House of Braganza amp oldid 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