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João Pinheiro Chagas

João Pinheiro Chagas (1 September 1863 – 28 May 1925; Portuguese pronunciation: [ʒuˈɐ̃w piˈɲɐjɾu ˈʃaɣɐʃ]) was a Portuguese politician, literary critic, propagandist, editor, and journalist.[1][2] He was heavily involved in several rebellions condemning the monarchy and disseminating materials via pamphlets and newspaper in support of the Portuguese Republican Party.[3][4] He was among the leaders of the 5 October 1910 revolution and the Lisbon Regicide, and later served as Ambassador to Paris for 14-years, and twice as interim prime minister of the Portuguese First Republic.[3][5]

João Chagas
Prime Minister of Portugal
In office
4 September 1911 – 13 November 1911
PresidentManuel de Arriaga
Preceded byProvisional Government
Succeeded byAugusto de Vasconcelos
Ambassador of Portugal to France
In office
25 April 1911 – 31 December 1923
Nominated byProvisional Government
Preceded byTomás de Sousa Rosa
Succeeded byAntónio Joaquim Ferreira da Fonseca
Minister of the Interior
In office
4 September 1911 – 12 November 1911
Prime MinisterHimself
Preceded byAntónio José de Almeida
Succeeded bySilvestre Falcão
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
4 September 1911 – 12 October 1911
Prime MinisterHimself
Preceded byBernardino Machado
Succeeded byAugusto de Vasconcelos
Personal details
Born(1863-09-01)1 September 1863
Rio de Janeiro, Neutral Municipality, Empire of Brazil
Died28 May 1925(1925-05-28) (aged 61)
Estoril, Portugal
Political partyPortuguese Republican (1890–1911)
Independent (1911–1925)
OccupationDiplomat, editor, journalist, political analist, politician, writer
Signature

Biography edit

Early years edit

Chagas was born 4 September 1863 in Rio de Janeiro, Empire of Brazil to João Pinheiro Chagas and Maria Amélia Rosa Pereira.[3][6] His father was a Portuguese emigrant with ancestral ties to Portuguese refugees from Beiras who fled to Brazil during the Liberal Wars.[7] On his paternal side, Manuel Pinheiro Chagas was his cousin and his son Mário was his first cousin once removed.[7] His mother was an Indigenous American.[7] The family relocated to Lisbon when Chagas was a child and he was orphaned at a young age.[7][1]

Writing career edit

Chagas could not afford to attend university, so he moved to Porto at age 16 and began his writing career.[7][3] At times, he wrote under the pseudonym João Rimanso or Ivan.[8] His first publication was in O Primeiro de Janeiro in Porto; he later moved back to Lisbon to collaborate with Temps, Correio da Manhã, and O Diá.[3][9][7]

At the end of the 19th century, Chagas founded La Marseillaise (1896—1898), O Berro (1896), Branco e Negro (1896—1898), A Paródia (1900—1907), and A República Portuguesa,[7][5] and became director of Brazilian newspaper O Paiz (1898) and the Portuguese publications A Lanterna (1899) and Batalha (1900).[3][7] While incarcerated in Angola, he headed the prison's newspaper (1896—1897).[7] La Marseillaise closed in 1898 due to censorship laws and Chagas' known allegiance to the Republican Party.[7] When he returned from exile, he founded A Portuguesa (1893), which he considered a revival of La Marseillaise.[5]

All of the newspapers he founded, directed, and contributed to were anti-monarchy propaganda tools; his articles were extremely controversial and led to him being arrested several times.[5][4]

Political activism edit

During his early years in Porto, he met and befriended several members of Life's Vanquished.[5] He became more critical and more deeply involved with the Republican Party as a result.[5] In 1891, he published an article in A República Portuguesa that was controversial enough to get him arrested and jailed for 10 days.[6] Within days, he participated in and helped plan a rebellion, and his sentence was increased to 4 years in prison or 6 years in exile.[5][3][10] Chagas was originally bound for Luanda but was transferred to Moçâmedes after one day.[10] He escaped within a few months and traveled to Paris before returning to Portugal in 1892, where he was arrested again.[10][6] While in prison, he continued petition against governmental oppression of rights and wrote extensively about his experiences, making him the only primary source from a Portuguese prisoner from that period.[10][5]

He was freed from prison in 1893 due to an amnesty resulting from the 1890 British Ultimatum.[9] He lived in Porto, Brazil, and Madrid for varying lengths of time before being arrested again in 1896, and again in 1908 for his involvement in the Lisbon Regicide.[7][5][6] He participated in the 5 October 1910 revolution not long after.[9]

 
A 1900 postcard featuring Chagas

Political career edit

The Portuguese First Republic was established in 1910, and Chagas' governmental career began.[5] His first role was an ambassador to Paris; he did, however, resign twice due to political disagreements with his supervisors.[5][9] He served as both prime minister and Interior Minister for 70 days in late 1911 and again in 1915.[3][9][1] While in Paris, he continued to keep a critical eye on Portugal's political decision-making.[1] During the Republic's early days, Chagas met with Sir Lancelot Carnegie of Britain, Portuguese War Minister Freire de Andrade, and French diplomat Émile Daeschner to keep himself informed.[1] He was very critical of Portugal's lack of involvement when World War I broke out and was one of the delegates who led the Republic to join the war in 1916.[5][1]

Final years and death edit

Following the 1915 May 14 Revolt, Chagas was nominated to succeed Manuel de Arriaga's role as president of Portugal.[5] Senator João José de Freitas disagreed with this decision and attempted to assassinated him.[3] He shot several times at a car Chagas was traveling in with his wife in Entroncamento.[3][9] Chagas' head was shaved and he lost an eye in the attack.[9] He withdrew from politics during his recovery and turned down the presidential nomination, preferring instead to continue working as an ambassador in Paris.[6][5] He kept this role until he retired in 1924, with the exception of 1917—1918 during the period of Sidónism.[9][1][5] Chagas died on 28 May 1925 in Estoril, Cascais, Portugal.[3][5]

He died of aortitis and is buried in the Alto de São João Cemetery.[11]

Honours edit

Chagas served as part of the Portuguese delegation at the Versailles Peace Conference and the League of Nations.[9][5] He was also a co-founder of the Portuguese Association of Journalists and the Porto Men of Letters, and became a Freemason in 1896.[12][3] In 1919, he was awarded a Gold Cross from the Military Order of Saint James of the Sword.[5]

He is the namesake for a road in Lisbon and a garden in Porto.[13][14]

Bibliography edit

During his lifetime, Chagas wrote at least 15 books and many more journal articles and pamphlets:[4]

Year Original title Title in English (Approx.)
1894 Diario de um condemnado politico Diary of a Political Convict
1897 De Bond. Algunas aspectos da civilisaçaõ brasileira Some aspects of Brazilian culture
O crime da sociedade Society's crime
1898 Na Brecha (Pamphletos) The Gap (Pamphlets)
1900 Trabalhos forçado Forced labour
1905 Bom-Humor Good spirits
Homens e Factos 1902—1904 Men and Facts 1902—1904
1906 As minhas razões My reasons
Posta-restante (Cartas a toda a genta) Remaining notes (Letters to everyone
Vida Litteraria (ideias e sensacoes Literary life: Ideas and sensations
1907 João Franco. 1906—1907
1908 1908. Subsidios criticos para a historia da dictadura 1908. Critical subsidies for the history of the dictatorship
1908—1910 Cartas Politicas Political notes
1915 A ultima crise. Comentários a situação da Republica Portuguesa The last crisis: Comementary on the Portuguese Republic
Portugal perante a Guerra. Subsidios para uma pagina da Historia Nacional Portugal before the war. Subsidies for a page in National History

In 1929, four years after his death, Diario de João Chagas was published.[4] He wrote the prefaces for Guedes d'Oliveira's 1890 Gazetilhas; and Luciano Fataça's 1895 A revolução de Cuba.[4] He co-wrote Historia da revolta do Porto de 31 de Janeiro de 1891 (depoimento de dois cúmplices) with Ex-Tenente Coelho.[4] He was also a translator; works included prose from Jacques Offenbach's operetta Os Bandidos and Adolphe d'Ennery's play Martyr.[5][4]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Novais, Noêmia (2010). "João Chagas: Itinerários de um intelectual republicano". Intellèctus. 9 (2). Retrieved 31 January 2022.
  2. ^ "João Pinheiro Chagas (1863-1925)" (in Portuguese). Fundacao Mario Soares Maria Barroso. n.d. Retrieved 31 January 2022.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "João Pinheiro Chagas". issuu (in Portuguese). Correiro da Venezuela. 2015. Retrieved 31 January 2022.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Romero Magalhães, Joaquim. João Chagas: a escrita como arma.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Brandão, Lucas (24 December 2017). "João Chagas, o jornalista da República" (in Portuguese). Comunidade Cultura e Arte. Retrieved 31 January 2022.
  6. ^ a b c d e "João Chagas (1863-1925)" (in Portuguese). University of Porto. n.d. Retrieved 31 January 2022.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "João Chagas, o jornalista panfletário" (in Portuguese). Publico. 28 August 2010. Retrieved 31 January 2022.
  8. ^ Silva, Joao. Entertaining Lisbon: Music, Theater, and Modern Life in the Late 19th Century.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Carta de João Chagas para Manuel Teixeira Gomes" (in Portuguese). Museu da Presidência da República. 9 August 2021. Retrieved 31 January 2022.
  10. ^ a b c d Coates, Timothy J. (2018). "The Depósito de Degredados in Luanda, Angola: Binding and Building the Portuguese Empire with Convict Labour, 1880s to 1932". International Review of Social History. 63 (S26): 151–167. doi:10.1017/S0020859018000263. S2CID 149673434.
  11. ^ "Livro de registo de óbitos da 6.ª Conservatória do Registo Civil de Lisboa (23-01-1925 a 30-06-1925)". Arquivo Nacional da Torre do Tombo. p. 159, assento 397.
  12. ^ Oliveira Marques, A. H. de (1985). Delta (ed.). Dicionário de Maçonaria Portuguesa. Lisboa. p. 335.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  13. ^ "Código Postal da Rua João Chagas" (in Portuguese). Codigo Postal. n.d. Retrieved 31 January 2022.
  14. ^ Bessa, Carolina (3 January 2022). "A história do Jardim João Chagas (ou Jardim da Cordoaria, como é conhecido)" (in Portuguese). Porto Secreto. Retrieved 31 January 2022.

joão, pinheiro, chagas, september, 1863, 1925, portuguese, pronunciation, ʒuˈɐ, piˈɲɐjɾu, ˈʃaɣɐʃ, portuguese, politician, literary, critic, propagandist, editor, journalist, heavily, involved, several, rebellions, condemning, monarchy, disseminating, materials. Joao Pinheiro Chagas 1 September 1863 28 May 1925 Portuguese pronunciation ʒuˈɐ w piˈɲɐjɾu ˈʃaɣɐʃ was a Portuguese politician literary critic propagandist editor and journalist 1 2 He was heavily involved in several rebellions condemning the monarchy and disseminating materials via pamphlets and newspaper in support of the Portuguese Republican Party 3 4 He was among the leaders of the 5 October 1910 revolution and the Lisbon Regicide and later served as Ambassador to Paris for 14 years and twice as interim prime minister of the Portuguese First Republic 3 5 Joao ChagasPrime Minister of PortugalIn office 4 September 1911 13 November 1911PresidentManuel de ArriagaPreceded byProvisional GovernmentSucceeded byAugusto de VasconcelosAmbassador of Portugal to FranceIn office 25 April 1911 31 December 1923Nominated byProvisional GovernmentPreceded byTomas de Sousa RosaSucceeded byAntonio Joaquim Ferreira da FonsecaMinister of the InteriorIn office 4 September 1911 12 November 1911Prime MinisterHimselfPreceded byAntonio Jose de AlmeidaSucceeded bySilvestre FalcaoMinister of Foreign AffairsIn office 4 September 1911 12 October 1911Prime MinisterHimselfPreceded byBernardino MachadoSucceeded byAugusto de VasconcelosPersonal detailsBorn 1863 09 01 1 September 1863Rio de Janeiro Neutral Municipality Empire of BrazilDied28 May 1925 1925 05 28 aged 61 Estoril PortugalPolitical partyPortuguese Republican 1890 1911 Independent 1911 1925 OccupationDiplomat editor journalist political analist politician writerSignature Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early years 1 2 Writing career 1 3 Political activism 1 4 Political career 1 5 Final years and death 2 Honours 3 Bibliography 4 ReferencesBiography editEarly years edit Chagas was born 4 September 1863 in Rio de Janeiro Empire of Brazil to Joao Pinheiro Chagas and Maria Amelia Rosa Pereira 3 6 His father was a Portuguese emigrant with ancestral ties to Portuguese refugees from Beiras who fled to Brazil during the Liberal Wars 7 On his paternal side Manuel Pinheiro Chagas was his cousin and his son Mario was his first cousin once removed 7 His mother was an Indigenous American 7 The family relocated to Lisbon when Chagas was a child and he was orphaned at a young age 7 1 Writing career edit Chagas could not afford to attend university so he moved to Porto at age 16 and began his writing career 7 3 At times he wrote under the pseudonym Joao Rimanso or Ivan 8 His first publication was in O Primeiro de Janeiro in Porto he later moved back to Lisbon to collaborate with Temps Correio da Manha and O Dia 3 9 7 At the end of the 19th century Chagas founded La Marseillaise 1896 1898 O Berro 1896 Branco e Negro 1896 1898 A Parodia 1900 1907 and A Republica Portuguesa 7 5 and became director of Brazilian newspaper O Paiz 1898 and the Portuguese publications A Lanterna 1899 and Batalha 1900 3 7 While incarcerated in Angola he headed the prison s newspaper 1896 1897 7 La Marseillaise closed in 1898 due to censorship laws and Chagas known allegiance to the Republican Party 7 When he returned from exile he founded A Portuguesa 1893 which he considered a revival of La Marseillaise 5 All of the newspapers he founded directed and contributed to were anti monarchy propaganda tools his articles were extremely controversial and led to him being arrested several times 5 4 Political activism edit During his early years in Porto he met and befriended several members of Life s Vanquished 5 He became more critical and more deeply involved with the Republican Party as a result 5 In 1891 he published an article in A Republica Portuguesa that was controversial enough to get him arrested and jailed for 10 days 6 Within days he participated in and helped plan a rebellion and his sentence was increased to 4 years in prison or 6 years in exile 5 3 10 Chagas was originally bound for Luanda but was transferred to Mocamedes after one day 10 He escaped within a few months and traveled to Paris before returning to Portugal in 1892 where he was arrested again 10 6 While in prison he continued petition against governmental oppression of rights and wrote extensively about his experiences making him the only primary source from a Portuguese prisoner from that period 10 5 He was freed from prison in 1893 due to an amnesty resulting from the 1890 British Ultimatum 9 He lived in Porto Brazil and Madrid for varying lengths of time before being arrested again in 1896 and again in 1908 for his involvement in the Lisbon Regicide 7 5 6 He participated in the 5 October 1910 revolution not long after 9 nbsp A 1900 postcard featuring ChagasPolitical career edit The Portuguese First Republic was established in 1910 and Chagas governmental career began 5 His first role was an ambassador to Paris he did however resign twice due to political disagreements with his supervisors 5 9 He served as both prime minister and Interior Minister for 70 days in late 1911 and again in 1915 3 9 1 While in Paris he continued to keep a critical eye on Portugal s political decision making 1 During the Republic s early days Chagas met with Sir Lancelot Carnegie of Britain Portuguese War Minister Freire de Andrade and French diplomat Emile Daeschner to keep himself informed 1 He was very critical of Portugal s lack of involvement when World War I broke out and was one of the delegates who led the Republic to join the war in 1916 5 1 Final years and death edit Following the 1915 May 14 Revolt Chagas was nominated to succeed Manuel de Arriaga s role as president of Portugal 5 Senator Joao Jose de Freitas disagreed with this decision and attempted to assassinated him 3 He shot several times at a car Chagas was traveling in with his wife in Entroncamento 3 9 Chagas head was shaved and he lost an eye in the attack 9 He withdrew from politics during his recovery and turned down the presidential nomination preferring instead to continue working as an ambassador in Paris 6 5 He kept this role until he retired in 1924 with the exception of 1917 1918 during the period of Sidonism 9 1 5 Chagas died on 28 May 1925 in Estoril Cascais Portugal 3 5 He died of aortitis and is buried in the Alto de Sao Joao Cemetery 11 Honours editChagas served as part of the Portuguese delegation at the Versailles Peace Conference and the League of Nations 9 5 He was also a co founder of the Portuguese Association of Journalists and the Porto Men of Letters and became a Freemason in 1896 12 3 In 1919 he was awarded a Gold Cross from the Military Order of Saint James of the Sword 5 He is the namesake for a road in Lisbon and a garden in Porto 13 14 Bibliography editDuring his lifetime Chagas wrote at least 15 books and many more journal articles and pamphlets 4 Year Original title Title in English Approx 1894 Diario de um condemnado politico Diary of a Political Convict1897 De Bond Algunas aspectos da civilisacao brasileira Some aspects of Brazilian cultureO crime da sociedade Society s crime1898 Na Brecha Pamphletos The Gap Pamphlets 1900 Trabalhos forcado Forced labour1905 Bom Humor Good spiritsHomens e Factos 1902 1904 Men and Facts 1902 19041906 As minhas razoes My reasonsPosta restante Cartas a toda a genta Remaining notes Letters to everyoneVida Litteraria ideias e sensacoes Literary life Ideas and sensations1907 Joao Franco 1906 19071908 1908 Subsidios criticos para a historia da dictadura 1908 Critical subsidies for the history of the dictatorship1908 1910 Cartas Politicas Political notes1915 A ultima crise Comentarios a situacao da Republica Portuguesa The last crisis Comementary on the Portuguese RepublicPortugal perante a Guerra Subsidios para uma pagina da Historia Nacional Portugal before the war Subsidies for a page in National HistoryIn 1929 four years after his death Diario de Joao Chagas was published 4 He wrote the prefaces for Guedes d Oliveira s 1890 Gazetilhas and Luciano Fataca s 1895 A revolucao de Cuba 4 He co wrote Historia da revolta do Porto de 31 de Janeiro de 1891 depoimento de dois cumplices with Ex Tenente Coelho 4 He was also a translator works included prose from Jacques Offenbach s operetta Os Bandidos and Adolphe d Ennery s play Martyr 5 4 References edit a b c d e f g Novais Noemia 2010 Joao Chagas Itinerarios de um intelectual republicano Intellectus 9 2 Retrieved 31 January 2022 Joao Pinheiro Chagas 1863 1925 in Portuguese Fundacao Mario Soares Maria Barroso n d Retrieved 31 January 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l Joao Pinheiro Chagas issuu in Portuguese Correiro da Venezuela 2015 Retrieved 31 January 2022 a b c d e f g Romero Magalhaes Joaquim Joao Chagas a escrita como arma a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Brandao Lucas 24 December 2017 Joao Chagas o jornalista da Republica in Portuguese Comunidade Cultura e Arte Retrieved 31 January 2022 a b c d e Joao Chagas 1863 1925 in Portuguese University of Porto n d Retrieved 31 January 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k Joao Chagas o jornalista panfletario in Portuguese Publico 28 August 2010 Retrieved 31 January 2022 Silva Joao Entertaining Lisbon Music Theater and Modern Life in the Late 19th Century a b c d e f g h i Carta de Joao Chagas para Manuel Teixeira Gomes in Portuguese Museu da Presidencia da Republica 9 August 2021 Retrieved 31 January 2022 a b c d Coates Timothy J 2018 The Deposito de Degredados in Luanda Angola Binding and Building the Portuguese Empire with Convict Labour 1880s to 1932 International Review of Social History 63 S26 151 167 doi 10 1017 S0020859018000263 S2CID 149673434 Livro de registo de obitos da 6 ª Conservatoria do Registo Civil de Lisboa 23 01 1925 a 30 06 1925 Arquivo Nacional da Torre do Tombo p 159 assento 397 Oliveira Marques A H de 1985 Delta ed Dicionario de Maconaria Portuguesa Lisboa p 335 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Codigo Postal da Rua Joao Chagas in Portuguese Codigo Postal n d Retrieved 31 January 2022 Bessa Carolina 3 January 2022 A historia do Jardim Joao Chagas ou Jardim da Cordoaria como e conhecido in Portuguese Porto Secreto Retrieved 31 January 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joao Pinheiro Chagas amp oldid 1179447844, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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