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Maria I of Portugal

Dona Maria I (17 December 1734 – 20 March 1816) was Queen of Portugal from 24 February 1777 until her death in 1816. Known as Maria the Pious in Portugal and Maria the Mad in Brazil, she was the first undisputed queen regnant of Portugal[a] and the first monarch of Brazil.

Maria I
Portrait attributed to Giuseppe Troni, 1783
Queen of Portugal
Reign24 February 1777 – 20 March 1816
Acclamation13 May 1777
PredecessorJoseph I
SuccessorJohn VI
Co-monarchPeter III (1777–1786)
Prince regentJohn, Prince of Brazil (1792–1816)
Queen of Brazil
Reign16 December 1815 – 20 March 1816
SuccessorJohn VI
Prince regentJohn, Prince of Brazil
Born(1734-12-17)17 December 1734
Ribeira Palace, Lisbon, Portugal
Died20 March 1816(1816-03-20) (aged 81)
Convent of Carmo, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Burial
  • 23 March 1816
    Convent of Our Lady of Ajuda, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
  • 18 March 1822
    Estrela Basilica, Lisbon, Portugal
Spouse
(m. 1760; died 1786)
Issue
Detail
Names
Portuguese: Maria Francisca Isabel Josefa Antónia Gertrudes Rita Joana
HouseBraganza
FatherJoseph I of Portugal
MotherMariana Victoria of Spain
ReligionRoman Catholicism
Signature

Maria was the eldest daughter of King Dom José I (Joseph I) of Portugal and Queen Mariana Victoria. As the heir to the throne, she held the titles of Princess of Brazil and Duchess of Braganza. She married her uncle Infante Pedro (Peter) in 1760. They had six children, of whom three survived infancy: José, João (John), and Mariana Vitória. The death of King José in 1777 placed Maria, then 42 years old, on the throne. Her husband Pedro was nominally king alongside her as Dom Pedro III.

Upon ascending the throne, Maria dismissed her father's powerful chief minister, Sebastião José de Carvalho e Melo, 1st Marquis of Pombal. The early part of Maria's reign witnessed growth in Portugal's economy. Maria had a number of national buildings constructed and renovated, leading to the completion of the Palace of Queluz and the inauguration of the Palace of Ajuda and other new monuments.[1] The death of her husband in 1786, followed by the deaths in 1788 of her eldest son, José, and her confessor Inácio de São Caetano, caused the queen to develop clinical depression. Her second son, João, then served as prince regent. With Napoleon's European conquests, Maria and her court moved to the Portuguese colony of Brazil in 1807. After Brazil was elevated to a kingdom in 1815, Maria became Queen of the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarves. Upon her death in 1816, her son succeeded her as King Dom João VI.

Early life edit

 
D. Maria Francisca, Princess of Beira, Duchess of Barcelos; Pavona; 1739.

Maria was born at the Ribeira Palace in Lisbon and baptized Maria Francisca Isabel Josefa Antónia Gertrudes Rita Joana. She was the eldest of four daughters born to Dom José (Joseph), Prince of Brazil (later King Dom José I of Portugal), and Infanta Mariana Victoria of Spain. Her father José was the eldest surviving son of the reigning King Dom João V (John V) of Portugal and his wife Maria Anna of Austria. Her mother, Mariana Victoria, was the eldest daughter of King Don Felipe V (Philip V) of Spain and Queen Elisabeth Farnese. This made her the eldest grandchild of King Dom João V (John V) of Portugal and King Don Felipe (Philip) V of Spain. King João appointed his granddaughter Maria as the Princess of Beira on the day of her birth.

Maria's grandfather João V died on 31 July 1750. Her father, Prince José, then succeeded to the throne as Dom José I. As José's eldest child, Maria became his heir presumptive and was given the traditional titles of Princess of Brazil and Duchess of Braganza.

Influence of the Marquis of Pombal edit

 
Maria Francisca Isabel, Princess of Brazil. Portrait by Vieira Lusitano, 1753

King José's government was dominated completely by Sebastião José de Carvalho e Melo, 1st Marquis of Pombal. The Marquis of Pombal secured control of the government after the 1755 Lisbon earthquake, in which around 100,000 people lost their lives. The palace of Maria's birth was also destroyed in the disaster.[2]

After the earthquake, King José was often uncomfortable at the thought of staying in enclosed spaces, and later experienced claustrophobia. The king had a palace built in Ajuda, away from the city centre. This palace became known as Real Barraca de Ajuda (Royal Hut at Ajuda) because it was made of wood. The family spent much time at the large palace. (The palace was the birthplace of Maria's first child, José, English: Dom Joseph.) In 1794 the palace burned to the ground and the Palace of Ajuda was built in its place.[2]

On 6 June 1760 Maria married the king's younger brother, her uncle Pedro (later King Dom Pedro III of Portugal). Maria and Pedro had six children: José, João Francisco, João (later King Dom João VI), Mariana Vitória, Maria Clementina, and Maria Isabel. Only José, João, and Mariana Vitória survived to adulthood. Maria also delivered a stillborn boy in 1762.

Reign edit

 
Portrait by Miguel António do Amaral of Queen Dona Maria I and King Dom Pedro III, c. 1777–1780
 
Part of the Charter of Queen Maria, which prohibited factories and manufactures in Brazil in 1785.

King José died on 24 February 1777. His daughter, Maria, then became the first undisputed queen regnant of Portugal. With Maria's accession, her husband became nominal king as Dom Pedro III, but the actual regal authority was vested solely in Maria, as she was the lineal heir of the crown. Also, as Pedro's kingship was jure uxoris only, his reign would cease in the event of Maria's death, and the crown would pass to Maria's descendants. However, Pedro predeceased his wife in 1786. Maria is considered to have been a good ruler in the period prior to her madness. Her first act as queen was to dismiss the popular secretary of state of the kingdom, the Marquis of Pombal, who had broken the power of the reactionary aristocracy via the Távora affair, partially because of his Enlightenment, anti-Jesuit policies. Noteworthy events of this period include Portugal's membership in the League of Armed Neutrality (July 1782) and the 1781 cession of Delagoa Bay from Austria to Portugal.[3] However, the queen had religious mania and melancholia and this would take a toll on her health. This acute mental illness (perhaps due to porphyria) made her incapable of handling state affairs after 1792.[4]

On 5 January 1785 the queen issued a charter imposing heavy restrictions on industrial activity in Brazil; how, for example, it prohibited the manufacture of fabrics and other products, extinguishing all textile manufactures in the colony, except the industry of coarse cloth for the use of slaves and workers; since the Portuguese colonial administration did not look favorably on the development of industrial activities in Brazil for fear of economic and, perhaps, political independence. During her reign, the trial, conviction and execution of ensign Joaquim José da Silva Xavier, known as Tiradentes, took place in 1789.

Mental deterioration edit

 
4 escudos coin with effigy of Maria I and Pedro III, 1785

Maria's madness was first officially noticed in 1786, when she had to be carried back to her apartments in a state of delirium. Afterward, the queen's mental state became increasingly worse. On 25 May 1786, her husband died; Maria was devastated and forbade any court entertainments. According to a contemporary account, state festivities began to resemble religious ceremonies. The queen's eldest son and heir, Prince Dom José, died aged 27 from smallpox on 11 September 1788, and her confessor Inácio de São Caetano, Titular Archbishop of Salonica, died in November that year.[5] These deaths may have resulted in Queen Maria developing major depressive disorder.[6] Another potential cause was her incestuous ancestry; this is substantiated by two of her sisters having had similar conditions.[6]

In February 1792, Maria was deemed insane and was treated by Francis Willis, the same physician who attended the British king George III. Willis wanted to take her to England, but the plan was refused by the Portuguese court. Potentially as a result of Willis' more advisory role in Maria's care, rather than the hands-on care of King George III, Willis deemed the queen incurable.[6] Maria's second son, Dom João (John), now Prince of Brazil, took over the government in her name, even though he only took the title of Prince Regent in 1799.[4] When the Real Barraca de Ajuda burnt down in 1794, the court was forced to move to Queluz, where the ill queen would lie in her apartments all day. Visitors would complain of terrible screams that would echo throughout the palace.[citation needed]

Napoleonic Wars edit

 
Engraving of Maria I from 1786

In 1801 Spanish Prime Minister Manuel de Godoy sent an army to invade Portugal with backing from the French leader Napoleon, resulting in the War of the Oranges. Though the Spanish ended their invasion, the Treaty of Badajoz on 6 June 1801 forced Portugal to cede Olivença and other border towns to Spain. (This cession is not recognized by the present Portuguese government, and the country officially considers those territories still to be Portuguese possessions.) On 29 September 1801 Prince Dom João signed the Treaty of Madrid (1801), ceding half of Portuguese Guyana to France, which became French Guiana.[5]

The refusal of the Portuguese government to join the French-sponsored Continental Blockade against Britain culminated in the late 1807 Franco-Spanish invasion of Portugal led by General Jean-Andoche Junot. The ultimate Napoleonic plan for Portugal was to split it into three sections. The northern parts of Portugal, from the Douro to the Minho, would become the Kingdom of Northern Lusitania, and its throne was promised to King Louis II of Etruria. The Alentejo Province and Kingdom of the Algarve would be merged to form the Principality of the Algarves, of which Manuel de Godoy would be sovereign. The remaining portion of Portugal would have been directly ruled by France.[5]

Transfer to Brazil edit

 
Maria's second son, Prince Regent Dom João, with a bust of his mother

At the urging of the British government, the entire House of Braganza decided to flee on 29 November 1807 to establish a government in exile in the Portuguese Viceroyalty of Brazil. Along with the royal family, Maria was transported aboard the carrack Príncipe Real. During her move from the royal palace to the docks she was heard screaming throughout the trip, in the middle of the crowd and in the carriage. The queen's dementia was so great that she feared that she was going to be tortured or robbed during her movement by her servants.[3]

In January 1808 Prince Regent João and his court arrived in Salvador da Bahia. Under pressure by local aristocracy and the British, the prince regent signed a commercial regulation after his arrival that opened commerce between Brazil and friendly nations, which in this case represented the interests of Great Britain above all. This law broke an important colonial pact that had previously allowed Brazil to maintain direct commercial relations only with Portugal.[3]

On 1 August 1808 British General Arthur Wellesley (later Duke of Wellington) landed a British army in Lisbon to initiate the Peninsular War. The impact of Wellesley's initial victory over Junot at the Battle of Vimeiro (21 August 1808) was wiped out by his superiors in the Convention of Cintra (30 August 1808), which allowed the defeated French troops to evacuate peacefully from Portugal.[5]

Wellesley (soon to be made Lord Wellington) returned to Portugal on 22 April 1809 to recommence the campaign. Portuguese forces under British command distinguished themselves in the defence of the Lines of Torres Vedras (1809–1810) and in the subsequent invasion of Spain and France. In 1815 Prince João's government elevated Brazil to the status of a kingdom, and Maria was proclaimed Queen of the United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarves. When Napoleon was finally defeated in 1815, Maria and her family remained in Brazil.[5]

Death and legacy edit

 
Tomb of Maria I at Estrela Basilica in Lisbon, Portugal

Maria lived in Brazil for a total of eight years, always in a state of incapacitation. In 1816, she died at the Carmo Convent in Rio de Janeiro at the age of 81. After her death, the prince regent was acclaimed as King Dom João VI. In 1821, Maria's body was returned to Lisbon to be interred in a mausoleum in the Estrela Basilica (Portuguese: Basílica da Estrela), which she had helped found.

Maria is a greatly admired figure in both Brazil and Portugal due to the tremendous changes and events that took place during her reign. In Portugal, she is celebrated as a strong female figure. Her legacy shines at Portugal's Queluz Palace, a baroque-roccoco masterpiece that she helped conceive. A large statue of her stands in front of the palace, and a pousada near the palace is named in her honour. A large marble statue of the queen was erected at the Portuguese National Library in Lisbon by the students of Joaquim Machado de Castro.

In Brazil, Maria is admired as a key figure in the eventual independence of Brazil. It was during her reign, albeit through the government of her son's regency, that many of the national institutions and organizations in Brazil were created. These institutions were the precursors to their modern-day equivalents and granted large degree of power to the Brazilian colonials. While she is often called A Louca (the Mad) in Brazil, Brazilian and Portuguese historians hold her in high esteem.

Marriage and issue edit

Maria married her uncle Pedro on 6 June 1760. At the time of their marriage, Maria was 25 and Pedro was 42. Despite the age gap, the couple had a happy marriage. Upon Maria's accession in 1777, her husband became the nominal King Dom Pedro III of Portugal. They had the following children:[7]

Name Birth Death Notes
Joseph, Prince of Brazil 20 August 1761 11 September 1788 José Francisco Xavier de Paula Domingos António Agostinho Anastácio married his maternal aunt Infanta Benedita of Portugal and had no issue. His death led to his younger brother becoming heir-apparent and later king.
John Francis of Braganza 16 September 1763 10 October 1763 João Francisco de Paula Domingos António Carlos Cipriano was born at the Ajuda National Palace.
John VI 13 May 1767 10 March 1826 João Maria José Francisco Xavier de Paula Luís António Domingos Rafael married Carlota Joaquina, eldest daughter of King Don Carlos IV (Charles IV) of Spain, and had issue. He was King of Portugal from 1816 to 1826 as Dom João VI and titular Emperor of Brazil from 1825 to 1826.
Infanta Mariana Victoria of Portugal 15 December 1768 2 November 1788 Mariana Vitória Josefa Francisca Xavier de Paula Antonieta Joana Domingas Gabriela married Infante Gabriel of Spain, son of King Don Carlos III, and had issue.
Maria Clementina of Braganza 9 June 1774 27 June 1776 Maria Clementina Francisca Xavier de Paula Ana Josefa Antónia Domingas Feliciana Joana Michaela Júlia was born at the Queluz National Palace.
Maria Isabella of Braganza 12 December 1776 14 January 1777 Maria Isabel was born at the Queluz National Palace.

Ancestry edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Portugal had two undisputed queens regnant: Maria I and Maria II and two disputed queens regnant: Beatriz and Teresa.

References edit

  1. ^ Saraiva (2007), pp. 261-263
  2. ^ a b A history of Portugal. CUP Archive. 1662. pp. 352–375.
  3. ^ a b c Birmingham, David (2018). A Concise History of Portugal. Cambridge University Press. pp. 93–107. ISBN 978-1-108-42419-6.
  4. ^ a b History of Portugal: Pamphlet Collection. CUP Archive, 1937. Accessed September 2012.
  5. ^ a b c d e A history of Portugal. CUP Archive. 1662. pp. 376–403.
  6. ^ a b c Peters, Timothy & Willis, Clive. (2013). ''Maria I of Portugal: Another royal psychiatric patient of Francis Willis''. The British journal of psychiatry: the journal of mental science. 203. 167. 10.1192/bjp.bp.112.123950.
  7. ^ "Trajetória política de D. Maria I: ideias ilustradas, convulsão política e melancolia". p. 50.
  8. ^ Genealogie ascendante jusqu'au quatrieme degre inclusivement de tous les Rois et Princes de maisons souveraines de l'Europe actuellement vivans [Genealogy up to the fourth degree inclusive of all the Kings and Princes of sovereign houses of Europe currently living] (in French). Bourdeaux: Frederic Guillaume Birnstiel. 1768. p. 14.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  •   Media related to Maria I of Portugal at Wikimedia Commons
Maria I of Portugal
Cadet branch of the House of Aviz
Born: 17 December 1734 Died: 20 March 1816
Regnal titles
Preceded by Queen of Portugal
1777–1816
with Peter III (1777–1786)
Succeeded by
Portuguese royalty
Preceded by Princess of Beira
Duchess of Barcelos

1734–1750
Succeeded by
Preceded by Princess of Brazil
Duchess of Braganza

1750–1777

maria, portugal, maria, redirects, here, other, uses, mary, other, people, with, same, name, maria, portugal, dona, maria, december, 1734, march, 1816, queen, portugal, from, february, 1777, until, death, 1816, known, maria, pious, portugal, maria, brazil, fir. Maria I redirects here For other uses see Mary I For other people with the same name see Maria of Portugal Dona Maria I 17 December 1734 20 March 1816 was Queen of Portugal from 24 February 1777 until her death in 1816 Known as Maria the Pious in Portugal and Maria the Mad in Brazil she was the first undisputed queen regnant of Portugal a and the first monarch of Brazil Maria IPortrait attributed to Giuseppe Troni 1783Queen of PortugalReign24 February 1777 20 March 1816Acclamation13 May 1777PredecessorJoseph ISuccessorJohn VICo monarchPeter III 1777 1786 Prince regentJohn Prince of Brazil 1792 1816 Queen of BrazilReign16 December 1815 20 March 1816SuccessorJohn VIPrince regentJohn Prince of BrazilBorn 1734 12 17 17 December 1734Ribeira Palace Lisbon PortugalDied20 March 1816 1816 03 20 aged 81 Convent of Carmo Rio de Janeiro BrazilBurial23 March 1816Convent of Our Lady of Ajuda Rio de Janeiro Brazil 18 March 1822Estrela Basilica Lisbon PortugalSpousePeter III of Portugal m 1760 died 1786 wbr IssueDetailJoseph Prince of Brazil John VI King of Portugal Mariana Victoria Infanta Gabriel of SpainNamesPortuguese Maria Francisca Isabel Josefa Antonia Gertrudes Rita JoanaHouseBraganzaFatherJoseph I of PortugalMotherMariana Victoria of SpainReligionRoman CatholicismSignature Maria was the eldest daughter of King Dom Jose I Joseph I of Portugal and Queen Mariana Victoria As the heir to the throne she held the titles of Princess of Brazil and Duchess of Braganza She married her uncle Infante Pedro Peter in 1760 They had six children of whom three survived infancy Jose Joao John and Mariana Vitoria The death of King Jose in 1777 placed Maria then 42 years old on the throne Her husband Pedro was nominally king alongside her as Dom Pedro III Upon ascending the throne Maria dismissed her father s powerful chief minister Sebastiao Jose de Carvalho e Melo 1st Marquis of Pombal The early part of Maria s reign witnessed growth in Portugal s economy Maria had a number of national buildings constructed and renovated leading to the completion of the Palace of Queluz and the inauguration of the Palace of Ajuda and other new monuments 1 The death of her husband in 1786 followed by the deaths in 1788 of her eldest son Jose and her confessor Inacio de Sao Caetano caused the queen to develop clinical depression Her second son Joao then served as prince regent With Napoleon s European conquests Maria and her court moved to the Portuguese colony of Brazil in 1807 After Brazil was elevated to a kingdom in 1815 Maria became Queen of the United Kingdom of Portugal Brazil and the Algarves Upon her death in 1816 her son succeeded her as King Dom Joao VI Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Influence of the Marquis of Pombal 2 Reign 3 Mental deterioration 4 Napoleonic Wars 4 1 Transfer to Brazil 5 Death and legacy 6 Marriage and issue 7 Ancestry 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksEarly life edit nbsp D Maria Francisca Princess of Beira Duchess of Barcelos Pavona 1739 Maria was born at the Ribeira Palace in Lisbon and baptized Maria Francisca Isabel Josefa Antonia Gertrudes Rita Joana She was the eldest of four daughters born to Dom Jose Joseph Prince of Brazil later King Dom Jose I of Portugal and Infanta Mariana Victoria of Spain Her father Jose was the eldest surviving son of the reigning King Dom Joao V John V of Portugal and his wife Maria Anna of Austria Her mother Mariana Victoria was the eldest daughter of King Don Felipe V Philip V of Spain and Queen Elisabeth Farnese This made her the eldest grandchild of King Dom Joao V John V of Portugal and King Don Felipe Philip V of Spain King Joao appointed his granddaughter Maria as the Princess of Beira on the day of her birth Maria s grandfather Joao V died on 31 July 1750 Her father Prince Jose then succeeded to the throne as Dom Jose I As Jose s eldest child Maria became his heir presumptive and was given the traditional titles of Princess of Brazil and Duchess of Braganza Influence of the Marquis of Pombal edit nbsp Maria Francisca Isabel Princess of Brazil Portrait by Vieira Lusitano 1753 King Jose s government was dominated completely by Sebastiao Jose de Carvalho e Melo 1st Marquis of Pombal The Marquis of Pombal secured control of the government after the 1755 Lisbon earthquake in which around 100 000 people lost their lives The palace of Maria s birth was also destroyed in the disaster 2 After the earthquake King Jose was often uncomfortable at the thought of staying in enclosed spaces and later experienced claustrophobia The king had a palace built in Ajuda away from the city centre This palace became known as Real Barraca de Ajuda Royal Hut at Ajuda because it was made of wood The family spent much time at the large palace The palace was the birthplace of Maria s first child Jose English Dom Joseph In 1794 the palace burned to the ground and the Palace of Ajuda was built in its place 2 On 6 June 1760 Maria married the king s younger brother her uncle Pedro later King Dom Pedro III of Portugal Maria and Pedro had six children Jose Joao Francisco Joao later King Dom Joao VI Mariana Vitoria Maria Clementina and Maria Isabel Only Jose Joao and Mariana Vitoria survived to adulthood Maria also delivered a stillborn boy in 1762 Reign edit nbsp Portrait by Miguel Antonio do Amaral of Queen Dona Maria I and King Dom Pedro III c 1777 1780 nbsp Part of the Charter of Queen Maria which prohibited factories and manufactures in Brazil in 1785 King Jose died on 24 February 1777 His daughter Maria then became the first undisputed queen regnant of Portugal With Maria s accession her husband became nominal king as Dom Pedro III but the actual regal authority was vested solely in Maria as she was the lineal heir of the crown Also as Pedro s kingship was jure uxoris only his reign would cease in the event of Maria s death and the crown would pass to Maria s descendants However Pedro predeceased his wife in 1786 Maria is considered to have been a good ruler in the period prior to her madness Her first act as queen was to dismiss the popular secretary of state of the kingdom the Marquis of Pombal who had broken the power of the reactionary aristocracy via the Tavora affair partially because of his Enlightenment anti Jesuit policies Noteworthy events of this period include Portugal s membership in the League of Armed Neutrality July 1782 and the 1781 cession of Delagoa Bay from Austria to Portugal 3 However the queen had religious mania and melancholia and this would take a toll on her health This acute mental illness perhaps due to porphyria made her incapable of handling state affairs after 1792 4 On 5 January 1785 the queen issued a charter imposing heavy restrictions on industrial activity in Brazil how for example it prohibited the manufacture of fabrics and other products extinguishing all textile manufactures in the colony except the industry of coarse cloth for the use of slaves and workers since the Portuguese colonial administration did not look favorably on the development of industrial activities in Brazil for fear of economic and perhaps political independence During her reign the trial conviction and execution of ensign Joaquim Jose da Silva Xavier known as Tiradentes took place in 1789 Mental deterioration edit nbsp 4 escudos coin with effigy of Maria I and Pedro III 1785 Maria s madness was first officially noticed in 1786 when she had to be carried back to her apartments in a state of delirium Afterward the queen s mental state became increasingly worse On 25 May 1786 her husband died Maria was devastated and forbade any court entertainments According to a contemporary account state festivities began to resemble religious ceremonies The queen s eldest son and heir Prince Dom Jose died aged 27 from smallpox on 11 September 1788 and her confessor Inacio de Sao Caetano Titular Archbishop of Salonica died in November that year 5 These deaths may have resulted in Queen Maria developing major depressive disorder 6 Another potential cause was her incestuous ancestry this is substantiated by two of her sisters having had similar conditions 6 In February 1792 Maria was deemed insane and was treated by Francis Willis the same physician who attended the British king George III Willis wanted to take her to England but the plan was refused by the Portuguese court Potentially as a result of Willis more advisory role in Maria s care rather than the hands on care of King George III Willis deemed the queen incurable 6 Maria s second son Dom Joao John now Prince of Brazil took over the government in her name even though he only took the title of Prince Regent in 1799 4 When the Real Barraca de Ajuda burnt down in 1794 the court was forced to move to Queluz where the ill queen would lie in her apartments all day Visitors would complain of terrible screams that would echo throughout the palace citation needed Napoleonic Wars edit nbsp Engraving of Maria I from 1786 In 1801 Spanish Prime Minister Manuel de Godoy sent an army to invade Portugal with backing from the French leader Napoleon resulting in the War of the Oranges Though the Spanish ended their invasion the Treaty of Badajoz on 6 June 1801 forced Portugal to cede Olivenca and other border towns to Spain This cession is not recognized by the present Portuguese government and the country officially considers those territories still to be Portuguese possessions On 29 September 1801 Prince Dom Joao signed the Treaty of Madrid 1801 ceding half of Portuguese Guyana to France which became French Guiana 5 The refusal of the Portuguese government to join the French sponsored Continental Blockade against Britain culminated in the late 1807 Franco Spanish invasion of Portugal led by General Jean Andoche Junot The ultimate Napoleonic plan for Portugal was to split it into three sections The northern parts of Portugal from the Douro to the Minho would become the Kingdom of Northern Lusitania and its throne was promised to King Louis II of Etruria The Alentejo Province and Kingdom of the Algarve would be merged to form the Principality of the Algarves of which Manuel de Godoy would be sovereign The remaining portion of Portugal would have been directly ruled by France 5 Transfer to Brazil edit Main article Transfer of the Portuguese Court to Brazil nbsp Maria s second son Prince Regent Dom Joao with a bust of his mother At the urging of the British government the entire House of Braganza decided to flee on 29 November 1807 to establish a government in exile in the Portuguese Viceroyalty of Brazil Along with the royal family Maria was transported aboard the carrack Principe Real During her move from the royal palace to the docks she was heard screaming throughout the trip in the middle of the crowd and in the carriage The queen s dementia was so great that she feared that she was going to be tortured or robbed during her movement by her servants 3 In January 1808 Prince Regent Joao and his court arrived in Salvador da Bahia Under pressure by local aristocracy and the British the prince regent signed a commercial regulation after his arrival that opened commerce between Brazil and friendly nations which in this case represented the interests of Great Britain above all This law broke an important colonial pact that had previously allowed Brazil to maintain direct commercial relations only with Portugal 3 On 1 August 1808 British General Arthur Wellesley later Duke of Wellington landed a British army in Lisbon to initiate the Peninsular War The impact of Wellesley s initial victory over Junot at the Battle of Vimeiro 21 August 1808 was wiped out by his superiors in the Convention of Cintra 30 August 1808 which allowed the defeated French troops to evacuate peacefully from Portugal 5 Wellesley soon to be made Lord Wellington returned to Portugal on 22 April 1809 to recommence the campaign Portuguese forces under British command distinguished themselves in the defence of the Lines of Torres Vedras 1809 1810 and in the subsequent invasion of Spain and France In 1815 Prince Joao s government elevated Brazil to the status of a kingdom and Maria was proclaimed Queen of the United Kingdom of Portugal Brazil and the Algarves When Napoleon was finally defeated in 1815 Maria and her family remained in Brazil 5 Death and legacy edit nbsp Tomb of Maria I at Estrela Basilica in Lisbon Portugal This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Maria I of Portugal news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Maria lived in Brazil for a total of eight years always in a state of incapacitation In 1816 she died at the Carmo Convent in Rio de Janeiro at the age of 81 After her death the prince regent was acclaimed as King Dom Joao VI In 1821 Maria s body was returned to Lisbon to be interred in a mausoleum in the Estrela Basilica Portuguese Basilica da Estrela which she had helped found Maria is a greatly admired figure in both Brazil and Portugal due to the tremendous changes and events that took place during her reign In Portugal she is celebrated as a strong female figure Her legacy shines at Portugal s Queluz Palace a baroque roccoco masterpiece that she helped conceive A large statue of her stands in front of the palace and a pousada near the palace is named in her honour A large marble statue of the queen was erected at the Portuguese National Library in Lisbon by the students of Joaquim Machado de Castro In Brazil Maria is admired as a key figure in the eventual independence of Brazil It was during her reign albeit through the government of her son s regency that many of the national institutions and organizations in Brazil were created These institutions were the precursors to their modern day equivalents and granted large degree of power to the Brazilian colonials While she is often called A Louca the Mad in Brazil Brazilian and Portuguese historians hold her in high esteem Marriage and issue editMaria married her uncle Pedro on 6 June 1760 At the time of their marriage Maria was 25 and Pedro was 42 Despite the age gap the couple had a happy marriage Upon Maria s accession in 1777 her husband became the nominal King Dom Pedro III of Portugal They had the following children 7 Name Birth Death Notes Joseph Prince of Brazil 20 August 1761 11 September 1788 Jose Francisco Xavier de Paula Domingos Antonio Agostinho Anastacio married his maternal aunt Infanta Benedita of Portugal and had no issue His death led to his younger brother becoming heir apparent and later king John Francis of Braganza 16 September 1763 10 October 1763 Joao Francisco de Paula Domingos Antonio Carlos Cipriano was born at the Ajuda National Palace John VI 13 May 1767 10 March 1826 Joao Maria Jose Francisco Xavier de Paula Luis Antonio Domingos Rafael married Carlota Joaquina eldest daughter of King Don Carlos IV Charles IV of Spain and had issue He was King of Portugal from 1816 to 1826 as Dom Joao VI and titular Emperor of Brazil from 1825 to 1826 Infanta Mariana Victoria of Portugal 15 December 1768 2 November 1788 Mariana Vitoria Josefa Francisca Xavier de Paula Antonieta Joana Domingas Gabriela married Infante Gabriel of Spain son of King Don Carlos III and had issue Maria Clementina of Braganza 9 June 1774 27 June 1776 Maria Clementina Francisca Xavier de Paula Ana Josefa Antonia Domingas Feliciana Joana Michaela Julia was born at the Queluz National Palace Maria Isabella of Braganza 12 December 1776 14 January 1777 Maria Isabel was born at the Queluz National Palace Ancestry editAncestors of Maria I of Portugal 8 8 Peter II of Portugal4 John V of Portugal9 Maria Sophia of Neuburg2 Joseph I of Portugal10 Leopold I Holy Roman Emperor5 Maria Anna of Austria11 Eleonore Magdalene of Neuburg1 Maria I of Portugal12 Louis Dauphin of France6 Philip V of Spain13 Maria Anna Victoria of Bavaria3 Mariana Victoria of Spain14 Odoardo Farnese Hereditary Prince of Parma7 Elisabeth Farnese15 Dorothea Sophie of NeuburgSee also editList of mentally ill monarchsNotes edit Portugal had two undisputed queens regnant Maria I and Maria II and two disputed queens regnant Beatriz and Teresa References edit Saraiva 2007 pp 261 263 a b A history of Portugal CUP Archive 1662 pp 352 375 a b c Birmingham David 2018 A Concise History of Portugal Cambridge University Press pp 93 107 ISBN 978 1 108 42419 6 a b History of Portugal Pamphlet Collection CUP Archive 1937 Accessed September 2012 a b c d e A history of Portugal CUP Archive 1662 pp 376 403 a b c Peters Timothy amp Willis Clive 2013 Maria I of Portugal Another royal psychiatric patient of Francis Willis The British journal of psychiatry the journal of mental science 203 167 10 1192 bjp bp 112 123950 Trajetoria politica de D Maria I ideias ilustradas convulsao politica e melancolia p 50 Genealogie ascendante jusqu au quatrieme degre inclusivement de tous les Rois et Princes de maisons souveraines de l Europe actuellement vivans Genealogy up to the fourth degree inclusive of all the Kings and Princes of sovereign houses of Europe currently living in French Bourdeaux Frederic Guillaume Birnstiel 1768 p 14 Bibliography editCheke Marcus 1947 Carlota Joaquina Queen of Portugal London England Sidgewick amp Jackson p 203 ISBN 9780836950403 miguel Benevides Francisco da Fonseca Rainhas de Portugal Estudo Historico Volume I Lisbon Portugal Typographia Castro Irmao Benevides Francisco da Fonseca Rainhas de Portugal Estudo Historico Volume II Lisbon Portugal Typographia Castro Irmao Gomes Laurentino 2007 1808 How a mad queen a coward prince and a corrupt court fooled Napoleon and changed the History of Portugal and Brazil in Portuguese Planeta Saraiva Jose Hermano 2007 Historia Concisa de Portugal Concise History of Portugal in Portuguese 24th ed Lisbon Portugal Coleccao Saber External links edit nbsp Media related to Maria I of Portugal at Wikimedia Commons Maria I of PortugalHouse of BraganzaCadet branch of the House of AvizBorn 17 December 1734 Died 20 March 1816 Regnal titles Preceded byJoseph I Queen of Portugal1777 1816with Peter III 1777 1786 Succeeded byJohn VI Portuguese royalty Preceded byMaria Barbara Princess of Beira Duchess of Barcelos1734 1750 Succeeded byJoseph Preceded byJoseph Princess of Brazil Duchess of Braganza1750 1777 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maria I of Portugal amp oldid 1218934695, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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