Difference between revisions of "Portugal"

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(much elaboration and statistics)
 
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|name          =''República Portuguesa''
 
|name          =''República Portuguesa''
 
|map         =Portugal rel82.jpg
 
|map         =Portugal rel82.jpg
 +
|map2          =Portugal location.png
 
|flag         =Flag of Portugal.png
 
|flag         =Flag of Portugal.png
 
|arms         =Arms of Portugal.png
 
|arms         =Arms of Portugal.png
Line 12: Line 13:
 
|queen         =
 
|queen         =
 
|monarch-raw =
 
|monarch-raw =
|president =Aníbal Cavaco Silva
+
|president =Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa
 
|president-raw =
 
|president-raw =
 
|chancellor =
 
|chancellor =
 
|chancellor-raw =
 
|chancellor-raw =
|pm         =José Sócrates
+
|pm         =António Costa
 
|pm-raw         =
 
|pm-raw         =
 
|area         =35,580 sq mi
 
|area         =35,580 sq mi
|pop         =10,848,692(2007)
+
|pop         =10,250,000 (2020)
 
|pop-basis =
 
|pop-basis =
|gdp         =
+
|gdp         =$240,000,000,000 (2020)
|gdp-year =$229.881 billion(2006)
+
|gdp-year =
|gdp-pc         =$23,464 (2006)
+
|gdp-pc         =$23,415 (2020)
 
|currency =euro
 
|currency =euro
 
|idd =
 
|idd =
|tld            =
+
|tld            =.pt
 
}}
 
}}
 +
'''Portugal''' is a [[European]] nation in the [[Iberian Peninsula]], with land borders with [[Spain]].  Its capital is [[Lisbon]].
  
'''Portugal''' is a [[european]] nation in the [[Iberian Peninsula]], with land borders with [[Spain]].  Its capital is [[Lisbon]].
+
Virtually all Portuguese are [[Roman Catholic Church|Roman Catholics]] and Portuguese compromise 98% of the population, the rest are North Africans and Eastern Europeans.
  
In the 16th century, it explored and colonised large areas, including [[Brazil]], [[Angola]], [[Mozambique]], parts of [[India]], [[Timor]], [[Cape Verde]], and others. It lost much of it's power when Lisbon was destroyed in an earthquake in 1755, and it was occupied in the Napoleonic Wars. In 1910 a revolution deposed the monarchy; but repressive nationalistic government would rule for most of the next six decades. In 1974, a left-wing military coup installed broad democratic reforms. Portugal is a founding member of [[NATO]] and entered the [[EC]] (now the [[European Union]]) in 1986.<ref>https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/po.html CIA Factbook</ref>
+
==Government and Political Conditions==
 +
Portugal moved from authoritarian rule to parliamentary democracy following the 1974 military coup against dictator Marcello Caetano, himself a continuation of the long-running dictatorship of Antonio Salazar. After a period of instability and communist agitation, Portugal ratified a new Constitution in 1976. Subsequent revisions of the Constitution placed the military under strict civilian control; trimmed the powers of the president; and laid the groundwork for a stable, pluralistic liberal democracy, as well as privatization of nationalized firms and the government-owned communications media. Portugal joined the European Union in 1986, and has moved toward greater political and economic integration with Europe ever since.  
  
                  Population
+
The four main branches of the national government are the presidency, the prime minister and Council of Ministers (the government), the Assembly of the Republic (the parliament), and the judiciary. The president, elected to a five-year term by direct, universal suffrage, also is commander in chief of the armed forces. Presidential powers include confirming the prime minister and Council of Ministers; dismissing the prime minister; dissolving the assembly to call early elections; vetoing legislation, which may be overridden by the assembly; and declaring a state of war or siege. The Council of State, a presidential advisory body, is composed of six senior civilian officers, former presidents elected under the 1976 constitution, five members chosen by the assembly, and five selected by the president.  
Portugal's population is 10,566,212.
+
It is the 76th most populated country.
+
                      Capitol
+
Portugal's capitol is a large town named Lisbon.
+
                      Government
+
Portugal’s government is a parliamentary
+
democracy. It’s president is Jorge Sampaio
+
and its prime minister is Jose Socrates. 
+
                      Languages
+
The official language of Portugal
+
is Portuguese. A little bit of Spanish
+
and French is also spoken.
+
                        Origin
+
The Kingdom of Portugal emerged 12th century connected with the process concerning the Christian reconquest of the Iberian Peninsula.
+
However the Republic of Portugal did not emerge until 1910.
+
                    Literacy Rate
+
The adult male literacy rate is 95%.
+
meaning, that 95% of the total male population
+
has had some type of formal schooling.
+
The rate for females is only 90%. The
+
literacy rate determines the percentage of  
+
schooling the countries occupants have.
+
                            Food
+
Portuguese food is a combination of seafood and
+
Mexican food. There are a lot of meats and cheeses
+
as well. Popular desserts are usually almond and fig
+
sweets. Two popular Portuguese meals are Cream
+
of Shrimp Soup and Rice with pork.
+
                          Books
+
Two notable Portuguese books are: Global
+
Impact of the Portuguese Language and  
+
Hebrews of Portuguese Nation: Conversos
+
And Community in Early Modern Amsterdam.
+
                          Flag
+
The Portuguese flag is red and green with
+
a yellow woven circle and an emblem to
+
the left of the center.
+
                      Map
+
As you can see on the map
+
to the right Portugal is
+
bordered by Spain and the  
+
North Atlantic ocean.
+
                Culture
+
A good example of Portugal culture occurs during the Christmas
+
season. Families create elaborate nativity scenes with lakes and  
+
hills. The family gathers around the Christmas tree and the Crèche
+
to celebrate the birth of Jesus. Instead of Santa Claus it is a
+
tradition to write to Baby Jesus and ask for gifts.
+
                                Geography
+
The area of Portugal is 92,391sq. km. It is slightly
+
smaller than the state of Indiana. It’s largest city,
+
Lisbon has 1.9 million people in it. It has a mountainous
+
Northern terrain and rolling plains in the South. The
+
average yearly temperature is 61° F.
+
                                People
+
Portugal’s density is 275 people per sq. mile. The annual
+
growth rate is – 1.3%.The religion is Catholic, with a
+
percentage of 97% belonging to its church. The main
+
race is Mediterranean with small black and European
+
communities. The life expectancy is 76 years and
+
the Work Force percentages are as shown below.
+
                                Industry
+
Natural resources: Fish, tungsten, iron, copper, tin, and uranium ores. Agriculture: forestry, fisheries, cork, wine.
+
Industry: textiles, clothing, footwear, wood and cork, paper, chemicals, manufacturing, food and beverages.
+
Services: Commerce, government, housing, banking and finance. <ref> worldfactbook.com/portugal <ref>
+
  
 +
The government is headed by the prime minister, who is nominated by the assembly for confirmation by the president. The prime minister then names the Council of Ministers. A new government is required to present its governing platform to the assembly for approval.
  
 +
The Assembly of the Republic is a unicameral body composed of up to 230 deputies. Elected by universal suffrage according to a system of proportional representation, deputies serve terms of office of four years, unless the president dissolves the assembly and calls for new elections. The national Supreme Court is the court of last appeal. Military, administrative, and fiscal courts are designated as separate court categories. A nine-member Constitutional Tribunal reviews the constitutionality of legislation.
  
 +
The Azores and Madeira Islands have constitutionally mandated autonomous status. A regional autonomy statute promulgated in 1980 established the Government of the Autonomous Region of the Azores; the Government of the Autonomous Region of Madeira operates under a provisional autonomy statute in effect since 1976. Continental Portugal is divided into 18 districts, each headed by a governor appointed by the Minister of Internal Administration. Macau, a former dependency, reverted to Chinese sovereignty in December 1999.
  
 +
===Current Administration===
 +
Parliamentary elections on February 20, 2005, gave the Socialist Party a comfortable majority for the new Prime Minister, Jose Socrates. Socrates’ government formally assumed power March 12, 2005.
  
 +
The Socialist Party’s 2005 victory followed a period of transition after center-right (PSD) Prime Minister Jose Manuel Durão Barroso resigned to accept the nomination as President of the European Commission. Durão Barroso, elected in 2002, committed his government to public-sector [[Ascesis|austerity]] and business incentives to promote growth, trade, and productivity. It faced rising unemployment, meeting euro-zone fiscal requirements, and adapting to [[European Union]] and [[NATO enlargement]]. After Durão Barroso’s resignation, President Jorge Sampaio asked the former mayor of Lisbon, Pedro Santana Lopes, to form a new government. Sampaio lost confidence in that government by the end of 2004, dissolved parliament, and called for new parliamentary elections.
 +
 +
Social Democrat Anibal Cavaco Silva, a center-right candidate and former Prime Minister, won the Portuguese presidential election on January 22, 2006 with 50.6% of the vote. He was sworn in on March 9, 2006, replacing outgoing Socialist President Sampaio.
 +
 +
===Principal Government Officials===
 +
*President of the Portuguese Republic—Anibal Cavaco Silva
 +
*Prime Minister—Pedro Passos Coelho
 +
*Minister of Foreign Affairs—Luis Amado
 +
*Minister of Defense—Nuno Severiano Teixeira
 +
*Minister of State for Internal Administration—Rui Pereira
 +
*Minister of the Presidency of the Council of Ministers—Pedro Silva Pereira
 +
*Minister of State and Justice—Alberto Costa
 +
*Minister of Finance—Fernando Teixeira dos Santos
 +
*Minister of Economy and Innovation—Manuel Pinho
 +
*Minister of Parliamentary Affairs—Augusto Santos Silva
 +
*Minister of the Environment—Francisco Nunes
 +
*Minister of Culture—Isabel Pires de Lima
 +
*Minister of Agriculture—Jaime Silva
 +
*Minister of Public Works—Mario Lino
 +
*Minister of Labor and Social Security—Jose Vieira da Silva
 +
*Minister of Science, Technology and Higher Education—Jose Mariano Gago
 +
*Minister of Education—Maria de Lurdes Rodrigues
 +
 +
===Foreign Relations===
 +
Portugal has been a significant beneficiary of the European Union and is a proponent of European integration. Portugal will hold the presidency of the EU Council for the third time during the latter half of 2007. During its upcoming presidency, Portugal hopes to focus on EU relations with North Africa and the Middle East, hold a second EU-Africa summit, revitalize the Lisbon Agenda, and develop a common EU approach toward migration flows.
 +
 +
Portugal was a founding member of NATO; it is an active member of the alliance by, for example, contributing proportionally large contingents in Balkans peacekeeping forces. Portugal proposed the creation of the Community of Portuguese Language Countries (CPLP) to improve its ties with other Portuguese-speaking countries. Additionally, Portugal has participated in a series of Ibero-American summits. Portugal was a strong advocate of independence for East Timor, a former Portuguese colony, and has committed troops and money to East Timor, in close cooperation with the United States, Asian allies, and the United Nations. Portugal contributed a small gendarme force to Iraq that it withdrew in February 2005, and has contributed funds and personnel for other training and development projects for Iraq reconstruction, including the NATO Training Mission.
 +
 +
==Economy==
 +
Portugal's membership in the European Union (EU) contributed to stable economic growth, largely through increased trade and an inflow of EU funds for infrastructure improvements. Until 2001, average annual growth rates consistently exceeded those of the EU average. Due to slow economic growth, Portugal has lost ground relative to the rest of the EU since 2002. Portugal's per capita GDP dropped from 80% of the EU-25 average in 2001 to 71% in 2006, causing the country to drop three places to 18th in purchasing power parity, behind Greece, the Czech Republic, and Slovenia.
 +
[[File:The Tower of Belem.jpg|thumb|The Tower of Belem.]]
 +
In order to enter the European Monetary Union (EMU) in January 1999, Portugal agreed to cut its fiscal deficit and undertake structural reforms. The EMU brought exchange rate stability, lower inflation, and lower interest rates. Falling interest rates, in turn, lowered the cost of public debt and helped the country achieve its fiscal targets. However, private sector borrowing increased dramatically. By 2001, the economy was in serious external imbalance, with a large current and capital account deficit. Portugal was the first country to breach the Eurozone's Stability and Growth Pact budget deficit target of 3%. The Government of Portugal met the 3% target from 2002-2004, but the deficit surged to an all-time high of 6% in 2005. The government reduced the deficit to 4.6% in 2006 mainly through revenue generating measures. The 2007 budget aims to reduce the deficit to 3.7% through spending cuts and structural reforms.
 +
 +
Helped in part by a wider EU recovery, the Portuguese economy grew by 1.4% in 2006, up from a 0.3% the year before. The Portuguese Government predicts the growth rate will accelerate to 1.8% in 2007. Unemployment was 7.6% in 2006.
 +
 +
Portugal's economy is based on traditional industries such as textiles, clothing, footwear, cork and wood products, beverages (wine), porcelain and earthenware, and glass and glassware. In addition, the country has increased its role in Europe's automotive sector and has a world-class mold-making industry. Services, particularly tourism, are playing an increasingly important role. Portugal’s EU funding will be cut by 10%, to 22.5 billion euros, during the 2007-2013 period. EU expansion into eastern Europe has erased Portugal's historic competitive advantage and relative low labor costs. The government is working to change Portugal's economic development model from one based on public consumption and public investment to one focused on exports, private investment, and development of the high-tech sector.
 +
 +
==History==
 +
[[File:VascoDaGama.jpeg|thumb|left|300px|Portuguese navigator [[Vasco da Gama]].]]
 +
Portugal is one of the oldest states in Europe. It traces its modern history to A.D. 1140 when, following a 9-year rebellion against the King of Leon-Castile, Afonso Henriques, the Count of Portugal, became the country's first king, Afonso I. Afonso and his successors expanded their territory southward, capturing Lisbon from the Moors in 1147. The approximate present-day boundaries were secured in 1249 by Afonso III.
 +
 +
By 1337, Portuguese explorers had reached the Canary Islands. Inspired by Prince Henry the Navigator (1394-1460), explorers such as Vasco da Gama, Bartolomeu Dias, and Pedro Alvares Cabral made explorations from Brazil to India and Japan. Portugal eventually became a massive colonial empire with vast territories in Africa and Latin America (Brazil) and outposts in the Far East (East Timor, Macau, Goa).
 +
 +
Dynastic disputes led in 1580 to the succession of Philip II of Spain to the Portuguese throne. A revolt ended Spanish hegemony in 1640, and the House of Braganca was established as Portugal's ruling family, lasting until the establishment of the Portuguese Republic in 1910.
 +
 +
In 1917, three shepherd children living in the parish region of [[Fatima]] received a series of apparitions from the [[Virgin Mary]].
 +
 +
Portugal was allied with the Entente Powers during the [[First World War]] and its troops fought on the Western Front.
 +
 +
During the next 16 years, intense political rivalries and economic instability undermined newly established democratic institutions. Responding to pressing economic problems, a military government, which had taken power in 1926, named a prominent university economist, Dr. Antonio Salazar, as finance minister in 1928 and prime minister in 1932. For the next 42 years, Salazar and his successor, Marcelo Caetano, appointed prime minister in 1968, ruled Portugal as an authoritarian "corporate" state. Unlike most other European countries, Portugal did not play a combatant role in World War II, although it was friendly towards the Allied cause and allowed anti-submarine patrols to fly from bases in the Azores. It was a charter member of NATO, joining in 1949.
 +
 +
In the early 1960s, wars with independence movements in Portugal's African territories began to drain labor and wealth from Portugal. Professional dissatisfaction within the military, coupled with a growing sense of the futility of the African conflicts, led to the formation of the clandestine "Armed Forces Movement" in 1973.
 +
 +
The downfall of the Portuguese corporate state came on April 25, 1974, when the Armed Forces Movement seized power in a nearly bloodless coup and established a provisional military government.
 +
 +
 +
{{Copyright Details (US Government)}}
 +
 +
{{European Union}}
  
 
[[Category:European Countries]]
 
[[Category:European Countries]]
[[Category:NATO members]]
+
[[Category:NATO Members]]
[[Category:EU Members]]
+
[[Category:Christian-Majority Countries]]
 +
[[Category:Portugal]]

Latest revision as of 21:41, January 28, 2024

República Portuguesa
Portugal rel82.jpg
Portugal location.png
Flag of Portugal.png
Arms of Portugal.png
Flag Coat of Arms
Capital Lisbon
Government Parliamentary Democracy
Language Portuguese (official)
President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa
Prime minister António Costa
Area 35,580 sq mi
Population 10,250,000 (2020)
GDP $240,000,000,000 (2020)
GDP per capita $23,415 (2020)
Currency euro
Internet top-level domain .pt

Portugal is a European nation in the Iberian Peninsula, with land borders with Spain. Its capital is Lisbon.

Virtually all Portuguese are Roman Catholics and Portuguese compromise 98% of the population, the rest are North Africans and Eastern Europeans.

Government and Political Conditions

Portugal moved from authoritarian rule to parliamentary democracy following the 1974 military coup against dictator Marcello Caetano, himself a continuation of the long-running dictatorship of Antonio Salazar. After a period of instability and communist agitation, Portugal ratified a new Constitution in 1976. Subsequent revisions of the Constitution placed the military under strict civilian control; trimmed the powers of the president; and laid the groundwork for a stable, pluralistic liberal democracy, as well as privatization of nationalized firms and the government-owned communications media. Portugal joined the European Union in 1986, and has moved toward greater political and economic integration with Europe ever since.

The four main branches of the national government are the presidency, the prime minister and Council of Ministers (the government), the Assembly of the Republic (the parliament), and the judiciary. The president, elected to a five-year term by direct, universal suffrage, also is commander in chief of the armed forces. Presidential powers include confirming the prime minister and Council of Ministers; dismissing the prime minister; dissolving the assembly to call early elections; vetoing legislation, which may be overridden by the assembly; and declaring a state of war or siege. The Council of State, a presidential advisory body, is composed of six senior civilian officers, former presidents elected under the 1976 constitution, five members chosen by the assembly, and five selected by the president.

The government is headed by the prime minister, who is nominated by the assembly for confirmation by the president. The prime minister then names the Council of Ministers. A new government is required to present its governing platform to the assembly for approval.

The Assembly of the Republic is a unicameral body composed of up to 230 deputies. Elected by universal suffrage according to a system of proportional representation, deputies serve terms of office of four years, unless the president dissolves the assembly and calls for new elections. The national Supreme Court is the court of last appeal. Military, administrative, and fiscal courts are designated as separate court categories. A nine-member Constitutional Tribunal reviews the constitutionality of legislation.

The Azores and Madeira Islands have constitutionally mandated autonomous status. A regional autonomy statute promulgated in 1980 established the Government of the Autonomous Region of the Azores; the Government of the Autonomous Region of Madeira operates under a provisional autonomy statute in effect since 1976. Continental Portugal is divided into 18 districts, each headed by a governor appointed by the Minister of Internal Administration. Macau, a former dependency, reverted to Chinese sovereignty in December 1999.

Current Administration

Parliamentary elections on February 20, 2005, gave the Socialist Party a comfortable majority for the new Prime Minister, Jose Socrates. Socrates’ government formally assumed power March 12, 2005.

The Socialist Party’s 2005 victory followed a period of transition after center-right (PSD) Prime Minister Jose Manuel Durão Barroso resigned to accept the nomination as President of the European Commission. Durão Barroso, elected in 2002, committed his government to public-sector austerity and business incentives to promote growth, trade, and productivity. It faced rising unemployment, meeting euro-zone fiscal requirements, and adapting to European Union and NATO enlargement. After Durão Barroso’s resignation, President Jorge Sampaio asked the former mayor of Lisbon, Pedro Santana Lopes, to form a new government. Sampaio lost confidence in that government by the end of 2004, dissolved parliament, and called for new parliamentary elections.

Social Democrat Anibal Cavaco Silva, a center-right candidate and former Prime Minister, won the Portuguese presidential election on January 22, 2006 with 50.6% of the vote. He was sworn in on March 9, 2006, replacing outgoing Socialist President Sampaio.

Principal Government Officials

  • President of the Portuguese Republic—Anibal Cavaco Silva
  • Prime Minister—Pedro Passos Coelho
  • Minister of Foreign Affairs—Luis Amado
  • Minister of Defense—Nuno Severiano Teixeira
  • Minister of State for Internal Administration—Rui Pereira
  • Minister of the Presidency of the Council of Ministers—Pedro Silva Pereira
  • Minister of State and Justice—Alberto Costa
  • Minister of Finance—Fernando Teixeira dos Santos
  • Minister of Economy and Innovation—Manuel Pinho
  • Minister of Parliamentary Affairs—Augusto Santos Silva
  • Minister of the Environment—Francisco Nunes
  • Minister of Culture—Isabel Pires de Lima
  • Minister of Agriculture—Jaime Silva
  • Minister of Public Works—Mario Lino
  • Minister of Labor and Social Security—Jose Vieira da Silva
  • Minister of Science, Technology and Higher Education—Jose Mariano Gago
  • Minister of Education—Maria de Lurdes Rodrigues

Foreign Relations

Portugal has been a significant beneficiary of the European Union and is a proponent of European integration. Portugal will hold the presidency of the EU Council for the third time during the latter half of 2007. During its upcoming presidency, Portugal hopes to focus on EU relations with North Africa and the Middle East, hold a second EU-Africa summit, revitalize the Lisbon Agenda, and develop a common EU approach toward migration flows.

Portugal was a founding member of NATO; it is an active member of the alliance by, for example, contributing proportionally large contingents in Balkans peacekeeping forces. Portugal proposed the creation of the Community of Portuguese Language Countries (CPLP) to improve its ties with other Portuguese-speaking countries. Additionally, Portugal has participated in a series of Ibero-American summits. Portugal was a strong advocate of independence for East Timor, a former Portuguese colony, and has committed troops and money to East Timor, in close cooperation with the United States, Asian allies, and the United Nations. Portugal contributed a small gendarme force to Iraq that it withdrew in February 2005, and has contributed funds and personnel for other training and development projects for Iraq reconstruction, including the NATO Training Mission.

Economy

Portugal's membership in the European Union (EU) contributed to stable economic growth, largely through increased trade and an inflow of EU funds for infrastructure improvements. Until 2001, average annual growth rates consistently exceeded those of the EU average. Due to slow economic growth, Portugal has lost ground relative to the rest of the EU since 2002. Portugal's per capita GDP dropped from 80% of the EU-25 average in 2001 to 71% in 2006, causing the country to drop three places to 18th in purchasing power parity, behind Greece, the Czech Republic, and Slovenia.

The Tower of Belem.

In order to enter the European Monetary Union (EMU) in January 1999, Portugal agreed to cut its fiscal deficit and undertake structural reforms. The EMU brought exchange rate stability, lower inflation, and lower interest rates. Falling interest rates, in turn, lowered the cost of public debt and helped the country achieve its fiscal targets. However, private sector borrowing increased dramatically. By 2001, the economy was in serious external imbalance, with a large current and capital account deficit. Portugal was the first country to breach the Eurozone's Stability and Growth Pact budget deficit target of 3%. The Government of Portugal met the 3% target from 2002-2004, but the deficit surged to an all-time high of 6% in 2005. The government reduced the deficit to 4.6% in 2006 mainly through revenue generating measures. The 2007 budget aims to reduce the deficit to 3.7% through spending cuts and structural reforms.

Helped in part by a wider EU recovery, the Portuguese economy grew by 1.4% in 2006, up from a 0.3% the year before. The Portuguese Government predicts the growth rate will accelerate to 1.8% in 2007. Unemployment was 7.6% in 2006.

Portugal's economy is based on traditional industries such as textiles, clothing, footwear, cork and wood products, beverages (wine), porcelain and earthenware, and glass and glassware. In addition, the country has increased its role in Europe's automotive sector and has a world-class mold-making industry. Services, particularly tourism, are playing an increasingly important role. Portugal’s EU funding will be cut by 10%, to 22.5 billion euros, during the 2007-2013 period. EU expansion into eastern Europe has erased Portugal's historic competitive advantage and relative low labor costs. The government is working to change Portugal's economic development model from one based on public consumption and public investment to one focused on exports, private investment, and development of the high-tech sector.

History

Portuguese navigator Vasco da Gama.

Portugal is one of the oldest states in Europe. It traces its modern history to A.D. 1140 when, following a 9-year rebellion against the King of Leon-Castile, Afonso Henriques, the Count of Portugal, became the country's first king, Afonso I. Afonso and his successors expanded their territory southward, capturing Lisbon from the Moors in 1147. The approximate present-day boundaries were secured in 1249 by Afonso III.

By 1337, Portuguese explorers had reached the Canary Islands. Inspired by Prince Henry the Navigator (1394-1460), explorers such as Vasco da Gama, Bartolomeu Dias, and Pedro Alvares Cabral made explorations from Brazil to India and Japan. Portugal eventually became a massive colonial empire with vast territories in Africa and Latin America (Brazil) and outposts in the Far East (East Timor, Macau, Goa).

Dynastic disputes led in 1580 to the succession of Philip II of Spain to the Portuguese throne. A revolt ended Spanish hegemony in 1640, and the House of Braganca was established as Portugal's ruling family, lasting until the establishment of the Portuguese Republic in 1910.

In 1917, three shepherd children living in the parish region of Fatima received a series of apparitions from the Virgin Mary.

Portugal was allied with the Entente Powers during the First World War and its troops fought on the Western Front.

During the next 16 years, intense political rivalries and economic instability undermined newly established democratic institutions. Responding to pressing economic problems, a military government, which had taken power in 1926, named a prominent university economist, Dr. Antonio Salazar, as finance minister in 1928 and prime minister in 1932. For the next 42 years, Salazar and his successor, Marcelo Caetano, appointed prime minister in 1968, ruled Portugal as an authoritarian "corporate" state. Unlike most other European countries, Portugal did not play a combatant role in World War II, although it was friendly towards the Allied cause and allowed anti-submarine patrols to fly from bases in the Azores. It was a charter member of NATO, joining in 1949.

In the early 1960s, wars with independence movements in Portugal's African territories began to drain labor and wealth from Portugal. Professional dissatisfaction within the military, coupled with a growing sense of the futility of the African conflicts, led to the formation of the clandestine "Armed Forces Movement" in 1973.

The downfall of the Portuguese corporate state came on April 25, 1974, when the Armed Forces Movement seized power in a nearly bloodless coup and established a provisional military government.


Copyright Details
License: This work is in the Public Domain in the United States because it is a work of the United States Federal Government under the terms of Title 17, Chapter 1, Section 105 of the U.S. Code
Source: File available from the United States Federal Government.