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Deodoro da Fonseca

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 2a02:c7d:1934:8000:bc51:78aa:3b3c:4069 (talk) at 23:15, 18 September 2018 (→‎Political career: Previously it made it seem like Isabel had chosen to eradicate slavery by herself. In reality this was done by the government. The Brasilian government was not an autocracy at that time. I feel this wording is more appropriate.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Deodoro da Fonseca
Marshal Fonseca in 1889
1st President of Brazil
In office
15 November 1889 – 23 November 1891
Vice PresidentNone (1889–1891)
Floriano Peixoto (1891)
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byFloriano Peixoto
President of the São Pedro do Rio Grande do Sul Province
In office
8 May 1886 – 9 November 1886
MonarchPedro II
Preceded byBaron of Lucena
Succeeded byMarquess of Abrantes
Personal details
Born(1827-08-05)5 August 1827
Vila de Santa Maria Madalena da Lagoa do Sul
(now Marechal Deodoro), Alagoas, Empire of Brazil
Died23 August 1892(1892-08-23) (aged 65)
Barra Mansa, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Political partyIndependent
SpouseMariana da Fonseca
AwardsOrder of the Southern Cross
Signature
Military service
Allegiance Empire of Brazil
Brazil
Branch/service Brazilian Army
Years of service1843–1892
RankField Marshal
Battles/warsParaguayan War

Manuel Deodoro da Fonseca (Portuguese pronunciation: [mɐnuˈɛw deoˈdɔɾu da fõˈsekɐ]; 5 August 1827 – 23 August 1892) was a Brazilian politician and military officer who served as the first President of Brazil. He took office after heading a military coup that deposed Emperor Pedro II and proclaimed the Republic in 1889, disestablishing the Empire, and stepped down little more than two years after his election in 1891, under great political pressure. He is therefore the first Brazilian President to have resigned from office.

Biography

Early life

Fonseca was born the third child of a large military family in Vila Madalena, Alagoas, a town that today bears his name as Marechal Deodoro, in Northeast Brazil. He was the son of Manuel Mendes da Fonseca Galvão (1785–1859) and his wife Rosa Maria Paulina de Barros Cavalcanti (1802–1873). In the period of the Brazilian Empire, his older brother Severino Martins da Fonseca was nominated the first Baron of Alagoas. Another notable relative was the Portuguese humanist Francisco de Holanda (d. 1585), his remote uncle. Fonseca pursued a military career that was notable for his suppression of the Praieira revolt in Pernambuco in 1848, Brazil's response to the European year of failed liberal revolutions.[1] He also saw action during the Paraguayan War (1864–1870), attaining the rank of captain. In 1884 he was promoted to the rank of field-marshal, and he later achieved the rank of full marshal. His personal courage, military competence and manly personal style made him a national figure.

Political career

As Governor of Rio Grande do Sul, Fonseca was courted by republican intellectuals such as Benjamin Constant and Rui Barbosa in the café society of São Paulo. In 1886, alerted that the imperial government was ordering the arrest of prominent republicans, Fonseca went to Rio de Janeiro and assumed leadership of the army faction that was favorable to the abolition of slavery.

Emperor Pedro II had advocated the abolition of slavery for decades, freeing his own slaves in 1840, but he believed slavery should be done away with slowly, so as not to damage the Brazilian economy. The government nominally headed by His daughter, Isabel, Princess Imperial of Brazil, abolished slavery entirely in 1888, during her third regency (while her father was away from the country). Enraged oligarchs played a role in the subsequent coup d'état. Fonseca's prestige placed him at the head of the military coup that deposed the emperor on 15 November 1889, and he was briefly the head of the provisional government that called a Constituent Congress to draft a new constitution for a United States of Brazil. Soon, however, he was in conflict with the civilian republican leaders. His election as president on 25 February 1891, by a narrow plurality, was backed with military pressure on Congress.

Presidency

The Fonseca administration, divided by political and personal animosity between the president and Vice President Floriano Peixoto, encountered strong opposition within the Congress, which chose a policy of obstruction. During the first months of his presidency, he permitted his ministers almost unrestricted control of their ministries.[2] Arbitrary presidential decrees (such as the concession of the port of Torres to a private company and Decree 528 that opened the country to further immigration except by Africans) and the disastrous conduct of economic policy during the bubble of the Encilhamento strengthened the resistance in Congress, which coalesced round Vice-President Peixoto, and soured public opinion. This also caused republicans of the South to withdraw their support from the marshal and provisional government.[3] The situation reached a crisis stage when Fonseca dissolved the National Congress and declared a "state of emergency" on 3 November 1891. A group of deputies opposed this decision and found support among the high-ranking officers of the Navy, including Admiral Custódio José de Melo. The marshal found himself on the brink of a civil war. On 23 November 1891 he signed a resignation (to no one in particular) and turned over the presidency to Floriano Peixoto.

Deodoro da Fonseca died in Rio de Janeiro on 23 August 1892.

See also

Media related to Deodoro da Fonseca at Wikimedia Commons

Political offices
Preceded by
Baron of Lucena
President of the
São Pedro do Rio Grande do Sul Province

1886
Succeeded by
Marquess of Abrantes
New office President of Brazil
1889–1891
Succeeded by
Honorary titles
Preceded by Honorary President of the Superior Military Court
1889–1891
Succeeded by

References

  1. ^ "Marshal Deodoro and The Fall of Dom Pedro II". JSTOR 2511467. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  2. ^ "Ruy Barbosa". JSTOR 1006827. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. ^ "Deodoro da Fonseca, Fate's Dictator". JSTOR 165283. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Charles Willis Simmons, Marshal Deodoro and the fall of Dom Pedro II, 1966