While her personal life may have been lamentable, her historical legacy is not.īlessings be upon you, most gracious Queen Maria, protector and sovereign of the Portuguese people. In Brazil, she is thought to be one of the key figures in the eventual independence of that nation. Her place in the culture of that land is best displayed in the Queluz National Palace, a baroque masterpiece that she helped conceive. In Portugal, she is now regarded as a strong female figure in its long history. Incapacitated by her growing madness, Maria I died in Rio de Janeiro in 1816.ĭespite her madness, Maria I is a greatly admired figure in both Portugal and Brazil, due to the changes and events that took place during her reign. As Queen of Portugal, Brazil, and the Algarves, she was known as Maria the Pious while ruling in Portugal, or Maria the Mad after fleeing to Brazil in 1807 from Napoleon's invasion.
In a dynasty characterized by tragedy and madness for centuries, Maria I is undoubtedly the best known to the world, and perhaps the best beloved by the Portuguese people. It is apparently inhabited by one man who lives in a long row of yellow houses with red roofs, and populated by sheep who do grand acts of balancing on the side of the hill." But, with its rich history and culture, and now one of the world's most globalized nations, Portugal is much, much more. Davis, who wrote, "Portugal is a high hill with a white watch tower on it flying signal flags. The erroneous view that Portugal has been no more than an outpost on the fringe of Europe was summarized by American journalist Richard H. A new constitution in 1976 and membership in the EEC in 1986 insured that it would remain a progressive democracy. The 1800s saw the dismantling of that empire, Brazilian independence in 1822 being the most serious blow to the power and prestige of Portugal.Īfter the 1910 revolution which ended the monarchy, Portugal suffered through a succession of juntas and dictatorships until democratic elections were finally held in 1975. Spearheading the "Age of Discovery," in the 15th and 16th centuries Portugal would establish the first global empire, stretching from South America to Africa to the Far East.
During the Reconquista, Portugal was born as an independent Christian kingdom in 1143. Over the following centuries, the Romans, Suebi and Visigoths ruled the peninsula but the history of Portugal might be said to begin with the Muslim invasion in 711 AD. Inhabited since prehistoric times, Portugal was reached by Phoenician and later Carthaginian traders in the first millennium BC, there meeting Celtic tribes that had pushed into Iberia across the Pyrenees.